Stanolind Oil & Gas Co. v. Midas Oil Co.

123 S.W.2d 911, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 1252
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 25, 1938
DocketNo. 8635.
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 123 S.W.2d 911 (Stanolind Oil & Gas Co. v. Midas Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stanolind Oil & Gas Co. v. Midas Oil Co., 123 S.W.2d 911, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 1252 (Tex. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinions

BAUGH, Justice.

■ This is a rule 37 case. Appeal is from a judgment of the District Court, based upon an instructed verdict, sustaining the validity of a permit granted to the Midas Oil Company to drill a second well on 2.14 acres of land in the East Texas oil field in Gregg County, being a strip about 1200 feet long and about 70 feet wide. In January, 1935, the Midas Oil Company, which then had one producing well on said strip located approximately 500 feet from the east end thereof, applied to the Commission for permits for two additional wells thereon. After hearing the Commission refused to grant this application. Upon motion for rehearing the Commission granted the permit here involved for one additional well on said strip located 200 feet east of its well No. 1. The application was made on the grounds that the wells were necessary to prevent confiscation of property and the order granting it recited that it was granted on that ground.

The grounds of attack on the permit were that the additional well would cause waste; that without it there would be no confiscation of appellee’s property; and that the tract in question had been subdivided in 1931 after rule 37 became applicable to the field.

Two questions are presented on this appeal: First, whether appellant was such “interested person affected by the conservation laws” and the orders of the Commission within the meaning of Sec. 8, Art. 6049c, Vernon’s Texas Civil Stats., as amended, as would authorize it to bring the suit; and, second, whether it discharged the burden of proof resting upon it to rebut the presumptive validity of the Commission’s order.

The appellee Midas Oil Company relies primarily upon, and devotes most of its brief to, the first question. This contention is predicated upon the following facts: The last hearing before the Commission was had on May 22, 1935, and the permit granted on June 10, ,1935. On these dates, and long prior thereto the adjacent lease to the north of this tract was owned by the Yount-Lee Oil Company, which protested before the Commission the granting of the permit, but did not file suit to set it aside after it was granted. On July 31, 1935, the Yount-Lee Oil Company assigned this lease to Wright Morrow, who, on the same day, assigned it to appellant which has owned it continuously since. On October 19, 1935, more than four months after the permit was granted, appellant filed this suit to set it aside.

It is the position of appellee that only those who were “parties” to the proceedings before the Commission come within the purview of Art. 6049c, § 8, and are authorized to attack the permit so granted, relying particularly on the cases of Southern Surety Co. v. Arter, Tex.Com.App., 44. S.W.2d 913, and Allied Drug Prod. Co. v. Seale, Tex.Com.App., 49 S.W.2d 704. The latter case involved the question of the right of appeal from an order of the District Court by one who was not a party to a judicial proceeding in that-court; which right he was denied because he was not a “party” to the suit. Manifestly the *913 case is not applicable here. A suit attacking an order of the Commission is not an appeal from such order as if it were a judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction ; nor is it merely a review of the proceedings had before the Commission. While often referred to as a statutory appeal, it is in reality an original suit in the trial court, to be tried as other civil suits, de novo in character, and not confined to, nor a mere review of, the proceedings before the Commission. Of course, the Commission must first act in the premises, and comply with the requirements of the statutes relating to such hearings, but the suit to test the validity of its orders, when instituted in the District Court, is an original proceeding in that court, and not an appeal in a judicial sense.

While we think there is no analogy between the statute authorizing “any interested person affected” to attack by suit a permit to drill an oil well, and the provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation Act (art. 8307, § 5, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St), which latter act was involved in the Arter Case, supra; even if they be deemed analogous so far as the proceedings before the Industrial Accident Board and the Railroad Commission are concerned, the holding of the Commission of Appeals in the Arter Case would seem to reject rather than sustain appellee’s contention here. The provision of Sec. S of Art. 8307 is that “any interested party” may, under the provisions of the Act, bring suit to set aside the Board’s order; and further that if “any party to any such final ruling” shall fail within the specified time to bring such suit, then that the ruling shall be binding “upon all parties thereto, etc.” Judge Leddy in the Arter Case gave special significance to the use of the word “party” in the Workmen’s Compensation Act as limiting such suit to those who were parties to the hearing before the Board. In discussing the meaning of the language of that Act in using the term “party” and in disposing of the contention that the term “interested” extended the right to sue to others, Judge Leddy used the following significant language: “If such had been the intention, the law-making body would doubtless have granted the right of appeal to any ‘person interested,’ and required the interest of the party attempting an appeal to be disclosed, as it did in making provision for a review by the district court of judgments of the probate court entered in administering the estates of decedents.” 44 S.W.2d 916.

That is the term the Legislature did use in Sec. 8 of Art. 6049c. Not only is this true, but there is a manifest difference between -the subject-matter of Art. 8307 and that of Art. 6049c. In the former, the rights granted to the employee for compensation are personal to him. Whereas, under Art. 6049c the rights involved, and subject to suit in an attack upon the Commission’s order, are not personal, but the suit so authorized is for the protection of the adjacent properties against drainage, confiscation, or damage, irrespective of ownership. The mere fact that the ownership of such property changes hands after the hearing before the Commission has .no bearing whatever on the character, extent, or nature of the injuries, if any, which result thereto by virtue of the Commission’s order. These are the. matters which the Legislature intended to protect, and the ownership thereof whether acquired before or after the Commission’s order is made, is, we think, but incidental so long as the owner of the property affected seasonably acts under the statute. We conclude, therefore, that the District Court had jurisdiction to try these issues in the suit brought by the Stanolind Oil Company.

It is not amiss to here observe that grave injustice may be done to the holder of a permit, prima facie valid, who has proceeded thereunder to drill a well at heavy expense, by unreasonable delay of the adjacent property owner in filing a suit to set it aside. In the instant case the delay in filing this suit was more than four months after the permit was granted. Meantime appellee had drilled the well and same had been producing oil prior to the filing of this suit. Where a permit granted to prevent confiscation is held to be invalid it is manifest that in such cases injustice is done the holder thereof by such delay in attacking it.

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Bluebook (online)
123 S.W.2d 911, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 1252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stanolind-oil-gas-co-v-midas-oil-co-texapp-1938.