The Superior Oil Company v. Federal Power Commission

322 F.2d 601
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 25, 1963
Docket18252_1
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 322 F.2d 601 (The Superior Oil Company v. Federal Power Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Superior Oil Company v. Federal Power Commission, 322 F.2d 601 (9th Cir. 1963).

Opinion

HAMLEY, Circuit Judge.

This is a proceeding to review the action of the Federal Power Commission in rejecting, without hearing, certain rate-schedule and certificate-application filings. The filings had been tendered by petitioner, The Superior Oil Company (Superior). Superior is an independent producer of natural gas and is subject to-Commission regulation under the Natural Gas Act (Act) 15 U.S.C. § 717 et seq. Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Wisconsin, 347 U.S. 672, 74 S.Ct. 794, 98 L.Ed. 1035.

On April 9, 1962, Superior entered into, a casinghead gas contract with the Els Paso Natural Gas Company (El Paso)covering the sale of casinghead gas produced in approximately 2,640 acres of gas in the Aneth Field in southeastern Utah. This contract incorporates by reference the terms of a twenty-year casin *603 ghead gas contract entered into on June 11, 1958, by the same parties. This 1958 -contract initially committed some 8,720 acres in the Aneth Field to El Paso, 1 but by subsequent agreements sections of 800 acres 2 and 2,560 acres 3 had been added to the contract. Nothing in the 1958 contract, which was in form amended by the 1962 contract, required or expressly permitted Superior to add acreage to that originally listed.

Among the terms incorporated in the 1962 contract by reference to the 1958 contract were certain price escalation clauses. One of these, not objected to by the Commission, called for specified price increases at five-year intervals. 4 Another provided for a price “redetermination” by the contracting parties, if requested by the seller, at each of these five year intervals. 5 A third escalation provision was a so-called favored-nation *604 clause, wherein El Paso agreed that it would never pay Superior less than the prices it was paying “others for comparable gas delivered under comparable conditions” within a specified area. 6

*603 “Seller shall have the right, at its option, to request a redetermination of the price provided in Section 7 of this Article to be paid for any one or more or all (but not part) of the periods set out in (b), (c), (d) and (e) above. Any such request made with respect to any of such periods shall be made in writing during the six (6) months immediately preceding the commencement of such period. If Seller shall make any such request, representatives of Buyer and Seller shall promptly meet and attempt to determine the then reasonable market price of the gas deliverable hereunder. In making such determination, consideration shall be given to all pertinent factors. The price so determined by Buyer' and Seller shall be the price applicable during the entire period with respect to which the same was determined; provided, that if such price shall be less than the price provided in Section 7 of this Article with respect to such period, the price during *604 such period shall be as provided in Section 7.”

On May 25, 1962, Superior applied to the Commission for an amendment to its certificate of public convenience and necessity for the purpose of authorizing it to sell gas to El Paso pursuant to the 1962 agreement. At the same time Superior made the related rate filing which would make the rate schedules then in effect, including the existing price escalation clauses described above, applicable to gas sold from the additional acreage. 7 *

By letter-order dated June 15, 1962, the Commission summarily rejected, without hearing, the May 25, 1962 filings. In this order it was recited that the supplemental agreement of April 9, 1962, in effect incorporates by reference the terms-of the contract of June 11, 1958, and therefore appears to incorporate pricing provisions other than those permitted by section 154.93 of the Commission’s Regulations (18 C.F.R. [Cum.Supp.1963] § 154.93). 8 Therefore, the Commission stated in this order, the proposed rate-schedule supplement and related petition to amend, were rejected “in accordance-with Commission Order No. 242 * * * and section 154.100 of the Commission’s Regulations. * * *” See 18 C.F.R. § 154.100. 9

On July 9, 1962, Superior filed an application for reconsideration of the rejected supplement to the rate schedule,. *605 complaining that the summary rejection of its certificate application and related rate schedule filing was invalid. Superior did not contend that its contract did not contain price-changing provisions proscribed by the regulations relied upon by the Commission. Nor did the company make any request for an amendment of the regulation in question which would render it inapplicable as to price-changing clauses of the kind here involved, or for a waiver of the regulation as to this sale. 10

Since the Commission did not act on the application for reconsideration, it was denied by operation of law on August 8, 1962. 11 This petition for review followed.

Under the existing regulations, referred to above, there being no request for an amendment, waiver or repeal thereof, and no contention that the rejected filings did not contain price-changing provisions proscribed thereunder, the Commission was required to summarily reject the filings without hearing. It follows that the only real issue presented on this review is the validity of the regulations pursuant to which summary rejection was ordered.

As a basis for discussing Superior’s attack upon these regulations it will be helpful to set out in detail their procedural history.

They had their inception in rule-making proceedings instituted in 1956. In the notice of this proposed rule-making, file Commission stated that it proposed to amend section 154.93 of its General Rules and Regulations (18 C.F.R. § 154.93) relating to the filing of rate schedules by independent producers, to describe certain types of contracts for the sale of natural gas which would not be accepted for filing as rate schedules.

The Commission’s specific proposal was that it would not accept for filing contracts containing provisions calling for price adjustments stemming from:

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322 F.2d 601, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-superior-oil-company-v-federal-power-commission-ca9-1963.