Wood Oil Co. v. Corporation Commission

268 P.2d 878
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 12, 1954
Docket35727
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 268 P.2d 878 (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, 268 P.2d 878 (Okla. 1954).

Opinion

BLACKBIRD, Justice.

This is an appeal from an order of the Corporation Commission in proceedings which may be termed a “sequel” to Wood Oil Co. v. Corporation Commission, 205 Okl. 537, 239 P.2d 1023, 1025. The same parties and property and one of the same Corporation Commission orders are in *880 volved here as there. As in that bpinion, the plaintiffs in, error, Wood Oil Company and Chas..M. Day, will be referred to herein as “Wood Oil” and the defendants in error, Toklan Production' Company and J. G. Catlett, Inc., as “Toklan”. The Corporation Commission will be referred to merely as the “Commission.”

As shown in Wood Oil Co. v. Corporation Commission, supra, Wood Oil is the owner of an oil and gas lease on the 5½ 1^½ NW% of Section 14, Township S North, Range 2 West, McClain County, Oklahoma. Toklan owns such a lease on the N½ N½ of said quarter-section. No well has ever been drilled on this 40 acres.

On December 21, 1946', Wood Oil obtained production from a well in the center of the east 10 acres of its lease. At a regular hearing held pursuant to Toklan’s application, the Commission-on April 1, 1947, entered its Order No. 19890, in Cause C D No.' 1375, extending the boundaries of the Wayne Pool (established by one of its' previous orders) to include the area here involved, and created a drilling unit of the NE%; NW% of the above named Section 14. Though duly notified, Toklan’ did not appear at this hearing. As to the rights of parties owning ' mineral interests in' land overlying the pool' (including Toklan and Wood Oil), the pooling' order (Order No. 19890 in C D 1375) contained the following pertinent provisions:

“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 sub-section D of Section 4, Chapter 3, Title 52, Oklahoma Session Laws, 1945.”

Toklan and Wood Oil reached no agreement concerning their rights in the premises as contemplated in the above quoted provision of Order No. 19890, and' thereafter Toklan filed an application commencing Cause No. I486, before the Commission, for the determination of such rights, at -the conclusion of which the. Commission entered its Order No. 20690, which was appealed from in Wood Oil Co.- v. Corporation Commission, supra. As.- shown, in the opinion in that case,

“ * * * the Commission * * *, 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 (%ths) 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 Tok-lan Production Company and J. G. Cat-lett, 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 %ths 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.’ ” (Emphasis added.)

As shown in the above- cited opinion, this Court in that case reversed the Commission’s Order No. 20690, in-so'far as it gave' Toklan any share in the Wood Oil’s well’s production before the creation of the spacing unit, but upheld said order as to the above described interest it gave Toklan in the well’s production subsequent to - the creation of said unit We further upheld the Commission’s finding of $33;000,- as to the cost, of the well involved, against Wood Oil’s, contention that the further sum of *881 $50,000 should have' been added to this, as representing the amount that the well hole had cost a former lessee and stranger to the action, before Wood Oil acquired the lease and converted the hole into a producing well by .drilling it deeper.

From the above, it is obvious that our decision or opinion in Wood Oil Co. v. Corporation Commission, supra, reversed the Commission’s order. No. 20690, only in part, or to a certain extent, and left some of the matters involved for' further determination and adjustment by the Commission, to which the case was' “remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent • with the views1 herein expressed.” Notwithstanding this, and for some unexplained reason, when the mandates in this case and the one in C D No. 1505, whose final order was affirmed in Wood Oil Co. v. Corporation Commission, 205 Okl. 534, 239 P.2d 1021, went to the Commission, they were spread of record there by an order representing that both of said appealed orders were then “final and should be enforced by the” Commission’s Conservation, Department. As it will hereinafter be necessary to repeatedly refer to both the above cited opinion and to Wood Oil Co. v. Corporation Commission, 205 Okl. 537, 239 P.2d 1023, we will refer to the former as “Wood Oil Case 1” and to the latter as “Wood Oil Case 2.”

During all of the time following the entry of the Commission’s drilling and spacing order, of April 1, 1947, hereinbefore referred to, qne-fourth .of the lessee’s share of production from the Wood Oil’s well had been impounded with - its pipe line purchaser, and the amount which the. Tok-lan was to pay Wood Oil1 as its share of the total cost of the “completion, development and production of- the well” and the exact amount of the well’s oil runs that Toklan was to receive, had never been determined as -directed by the Commission’s Order No. 20690. Shortly after the Commission’s Journal Entry, spreading of- record the mandates as above described, Wood Oil, despite the fact that they had furnished Toklan no -statement to enable -the aforementioned cost participation determination-as directed by Order No. 20690, and despite the declaration in paragraph 2 of'said order that in the' event of a dispute on that subject, the Commission specifically reserved jurisdiction to- resolve it, filed suit in the Federal Court to recover these impounded oil runs' or their proceeds from the -pipeline purchaser. The pipeline company inter-pleaded Toklan, and after--its intervention, the Federal Judge, at a pre-trial hearing of'the cause, decided to hold the matter in abeyance until the above described matters referred to in Order No. 20690, could properly (and in accord with our views on its appeal in Wood Oil Case 2) be determined. Accordingly, Toklan then filed an “Amended Application” in the Commission’s C D 1486, and thus began the present chapter in the controversy between the parties.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

SOUTHSTAR EXPLORATION v. CORPORATION COMMISSION OF STATE OF OKLA.
2022 OK CIV APP 9 (Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, 2022)
Marathon Oil Co. v. Corporation Commission
1994 OK 28 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1994)
Eason Oil Co. v. Howard Engineering, Inc.
1990 OK 101 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1990)
Anderson v. Dyco Petroleum Corp.
1989 OK 132 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1989)
Kuykendall v. Helmerich & Payne, Inc.
741 P.2d 869 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1987)
Imperial Oil of North Dakota, Inc. v. Industrial Commission
406 N.W.2d 700 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1987)
WL Kirkman, Inc. v. Oklahoma Corp. Com'n
676 P.2d 283 (Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, 1984)
Ward v. Corporation Commission
1972 OK 122 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1972)
Sylvania Corp. v. Kilborne
271 N.E.2d 524 (New York Court of Appeals, 1971)
Cox v. Davison
397 S.W.2d 200 (Texas Supreme Court, 1965)
Wilcox Oil Company v. Corporation Commission
1964 OK 131 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1964)
Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line Co. v. Corporation Commission
285 P.2d 847 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1955)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
268 P.2d 878, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-oil-co-v-corporation-commission-okla-1954.