Union Oil Co. v. Heinsohn

43 F.3d 500
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedDecember 15, 1994
DocketNos. 92-6211, 92-6217, and 92-6240
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 43 F.3d 500 (Union Oil Co. v. Heinsohn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union Oil Co. v. Heinsohn, 43 F.3d 500 (10th Cir. 1994).

Opinion

SETH, Circuit Judge.

These diversity proceedings began with an action brought by Union Oh Company for a declaratory judgment against Darrel D. Heinsohn and Kathy Heinsohn. It sought to determine whether Union Oh would be hable to the Heinsohns under the Oklahoma Surface Damages Act, Okla.Stat. tit. 52, §§ 318.2-.9 (1991), if it built and operated a sour gas processing plant in the NE/4 of Section 33 of a described township. The plant was to be built and was eventually built under the express authority of the provisions of an oil and gas lease obtained in 1967 from the surface and mineral owner of the NE/4 of [502]*502Section 33. The Heinsohns had thereafter (1983) acquired the surface of the NE/4 of Section 33 subject to lease. They do not challenge the right of Union to build the plant.

This suit, as commenced by Union, only concerned the matter of surface damages under the Oklahoma Act which would result from the sour gas treatment plant pursuant to the oil and gas lease.

A gas well known as the Bruner No. 1-33 had been drilled in the NE/4 of Section 33, Township 11 North, Range 25 West, Beck-ham County, Oklahoma in 1972. This producing well was drilled to a depth of 24,500 feet to the Hunton formation. The gas field was thereafter developed on a 640-aere spacing pattern. The gas produced contained a considerable quantity of hydrogen sulfide. It was thus necessary to process this sour gas to remove the hydrogen sulfide, which was poisonous, in order to market the gas. The well was posted as dangerous by reason of the hydrogen sulfide in the gas produced.

The Heinsohns bought the surface of the SE/4 of Section 33 in 1974 (the quarter section south of the quarter section on which the above well was located), subject to Union’s lease. A gas processing plant had been built in 1975 by El Paso in the NE/4 at the No. 1-33 well site to remove the hydrogen sulfide and carbon dioxide from the gas produced by the Bruner 1-33 well of Union. This plant operated until 1982 and was removed in 1990. The 1-33 well was plugged in 1983.

In May of 1983 the Heinsohns bought the surface of the NE/4 of Section 33 subject to the lease and began to operate a dairy. At that time the 1-33 well had been plugged and the plant apparently was not operating. In the sections surrounding Section 33 there were several wells in the Hunton sour gas formation.

Union decided in 1988 to drill a well, the 2-33 well, in the NE/4, to replace the original Bruner 1-33 well, and negotiated with the Heinsohns as to what would be the surface damage for the drilling and operation of such a well. The amount of $15,000 was agreed upon and provision was made for surface damages if a new processing plant was built at the well site.

The 2-33 well was completed as a producer and it was necessary to process the gas and Union thereafter began construction of such a plant. The well site and the plant site occupy about five acres. Union obtained the required permits for the plant from the Oklahoma Air Quality Service of the Oklahoma Department of Health and review by the EPA. The authorization required a showing that the plant design used the best control technology.

Union and the Heinsohns could not agree on the amount of surface damages which would result from the plant’s construction and operation. Thus before construction began on the plant Union filed this suit against the Heinsohns for a declaratory judgment as to whether the Surface Damages Act applied, and if so, what would be the damages thereafter. Construction was begun and the plant was completed. In response to the declaratory judgment action the Heinsohns filed a counterclaim against Union Oil Company, asserting that its gas processing plant in the NE/4 constituted a nuisance.

The Heinsohns also filed third party claims of nuisance against Exxon Corporation for its gas processing plant in Section 3, Township 10 North, Range 25 West (about 1.3 miles from the Heinsohn property), and against El Paso Natural Gas Company and Mesa Operating Partnership for their gas processing plants in nearby sections.

The causes which were tried were the Surface Damages Act cause against Union only, and the nuisance causes against Union and Exxon. The trial court bifurcated the proceedings to separate the surface damage cause against Union from the nuisance causes against Union and Exxon.

The third party nuisance claims against El Paso and Mesa directed to their two plants were both settled for a total of $100,000. This settlement permitted the continued operation of the two sour gas processing plants, with a release by the Heinsohns of any claims that the future operation of such plants would constitute a nuisance. The final nuisance judgment against Exxon and Union [503]*503as to their plants represented a reduction of the jury award by the amount of this settlement.

The Surface Damages Act Of Oklahoma 52 Okla.Stat. § 318 (1982)

The Surface Damages Act cause against Union only was submitted to the jury. It decided that the market value of the Hein-sohn farm would be reduced by the Union Oil Company plant in the amount of $100,700. The trial court’s judgment for the Heinsohns against Union was entered together with attorney fees as “costs”.

The record demonstrates that the Oklahoma Surface Damages Act was followed in the proof, instructions, and award. The decline in the fair market value of the land was shown. The Act allows for no award for personal injuries. Turley v. Newboume Oil Co., 904 F.2d 43 (10th Cir.1990); Dyco Petroleum Corp. v. Smith, 771 P.2d 1006 (Okla.1989).

The trial court awarded attorney fees to the Heinsohns for the surface damage trial. This is challenged by Union on the basis that the Act has an express attorney fee provision which must be followed, and the trial court should not have applied the railroad condemnation doctrines instead.

The express fee provision in the Act should prevail and it does not permit the fees here ordered against Union because Union did not request a jury which is an express condition in the Act. Andress v. Bowlby, 773 P.2d 1265 (Okla.1989). An Oklahoma Supreme Court opinion must control rather than the court of appeals case of TXO Production Corp. v. Stanton, 847 P.2d 821 (Okla.App.1992).

The Nuisance Causes Of Action

The nuisance cause of action in the third party complaint by the Heinsohns against Exxon, and in the counterclaim against Union, presents several issues. The damages are asserted to have been caused by the gas processing plants. These damages were in the nature of personal injuries, not in the sense of any permanent impairment,-or long-term pain and suffering resulting from the nuisances, but inconvenience, anxiety, and annoyance which were of intermittent duration and of variable intensity.

Mesa and El Paso, as mentioned, settled the nuisance claims against them with the Heinsohns for a total of $100,000. The nuisance causes continued against Exxon and Union. This settlement amount is however an issue in the claims against Union and Exxon because it was deducted by the court from the jury award against Union and Exxon.

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