Western Gulf Oil Co. v. Superior Oil Co.

206 P.2d 944, 92 Cal. App. 2d 299, 1949 Cal. App. LEXIS 1690
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 8, 1949
DocketCiv. 3792
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 206 P.2d 944 (Western Gulf Oil Co. v. Superior Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Western Gulf Oil Co. v. Superior Oil Co., 206 P.2d 944, 92 Cal. App. 2d 299, 1949 Cal. App. LEXIS 1690 (Cal. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

GRIFFIN, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of dismissal in an injunction proceeding after sustaining general demurrers to the complaint without leave to amend. The plaintiffs are Western Gulf Oil Company and the Texas Company. One group of defendants are The Ohio Oil Company, General Petroleum Corporation of California, Union Oil Company of California and Barnsdell Oil Company, and will hereinafter be referred to as “unit operators” with plaintiffs. Defendants The Superior Oil Company, Lloyd Corporation, Limited, Pacific Western Oil Corporation, Chanslor-Canfield Midway Oil Company, The Hancock Oil Company, and Rich-field Oil Corporation are referred to as.“non-unit defendants. ’ ’ The other defendants mentioned in the complaint are landowners or royalty owners and are referred to as “non-operating defendants.”

There was discovered in Kern County the “Paloma Oil Field, ’' about six years before the filing of this action. It is a condensate field and the entire area covers approximately 20 square miles. The unit operators are the owners of the sole and exclusive right to drill and operate for oil and gas within a described area, referred to as the “unit area,” and each of the nonutiit defendants is the owner of similar rights within other described areas. These areas overlie a common source of supply of oil and gas referred to as the “Reservoir.” In addition, there are certain areas overlying the reservoir in which some of the unit operators hold exclusive drilling and operating rights but which are not a part of the land operated as a unit. The rights of each operator are limited and affected by similar and correlative rights of the others. The non-operating defendants are landowners or royalty owners without present operating rights.

According to the allegations of the complaint, as epitomized by cousel for plaintiffs, the free gas in the reservoir contains, as a component part thereof, large quantities of hydrocarbons which under ordinary surface pressure and temperature conditions would be fluids. They are maintained in gaseous form, intermixed with the other gas, only because of the exceptionally high pressures. At lower pressures, these hydro *301 carbons become liquids—in other words, they condense. This free gas containing condensate is concentrated in one part of the reservoir, referred to as the ‘ Condensate Area. ’ ’ As the pressures under which this gas is held are reduced, condensation occurs. The condensation resulting from such pressure decline is known as “xeirograde condensation.” When such condensation occurs, the resulting liquids are precipitated at progressively accelerated rates into the interstices between the grains or particles of sand in the underground formation. Only a very small part of these precipitated liquids can be recovered by any practicable method of operation. To minimize this precipitation and consequent wastage, it is necessary to maintain the pressure in the reservoir at as high level as practicable, and in this manner make possible the production of liquefiable hydrocarbons while they remain in gaseous form. Pressure declines resulting from production of fluids/ from the reservoir have already caused precipitation of some liquids into the formation, but the pressures are still at sufficiently high levels to hold the greater part of the liquefiable hydrocarbons in the gaseous phase. The quantity of gas in the reservoir is in excess of one trillion cubic feet; and the recoverable liquefiable hydrocarbons in the condensate gas are in excess of 88,000,000 barrels. The part of the reservoir out-^ side of the condensate area contains crude oil, referred to in 1 /. the complaint as “black oil.” This black oil holds in solution large quantities of gas, called “solution gas.” The solutionj gas adds to the fluidity and mobility of the black oil and furnishes energy to propel the black oil to the well bore. The quantity of solution gas retained in the black oil is dependent upon the prevailing formation pressure. In order to produce' maximum quantities of black oil, good production practice requires that the solution gas be kept within the black oil until it has performed its functions. The maintenance of pressure in the condensate gas area is a further aid to the production of the black oil. The maintenance of high pressures in the reservoir is of utmost importance, not only to prevent condensation in the reservoir, but also to produce the maximum quantity of black oil. It is alleged that prudent and efficient producing operations and sound engineering prac-“ tices, as an effective means of maintaining high pressures within the reservoir, require the return to the reservoir, at proper locations and at pressures exceeding pressures in the reservoir, of all the gas produced therefrom and remaining *302 processing for the removal of liquefiable constituents, except the small amount used for fuel in lease and plant operations. This is called “cycling,” and by means thereof the above-described losses can be kept at a minimum. The complaint then states that the proper' distribution of producing wells is an important factor in cycling; that cycling is more effective if the reservoir is treated as a single entity without regard to property lines, as if it belonged to one owner; that the development and operation (including cycling) of the reservoir as a unit in an efficient manner eonsistent with sound engineering practices would result in the production of at least 61,000,000 barrels more than could-otherwise be produced; that this represents the quantity that would be wasted in the ground and its value at today’s prices exceeds $166,000,000; that plaintiffs’ shares of this loss would be in excess of $66,000,000; that plaintiffs and the other unit operators have, at great cost and expense, erected a cycling plant and are carrying on cycling operations on their lands, but the other operators have refused to cycle; that while this cycling in part of the reservoir by the unit operators has materially increased the recovery of black oil and other liquid and liquefiable hydrocarbons from the common reservoir, as compared with what would have been recovered had their gas not been returned, such cycling is driving the condensate gas and black oil from the high pressure areas of the unit area into areas from which the nonunit defendants are producing, to the irreparable damage of plaintiffs and the other unit ¡operators; that the nonunit defendants are producing on a large scale without returning to the formation any of the gas (solution or condensate) produced by them, and without [extracting the liquefiable hydrocarbons; that such gas, except a small quantity used as fuel, is sold and transported out of the field; that Richfield has only recently commenced its operations; but the others have been so operating for several years Sand Richfield is returning no gas to the reservoir; that it is drilling other wells, and, unless prevented, will continue to operate without returning gas to the reservoir, and will continue the same wasteful practices now being followed by other nonunit defendants. It is further alleged that there is, and has been for several years, an acute and serious shortage of oil and other hydrocarbons in the United States, particularly in California; that public policy, and the protection of private rights of plaintiffs, require that the court enjoin the non-unit defendants from continuing the unreasonable, profligate, *303

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
206 P.2d 944, 92 Cal. App. 2d 299, 1949 Cal. App. LEXIS 1690, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-gulf-oil-co-v-superior-oil-co-calctapp-1949.