Summers v. Sutton

428 So. 2d 1121
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 22, 1983
Docket82 CA 0450
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 428 So. 2d 1121 (Summers v. Sutton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Summers v. Sutton, 428 So. 2d 1121 (La. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

428 So.2d 1121 (1983)

Beverly Miller SUMMERS, et al.
v.
R.T. SUTTON, Commissioner of Conservation, et al.

No. 82 CA 0450.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

February 22, 1983.

*1123 Frank W. Summers, Abbeville, for plaintiffs-appellants, Beverly Miller Summers, et al.

Robert T. Jorden, Kerry T. Massari, Lafayette, for defendant-appellee, Inexco Oil Co.

D.D. Howard, New Orleans, for defendant-appellee, Broussard Land Co.

Veil David DeVillier, Eunice, for defendant-appellee, R.T. Sutton, Com'r of Conservation, State of La.

Before LOTTINGER, COLE and CARTER, JJ.

CARTER, Judge.

This is a suit by Beverly Miller Summers, Frank W. Summers, II, Preston M. Summers, Susan P. Summers, Clay James Summers, William C. Summers, Beverly Marie Summers, Lottie Lucia Miller Massie, Charles W. Massie, III, and Laura Lucia Massie (Summers group), the lessors in an oil, gas and mineral lease dated October 14, 1977, in favor of Inexco Oil Company (Inexco), lessee, affecting certain immovable property situated in Sections 21 and 22, Township 14 South, Range 2 East, Vermilion Parish, Louisiana. The suit was brought under the Administrative Procedure Act[1] for judicial review of an administrative order issued by the Commissioner of Conservation, R.T. Sutton, which revised the boundaries and reduced the size of the drilling and production unit for the exploration for and production of gas and condensate from the Db-3 Sand, Reservoir A, in the Forked Island Field.

The plaintiffs claim that the Commissioner's order No. 1054-A-1 is invalid because of its adverse effect upon them in reducing the unit acreage from 231.07 acres to 161.04 acres in the revised unit, which unlawfully reduced their participation in production from the unit well, Inexco Oil Company—M M Summers # 3 well (M M Summers # 3) from 71.25546 percent to 58.75559 percent.

The suit was initiated against R.T. Sutton, the Commissioner of Conservation; Inexco Oil Company, the operator of the unit and proponent of the revised unit; and Broussard Land Company, Inc., another lessor of Inexco which is participating in the unit.

From a trial court judgment affirming the Commissioner's order creating the revised unit, the plaintiffs have brought this appeal. We affirm.

*1124 THE FACTS

The controversy arises out of the following set of facts: Inexco drilled a well, M M Summers # 3, to the Db-3 Sand, Reservoir A,[2] which was productive of oil and gas in paying quantities.

Thereafter, upon application of Inexco, the Commissioner conducted a public hearing on January 7, 1981, which resulted in the issuance of Commissioner's order No. 1054-A, dated February 4, 1981, creating a 231.07 acre production unit.

Subsequent to the creation of the production unit, Inexco drilled the Inexco-Massie Miller Summers # 5 well (M M Summers # 5) within the confines of the unit. When the # 5 well reached a depth of 13,680 feet, Inexco lost it and had to abandon it on April 29, 1981. Inexco, based on findings from its experts' interpretation of the available geological and engineering data, concluded that the Db-3 Sand had shaled out in this area of the unit. With these findings, Inexco applied to the Commissioner for a public hearing to consider its application to dissolve the unit which had been established for the Db-3 Sand, and simultaneously therewith, to create a revised unit.

At the public hearing held on September 2, 1981, Inexco presented its position that the additional evidence obtained through the drilling of M M Summers # 5 showed that the unitized sand shaled out under the northern 70 acres of the unit and that this area should be excluded from the unit as nonproductive. The appellants opposed the revision, basically taking the position that the entire acreage in the unit was commercially productive, so that the unit should remain unchanged. As an alternative, the appellants presented a counterplan suggesting only a 30 acre reduction instead of the larger reduction proposed by Inexco. Experts in the fields of petroleum geology and petroleum engineering testified in support of the proponents' and the opponents' positions respectively.

Following the presentation of evidence, the case was submitted to the Commissioner. On October 5, 1981, the Commissioner issued order No. 1054-A-1, dissolving the unit and approving the revised unit proposal of Inexco as the unit for the exploration for and production of gas and condensate from the Db-3 Sand, Reservoir A, in the Forked Island Field.[3]

Appellants objected to the revised unit order, and on November 3, 1981, they petitioned the district court for judicial review, seeking a stay of execution of the order pending the litigation, and in due course, reversal or modification of the order. The case was heard on the Office of Conservation record, submitted on briefs and on oral argument. Neither party presented additional evidence to the trial court.

TRIAL COURT'S FINDINGS

In written reasons for judgment, the trial court found that: (1) the plaintiffs did not establish that they were entitled to a stay of the enforcement of the administrative order pending the litigation; (2) the plaintiffs were furnished with the complete record of the administrative hearings; (3) the agency officials were in attendance at the public hearing and participated therein; (4) the administrative hearing was a public, not an ex parte, hearing; (5) the Commissioner's "findings", including the exhibit made a part thereof, constituted the necessary findings required by law; (6) the record contained substantial evidence to support the Commissioner's factual findings; (7) it was not manifest error for the Commissioner to accept the proponents' experts' interpretation of the technical evidence that the well in question had shaled out; (8) based on the evidence of the shaling out, it was not arbitrary or capricious for the Commissioner to revise the unit so as to exclude certain nonproductive acreage therefrom; (9) the standard of the burden of proof that the proponents of the revised unit were *1125 required to meet at the administrative hearing was by "a preponderance of the evidence"; and (10) Inexco established that the well in question had shaled out.

SPECIFICATIONS OF ERRORS

On appeal the appellants in their Specifications of Errors assert that the trial court erred in the following respects: (1) in failing to grant them the stay of execution of the administrative order pending the final determination of the litigation; (2) in failing to require that they be furnished with the complete record of the administrative hearing; (3) in not finding that the Commissioner had not followed the procedures of the Administrative Procedure Act; (4) in failing to require the agency to hold Inexco to the burden of proving with reasonable certainty that the proposed revision unit was necessary; (5) in failing to find that the Commissioner's order did not include findings of fact, accompanied by an express statement of supporting facts; (6) in failing to find that the Commissioner's order was arbitrary and capricious; (7) in failing to find that the Commissioner's order was manifestly erroneous in view of the reliable, probative, and substantial evidence on the whole record; (8) in finding that Inexco had established that the Db-3 Sand in M M Summers # 5 had shaled out; and (9) in affirming the administrative order in question. Some of the specifications of error were grouped for the purpose of argument to this Court on appeal because of the inter-relationship of the alleged errors.

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Bluebook (online)
428 So. 2d 1121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/summers-v-sutton-lactapp-1983.