SUN OIL CO. v. RAILROAD COMMISSION et al.
No. 8052.
Court of Civil Appeals of Texas. Austin.
Dec. 22, 1933.
Rehearing Denied Feb. 7, 1934.
68 S.W.2d 609
It was further said in that case: “If under such a showing it can be said that the property sought to be condemned is not subject to condemnation it must be presumed that the county court will so decide. It cannot be presumed that its decision will be incorrect. In any event, appellant‘s remedy for an erroneous decision by that court will be by appeal to a higher court in which is vested the power to correct the error.”
A writ of error was refused in that case, and it was cited with approval by the San Antonio Court of Civil Appeals in Wilson v. Donna Irrigation District No. 1 (Tex. Civ. App.) 8 S.W.(2d) 187, in an opinion by Chief Justice Fly, who also cited the following cases of like effect: Stemmons v. Dallas Power & Light Co. (Tex. Civ. App.) 212 S. W. 222; City of Dallas v. Crawford (Tex. Civ. App.) 222 S. W. 305; and Benat v. Dallas County (Tex. Civ. App.) 266 S. W. 539, 541. In the case last cited it was said: “We recognize the correctness of the doctrine of the Ellis and other cases referred to, that is, that where the condemnation of property is sought by a petitioner to whom the power of eminent domain is given by law all questions that may arise in said proceedings, such as the right to exercise the power in the instant case, or the right to condemn the particular property involved, the amount of damages, the regularity of the proceedings, etc., must and should be determined in the condemnation proceedings for the reason that in all such cases the statutes regulating the condemnation of property apply and must therefore control.”
The allegations of appellant‘s petition to the effect that the threatened institution of the condemnation suit will injuriously affect appellant‘s credit, etc., is entitled to no weight. While under certain circumstances equity will interfere to prevent a multiplicity of suits, we know of no case where a party with the capacity to sue may not, under the constitutional guaranty that “all courts shall be open,” appeal to a judicial tribunal having jurisdiction of his cause of action. The only penalty in such case, if he loses, is the payment of costs. Smith v. Adams, 27 Tex. 28; Johnson v. King, 64 Tex. 226; Salado College v. Davis, 47 Tex. 131; Shapleigh Hardware Co. v. Keeland Bros. (Tex. Civ. App.) 60 S.W.(2d) 510.
We conclude that the judgment of the district court denying the application for the writ of injunction sought in this case was correct. A judgment of that court undertaking to determine the material questions presented by the allegations of the plaintiff‘s petition would be void for want of jurisdiction, and could in no event operate to restrain the city should it in fact undertake to exercise its right of condemnation.
The judgment of the court below is accordingly in all things affirmed with costs.
Jas. V. Allred, Atty. Gen., and Maurice Cheek, Asst. Atty. Gen., for appellee Railroad Commission.
Ramey, Calhoun & Marsh, of Tyler, for appellees H. D. Bennett, Katherine Ryan, and Frank King.
BAUGH, Justice.
This appeal is from an order of the district court of Travis county denying appellant‘s application for a temporary injunction to restrain the appellees Bennett, Ryan, and Scheultz from drilling three wells on a strip of land in Rusk county, Tex., 33 feet wide and 3,342 feet long, containing 2.59 acres, and to set aside the order of the Railroad Commission granting permits for said wells. Pending a determination of this appeal, this court entered on September 29, 1933, a temporary restraining order, restraining appellees from drilling wells Nos. 1 and 3 authorized by the Railroad Commission. This order did not, however, relate to well No. 2, near the center of the tract.
The case arose under the following pertinent facts: One Rich Lee and wife were former owners of a 240-acre tract in Rusk county, which included the strip in question and the lands to the north and south thereof, all held as one body of land. After their deaths, six of their children partitioned said lands in March, 1921. There was set aside to Malinda Schuler a 42-acre tract south of and adjoining in its entire length the 2.59-acre tract here involved. To Mary V. Flanagan there was set apart this 2.59-acre tract and a 39 3/4-acre tract immediately south of and adjoining in its entire length Malinda Schuler‘s 42-acre tract. Thereafter, in August 1921, Mary V. Flanagan conveyed to Malinda Schuler this 2.59-acre tract in exchange for a 2 1/2-acre tract conveyed to her at the same time by Malinda Schuler out of the west end of the latter‘s 42-acre tract. This exchange gave to Malinda Schuler her 42 acres, including the strip here in controversy, all adjacent and constituting one contiguous body of land, and to Mary V. Flanagan her 42 acres of contiguous lands instead of having same separated by the Malinda Schuler tract as created in the original partition.
A seventh child of Rich and Mary Lee, who was then thought to be dead, and who was not considered in the partition of 1921, appeared in 1931 and claimed his one-seventh interest in all of said lands, and his interest in the Malinda Schuler tract, including the 2.59-acre tract, was acquired by appellant Sun Oil Company, leaving only a six-sevenths interest claimed by appellees. To avoid confusion and for the purposes of the issues here presented, we shall discuss the issues as if Malinda Schuler owned the entire estate in said lands at the time she and her son executed a lease thereon to the Sun Oil Company on July 21, 1930. It may also be noted that a suit is now pending on appeal in the Court of Civil Appeals at Texarkana wherein appellant contends, and which contention was decided against it by the trial court in that case, that its lease from Malinda Schuler and son in fact covers
Several contentions are presented on this appeal, but, since we have concluded that one of them disposes of the entire controversy, we shall pretermit a discussion of the others. We are met at the threshold of the case with the question of whether the owners of the fee to the 42 acres, of which the 2.59-acre strip is a part, and which entire 42-acre tract was capable of development as a unit, under regulations of the Railroad Commission, in such manner as to extract therefrom all of the oil to which such owners were entitled, can by their voluntary act subdivide in small tracts said 42 acres so as to require exceptions to rule 37 and permit the drilling of more wells thereon than would otherwise be permitted under the conservation laws of the state and the rules of the Railroad Commission promulgated pursuant thereto; that is, can the owners of a tract of land capable of development as a whole, under the conservation laws of the state and valid rules of the Railroad Commission, voluntarily divide same into small tracts and thereby create in themselves or in their assignees “vested rights” in such small tracts which would entitle them to more wells thereon than they could have drilled thereon under the law but for such subdivision into small tracts. We have reached the conclusion that they cannot.
Rule 37 was promulgated by the Railroad Commission in 1919, and was in force at the time the Schulers, under whom appellees claim, acquired title to the land here involved in 1921. Its validity has been upheld by the courts and is not here questioned. Bass v. R. R. Com. (Tex. Civ. App.) 10 S.W.(2d) 589; Danciger Oil & Ref. Co. v. R. R. Com. (Tex. Civ. App.) 49 S.W.(2d) 837, and cases there cited. When first promulgated rule 37 provided for spacing of wells 300 feet apart and 150 feet from the property lines, and for exceptions to protect vested rights. It is now settled that orders of the Railroad Commission, validly issued in accordance with law, and when operating prospectively, are legislative in character and have “the force and effect of an enactment of the Legislature.” West Tex. Compress & Warehouse Co. v. Ry. Co. (Tex. Com. App.) 15 S.W.(2d) 558, 560; Missouri-Kansas & T. Ry. Co. v. R. R. Com. (Tex. Civ. App.) 3 S.W.(2d) 489; Railroad Com. v. Uvalde Const. Co. (Tex. Civ. App.) 49 S.W.(2d) 1113; Coleman Gas & Oil Co. v. Santa Anna Gas Co. (Tex. Civ. App.) 58 S.W.(2d) 540. As such, therefore, all parties leasing land for oil and gas subsequent to its promulgation are required to take cognizance of said rule 37. Being a valid order, sustained under the police power of the state, all parties affected by it must contract with reference to this well-recognized rule, and not in violation of it; and contracts, whether by conveyance or lease, covering the subject-matter to which it relates, must be entered into and construed in keeping with its terms. It is not necessary, so far as this controversy is concerned, for us to undertake to define the term “vested rights,” nor to attempt to prescribe its limitations. Whatever the conditions under which vested rights may arise, certainly they must arise in conformity with law, and cannot grow out of a violation or an evasion of it. Any asserted right, therefore, the validity of which must be predicated upon a clear contravention of the terms and provisions of rule 37, cannot become a vested right.
To hold otherwise would be to set at naught the conservation laws of the state. There can be no distinction in principle between the right of the state through its Railroad Commission to limit the number of wells to be drilled in a given oil field on a given surface area, spaced at minimum distance from each other and its power to limit and prorate the amount of production from wells legally drilled. And the owners have no more right to contract, whether by lease, drilling contract, conveyance, partition, or otherwise, in such manner as to circumvent the purposes of this order of the commission, and thus acquire a right which, if permitted and enforced, would defeat those purposes, than they have to contract for the production from a given well of more oil than their allowable under a proration order of the commission, and by such contract acquire a vested right to do so. If the owner of a tract of land which is capable of development as a whole in such manner as to extract therefrom all the oil he is entitled to under the conservation laws of the state, be permitted, under the guise of vested rights, either to lease same in small tracts, or to lease a portion thereof
The case here presented clearly illustrates what such a course would lead to. The area here involved is in a proven field where the sands are very porous and the oil very mobile. It is not controverted that a single well in that field will effectively drain ten acres surrounding it. Nor is it controverted that excessive drainage in a concentrated area will result in waste which is prohibited by the Conservation Act. After a full hearing the Railroad Commission determined, and amended its rule 37 accordingly, that wells should be spaced 660 feet apart in that field in order to prevent waste; i. e., one well to approximately 10 acres of land. According to their own rule, therefore, promulgated after an extensive hearing, wells in closer proximity producing equally would tend to create waste. If the three wells on this 2.59-acre strip, for which the commission granted permits, be drilled, a situation would be created, which the very rule itself seeks to prevent, calculated to cause waste, a condition which the statute imposes upon them the mandatory duty to prevent. The commission is the duly constituted agency of the state to ascertain what constitutes waste of oil and gas. This it must do after hearings and a careful investigation with reference thereto. And when it has promulgated a general rule, a power expressly delegated to it, after a full and careful consideration of the subject to which such rule relates, as amended rule 37 was, it cannot thereafter even itself arbitrarily grant exceptions thereto which would in effect indubitably destroy the efficacy of the rule itself.
In no event could the Schulers, even under authority of the commission to grant exceptions where legally authorized, as owners of the entire 42-acre tract, legally create a condition by their own voluntary acts which would vest in them or in their assigns any right to such exception, and thus be enabled to do indirectly that which they were forbidden by law to do directly; i. e., procure more wells on their lands than they were otherwise legally entitled to. Without undertaking to pass upon what facts or circumstances will authorize an exception to rule 37, we do expressly hold that no owner of lands which can be developed as a whole under the conservation laws of the state and the valid rules of the Railroad Commission in force at the time he undertakes to do so can by his voluntary acts divide same into small tracts by severance of the minerals, lease, or otherwise, and thus create in himself, or in any assignee or vendee under him, any vested right to any exception to the conservation rules of the commission which would enable him to circumvent the conservation laws and valid rules of the commission designed to make such laws effective. Such owner, whether of the leasehold, the minerals, or the fee, must contract in consonance with such laws and rules and subject to their provisions. Otherwise he is entitled to no exceptions to, nor relief from, the burdens they impose.
Rights in the individual to the use of his property are subordinate to rights of the state under its police power to regulate, curtail, or even prevent entirely such uses if the public welfare requires it. He can by his voluntary acts obtain no vested right in himself which would defeat or impair the state‘s proper exercise of that power.
This conclusion renders unnecessary the discussion of the other issues raised. We think the Railroad Commission erroneously granted the permits attacked and that they had no authority to do so under the uncontroverted facts of this case. In passing, and without discussing that issue, we think it is clear, under the statute (
For the reasons stated, the judgment of the trial court is reversed, and judgment here rendered granting to appellant the injunction prayed for against the appellees pending a trial of this case on its merits, upon appellant executing a proper bond in such sum as may be agreed to by the parties, or in case of failure to so agree to be fixed by the court, and conditioned as provided by law.
Reversed and rendered, with instructions.
On Motion for Rehearing.
Appellees, other than the Railroad Commission, urgently insist in their motion for a rehearing that the action of the Railroad Commission, in granting the permits involved, is clearly sustainable under the commission‘s amendment of June 13, 1933, authorizing the granting of exceptions to rule 37 (that is, as to spacing at minimum distances from other
It is also urged that, power being delegated to the commission to promulgate rule 37, the same power authorizes them to abrogate, repeal, or amend it as circumstances may require, and that therefore the exceptions to the rule granted by the commission carry the same degree of efficacy, and have the same binding force as the rule itself. If the exceptions are authorized upon legal and valid grounds, such contention is undoubtedly correct. But, unless they are, such contention is not.
In every enunciation of rule 37, and all amendments thereto, a minimum spacing of wells from each other and/or from property lines has been required except in the salt dome fields. Its basis is essentially that of conservation of the natural resources. If proper spacing of wells for that purpose is not necessary, the rule is without foundation to sustain it. To this spacing limitation upon the drilling of wells, and for purposes of conservation, has been added, among other things, proration of, or limitation upon, production. But never has the commission abandoned its spacing requirement as necessary to prevent waste, except, as stated, in the Gulf Coast fields. We take it, therefore, that the commission deemed proper spacing of wells as absolutely essential in order to prevent waste. It is true that different spacing requirements, save as to salt dome fields, have been found necessary, and have been prescribed by the commission for different oil fields as underground formations, depth, and water and gas pressure may require. But the spacing requirement has been uniformly incorporated in rule 37 since its promulgation so far as the East Texas field is concerned. Exceptions, therefore, must have their basis either as necessary to prevent waste (the same purpose sustaining the spacing requirement itself) or to protect some vested right of the owner. While the matters of offsets and of undue drainage have been added as exceptions, they are in final analysis, so far as the owners are concerned, but phases of vested rights. And if the owner of the land, by his voluntary act, creates a condition or seeks thereby to invest himself with a right which he would not have otherwise been entitled to under the general provisions of rule 37, such act is but to circumvent the rule and to render it incapable of enforcement.
Protection against undue drainage is but a protection of a right legally vested; and, if the owner creates, by his attempt to circumvent the spacing requirements of rule 37, and by his voluntary act in the face of rule 37 a condition causing undue drainage of his particular small tract, which he has voluntarily set apart or has acquired for the purpose of production, the efficacy of said rule 37 would be destroyed as effectually in one manner as in another. If by such action he can secure the right to drill a small tract, which he has voluntarily segregated from his larger tract, on the ground of adjoining drainage, he has worked a nullification of said rule 37 as effectively as if he had obtained a permit under any other exception to the rule. Undue drainage, therefore, resulting from his own voluntary act in creating a condition which produces it, does not vest in him, or in his assigns, any right to an exception, in order that he may be relieved of a situation that is the result of his own choosing. Otherwise by alienating his land in small tracts in a proven field, when any one of such tracts should be drilled, to protect against undue drainage, the surrounding tracts would be entitled to an exception, if appellees’ contention is correct, until eventually all such tracts must be drilled and rule 37 as to spacing entirely set at naught. This condition he cannot voluntarily create in the face of rule 37, and thus under the guise of a vested right nullify its provisions and purposes.
The very term “exception” necessarily implies a departure from a rule otherwise found necessary to prevent or minimize waste. It must be in derogation of the general rule as to proper spacing; otherwise it is not an exception. We do not dissent from the proposition that an owner of land, acquired without reference to rule 37, and of the oil beneath it, cannot by such rule be deprived of his prop-
Appellees’ motion is therefore overruled.
Overruled.
BLAIR, Justice (dissenting).
In the instant case the writer agreed with the holding that the commission erroneously granted the permits to drill the wells on the 2.59-acre tract in question, because appellant as adjacent lessee was entitled to notice of the application for the permits, which was not accorded it. The permits were also erroneously granted, because the title to the oil and gas estate in the tract was in litigation between appellant and appellee in another suit now pending on appeal. True, they agreed that the oil and gas estate in the tract might be regarded for the purpose of this suit as the property of appellees, but conditioned that such agreement would not affect the rights of either party in the other pending suit. Manifestly this court has no jurisdiction to determine whether appellees have the right to drill the wells under the permits granted until they have acquired the title to the oil and gas estate in the tract sought to be drilled. The proper judgment would have been to have enjoined the drilling of the wells under the permits granted, and to have dismissed the suit without prejudice to the right of appellees, if they should recover title to the oil and gas estate in the tract in the other pending suit, to again apply for permits to drill such wells as the commission may grant under the conservation laws and its rules and regulations, after notice and hearing of the application for the permits.
But notwithstanding either of the foregoing conclusions would have disposed of the instant case, the majority opinion construed and interpreted rule 37 as promulgated in 1919, and under the interpretation given the rule held that from and after its promulgation the rule “had the force and effect of an enactment of the Legislature“; that “all parties leasing land subsequent to its promulgation are required to take cognizance of said Rule 37“; that they “must contract with reference to this well settled rule“; and that “contracts, whether by conveyance or lease, covering the subject-matter to which it relates, must be entered into and construed in keeping with its” general spacing distances for oil wells. And notwithstanding rule 37 as adopted in 1919, and each amendment thereto, has provided for an exception to the general spacing distances prescribed “to protect vested rights,” the majority view holds that “any asserted right” in contravention of the general spacing distances prescribed “cannot become a vested right.”
By memoranda opinions this interpretation of rule 37 as promulgated in 1919 was made to apply to the cases of Humble Oil & Refining Co. v. Railroad Commission et al. (No. 7996) 68 S.W.(2d) 625, and Lon A. Smith et al. v. Maurice Stewart (No. 8089) 68 S.W.(2d) 627, which were submitted and regarded as companion cases to the instant case, the majority view holding in effect that, since the parties acquired the respective small tracts of land involved in these suits subsequent to the promulgation of rule 37 in 1919, they would never be entitled to drill any well or wells on either of the tracts of land.
The writer is not in accord with the interpretation given rule 37 as promulgated in 1919, if it has any application to these cases, nor with the interpretation given the special amended rule 37 made applicable only to the East Texas field, in which the lands involved are situated.
To avoid repetition, the points of dissent will be stated where they are discussed in the opinion.
A review of the history of rule 37 as adopted in 1919, its amendments, and the construction and interpretation given it by the commission is necessary to a proper interpretation of the rule. Before its promulgation in 1919, there was no limitation upon the right of an owner of a tract of land, regardless of its size or shape, to drill as many wells on it as he desired, and at any point with reference to his property line as he
The foregoing exceptions and exemptions were amended in March, 1923, to read as follows: “Provided, that the Commission, in order to prevent waste or to protect vested rights, will grant exceptions permitting drilling within shorter distances than as above prescribed. Rule 37 shall not for the present be enforced within proven salt dome fields.”
In each oil and gas circular promulgated by the commission since the above amendment in March, 1923, rule 37 has been designated as a “general rule,” although it has always exempted proven salt dome fields and has always been construed by the commission as having no application to unproven or wildcat fields. It has always provided for the same general spacing distance between wells and property lines, and with the same exceptions and exemptions last above quoted; and each succeeding circular published as the general and special rules and regulations for the conservation of oil and gas has by express provision abrogated the next-preceding circular. See Oil and Gas Circulars Nos. 14, 15, and the very complete circular promulgated and published on October 17, 1933, which has apparently revised, amended, and codified all general and special rules and regulations of the commission for the conservation of oil and gas.
The records and minutes of the commission and the evidence adduced on the hearings before the commission and the court in cause No. 7996 show that the commission has always construed and interpreted the exception to “protect vested rights” as authorizing the drilling of wells closer than the general spacing rule prescribed on small tracts of land under separate ownership without regard to when the title thereto was acquired. Wells have also been allowed under this exception in cases of partition after the adoption of the rule. The evidence is also undisputed in cause No. 7996 that many wells have been authorized under each of the exceptions to general rule 37, without regard to when the title to the land, or the oil and gas interest therein, was acquired.
The East Texas field in which the tracts of land involved in the three cases under consideration are situated, became a special rule field on September 5, 1931. Special rule 37 applicable to said field provided for the spacing of oil wells 660 feet apart and 330 feet from property lines, and provided for the same exceptions “to prevent waste” and “to protect vested rights” as did old rule 37. These special rules expired by their own terms on October 31, 1931, and this East Texas field had no rules from that date until February 25, 1932, unless the general rules of the commission, including rule 37 as adopted in 1919, automatically became effective. On February 25, 1932, the special rules of September 5, 1931, were readopted with amendments not material here. On June 13, 1933, after extensive hearings, the commission promulgated a complete set of special rules and regulations for the East Texas field, and the June 13th special rule 37 reads substantially as present special rule 37, promulgated October 17, 1933, reading as follows: “Rule 1. Rule 37, adopted November 26, 1919, is hereby amended insofar as it applies to the East Texas Field so as to hereafter read as follows: ‘No well shall hereafter be drilled for oil or gas at any point less than Six Hundred and Sixty (660) feet from any drilling or completed well and no well shall
It will be noted that the last two complete sets of special rules for the East Texas field have each contained a special rule 37, which has provided for four exceptions to the general spacing rule prescribed, the first two being the same exceptions as have been provided for in old rule 37 since 1923, and the last two being peculiar to the East Texas field to which they specifically relate; and each set of special rules for the East Texas field have by express provision and order of the commission abrogated or superseded all general rules of the commission which may have been theretofore applicable to said field. The preamble to the special East Texas rules, adopted June 13, 1933, reads as follows: “It appearing to the Commission, from evidence adduced at the East Texas hearing held in Austin on June 12th, 1933, that Rule 37, limiting the spacing of wells in the East Texas Field, including Upshur, Smith, Rusk, Gregg, and Cherokee Counties, Texas, should be amended in order that properties might be more fully developed so as to insure a maximum oil recovery and to allow owners of various properties in said field to protect themselves against inequities which might result from a strict enforcement of Rule 37.”
This practice of the commission of promulgating complete sets of special rules and regulations for particular oil fields is of recent origin, and was evidently made necessary by the enactment of the proration statutes, and particularly by the Act of the 42d Legislature,
If, as the majority opinion seems to hold, it is material when one acquires title or the vested rights in the oil and gas estate in land, then the evidence is undisputed that the owners of the three tracts of land involved in these suits (granting that appellees in the instant suit will recover in the other pending suit), acquired respective their titles or vested rights prior to the promulgation of the special rules and regulations for the East Texas field, which by their own terms abrogate and supersede all general rules of the commission, including old rule 37. It is also undisputed that appellant in the instance case has drilled wells within a shorter distance to appellees’ property line than even old rule 37 would permit, and has been draining and will eventually drain all the oil and gas from under appellees’ land, unless they are permitted or given an equal opportunity to drill and produce the oil underlying their land. The same facts are true with reference to drainage of each of the other tracts involved in these companion cases. The evidence is also undisputed in one of the companion cases (No. 7996) that the commission has granted many similar exceptions in the same field and on even smaller tracts of land than those involved in these cases, under its interpretation of one or the other exceptions provided for in the special rules and regulations applicable to the East Texas field; and the records and minutes of the commission show that more than 60 per cent. of the producing wells in the East Texas field have been drilled under one or the other exceptions to the general distances prescribed for drilling wells.
It is the view of the writer that the Legislature did not intend to delegate and that it has not delegated the power to the Railroad Commission to promulgate rules and regulations under the provisions of the conservation laws by which property or vested rights in the oil and gas estate in land may be acquired. Such property or vested rights are acquired under
The only rule-making power delegated to the commission by the Legislature under the conservation laws is the power to make rules and regulations to prevent certain statutory causes of waste so that the state and the owners to whom it has sold or leased the oil and gas estate in land may ultimately recover same from under their lands, and to so regulate the drilling of wells and the production of oil and gas therefrom as to conserve the rights of adjoining owners. This power given the commission to promulgate rules and regulations to conserve oil and gas against certain statutory causes of waste and to regulate drilling of wells as between adjoining owners so that each may have an equal opportunity to use and enjoy the oil and gas un-
A vested right or vested rights with regard to the oil and gas estate in land simply means present ownership with right of possession and use. There was some confusion with regard to the question of ownership of oil and gas in place prior to the decision in the case of Stephens County v. Mid-Kansas Oil & Gas Co., 113 Tex. 160, 254 S. W. 290, 292, 29 A. L. R. 566, but in that case the Supreme Court clearly and definitely settled the question, holding “that gas and oil in place are minerals and realty, subject to ownership, severance, and sale, while embedded in the sands or rocks beneath the earth‘s surface, in like manner and to the same extent as is coal or any other solid mineral.” The court further held that the gas and oil estate in land was subject to taxation the same as other property; and that owners of adjacent tracts of land had correlative rights to appropriate through like operations the gas and oil underlying their respective lands. The Legislature with the view of preventing waste of these natural resources and at the same time of protecting the correlative or “vested rights” of the adjacent owners, so as to permit them to appropriate only the oil underlying their respective lands, authorized the commission to promulgate rules and regulations for said purposes. Pursuant to this authority the commission has promulgated rule 37 and the amendments thereto, each providing for an exception to protect vested rights since its inception. The commission has always interpreted the exception to protect vested rights as authorizing the drilling of one well or more wells on each small tract of land under separate ownership, without regard to the size or shape of the tract and without regard to when the title or vested rights in the tract were acquired, with correlative rights to adjacent owners to drill offset wells. These cases are the first to ever question this interpretation given the exception to protect vested rights by the commission. In so promulgating and interpreting its spacing rules, the commission has simply applied the rule or exception in force at the time the vested rights in the oil and gas were sought to be exercised or used; and manifestly it can make no difference when the owner acquired title or the vested rights in oil and gas in land, if the spacing rule or an exception thereto in force at the time he seeks to drill the well authorized it to be drilled.
Another reason for the aforementioned view of the writer is that the Constitution and statutes of the state can be readily ascertained, and notice of their provisions with respect to how and when civil or vested property rights may be acquired must be imputed to every one. But not so with respect to an administrative commission‘s rules and regulations, which are frequently confused, obscure, and difficult of ascertainment, and subject to variations and change at any time. Rule 37 as promulgated in 1919, when viewed in light of its history, its amendments, that the evils sought to be remedied by it have been practically eliminated, and the fact that it has been abrogated or superseded by special drilling and spacing rules for the various oil fields, itself furnishes a concrete example of the difficulties or hazards incident to acquiring vested rights in property under administrative rules and regulations.
If the majority view is correct, and if appellees in these suits were required to take cognizance of and contract with reference to rule 37 as promulgated in 1919, then they would be compelled to ascertain whether their
The effect of the majority opinion is to destroy the exceptions to rule 37 as adopted in 1919, and to strike down all the exceptions to special rule 37 applicable to the East Texas field. This is manifest from the announcement of the very unusual doctrine that the commission had no authority to promulgate a minimum spacing rule, and then provide exceptions which would destroy it. The majority opinion also necessarily holds that purchasers or lessees of the oil and gas estates in land can purchase or lease only with reference to the minimum spacing distances for wells and not with reference to any exception to rule 37 as adopted in 1919, or either special rule 37 adopted for the East Texas field, although the exception to protect vested rights was made a part of each rule since its inception.
It is settled law that, where a statute carries a plain statement that the Legislature intends to allow an exception or exemption from the general rule there laid down, such exception or exemption must be allowed, otherwise the entire act must fall, because the courts cannot know what has been prohibited unless they know what has been excepted or exempted, and they cannot know what has been left inside the law unless they know what has been taken out of it. Cline v. Frink Dairy Co., 274 U. S. 445, 455, 47 S. Ct. 681, 71 L. Ed. 1146; International Harvester Co. v. Kentucky, 234 U. S. 216, 221, 34 S. Ct. 853, 58 L. Ed. 1284; Collins v. Kentucky, 234 U. S. 634, 637, 34 S. Ct. 924, 58 L. Ed. 1510; Connally v. General Construction Co., 269 U. S. 385, 391, 46 S. Ct. 126, 70 L. Ed. 322. This results from the fact that, the Legislature having plainly stated its intention to allow an exception or exemption, the courts cannot impute to the Legislature the intention to enact or enforce the statute without the exception or exemption. The Legislature having expressly defined a limited field for the operation of the statutes, the courts cannot give it an unlimited field. That which the Legislature said should be limited cannot be given unlimited effect by the courts merely because the courts may think that the exception destroyed the general rule, because in such event the entire act must fall. The courts cannot give a legislative act a character not given it by the Legislature itself. Davis v. Wallace, 257 U. S. 478, 42 S. Ct. 164, 66 L. Ed. 325; Connally v. Union Sewer Pipe Co., 184 U. S. 540, 22 S. Ct. 431, 46 L. Ed. 679; Lewis, Sutherland, Stat. Const. vol. 1, § 305; Ruling Case Law, vol. 6, p. 129, § 127.
This same rule of construction applies to rules and regulations of the commission, because they are given the “force and effect of an enactment of the legislature.” And, since the commission has adopted each rule 37 with the exception to protect vested rights and other exceptions stated, the courts cannot take out the exception or exemption and enforce the rules without them, for that would impute to the commission the intention to adopt an unlimited rule, where in fact it actually adopted a limited one. McFarland v. American Sugar Refining Co., 241 U. S. 79, 87, 36 S. Ct. 498, 60 L. Ed. 899.
In the case of West Texas Compress & Warehouse Co. v. Panhandle & Santa Fe Ry. Co. (Tex. Com. App.) 15 S.W.(2d) 558, it is held that interpretations placed by the Railroad Commission on order or rule of the commission become a part of the rule and the rule is susceptible of no other interpretation.
In the case of Texarkana & Ft. Smith Ry. Co. v. Houston Gas & Fuel Co., 121 Tex. 594, 51 S.W.(2d) 284, 287, it is held that, “where the commission has officially interpreted its own rules and rate orders, such interpretation should be considered a part thereof.”
The commission has continuously interpreted the exception “to protect vested rights” as made a part of each rule 37 promulgated from its inception as authorizing the drilling of oil wells on all small tracts of land owned under separate title or where partitioned by the courts. Under its interpretation of the vested rights and other exceptions to the general spacing distances of special rule 37 adopted for the East Texas field, the commission has invariably allowed wells to be drilled on tracts of land owned under separate title, without regard to the size or shape of the tracts, if the title or vested rights in the oil and gas estate were acquired prior to the discovery of the East Texas field in 1930, granting to adjacent owners the right to drill equidistant spaced offset wells or even an extra well to prevent undue drainage from a closely drilled area or a single well on a small tract of land. It has also allowed wells under like facts and circumstances even though title or the vested rights were acquired after the adoption of the special rule 37 and the discovery of the East Texas field, and has recognized and granted wells on small partitioned tracts without regard to when the partition was had. In the East Texas field more than 60 per cent. of the producing wells were drilled under one or the other exceptions provided in the special rule 37 applicable to that field. Under the decisions above cited and quoted from, the official interpretation of the various exceptions to the general spacing distances prescribed for oil wells becomes a part of the rule and the rule is susceptible of no other interpretation by the commission or by the courts.
All parties to the case of Railroad Commission v. Bass (Tex. Civ. App.) 10 S.W.(2d) 586, as well as this court assumed that the aforementioned interpretation of the exception to protected vested rights by the commission was correct. This interpretation of the exception has never been questioned so far as the writer has been able to ascertain until these cases were presented. And in the Bass Case, this court, in defending rule 37 against the attack that it was violative of the due process clauses of both the State and Federal Constitutions and other constitutional inhibitions, held, in the interest of the rule, that, with its exception to protect vested rights, it was a valid, reasonable, and enforceable rule. The writer is still of the same view, and that the interpretation given the exception and rule in the Bass Case is correct and controls each of the three cases here presented.
In the case of State v. Jarmon (Tex. Civ. App.) 25 S.W.(2d) 936, the court held that the commission could not enjoin nor restrain the owner of a small narrow strip of land from drilling an oil well on it under the exception to rule 37 to protect vested rights, and further held that the state in leasing its lands for oil development was bound by the same rules as other persons. Since this decision the Legislature, its board of mineral development created to lease state lands, and the commission have uniformly interpreted the exception to protect vested rights as allowing persons to drill on small strips as excess or vacant lands. The writer will briefly advert to these interpretations given state leases, most of which courts must take judicial knowledge of, and those not subject to judicial knowledge will no doubt be proved in
In 1931 the Legislature enacted
The public records of the land office show the interpretation placed upon section 5, supra, by the mineral board to be, for example, as follows: Seven heirs own a tract of land with a vacant strip of seven acres along its side or end, the board under the distribution feature of the statutes subdivides the seven-acre strip in equal parts, or one-acre tracts, and the land commissioner issues a patent to each heir covering his one acre. The Railroad Commission then grants a permit to drill a well on each one-acre tract thus subdivided under the exception to protect vested rights. And the public records of the land office and the minutes of the commission show that, in carrying out the mandate of the Legislature to lease such lands for production of oil and gas, many small tracts have thus been leased and drilled for oil in proven oil fields under the exception to protect vested rights, and that the permits to drill for oil have been granted as soon as the patents are issued from time to time as the vacancies are discovered.
Section 8—A, supra, authorized the mineral board to lease for oil and gas development the river beds “in tracts of such size as it may deem proper,” and pursuant to this legislative mandate the board leased to various persons the state-owned river beds. It is a matter of common knowledge that such a state-owned river bed, which under the statutes needs only maintain an average width of 30 feet from its mouth up, cannot be developed if the general spacing distance prescribed by rule 37 or its amendments be enforced. Still the board was instructed to lease river beds, and they have continuously done so; and the public records of the land office and the minutes and dockets of the commission show that of the more than one hundred producing wells on such river beds, about 90 per cent. have been drilled as exceptions to protect vested rights.
It is not thought that the state would thus develop its own lands for oil and gas and deny to its citizens the same rights. And since the Legislature has specifically enjoined upon the board, of which the chairman of the Railroad Commission is a member, the duty of developing under the rules governing other persons, these interpretations become pertinent; and the interpretation given the vested rights exception to rule 37 becomes under the decisions a part of the rule, susceptible of no other interpretation.
The right of joint owners of the oil and gas estate in land to partition is authorized by
The writer is of the opinion that the instant case should be disposed of as above suggested, and that the other two companion cases should be affirmed. A copy of this opinion will be filed in each of these cases as the dissenting opinion of the writer.
