RICKS EXPLORATION COMPANY, Plaintiff-appellant, v. OKLAHOMA WATER RESOURCES BOARD, Defendant-appellee, and RICKS EXPLORATION COMPANY, Plaintiff-appellant, v. OKLAHOMA WATER RESOURCES BOARD, Defendant-appellee.
Nos. 58350, 59172
Supreme Court of Oklahoma
Oct. 16, 1984
Rehearing Denied Feb. 26, 1985
695 P.2d 498
OPALA, Justice.
As Corrected Oct. 16, 1984.
R. Thomas Lay, Dean A. Couch, Oklahoma City, for defendant-appellee.
OPALA, Justice.
The first-impression question presented for review is: Does a mineral lessee have standing before the Oklahoma Water Resources Board to seek a non-domestic groundwater use permit under the Oklahoma Groundwater Law,
Ricks Exploration Company [Ricks], mineral lessee from a severed mineral estateholder applied to the Oklahoma Water Resources Board [Board] for both a provisional temporary permit and a special permit to withdraw fresh groundwater from the land subject to its lease for use in its oil-and-gas operations. Both permits were denied. These rulings were affirmed by the district court. Ricks brought separate appeals from the two judgments.
I
PROCEDURAL FRAMEWORK
A. Rick‘s First Appeal
Ricks sought a provisional temporary permit for groundwater use which, under the Board‘s rules,1 its Executive Director
The district court dismissed the appeal without prejudice to Rick‘s efforts to obtain another permit under the groundwater law. Its decision was based upon a construction of
The first appeal is fraught with a patent procedural infirmity. Firstly, the district court was without jurisdiction to review the director‘s ex parte ruling, because this decision did not amount to an appealable order. The applicant remained entirely free to press the Board for an adversary hearing on its application for a groundwater permit and for a consideration of the issues in conformity with the minimum standards of due process. The action of the director did not preclude the applicant from proceeding further before the Board; nor did the director‘s letter amount to a final disposition of an individual proceeding within the meaning of
Parties to an action cannot by agreement so frame the issues as to extend them beyond the jurisdiction of the tribunal.12 This court cannot affirm a district court decision which—based on the issues raised—would give the district court a sweep of cognizance broader than that sanctioned by law.13 We must hence notice sua sponte the jurisdictional defect14 and direct that, upon remand, the district court modify its decision by effecting a dismissal of the case for want of jurisdiction. In this manner the proceeding will stand terminated by a decision dehors the merits of the case.
B. Ricks’ Second Appeal
After the denial of his first application, Ricks then sought a special permit from the Board. The Board denied the second application following a hearing. In its order, the Board expressed the view that Ricks did not have standing qua landowner to seek a groundwater permit and found that Ricks had not obtained permission of the surface owners to withdraw and use fresh groundwater. Rick‘s second appeal to the district court was brought from a final Board determination under
II
PUBLIC LAW AND PRIVATE LAW CONSIDERATIONS
Ricks contends that it qualifies as a landowner within the meaning of
The ownership of oil-and-gas carries with it by implication the means of enjoying the mineral estate.16 It is well established that the owner of oil-and-gas interest has the right to enter upon and make reasonable use of the surface in exploring for and extracting the mineral deposits.17 Any limitation upon the right of entry or the right to extract minerals is in derogation of this common-law interest. While it is clear that the owner of the surface estate also owns the underlying fresh groundwater (
The sole object of the groundwater law, enacted in 1972, appears to be the regulation and control of nondomestic use of groundwater. The Act provides for the allocation of water to each acre of land overlying fresh water basins or subbasins. Before a permit may be issued, the Board must first make the allocation and then determine whether the applicant meets the statutory requirements for a groundwater permit.21 At issue here is whether Ricks meets the “ownership” requirement of
“*** D. Except as provided in Section 1020.21 of this title, no permits shall
be issued to an applicant who does not own the land on which the well is to be located, or hold a valid lease from the owner of such land permitting withdrawal of water from such basin or subbasin.”
By interpreting this section to exclude owners of interest other than surface from the allowable class of applicants, the Board in effect has placed the mineral owner in the position of having to bargain with the surface owner for what is recognized as his common-law right of free access to reasonable use of groundwater for oil and gas purposes. In order to reach the result sought by the Board, we would have to conclude that the Act operates to alter private commonlaw rights of the mineral owner. We cannot so hold.
A mineral owner‘s claim to groundwater use is a “vested right” created by common law.23 Once created, it becomes absolute, and is protected from legislative invasion by Art. 5 §§ 52 and 54, Okl. Const.24 A vested interest will not be deemed abrogated or impaired except by explicit legislative extinguishment effective prospectively.25 Laws depriving a party of private rights should be strictly construed.26
Section 1020.11(D) does not manifest legislative intent to alter a mineral owner‘s private interest in groundwater use. In ascertaining what class of applicants meets the
Public law will not be interpreted as legally destroying private rights by inference.28 Absent some clear statutory mandate, we are powerless to strike down a valuable right cognizable at common law merely upon an inference sought to be drawn from a public-law statute. When a statute is susceptible of more than one construction, it must be given that which makes it free from constitutional doubt rather than one which would make it fraught with fundamental-law infirmities.29
Mineral lessees have a quantum of recognizable proprietary interest in the reasonable nondomestic use of groundwater. That interest is sufficient to place them in the category of “owners” within the meaning of
The judgment under consideration in the first appeal [58,350] is reversed with directions to dismiss the case for want of subject matter jurisdiction. The trial court‘s judgment under review in the second appeal [59,172] is also reversed and the cause is remanded with directions to afford the mineral lessee standing as an applicant for a groundwater permit.34
BARNES, C.J., LAVENDER, DOOLIN, and HARGRAVE, JJ., and YOUNG, S.J., concur.
HODGES, WILSON and KAUGER, JJ., dissent.
SIMMS, V.C.J., certified his disqualification and YOUNG, S.J., was assigned to sit by designation.
ALMA WILSON, Justice, dissenting:
Whether or not a mineral lessee seeking to appropriate surface water, without the consent of the surface landowner, has standing before the Oklahoma Water Resources Board is properly governed by the law in force at the time application is made.
Title
“The owner of the land owns water standing thereon, or flowing over or under its surface, but not forming a definite stream ...; provided further, that nothing contained herein shall be construed to limit the powers of the Oklahoma Water Resources Board to
grant permission to build or alter structures on a stream pursuant to Title 82 to provide for the storage of additional water the use of which the landowner has or acquires by virtue of this Act.” (Emphasis added.)
The owner of the land is thus vested with absolute ownership of the surface waters upon his land. This vested property right is in no way limited by common law principles. The distinction rests upon cognizance of the disparity between entry upon the land/reasonable use of the surface of the land, as opposed to a lessee‘s appropriation of water itself, belonging to the landowner.
An owner of an oil and gas interest is not the owner of the land. While the owner of oil and gas interests may enter upon and make reasonable use of the land surface in connection with exploring for and extracting mineral deposits, he is not entitled to ex-parte appropriation of the landowner‘s property to his own use without just compensation. Non-consensual impairment of a landowner‘s vested property right to the surface waters upon his land constitutes an unconstitutional taking. Accordingly,
“...D. Except as provided in Section 1020.1 of this title, no permits shall be issued to an applicant who does not own the land on which the well is to be located, or hold a valid lease from the owner of such land permitting withdrawal of water from such basin or subbasin.” (Emphasis added.)
Water is a valuable natural resource, having a definite economic value. Where a fixed quantity of water is appropriated for use to the overlying surface owner, serious disputes often arise. Consider for example, the conflict between an irrigator-surface owner who intends to use or is using the full amount of water apportioned to his acreage, and a mineral lessee who intends to use a quantity of the same water to carry on his oil and gas operations. Such conflicts are better resolved contractually through purchase or lease of water rights. Their resolution is not contemplated by the Oklahoma Ground Water Law.
OPALA
JUSTICE
