Wood Oil Co. v. Corporation Commission

1950 OK 207, 239 P.2d 1023, 205 Okla. 537, 1 Oil & Gas Rep. 132, 1950 Okla. LEXIS 599
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 18, 1950
Docket33483
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 1950 OK 207 (Wood Oil Co. 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
Wood Oil Co. v. Corporation Commission, 1950 OK 207, 239 P.2d 1023, 205 Okla. 537, 1 Oil & Gas Rep. 132, 1950 Okla. LEXIS 599 (Okla. 1950).

Opinions

GIBSON, J.

Herein, for convenience, Wood Oil Company and Chas. M. Day, plaintiffs in error, will be referred to as “Wood Oil”, and Toklan Production Company and J. G. Catlett, Inc., of defendants in error, as “Toklan”.

This is an appeal by Wood Oil from an order of the Corporation Commission declaring the right of Toklan, as owner of mineral interest in land within a drilling unit, to share in the production of oil well drilled by Wood Oil upon other land therein previous to formation of the unit.

[538]*538The drilling unit involved comprises the northeast quarter of the northwest quarter of section 14, township 5 N., range 2 west, McClain county, and was established by the commission on April 1, 1947, when the boundaries of Wayne Pool, theretofore established, were extended so as to include that area. Wood Oil, holder of oil and gas lease on south half of the north half of the quarter section, on December 21, 1946, obtained production from a well at the center of the east 10 acres. The east 20 acres of this tract constitutes the south half of the 40-acre drilling unit involved, and the well is in the southeast 10 acres thereof. Toklan owned a one-half undivided interest in the minerals in the north half of the north half of said quarter section, and the Sinclair Prairie Oil Company, was owner of an oil and gas lease on the remaining undivided mineral interest therein. The east 20 acres of this tract constitutes the north half of said drilling unit.

At the time of said extension and establishment of the drilling unit the Sinclair Prairie agreed to and thereafter did assign to Wood Oil its lease. Toklan, though duly notified, did not appear at the hearing. Pertinent to the rights of Toklan and Wood Oil, the pooling order contains the following:

“That in the event there are divided or undivided interests within any unit and the parties are unable to agree on a plan for the development for the unit, then the rights and equities shall be adjusted as provided for by subsection D of Section 4, Chapter 3, Title 52, Oklahoma Session Laws, 1945.”

Subsection (d), page 159, S. L. 1945, 52 O. S. Supp. 1945, sec. 87 (d), authorizes the commission to require parties having undivided interests to pool same for the purpose of the development upon terms and conditions as are just and reasonable and will afford to each opportunity to recover or receive, without unnecessary expense, his just and fair share of the oil and gas.

Toklan and Wood Oil reached no agreement concerning their rights in the premises, and on July 1, 1947, Tok-lan initiated the present action by filing before the commission an application for the determination by the commission of the rights of the parties. Upon hearing the commission, so far as material here, found:

“That the applicants in the case, under the law, are entitled, upon payment of their proportionate share of the cost of the drilling, completing and producing of the well, to take therefrom their proportionate share of the oil and gas, and to participate in the seven eighths (7/8ths) working interests in the well; that for the purpose of this order, the sum of $33,000.00 is fixed as the cost of development and equipping of said well;”

and adjudged:

“That the Wood Oil Company furnish to the Toklan Production Company and J. G. Catlett, Inc., within 10 days from the date of this order, a statement of the total cost of the completion, development and production of the well located on the SE/4 of the NE/4 of the NW/4 of Section 14, Township 5 North, Range 2 West, McClain County, Oklahoma; that the Wood Oil Company credit their actual expenditures with 7/8ths of the production from the well from the date of its first production to the date of the statement provided for herein; that within 10 days after receipt of such statement by the Toklan Production Company and J. G. Catlett, Inc., that they pay to the Wood Oil Company their proportionate share of the cost of completing and equipping the well, less the credit to such cost of the production from said well; that their proportionate share be determined in the relation that the acreage owned by them bears to the total acreage in the unit.”

As grounds for reversal it is urged, in substance, that the commission was without jurisdiction to make the order, that it erred in holding Toklan entitled to share in the production of the well, and erred in fixing the amount of the cost of the well.

The contention upon the question of jurisdiction is thus stated:

[539]*539“That neither Section 87, Title 52, O. S. Statutes of 1945, or Subdivision E thereof, grants or confers, directly or indirectly, any power, jurisdiction or authority upon the Corporation Commission to compel, by order or otherwise, the owner of a developed and producing tract after the same has been developed and included within a spacing unit, along with an unleased and undeveloped separately owned tract, to account to the owner of the unleased and undeveloped separately owned tract for any part of the oil produced from the 7/8ths working interest of his separately owned developed leasehold estate.”

This contention is broad enough to cover the production had after as well as that had before establishment of the spacing unit that includes the well and it was so intended. As the basis therefor it is urged that with the discovery and initial production there obtained a vested right in Wood Oil to continue to produce from the well for its sole use and benefit.

To the extent that it has reference to production had before the application of the power of the state in furtherance of conservation the contention is sound. But to the extent it has application to production had after the exercise of such power it is unsound. The law determinative of the right of the producer and its subordination to the police power of the state is thus declared in Champlin Refining Co. v. Corporation Commission of the State of Oklahoma, 286 U. S. 210, 76 L. Ed. 1062, 52 S. Ct. 559, 86 A. L. R. 403:

“Landowners do not have absolute title to the gas and oil that may permeate below the surface. . . . Every person has the right to drill wells and take from the pools below all oil and gas that he may be able to reduce to possession, including that coming from land belonging to others, . . . subject to the reasonable exertion of the power of the state to prevent unnecessary loss, destruction, or waste.”

We think it follows from this statement of the law that Wood Oil had title absolute to the oil by it produced prior to the pooling. We find nothing in the conservation law that purports to disturb the title of the producer thereto. The effect of the order of the commission is to treat the unitization effective as of the time of the drilling of the well and the interest of Toklan in the production coincident with that of Wood Oil. To the extent the order holds Wood Oil accountable to Toklan directly or indirectly for a share in the production before the spacing unit was created, same is not authorized by law and it was error to so hold.

That the commission was clothed with power to apportion the production had after pooling where necessary in furtherance of the conservation is without question. Declaratory of the existence of such power in the state, it is said in Hunter Co. v.

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Bluebook (online)
1950 OK 207, 239 P.2d 1023, 205 Okla. 537, 1 Oil & Gas Rep. 132, 1950 Okla. LEXIS 599, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-oil-co-v-corporation-commission-okla-1950.