110 So. 188 | La. | 1926
Lead Opinion
Defendant company is a Louisiana corporation, with its domicile and principal office in the city of Monroe, La., and is engaged in operating gas wells in the Monroe gas field, which embraces the parishes of Ouachita, Morehouse, and Union, in this state.
On the 20th of November, 1925, defendant corporation was convicted in the Third judicial district court for the parish of Union for an overdraft of gas from its Parks well No. 2, which is located in that parish.
Defendant corporation has appealed from the judgment against it, and relies, for the reversal of the conviction and sentence, upon numerous grounds.
1. The information filed by the district attorney of the Third judicial district charges that defendant, the Thrift Oil Gas *167 Company, "during the seven-day period, beginning November 13, 1924, and ending November 20, 1924, with force and arms, etc., did, at its Parks well No. 2, having a maximum flow of gas allowed by law of 4,794,000 cubic feet, willfully, feloniously, and maliciously draw from said well, during the said seven-day period, the sum of 6,551,000 cubic feet, an overdraft of 1,757,000 cubic feet of gas, contrary to the form of the statutes of the state of Louisiana in such cases made and provided, and against the peace and dignity of the same."
Defendant corporation has attacked the constitutionality of Act
The constitutionality of Act
Section 1 of article 6 of the Constitution creates and establishes the department of conservation. Section 1 of article 5, ranks the commissioner of conservation as one of the public officers composing the executive department of the state government. Sections 1 and 2 of article 2 divide the powers of the government of this state into three distinct departments, legislative, executive, and judicial, and provide that: *168
"No one of these departments, nor any person or collection of persons holding office in one of them, shall exercise power properly belonging to either of the others, except in the instances hereinafter expressly directed or permitted."
Section 1 of article 6 of the Constitution of 1921 declares that:
"The natural resources of the state shall be protected, conserved, and replenished; and for that purpose shall be placed under a department of conservation, which is hereby created and established. The department of conservation shall be directed and controlled by a commissioner of conservation to be appointed as elsewhere provided in this Constitution, who shall have and exercise such authority and power as may be prescribed by law. The Legislature shall enact all laws necessary to protect, conserve and replenish the natural resources of the state, and to prohibit and prevent the waste or any wasteful use thereof."
Section 2 of Act
"What percentage of consumption of natural gas produced by each gas well may be used in the manufacture of carbon black, said percentage of consumption to be based upon the potential capacity of such gas well, and which percentage shall not be less than fifteen per cent. and not more than twenty per cent. of the potential capacity of such well, provided that in fixing such basis of consumption the same rule, as far as possible, shall be applied to all gas wells in any producing gas area, and provided further, that the percentage of consumption may be increased in any particular well when the safety of such well may demand such increase."
Section 3 of said act provides:
"That the commissioner of conservation is authorized, empowered, directed and required to reduce the consumption of natural gas used in the manufacture of carbon black below the minimum fixed in section 2 of this act, after promulgation for sixty days of an order to that effect, whenever it is actually necessary to do so in obtaining an adequate supply of natural gas for domestic heating and lighting purposes in the state of Louisiana, and for manufacturing plants, industries and enterprises located *169 and operated within the state of Louisiana, other than those engaged in the manufacture of carbon black; provided that the conditions set out in this section shall not become effective until such time as the establishment of factories, industrial plants, and enterprises, the construction of pipe lines in the state of Louisiana, and domestic consumers in Louisiana, or any one of such shall provide a demand which necessitates the enforcement of the same."
Section 5 of said act declares:
"That the commissioner of conservation is authorized, empowered, and directed to make, adopt and promulgate orders, rules and regulations, which in his judgment may be necessary for the proper carrying out of the provisions of this act."
Section 6 of said act provides:
"That it shall be the duty of the commissioner of conservation to enforce the provisions of this act and the orders, rules and regulations made, adopted and promulgated by him."
Section 7 declares that:
"It shall be the duty of the department of justice to represent said commissioner in the enforcement of the provisions of this act, and of the orders, rules and regulations made, adopted and promulgated by said commissioner of conservation."
Section 8 provides that it shall be a misdemeanor for any person, partnership, firm, corporation, or association of persons to violate any of the provisions of this act, or any rule, regulation, or order of the commissioner of conservation prescribed by authority of this act, and fixes the fine at not less than $100 nor more than $500, makes daily violations of this section separate offenses, and for the third conviction subjects the offender to the forfeiture of the right to manufacture natural gas into carbon black, at the suit of the commissioner of conservation.
Does Act
Is the General Assembly of this state to be called into extra session every six months? Are special committees to be appointed at these semiannual sessions to test and regauge every gas well in the state? Are such committees to make a report to the committee on the whole as to whether the percentage of the potential capacity of each gas well should be increased or diminished? And, then, is a special act to be passed to continue in force the percentage of consumption from each gas well for the next six months?
Constitutions and laws are intended to be practical and sensible. They cannot well be impossible; nor should they be construed to defeat their evident purpose and intent.
The framers of the present Constitution were well aware of the fact that the commissioner of conservation is an officer in the executive branch of the state government. They were fully cognizant of the limitations placed upon each department of the state government by the organic law; yet, in face of all this, it is ordained that "the natural resources of the state shall be protected, conserved and replenished," and "the Legislature shall enact all laws necessary to protect, conserve and replenish the natural resources of the state, and to prohibit and prevent waste or any wasteful use thereof."
The Legislature has been careful not to leave the fixing of the percentage of gas to be used from wells to the mere arbitrary discretion of the commissioner of conservation.
The limits of the percentage have been established by the Legislature itself, in section 2 of Act
Defendant company today is receiving the maximum limit of 20 per cent.
Every condition under which this percentage may be increased or diminished has been specifically prescribed in sections 2 and 3 of that act, and it has been expressly provided, in order to prevent discrimination, that:
"In fixing such basis of consumption, the same rule, as far as possible, shall be applied to all gas wells in any producing gas area."
In determining the minimum and maximum limits of the percentage of gas to be used, the Legislature realized that producing wells gradually change in flow and condition, and that it was impossible, therefore, for the state to prescribe any fixed rule as a basis for a fixed percentage of the gas to be consumed.
The acts which must be performed in the conservation of the oil and gas of the state, in order to protect these natural resources against waste and wasteful use, are multitudinous.
It is not possible for the state itself to be present at each time the open flow capacity of a well is tested, in order to ascertain whether the percentage of the gas to be taken should be increased or decreased, according to the condition of the well or its production. Should the state attempt to exercise such authority, the whole time of the Legislature would be thus consumed; its acts would be endless; the thing would be utterly impracticable.
Oil or gas in the common reservoir is not susceptible of private ownership, but falls within the domain of the natural resources of the state, until severed from the soil and reduced to possession in accordance with the conservation laws of the state and the rules and regulations of the department of conservation. Frost-Johnson Lumber Co. v. Salling's Heirs,
The right of the state to protect, conserve, and replenish its natural resources is derived from the ownership of such resources.
In exercising its authority in the conservation *172 of its natural resources, the state is not dealing with the property of private individuals, nor attempting to regulate the owner's use of private property, but is acting directly with reference to the administration of property held by it under its sovereignty.
The owner of the soil is powerless to exploit beneath its surface for minerals in such manner as he may will. He must take of those natural resources, if at all, only in the way and to the extent and under the conditions prescribed by the sovereign.
He may not drill a well for gas, except under a permit from the department of conservation, and in the manner prescribed by conservation acts and the rules and regulations of the conservation department. Act
The state's ownership of oil and gas and forests cannot be severed from the soil, except by the permission of the state, and only then upon the payment of a royalty or excise tax for the privilege. Gulf Refining Co. v. McFarland,
The case at bar is therefore analogous to the cases of United States v. Grimaud et al.,
The act complained of in the Grimaud Case was a departmental regulation of the secretary of agriculture forbidding stock grazing on a forest reservation without a permit from the department, and providing a penalty.
In passing on this question, the Supreme Court of the United States said:
"In refusing permits to use a forest reservation for stock grazing, except upon stated terms or in stated ways, the secretary of agriculture merely asserts andenforces the proprietary rights of the United Statesover land which it owns. The regulation of the Secretary, therefore, is not an exercise of legislative, or even of administrative, power; but is anordinary and legitimate refusal of the landowner'sauthorized agent to allow persons having *173 no right in the land to use it as they will." (Italics ours.)
In the Grimaud Case, the court held that:
"Legislative power was not unconstitutionally delegated to the secretary of agriculture by the provisions of the forest reserve acts of June 4, 1897, * * * making criminal the violation of the rules and regulations covering forest reservations, made and promulgated by him under authority of those statutes."
A corporation may use the natural resources owned by the state for manufacturing purposes, it is true, but such right is a mere privilege granted by the state, which may be revoked for repeated violations of the conservation acts or of the rules and regulations of the department of conservation. Act 252, 1924, § 8; Act 91, 1922, § 8.
It is clear, therefore, that when the commissioner of conservation fixes the percentage of the gas to be taken from each well in the manufacture of carbon black, he is merely exercising the proprietary rights of the state in its natural resources by limiting the use of such resources to the end that they may be conserved.
The delegation by Act
The case of State v. Billot,
The Billot Case holds that Act
Section 1 of said act expressly declares:
"That the ownership and title to all fish, birds, and wild quadrupeds found in the state of Louisiana, or in the waters under the jurisdiction of the state not held by private ownership legally acquired, is hereby declared to be in the state."
It follows, therefore, that the state, in vesting the conservation commission with authority to fix the open season during which wild deer may be killed in the various parishes of the state, was dealing directly with the administration of its own property, unaffected by any private right or interest therein. It was the assertion and enforcement by the state through its authorized agent of rights purely proprietary, and not the exercise by such agent of any legislative function or power.
Animals feræ naturæ belong to no one. R.C.C. arts. 3412, 3415.
Game laws do not affect the private ownership of property, or its use. The right of a citizen of this state to take or kill game arises solely from the privilege or license which may be granted to him by the state, which has the authority to protect its natural wild life by prohibiting the taking or killing of birds and animals altogether for fixed periods, as well as by the establishment of closed seasons for that purpose. A citizen may take or kill game only at the times prescribed by the sovereign.
2. Defendant corporation contends that Act
Section 12 of Act
"Any corporation violating the provisions of this act, or any order of the commissioner of conservation promulgated by authority of this act, may be prosecuted by indictment, or information, the same as a natural person, and, in addition to and cumulative of any way now existing for bringing a corporation into court in criminal prosecutions, may be brought into court to answer such prosecutions by service of a certified copy of such indictments or information served in the same manner as a civil suit would be served with notice to appear and answer such charge within ten days. In the event of failure to appear and answer such charge within the said ten days judgment by default may be entered as in civil cases, which judgment by default shall constitute a joining of issues and be treated as a plea of not guilty, and on the third day thereafter if no appearance has been made in the meantime evidence may be introduced on the part of the state and the trial judge may render such judgment and sentence as the law and evidence warrant. The amount that such defendants are sentenced to pay may be collected as sentences in other criminal cases, and in addition thereto may be collected in the same manner and same way as judgments in civil cases."
In section 13 of Act
"The following definitions and constructions are made a part of and shall be used in construing the meaning and purposes of this act: * * *
"`Person' means a natural person, a partnership, an association of persons or a corporation."
In declaring, therefore, in section 12 of said act, that "Any corporation violating the provisions of this act, or any order of the commissioner of conservation promulgated by authority of this act, may be prosecuted by indictment or information, the same as a natural person," the Legislature, in view of *176 the definition given of "person" in section 13 of said act, has provided that a corporation may be prosecuted under section 12 of said act "the same as" a partnership, or association of persons, which are expressly included in the definition of "person."
Civil, or additional process, is provided for as to all corporations, firms, and association of persons, as section 10 of Act
"This act shall be cumulative of and in addition to all of the laws of this state which are not in direct conflict with the provisions hereof."
Additional civil process was necessarily provided for in section 12 of said act, as ideal persons can neither be arrested nor can they personally appear in court to plead to an indictment or information.
The laws of the state, prior to the adoption of section 12 of Act
It is not an unreasonable classification to provide a different or rather an additional process, as to ideal persons, who can be brought into court effectively only by civil process, in aid of a criminal prosecution.
3. Defendant corporation also attacks section 3 of Act
Section 3 provides that:
"Where the percentage hereinabove provided applied to any well reduces the amount allowed below one million cubic feet, there may be taken from such well a total of one million cubic feet, provided the back pressure as elsewhere herein provided for, shall be maintained."
Defendant corporation, in attempting to evade the process and penalties provided for *177
in section 12 of Act
"Appearer further shows that the gas well, styled in said bill of information as Parks No. 2, was drilled and completed prior to June 24, 1924, and prior to the passage of Act252 of 1924; that the provisions of said Act No.252 of 1924 do not apply to the production of gas from said gas well, in fact, are specially excluded therefrom by the recitals of said act; that the penalties prescribed therein and the mode of procedure thereunder are limited to the violations of the provisions of said Act of 1924; that there is no authority for the procedure taken herein, save for violations of said Act No.252 of 1924; and that no valid verdict or judgment may be rendered against appearer herein." Tr. 6 and 7.
This plea is not made in the alternative. Defendant corporation stood upon its plea, and went to judgment on it. The trial judge held in his opinion in the case that:
"It is evident to this court that in so far as gas wells drilled prior to June 24, 1924, Act252 of 1924, provides that the percentage of open flow capacity as fixed in Act91 of 1922 shall continue as the basis of the owner's right of use, because it is expressly so stated in Act252 of 1924."
Defendant corporation cannot be permitted to attack section 3 of said act upon the grounds alleged, in total disregard of its pleading, and of the judgment of the lower court, rendered and based upon the same. The opinion of the lower court as to this issue is correct.
4. In defendant's plea of unconstitutionality and motion to quash Act
(a) That said act is violative of article 3, § 16, of the Constitution of 1921 of the state of Louisiana, in that said act has more than one object, and more than one object expressed in its title.
It is contended by defendant's counsel that because Act
The act has but one object indicated in its title, and that is, "To conserve the natural gas resources of the state of Louisiana." The various provisions of the act are germane to that object, including the provision as to the prosecution of corporations, which is merely one of the means intended to carry the object of the act into effect.
"It is hardly worth while repeating what has been said so often, that the constitutional requirement that a statute shall have only one object does not mean that each and every means that may be deemed appropriate for accomplishing the object shall be provided for by a separate act." State v. Lahiff,144 La. 366 ,80 So. 590 ; State v. Doremus,137 La. 266 ,68 So. 605 ; City of Shreveport v. Hejin,140 La. 786 ,73 So. 996 .
5. It is contended by defendant corporation that Act
As has already been pointed out, the new provision for the prosecution of corporations, firms, and associations of persons, contained in section 12 of said act, by bringing defendants into court by civil process, is expressly declared to be "in addition to and cumulative of any way now existing for bringing *179 a corporation into court in criminal prosecutions."
Section 10 of said act declares also that:
"This act shall be cumulative of and in addition to all the laws of this state which are not in direct conflict with the provisions hereof."
It is clear, therefore, that any corporation, firm, or association of persons, for the violation of any criminal statute of this state, may be proceeded against by the service of additional civil process, as provided in section 12 of Act
6. The constitutionality of Act
Section 16 of article 3 of the Constitution of 1921 declares that:
"Every law enacted by the Legislature shall embrace but one object, and shall have a title indicative of such object."
We have already passed upon this objection adversely to the contention of the defendant.
Section 17 of said article is to the effect that:
"No law shall be revised or amended by reference to its title, but in such cases the act revived, or section as amended, shall be reenacted and published at length."
Act
There is similarity in some respects between each of these acts, but in other respects Act
Act
It is provided in section 12 of Act
The identical issue here involved arose in the case of Dehon v. Lafourche Basin Levee Board,
The court said in the Dehon Case:
"Act No. 84 was not written as an amendment of the old law. It is accessory of, and not contrary to, the old law. It contains new and distinct propositions needful, the Legislature must have thought, in carrying out the object in view.
"It would become cumbersome and confusing if, when it becomes necessary by legislation to delegate additional power in order to carry out the old law, it were required to insert, as plaintiffs contend, the whole of the old law in the new act, and publish the old and new law in full.
"We have no idea that such is the intention of article 32 of the Constitution, invoked by plaintiffs in their attack on Act No. 9, p. 8, of 1900, and Act. No. 84, p. 115, of 1902." Pages 774, 775 (34 So. 773).
Section 18 of article 3 of the Constitution of 1921 declares that:
"The Legislature shall never adopt any system or code of laws by general reference to such system or code of laws; but in all cases shall recite at length the several provisions of the laws it may enact."
In State v. De Hart,
"We are inclined to think that the words `any system or code of laws,' as used in the article, means systems or codes of law other than our own — systems of law, codes of law in vogue in other countries and jurisdictions; that these are not to be adopted by merely a general reference to the same, but that such systems or codes, or the several provisions of the same, wanted to be adopted or enacted here, are to be recited at length in the adopting act."
Act No.
7. Defendant corporation contends that section 12 of Act
This section has already been produced in this opinion. It is made sufficiently clear by its provisions that the prosecution is to be initiated by information or indictment, and each step of the civil process which may be taken in bringing the defendant into court, in the joining of issue, in the confirmation of default, and in the execution of the judgment, is in accordance with the Code of Practice of the state, and is sufficiently explicit.
8. Defendant corporation contends that the penalties prescribed and the mode of procedure in the prosecuting of corporations provided by Act
We have already discussed the matter of the mode of prosecution, and have held that it is applicable to any corporation violating the provisions of Act
Act
The penalty actually imposed upon defendant corporation in this case is no higher than *183
that provided by Act
It is also provided that:
"The percentage of the open-flow capacity of gas wells that may be utilized in burning carbon black shall be controlled by this act when the production of such wells is controlled by this act and by Act No.91 of 1922 when the percentage that such wells may produce is controlled by said Act91 of 1922." Section 5.
In other words, wells utilized in the manufacture of carbon black are excluded as to the percentage of the open-flow capacity fixed by Act
All wells, regardless of the use of the gas, if drilled after July 24, 1924, participate alike in the percentage of open-flow capacity fixed in the act. The procedure and penalties of Act
9. Defendant corporation filed a motion to quash the bill of information in this case on the ground that it does not clearly charge or sufficiently show any offense against defendant, "inasmuch as the production of gas well Parks No. 2 was drilled prior to June 24, 1924, the product of gas therefrom is regulated by the provisions of Act No.
Section 4, par. 2, of Act
"It shall be unlawful for any person, firm, corporation, or association of persons to take more gas from any well for a period of seven consecutive days than the maximum production allowed to be taken from such well would amount to for the same period."
The information in this case charges defendant corporation with an overdraft from its Parks No. 2 well of 1,757,000 cubic feet of gas "during the seven-day period beginning November 13, 1924, and ending November 20, 1924."
The information, therefore, is clearly drawn under the above provision of Act
It is immaterial under this provision whether the gas taken from the well during the period of seven consecutive days is used in the manufacture of carbon black, or for any other purpose, the gravamen of the offense being the excessive and unlawful quantity of gas taken and not the purpose for which it may be used.
We have already held that the provisions of Act
Defendant corporation has been allowed by the department of conservation the full maximum percentage of 20 per cent. under Act
This state of facts necessarily shows that the overdraft was "willfully" made, and that the penalty of the statute was justly incurred. Section 8, Act
It was not necessary, therefore, that the trial judge should charge himself that, in order to support a conviction in this case, the state must prove that the gas drawn from defendant company's well, Parks No. 2, was used in the manufacture of "carbon black."
Nor was it necessary for the trial judge to hold that the state must prove that the commissioner of conservation had fixed and determined on October 1, 1922, and semiannually thereafter, under Act
"The commissioner of conservation shall make, or cause to be made, a test of the open flow capacity of each producing well once every twelve months."
The evidence shows that the test of Parks well No. 2 was made October 7, 1924, and the open-flow capacity of the well fixed at 4,647,360 cubic feet of gas. Defendant company is prosecuted for an overdraft of this well between the dates of November 13 and 20, 1924. The law was complied with as to the time of making the test. *186
Nor was it necessary for the state to have proven, to support a conviction herein, that more than 1,000,000 cubic feet of gas per day was drawn from the Parks well No. 2, nor any of the other contentions of defendant company as to the quantity of gas, based upon the provisions of Act
Defendant company can find no satisfaction in the fact that, in fixing its percentage of gas, the supervisor of minerals division, through error, stated in his letter to said company of date November 12, 1924:
"For wells whose quotas figure less than 1,000,000 cubic feet per day, such wells will be allowed to take 1,000,000 cubic feet, or whatever lesser amount that can be taken while holding a working pressure equal to one-half of the closed pressure, the working pressure in no case to be below 200 pounds per square inch." Tr. 38, 39, 84.
Defendant company was fully aware, even before the order of the department of conservation was issued, that the daily quota for its Parks well No. 2 was 929,472 cubic feet of gas. Defendant was also fully advised to the same effect in the letter of November 12, 1924, and was notified in a circular issued two days afterwards by the supervisor of minerals division of the error made as to the daily quota of 1,000,000 cubic feet.
The lawful daily quota of 929,472 cubic feet was not to take effect until November 20, 1924, and said company was notified, therefore, as to the error as to the 1,000,000 cubic feet quota, in ample time before the order of *187 the department of conservation went into effect.
As a matter of fact, defendant company made no mistake as to the quantity of gas that it could lawfully draw from its well, under the order of the department of conservation.
10. Defendant company contends that the department of conservation cannot secure any conviction in this case, because it has never adopted and promulgated, in accordance with the requirements of law, any rule or regulation, under the authority of the provisions of Act
Rule 43 of the department of conservation fixing the percentage of gas which may be used under Act
While it is stated in section 5 of said act that the commissioner of conservation is authorized and empowered and directed to make, adopt, and promulgate orders, rules, and regulations which in his judgment may be necessary for the proper carrying out of the provisions of this act, there is no provision in said act requiring any particular method of such promulgation. It was left by the Legislature to the discretion of the conservation department as to the manner in which it would promulgate its rules and regulations.
These rules are usually published in booklets and distributed to owners of gas wells and the public generally.
Defendant corporation's Parks No. 2 well is rated as an "old well" in the order of the department of conservation in this case fixing the open-flow capacity of this well and its daily quota based upon 20 per cent. of the *188 capacity. Defendant company received this order as its authority for taking gas from its well; in fact, took the gas as soon as the well was tested and its capacity was ascertained, and before the order was issued. Necessarily, defendant corporation, being engaged in operating old gas wells, must be presumed to have notice of the rules and regulations adopted by the department of conservation fixing the percentage of gas to be used from such wells. It had special notice of the order in this case fixing that percentage, and, moreover, acquiesced therein.
11. The motion in arrest of judgment filed in the case is but a repetition of the matters set out in the motion to quash and in the exception to the service of citation and process. It is stated in said exception, however, that a copy of the bill of information herein and citation were served on defendant corporation in the parish of Ouachita by the sheriff of Union parish, beyond the confines of his territorial jurisdiction and without authority of law. We find no citation in the record, and consequently, no proof of the matter complained of, by defendant corporation.
12. The motion for new trial is based largely upon the contention that the state has failed to make out the case by sufficient proof. In the face of the admission made by the manager of defendant company that it overdrew 44,000 cubic feet of gas under the new test of open-flow capacity of Parks well No. 2, made by the department of conservation on October 7, 1924, the contention of defendant company does not seem to be well founded.
It was not necessary for the state to prove that defendant company had drawn in excess of 1,000,000 cubic feet of gas per day, as permitted by section 3 of Act
Nor was it necessary for the state to prove that the gas drawn was used in the manufacture of "carbon black," for the reasons already assigned.
We agree with the trial judge that the evidence shows that the overdraft of gas was "willful" in this case, and was made after previous warning as to other overdrafts.
It is conceded that section 8 of Act
The complaint made in the motion for new trial as to the process used in this case has already been passed upon.
It is therefore ordered that the conviction and sentence appealed from be affirmed.
ST. PAUL, J., dissents.
Dissenting Opinion
My opinion is that the proviso in section 3 of the Act
I respectfully dissent from the opinion and decree submitted in this case.
Addendum
Defendant has raised several issues, but since it would not be possible to state them clearly without first stating the laws applicable to the consumption of natural gas, we will first set forth those laws and thereafter proceed to consider the issues raised so far as may be necessary for the decision of this case.
"An act to regulate and control the use of natural gas in the manufacture of carbon black, and to prescribe penalties for the violation of this act."
It provides, inter alia, that the commissioner of conservation shall fix and determine the percentage of natural gas which may be used in the manufacture of carbon black, which percentage shall be not less than 15 nor more than 20 per cent. of the potential capacity of any well. It further provides that any person, firm, association, or corporation, who shall violate such regulation shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, etc.; but it provides no process for bringing into court any corporation charged with a violation of its provisions. There are also other minor features to the act, but they are not material here.
The act provides numerous regulations for the drilling and operating of gas wells (section 2). It also provides that the percentage of gas to be taken from a well for any purpose shall depend upon the acreage on which the well is drilled, that percentage being based on the open flow (potential) capacity of the well, and being as high as 24 per cent. for a well on 160 acres and as low as 7 per cent. for a well drilled on less than 5 acres; provided however, that:
"Where the percentages hereinabove provided [when] applied to any well, reduces the amount allowed below one million cubic feet, [per day] there may be taken from such well a total of one million cubic feet, provided the back pressure as elsewhere herein provided for, shall be maintained." Section 3.
Now the back pressure is provided for as follows:
"It shall be unlawful for any person, firm, corporation, or association of persons * * * to take any gas whatever from any gas well when the working pressure of such well is less than one-half the closed [back] pressure of such well, and provided that the working pressure of any well cannot be reduced below 200 pounds regardless of what the closed [back] pressure is." Section 4.
From which it is clear that no gas at all may be taken from a well when the closed (back) pressure falls below 200 pounds; but that as long as any gas at all may be taken from a well, then at least 1,000,000 feet may be taken therefrom (under the conditions above stated) regardless of the acreage on which the well is drilled.
"Provided that the percentage of the open flow capacity of each well as fixed in this section, depending on location [acreage], shall not apply to any well or wells heretofore drilled, * * * [which] shall be allowed to produce the same percentage of the open flow capacity that such wells could produce under Act
91 of 1922." Section 3.
But this contention is unsound, for the next clause of the proviso relied upon distinctly says that such wells "shall beallowed to produce the same percentage of the open-flow capacity that such wells could produce under Act
Its purpose in seeking to have it declared that its well is governed exclusively by the former act is to escape the process provided in section 12 of the later act, by which corporations may be brought to the bar by a mere summons or citation, instead of by an impossible capias; for, as we said at the beginning, the former act provides no process for bringing to the bar anycorporation violating its provisions.
But this contention is untenable. The act of 1924 was intended to be, and is, the paramount statute regulating the production of natural gas in this state. "This act shall be cumulative of and in addition to all the laws of this state which are not in direct conflict with the provisions hereof." Section 10. Hence all laws on the same subject-matter, and not in conflict with this act, are by this clause incorporated into this statute and made part thereof as fully as if set forth in full therein. So that Act
Hence the sum and substance of this case is, that there is but one statute regulating the amount of natural gas which may be taken from a well, and that statute is the Act of 1924, with aproviso therein incorporated to the effect that a well drilled before the passage of said act may still take at least the same percentage of gas as it might have taken under the Act of 1922.
OVERTON, J., concurs in decree.
LAND, J., dissents and hands down reasons.
Addendum
Section 3 of Act
"The percentage of the open-flow capacity that gas wells may be allowed to produce or that may be drawn from each gas well shall depend upon the acreage upon which the well is drilled."
A schedule of percentages is fixed in this section of the act ranging from 24 per cent. of the open-flow capacity of a well drilled on a tract of 160 acres or more to less than 7 per cent. of the open-flow capacity of a well drilled on a 5-acre tract.
It is declared in this section that, "Where the percentages hereinabove provided applied to any well reduces the amount allowed below one million cubic feet, there may be taken from such well a total of one million cubic feet, provided the back pressure, as elsewhere herein provided for, shall be maintained" — i.e., "provided that the working pressure of any well cannot be reduced below 200 pounds regardless of what the closed pressure is." Paragraph 2, § 4, Act
It is expressly provided in section 3 of said act:
"That the percentage of the open-flow capacity of each well as fixed in this section depending on location, shall not apply to any well or wells heretofore drilled."
It is conceded that defendant company's well was completed before the passage of Act *196
252 of 1924. The testimony in the case shows that at no time have the acreage percentages fixed by the act of 1924 been applied to the well of defendant company, which has been operated all the time under the percentages of Act
It is not possible to apply the acreage percentages of Act
"The commissioner of conservation may grant permits for the building of plants to burn natural gas into carbon black under the conditions and provisions of Act No.
91 of 1922, except that the percentage of the open-flow capacity of gas wells that may be utilized in burning carbon black shall be controlled by this act [Act252 of 1924], when the production of such well is controlled by this act [Act252 of 1924], and by Act91 of 1922 when the percentage that such wells may produce is controlled by said Act91 of 1922."
Section 2 of Act
"That the commissioner of conservation is authorized, directed, and empowered to fix and determine on the 1st day of October, 1922, and semiannually thereafter, what percentage of consumption of natural gas produced by each gas well may be used in the manufacture of carbon black, said percentage of consumption to be based upon the potential capacity of such gas well, and which percentage shall not be less than fifteen per cent. and not more than twenty per cent. of the potential capacity of such well, provided that in fixing such basis of consumption the same rule, as far as possible, shall be applied to all gas wells in any producing *197 gas area, and provided further, that the percentage of consumption may be increased in any particular well when the safety of such well may demand such increase."
It is manifest that it is only where the acreage percentages provided for in Act
Section 3 of Act
It is clear that there can be no practical classification whatever under the police power of the state based upon mere capacity of gas wells, as this varies in each well when brought in, as well as at different periods of production in the same well. Necessarily, a fixed percentage of the capacity of each well must be made the basis of regulation as to the quantity to be taken.
This is what the Legislature has done under Act
The percentage of gas to be pulled under Act
Under Act
It is plain that the owner of a 5-acre tract, or less, may exhaust the gas under an adjoining tract of 160 acres or more. The right of the owner of a small tract to take gas from the common reservoir would be, therefore, out of all proportion to the extent of his ownership, unless restricted.
That acreage, or proportionate ownership of the surface, is a fair and reasonable basis for the computation of the percentage of gas to be taken must be admitted.
Under section 3 of Act
The equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment does not take from the state the power to classify in the adoption of police laws, but admits of the exercise of a wide scope of discretion in that regard, and avoids what is done only when it is without any reasonable basis and therefore is purely arbitrary. When the classification in such a law is called in question, if any state of facts reasonably can be conceived that would sustain it, the existence of that state of facts at the time the law was enacted must be assumed. One who assails the classification in such a law must carry the burden of showing that it does not rest upon any reasonable basis, but is essentially arbitrary. Lindsley v. *199
Natural Carbonic Gas Co.,
This burden has not been discharged by defendant company in the case at bar. Defendant company's well was drilled prior to Act
It must be assumed that the Legislature was aware of the average capacity of old gas wells at the time of the passage of Act
The impracticability, if not impossibility, of adjusting old gas wells to the same condition as that of new wells is apparent, and must have been well known to the General Assembly of this state at the date of the adoption of Act
For these reasons, I respectfully dissent *200
from the opinion of the majority of the court as to the holding that defendant company is entitled to claim the 1,000,000 cubic feet of gas in this case, and therefore is not guilty of violating Act
I adhere, therefore, to our original decree affirming the conviction of defendant company in the lower court.