Ward v. Corporation Commission

1970 OK 108, 470 P.2d 993, 36 Oil & Gas Rep. 643, 1970 Okla. LEXIS 391
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 9, 1970
Docket43715
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1970 OK 108 (Ward v. Corporation Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ward v. Corporation Commission, 1970 OK 108, 470 P.2d 993, 36 Oil & Gas Rep. 643, 1970 Okla. LEXIS 391 (Okla. 1970).

Opinion

BLACKBIRD, Justice.

This appeal involves the spacing of gas wells in an area of Township 20 North, Range 10 West, in Blaine and Major Counties.

The matter came before this State’s Corporation Commission (hereinafter referred to merely as the “Commission”) upon the Application of the plaintiff in error, hereinafter referred to as “Appellant” or by his surname of “Ward”, and another Application filed in said Commission by the defendant in error, Tenneco Oil Company, hereinafter referred to as “Appellee” or “Tenneco”.

The filing of these two Applications in the Commission was precipitated by Ward’s drilling of a well, called his “Freed No. 1”, into the Hunton Lime formation, on a tract described as the SW/4 NE/4 of Section 34, Township 20 North, Range 10 West. This well is approximately 5 miles south of a well previously drilled in Section 3 of an area covering Sections 2-4, both inclusive, and Sections 9 and 10, of the same Township and Range, wherein 640-acre drilling and spacing units had been established, for wells producing gas from the Hunton Lime formation, by the Commission’s Orders numbered 66311 and 68437, respectively, which were entered before the Commission’s hearing on the present Applications.

Ward’s Freed Well is less than 2 miles north of another area in which the Star-Lacey Field has been developed on 640-acre drilling and spacing units.

Ward’s Application to the Commission was for it to create “drilling and spacing units for the production of gas and gas condensate from the Chimney Hill section of the Hunton Lime formation underlying Sections 34 and 35” in said Township and Range. Ward therein alleged the depth at which his Freed Well encountered what he referred to as the “Chimney Hill section” of the Hunton Lime formation (which formation is hereinafter referred to merely as the “Hunton”), and he further alleged, among other things, that “said well is producing in a zone that is separate and distinct from any other wells in * * * *995 (its) vicinity * * *”, and “* * * (that said well) has discovered a new and separate common source of supply * * * In said Application, Ward recommended that 160-acre drilling and spacing units be established for such production in said Sections 34 and 35, on the basis of his opinion (expressed therein) that one well would adequately drain “all of the producible hydrocarbons underlying each 160 acres.”

Tenneco’s Application was for the Commission to amend its previous Order No. 68437, supra, to include Sections 14-16, both inclusive, Sections 22-23, both inclusive, Sections 26-28, both inclusive, and Sections 33-35, both inclusive. This Application referred to both the Hunton (at a depth of 8,600 feet) and the Mississippi Lime formation (at a depth of 7,100 feet) as “common sources” of gas supply, and alleged that 640-acre well spacing units should be established in the described geographical area, with the one permitted well for each unit, being located no closer than 1,320 feet to its unit’s boundary.

At the Commission’s hearing before one of its Trial Examiners on these two Applications, it was shown that Ward’s leasehold estate, on which the Freed Well is located, covers the entire NE/4 of Section 34, supra, and that, besides this 160-acre tract, he owns leases on 120 more acres in said Section, but that the remaining 360 acres in said Section are covered by leases owned by Tenneco. By the evidence he introduced at the hearing, Ward attempted to show that the gas and gas condensate encountered in his Freed Well is in a zone, or section, of the Hunton, other than the one from which the aforementioned Section 3 Well (5 miles to the north) produces and whose development in that area is, as aforesaid, covered by the 640-acre well spacing Orders numbered 66511 and 68437, supra.

On the other hand, Tenneco’s evidence was directed toward showing that the Freed Well is producing from a part of the Hunton, even though it was encountered at a different depth than the production found in the Section 3 Well.

In the report he filed after the close of the hearing, the Commission’s Trial Examiner recognized that there was a conflict in the evidence as to whether or not the production encountered in the Freed Well was from the same zone, or section, of the Hunton, as that from which the Section 3 Well is producing; but he concluded that whether “it may or may not be”, said Freed Well “is producing from a section of- the Hunton Lime, and that means any production from said formation from top to bottom; * * * On the basis of the evidence, it was the Trial Examiner’s finding that the area involved should be included in an extension of the 640-acre well spacing then covering the area to the north around the Section 3 Well, and that Ward’s Application for 160-acre well spacing should be denied.

In the report, which the Commission filed more than a month later, it upheld its Trial Examiner’s report as to the area comprised of Sections 26, 27, 28, 33, 34 and 35 only (Township 20 North, Range 10 West) and constituted each of those geographical sections a drilling and spacing unit for the production of gas and gas condensate from “the Hunton and Mississippi common sources of supply underlying * * * ” them. The Commission’s Order requires that each well “hereafter” drilled to said common sources of supply in that area be located not closer than 1,320 feet to its unit’s boundary, but it excepts, from this requirement, wells that are being drilled, or have already been drilled, to those common sources of supply. The Order also contains the usual provision “pooling and unitizing” all royalty interests within each of those 640-acre drilling and spacing units and allowing each owner of mineral rights in those two common sources under any unit to participate in the unit well’s production in the ratio that his interest bears to the unit’s total acreage.

In his present appeal from said Order, Appellant complains that, on the basis of *996 the ratios that their respective leased acreages, in Section 34, bear to said Section’s total acreage, the Order requires him to give Tenneco a 55% interest in the Freed Well, which, as aforesaid, is producing on a lease owned entirely by him. He points to the testimony establishing that this well will eventually produce hydrocarbons of a value of $5,695,000.00, and says that distributing 55% of this to Tenneco will result in his loss of $3,132,250.00, and that, unless the evidence is clear and convincing that all of Section 34’s acreage is as productive as that in the leasehold on which said well is located, this Court — if it upholds the Order appealed from — will be taking property “away from one entitled thereto and dividing it with another party who is not entitled thereto * * * ”,

In much of Appellant’s argument, he concerns himself with attempting to show that the production of his Freed Well (now shut in, awaiting marketing facilities) comes from a section of the Hunton, from which none of the wells governed by either of the aforementioned previously-entered 640-acre spacing orders produces. Such argument presents no cause for reversal.

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Bluebook (online)
1970 OK 108, 470 P.2d 993, 36 Oil & Gas Rep. 643, 1970 Okla. LEXIS 391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ward-v-corporation-commission-okla-1970.