Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion

Hon. Ernest 0. Thompson, Chairman Railroad Commission of Texas Tribune Building Austin, Texas Opinion NO. S-123 Re: Authority of the Railroad Commission to require that a certain portion of the natural gas production of the Texas Hugoton Field be dedicated to the sur- face u*e of fuel for irrigation pumps, and related questions. Dear General Thompson: You have requested the opinion of this office as follows: "The Commission has been petitioned to issue cer- tain orders relating to the usage of natural gas for a localized area and purpose',namely, for irrigation pump fuel in the Texas Hugoton Field. The Commission's au- thority to issue the type orders requested is not speci- fically set out in the statutes; 60 a request is hereby made for an opinion concerning the Commission's authority in such matters. “1.) Can the Commission Issue an order requiring that a certain portion of the production from a field, or from a certain well, be dedicated to a local use, (i.e. fuel for irrigation pumps) and further, that such production not be charged against the allowable? “2.) Can the Commission issue an order providing that a royalty owner, within the confines of a field, has the right to use whatever portion of his one-eighth of the gas produced for a local use? “3.) Can the Commission issue an order which provides that the act of delivering natural gas from a gas well for use 86 pump fuel for irrigation pumps on the 8ame land does not make the deliver- er a gas utility company? Hon. Ernest 0. Thompson, page 2 (S-123) "4.) Can the Commission issue an order which provides that the act of delivery of gas from a pipeline for such use does not make the deliverer a gas utility?" In the interest of clarity, we set out our replies to the enum- erated questions in their listed order. (1) The recent case of Railroad Commission Y. Rowan Oil Co., Tex. 259 S.W.2d 173 (1953), (the Spraberry Case), reiterated thefamil?$rinciple that: "An order of the Railroad Commission must be bottomed upon a specific grant of power either contained in the Con- stitution or delegated by the Legislature." The constitutional power of the Railroad Commission to issue or- ders for the prevention of waste of natural gas as a part of the natural resources of this State is found in Section 59a of Article XVI of the Con- stitution of Texas, and the statutory power of the Commission to regulate the production of natural gas is found in Title 102, V.C.S. Articles 6014, 6015, 6o4gc, 6049d, V.C.S., authorize wells to be shut down completely in order to prevent waste (Railroad Commission v. Rowan Oil Co., supra),.and Art. 6008 authorizes the Commission to prorate production from gas wells to prevent waste or to protect correlative-rights.- Corzelius V. Harrell, 143 Tex. 509, 186 S.W.2d 961 (1945). It is therefore apparent that for an or- der to be valid requiring a part of the production of gas from certain wells to be utilized for certain surface uses, such order must be reasonably re- lated to the prevention of waste or the adjustment of correlative rights. See Railroad Commission Y. Rowan Oil Co., supra. As you know, waste in connection with the production of natural gas from gas wells has been defined by law. Art. 6008. The Commission also has authority to define factually what constitutes waste in a particular field, so long as the definition is reasonable, non-discriminatory and non-confiscatory. Railroad Commission v.~Rowan Oil Co., supra. With these fundamentals in mind, we have concluded that an order of the Commission requiring that a certain portion of the production from a field or from a certain well shall be dedicated to a surface use for fuel for irrigation pumps is not 86~8 matter of law reasonably related to the prevention of waste or to the adjustment of correlative rights within the conservation statutes. Arts. 6008, 6014, 6015, 6049c, 6049d, V.C.S. - Cor- zelius Y, Harrell, supra; Railroad Commission Y. Rowan Oil Co., supra. That being true, the Commission does not have authority to promulgate such an order. Hon. Ernest 0. Thompson, page 3 (S-123) We similarly conclude that all such production should be charged against the allowable and recorded, under Art. 6008. Although~the Commis- sion is vested with a broad discretion in gas proration matters (Art. 6038; 31-A Tex.Jur. 659, Sec. 389), we think that allowing such a credit on the allowables for such irrigation pump fuei purposes would be discriminatory between operators, and as such invalid. (Art. 6008; 31-A Tex.Jur. 645, Sec. 383). (2) The obligation to pay royalties, either in money or in kind, is a matter which is resolved in the contract between the lessor and the lessee. Judge Smedley described the contractual relationship arising under an oil and gas lease as follows, in Tennant Y. Dunn, 130 Tex. 285, 110 S.W.2d 53 (1937): "The parties to a contract may agree upon a standard of value, and they are bound by such agreement unless the standard fails," To the extent, therefore, that the lease contracts call for royalty payment of the gas in kind, this is a contractual obligation be- tween the parties subject to approprdate enforcement as such. If such contracts do not embody provisions calling for royalty payments in kind, there is no authority for the Commission to alter, amend or abrogate these contractual provisions by administrative fiat, and for the Commis- sion to attempt to do so would raise serious constitutional questions. (3)(h) We group your third and fourth questions because they pertain to the single issue of whether the Commission can issue an order providing that either an operator or a pipeline company delivering gas for irrigation fuel pump use would not become a gas utility as a result of such action. Since the definition of a "gas utility" is technically pre- scribed by law in Art. 6050, the Commission is without authority to issue an order relieving an operator or a,pipeline from inclusion with- in the statute, as there is no discretion'reposed in the Commission in this regard. Whether or not an operator or a pipeline is within the statutory classification of a "gas utility" as defined in Art. 6050, requires the examination and resolution of the facts in each instance. Our determination of whether or not the actions in question would legal- ly classify the operators or the pipelines as "gas utilities", within the contemplation of Art. 6050, et seq., has not been asked, and our answer would depend upon an examination of all of the circumstances in- volved in the complete operation. Of course, irrespective of such de- termination, the statutory definition of a "gas utility" prescribed by the Legislature could clearly be amended to provide a specific exception for the operations described in your request. Hon. Ernest 0. Thompson, page 4 (S-123) The Railroad Commission does not have authority to issue an order requiring that a certain portion of natural gas production from the Texas Hugoton Field shall be dedi- cated to the specific surface use of fuel~for irrigation Pump*, and the Commission cannot order that such production shall not be charged against the appropriate allowable. Whether a royalty owner may take his gas royalty in kind is a contractual obligation to be negotiated between the contracting parties. Whether or not the act of delivering gas from a gas well or from a pipeline constitutes such deliverer a "gas uti+ity" is to be determined by the stat- utory definition prescribed in Art. 6050. APPROVED: Yours very truly, Willis E. Gresham JOHN BEN SHEPPERD Reviewer Attorney General of Texas w. v. Geppert Reviewer Robert S. Trotti First Assistant