Utilities Production Corp. v. Carter Oil Co.

2 F. Supp. 81, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1841
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 10, 1933
DocketNo. 560
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 2 F. Supp. 81 (Utilities Production Corp. v. Carter Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Utilities Production Corp. v. Carter Oil Co., 2 F. Supp. 81, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1841 (N.D. Okla. 1933).

Opinion

FRANKLIN E. KENNAMER, District Judge.

The purpose of plaintiff’s bill is to obtain an injunction against the defendant’s use of residue gas, as well as an accounting for residue gas used by defendant. Plaintiff is the gas lessee in gas leases covering and affecting lands allotted to members of the Osage Tribe of Indians. The lands are commonly referred to as the Osage Nation. The defendant, Carter Oil Company, is the oil lessee of oil leases covering fourteen .tracts of the land on which plaintiff has gas leases. Section 3 of the Act of Congress approved June 28, 1906, 34 Statute at Large, 539, 543, reserved the oil and gas under the lands in the Osage Nation to the Osage Tribe, and by subsequent acts of Congress the reservation extends to April 8,1958 (Act March 2, 1929, § 1 [45 Stat. 1478]). ' By appropriate resolution the Osage tribal counsel recommended that the oil and gas rights should be leased separately, and that practice has been pursued. Plaintiff claims under a gas lease executed July 14, 1919, which was approved by the Secretary of the Interior on December 20, 1919, and covers 166,400 acres, included in which are the lands covered by’defendant’s fourteen oil leases. The defendant has drilled numerous wells and has produced oil from the lands covered by its leases, and has constructed a casinghead gasoline plant at a cost of approximately $1,000,000 in the vicinity of its leases. The gasoline plant is not located upon any of the oil leases held by the defendant but is in the vicinity thereof. The defendant purchases casinghead gas from sixteen other oil leases, in addition to the casinghead gasoline from its fourteen leases, for its casinghead gasoline plant. The greater part, if not all, of the sixteen oil leases from which casinghead gas is purchased by the defendant, covers lands included in the gas leases held by plaintiff.

Gas from an oil well saturated with oil vapors is commonly called “casinghead gas.” Gasoline is extracted from casinghead gas by gasoline manufacturers, and after the extraction of gasoline from casinghead gas, there remains á residue or dry gas. The rights of the gas lessee and the oil lessee to such residue gas constitute the controversy herein presented.

The evidence shows, as charged in plaintiff’s bill, that the defendant has been making various uses of the residue gas. They are as follows:

[83]*831. For operating the leases from which such residue gas was produced, and defendant’s adjoining leases.

2. For fuel in operating its casinghead gasoline plant.

3. For drilling oil wells on and operating other leases owned by the defendant but not adjoining leases from which it takes the casinghead g-as.

4. Selling' and otherwise disposing of the residue gas to other persons or corporations for purposes disconnected with the operation of the leases, and in returning residue gas as a bonus for casinghead gas contracts.

5. Returning residue gas into the ground for the purpose of repressuring oil wells, and for using the residue gas as fuel for its compressor stations and compressors located upon leases other than those from which the casinghead gas is produced.

The questions here presented for determination are new. Such a dispute has never had the consideration of a court because of the peculiar manner in which the rights of the respective parties were acquired. Precedent is, therefore, not available to assist in tlie solution of the questions involved in this action, but the same must be determined solely upon the written leases under which plaintiff and defendant assert their rights to the residue gas, as well as the regulations promulgated by the Secretary of the Interior relative to such leases. Such regulations will be referred to briefly and only the pertinent parts thereof will receive consideration.

The applicable provisions of the leases and regulations are as follows:

Paragraph 13 of the plaintiff’s lease, which lease grants plaintiff its rights to gas in the Osage Nation, provides: “All casing-head gas shall belong to- the oil lessee.” The clause of the oil lease affecting casinghead gas under which defendant asserts its rights is as follows (section 12): “All casinghead gas shall belong to the oil lessee, and when used for the manufacture of gasoline shall be metered and be subject to a royalty of 10%% of the market value of the gasoline content, and all such gas not utilized by the oil lessee on his leased premises or for operating other adjoining leases within the Osage Reservation, shall belong to the gas lessee, subject to the prescribed royalty of 16%%.”

Section 6 of the oil lease is as follows: “The lessee accepts this lease with the understanding that the lands covered thereby may he leased to some other party, who shall have the exclusive right to all gas except as herein provided.”

A similar provision is included in the gas lease as section 6, which is as follows: “The lessee accepts this lease with the understanding’ that the lauds covered thereby may be leased to some other party, who shall have exclusive right to all oil except as herein provided.”

The oil lease provides, in section 16, that: “This lease is subject to the regulations now or hereafter prescribed by the Secretary of the Interior relative to such leases, all of which are made a part of this lease: Provided, that no regulations made after the approval of this lease shall operate to affect the term of lease, rate of royalty, rental or acreage, unless agreed to by both parties.”

The gas lease provides, in section 17, that the lease is subject to the regulation approved August 26, 1915, and all regulations which may thereafter be prescribed by the Secretary of the Interior, with the provision that no regulation was to bo made after the approval of the lease which should operate to affect the terms of the lease, rate of royalty, or acreage, unless agreed to by both parties, which provision is similar to section 16 of the oil lease.

Section 13 of the oil lease provides that the gas lessee should furnish the oil lessee sufficient gas for drilling and operating purposes, making- provision for the rate to be paid for the gas, and for the necessary connections.

Section 14 of the gas lease contains similar provisions as section 15 of the oil lease. Both leases provide that in the event of the drilling of a well, the oil lessee shall be entitled to the oil, and gas lessee to the gas, regardless of which lessee drills the well. Provision is made for an adjustment of the costs in such event.- The provisions evidence the intention of separating the rights to the oil and the gas.

Regulations have been promulgated by the Secretary of the Interior respecting casinghead gas. On May 13, 1919, a regulation was made which, among other things, provides : “ s * >Y Any casinghead gas coming direct from the wells and not utilized by the oil lessee, as above provided for (for the manufacture of gasoline) or for operations as provided for in section 12 of the oil lease, shall bo delivered to the gas lessee at a central point on the oil lessee’s gathering or carrying lines at the same schedule of prices as fixed for delivery of residue gas at gaso[84]

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Bluebook (online)
2 F. Supp. 81, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1841, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/utilities-production-corp-v-carter-oil-co-oknd-1933.