Wolverine Natural Gas Corp. v. Consumers Power Co.

296 N.W. 660, 296 Mich. 500
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 11, 1941
DocketDocket No. 26, Calendar No. 41,118.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 296 N.W. 660 (Wolverine Natural Gas Corp. v. Consumers Power Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wolverine Natural Gas Corp. v. Consumers Power Co., 296 N.W. 660, 296 Mich. 500 (Mich. 1941).

Opinion

*501 Bushnell, J.

Plaintiff, Wolverine Natural Gas Corporation, a Michigan corporation, is a producer of natural gas from wells situated in what is known as the Six Lakes field in Montcalm county, Michigan. It is the successor of Michigan Exploration Company and Gordon Oil Company, both Michigan corporations.

Several producers in the Six Lakes field organized Petroleum Transportation Company, a Michigan corporation, in order to develop their acreage, create a market for, collect, transport, and deliver their gas. Petroleum was granted a permit by the Michigan public utilities commission on May 2, 1935, to operate as a common purchaser in the Six Lakes field. On May 27, 1935, Petroleum entered into identical agreements with Michigan Exploration, Gordon, and other producers in the field for the purchase of natural gas produced by these companies. On the same day, Petroleum made an agreement with defendant, Consumers Power Company, a Maine corporation doing business in Michigan, for the sale of all gas purchased by Petroleum under its agreements with leaseholders in the Six Lakes field. On March 27, 1936, Consumers purchased all the capital stock of Petroleum and caused its name to be changed to Hinton-Belvidere Natural Gas Gathering Company. Hinton-Belvidere afterwards ceased operations in the Six Lakes field and Consumers has since continued the operation of the business of Petroleum and Hinton under its own name.

When the written contracts out of which the present litigation arose were made between the leaseholders and Petroleum and between Petroleum and Consumers, only a few wells had been drilled in the Six Lakes field and no orders had yet been entered by the commission prorating the quantity of gas to be withdrawn from the field. Each of the contracts with the leaseholders provided that Pe *502 troleum would “take and pay for, or pay for if not taken, at least a minimum quantity of natural gas each 12 months, ’ ’ according to a formula specified in "the contract. This “minimum-take” provision was carried over into the contract between Petroleum and Consumers.

Wolverine seeks recovery of moneys which it claims are due from Consumers by reason of its failure to take and pay for, or pay for if not taken, a certain minimum quantity of natural gas. The record is largely devoted to testimony of the most conflicting nature with respect to the method of computing this “minimum quantity.” The difficulty experienced in determining this “minimum quantity” arises out of the technical factors entering into the contract formula. Some of these factors are, “ability to deliver,” “proven reserve,” “annual open flow,” “allowable withdrawal,” “ratable take,” and other descriptive language peculiar to the natural gas industry. The complexity of the contract formula is evidenced by the difficulty Wolverine had in determining the amount it claimed was due. It claimed in its original declaration the sum of $37,426.00. After a recomputation at the suggestion of the court, the declaration was amended during the trial to show Wolverine’s claim to be $71,339.55. Before completion of the trial, this figure was corrected and the claim was reduced to $68,222.40.

The written contracts, which are given in full in the record, are most involved. Experts who testified disagreed as to the technical interpretation of them. The trial court said:

“Either due to the inability of the parties to foresee the future developments of the field or to the fact that the person who drafted the contracts was more skillful in concealing than in revealing the intention of the parties, that part of the contract requiring a minimum take is so confusing that it has puzzled *503 every one concerned with this case to discover what was intended.”

The various contracts are substantially identical, their differences being in the recital of the parties and schedule of leases involved. Each contract contains the following language:

“This contract is subject to all valid laws of the State of Michigan, now or hereafter effective, and to all lawful rules, regulations, and orders of governmental agencies having jurisdiction as to the subject matter hereof.”

Wolverine claims that the only limit on the amount of gas which Consumers may lawfully take annually according to the rules and regulations of the commission is 17-1/2 per cent, of the open flow of plaintiff’s wells, and that this “maximum allowable withdrawal” amounts to some 40 billion cubic feet of natural gas. Consumers says that this claim ignores the effect of Pule 13 of the commission, which limits the annual take to a pro rata amount of the total annual withdrawal from the entire field; that Wolverine wells are in a “common field” and only constitute approximately one-seventh of the open flow of that field; and, consequently, only one-seventh, and no more, of the pipe-line output of the entire field can be lawfully taken from Wolverine’s wells.

Under the commission’s proration orders, the lawful withdrawal from any givén well constitutes a fixed percentage of the amount of gas actually taken from the entire field during the year. Plaintiff concedes that defendant took the full pro rata amount from plaintiff’s wells which was allowable on the basis of the field ratings (percentage factors) assigned by the commission to each well in the Six Lakes field. These field ratings constitute the percentage of the actual output of the field which may be drawn from any given well in the field. But plain *504 tiff claims that the allowable withdrawal under these proration orders fell short of what defendant guaranteed to take and/or pay for under the minimum-take clause in its contracts. Wolverine computes the ‘minimum take” according to the contract formula as 999,449,000 cubic feet. Consumers took and paid for 544,633,000 cubic feet during the year from August 1, 1936, to July 31, 1937. The quantity not taken and for which Wolverine claims payment under the terms of the contract is 454,816,000 cubic feet. It is admitted that all that Consumers could legally take under the proration orders of the commission was 544,633,000 cubic feet. However, plaintiff claims that the allowable withdrawal, even under the proration orders, could have been increased if defendant had raised the output of the entire field. It is contended that a sufficient increase in the output of the entire field would have raised the pro rata take from plaintiff’s wells to a point where defendant could have fulfilled its minimum guarantee. In reply to this contention defendant asserts in its supplemental argument and brief:

“It is true that proration does not prevent a larger take from the field and if two common purchasers could agree that each should take more gas, the result would be a larger take from the field tut one common purchaser alone cannot raise the take from the field over a period of time, for it is limited to its pro rata share of the total production and if it takes more than its share one month, it must take less than its pro rata share the next month, provided the other common purchaser takes the same amount both months.

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Bluebook (online)
296 N.W. 660, 296 Mich. 500, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wolverine-natural-gas-corp-v-consumers-power-co-mich-1941.