State v. Arkansas Louisiana Gas Company

78 So. 2d 825, 227 La. 179, 4 Oil & Gas Rep. 1056, 1955 La. LEXIS 1228
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 14, 1955
Docket42114
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 78 So. 2d 825 (State v. Arkansas Louisiana Gas Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Arkansas Louisiana Gas Company, 78 So. 2d 825, 227 La. 179, 4 Oil & Gas Rep. 1056, 1955 La. LEXIS 1228 (La. 1955).

Opinion

SIMON, Justice.

Arkansas Louisiana Gas Company, a Delaware corporation authorized to transact all phases of the natural gas business in the States of Louisiana, Arkansas and Texas, was charged, by way of indictment, with a violation of Act No. 270 of 1918, now Louisiana Statutes Annotated- — -Revised Statutes 30:41^46, known from its origin as the Common Purchaser Law, and was tried and convicted. It was sentenced to pay a fine of $350 and costs.

The defendant has appealed, and in this court its counsel relies on a number of bills of exception for a reversal of the conviction and sentence.

The bill of indictment, as amended, under which defendant was convicted, and with its language, in the interest of clarity, rearranged and condensed charges that on December 1, 1952, Arkansas Louisiana Gas Company was engaged in the business of purchasing and selling natural gas in Louisiana and did violate the Common Purchaser Law and did pay Mrs. Mattie Burnham Clampitt and her lessee, Joe B. White, the sum of approximately $0.05 per thousand cubic feet for gas purchased from the Joe B. White-Delaney Unit Well No. 1 and at *184 the same time the defendant was paying the Hunt Oil Company, the Stanolind Oil Company, the Ohio Oil Company and J. R. Frankel approximately $0.11 per thousand cubic feet for gas produced from the same reservoir and offset wells in the East Haynesville Field as that from which the Joe B. White-Delaney Unit No. 1 well was producing, and did, therefore, discriminate against the said Mrs. Mattie Burnham Clampitt and Joe B. White in violation of the Act.

The charge of discrimination against defendant is based upon the provisions of contracts entered into between defendant and fifty-one gas producer-sellers. The contract entered into with Joe B. White-Delaney stipulated that defendant would buy gas in its raw state from the Joe B. White-Delaney Unit Well No. 1 at the price of $0.05 per thousand cubic feet during the period of time and under the terms and conditions set forth therein. During the time that defendant was paying the price fixed in said contract, defendant was paying the other named producer-sellers a higher price. The differential in the price which defendant paid to White and that paid to other producer-sellers named in the indictment is the gravamen of the violation chargéd. In other words, the indictment, conviction and sentence is predicated upon the difference in prices paid by defendant to producer-sellers, and which the court below held was a discrimination between producers and, therefore, was a violation of the Common Purchaser Law. 1

In the court below, defendant filed a demurrer and a plea attacking the constitutionality of the statute invoked. The pertinent features alleged in the demurrer are that, if the indictment is “construed to charge defendant with paying different prices for gas purchased from persons named therein, such alleged conduct is not denounced by the statute”; that the statute does not prohibit differences in prices paid; that the indictment does not charge defendant with any offense known to or denounced by the criminal laws or statutes of the State of Louisiana, more particularly the Common Purchaser Law. The demurrer further alleges that the indictment as drawn, and under which the prosecution was conducted, did not set forth with legal certainty the nature of the offense so as to enable it to understand with what it was charged and thus prepare a defense thereto, in violation of the Constitution of this State. This demurrer was overruled, to which Bill of Exception No. 1 was .reserved.

Besides others, bills of exception were reserved by defendant to, namely: (1) the ruling of the court below admitting evidence; 2 (2) the refusal by the court of *186 requested charges; 3 .'.(3) the overruling of a motion for a new trial; 4 and (4) that of a motion in arrest of judgment. 5 These bills of exception are based on the same contentions advanced by defendant in its demurrer, and, therefore, as a group, present the identical contentions contained in the demurrer, and which shall be disposed of collectively.

Though there are numerous other bills of exception presented by the record, the view we have taken, as hereinafter expressed, obviates the necessity of considering them.

The statute under which defendant was indicted and prosecuted, 6 and particularly the pertinent part of the section 7 which deals with the prohibition against discrimination, reads:

“Every person, engaged in the business -of purchasing and selling natural gas in this state, shall be a common purchaser thereof, and shall purchase all of the natural gas which may be offered for sale which may be brought in pipes and connecting lines by the owner or proposed seller to its trunk lines, * * * without discrimination ■ in' favor of one producer as against another, or in favor of any one source of supply as against another save as authorized by the commissioner of conservation after due notice and hear-fog. ^ *[* 5¡í

It is so axiomatic, that citation of authority is unnecessary, that in Louisiana there are no common-law crimes, and that nothing is a crime, no conduct can be held criminal, which is not made so by statute and clearly described by the language of its prohibition. Such statutes are subject to strict interpretation. 8 Article 7 of the Louisiana Criminal Code itself states as follows: “A crime is that conduct which is defined as criminal in this Code, or in other acts of the legislature, or in the constitution of this state.” LSA-R.S. 14:7.

It is significant that counsel for the State concedes, as contended by defendant, that the statute says nothing about discrimination in the matter of price, and from a reading of its provisions we are in full accord with that concession. Counsel contends, however, that the words “without discrimination”, when applied to persons engaged in purchasing natural gas from producers, mean that they shall purchase without discrimination in favor of one producer as against another, or in favor of any one source of supply as against another; that as a consequence, unless the words are not applied and are interpreted to mean *188 the price paid to producers, the prohibitions become meaningless.

The word “discrimination”, that is, the word itself without any context, merely means “The act of treating differently; treating one differently from another”; 9 the word “discriminate”, according to Webster, means “to make a difference or distinction”.

It logically follows that every difference is a discrimination.

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Bluebook (online)
78 So. 2d 825, 227 La. 179, 4 Oil & Gas Rep. 1056, 1955 La. LEXIS 1228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-arkansas-louisiana-gas-company-la-1955.