Appellant is a producer of gas in an Oklahoma natural gas field,
but does not purchase from other producers in that field. The gas
which it produces is transported through its own facilities to
Texas, where it processes the gas, utilizes or sells the
byproducts, and sells the residue of natural gas to pipeline
companies.
Held: orders of the Oklahoma Corporation Commission
fixing a minimum wellhead price on all gas taken from the Oklahoma
field, as applied to appellant, are not unreasonably vague, and are
valid under the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses of the
Fourteenth Amendment of the Federal Constitution. Pp.
340 U. S.
191-192.
203 Okla. 35,
220 P.2d 279,
affirmed.
The validity under the Federal Constitution of orders of the
Oklahoma Corporation Commission fixing a minimum wellhead price for
gas taken from an Oklahoma natural gas field was sustained by the
State Supreme Court as applied to appellant.
203 Okla. 35,
220 P.2d 279.
On appeal to this Court,
affirmed, p.
340 U. S.
192.
Page 340 U. S. 191
MR. JUSTICE CLARK delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a companion case to
Cities Service Gas Co. v.
Peerless Oil & Gas Co., 340 U. S. 179.
Appellant a producer in the Guymon-Hugoton Field, owning leases on
approximately 183,000 acres, but, unlike Cities Service, it does
not purchase from other producers in this field. It has its own
gathering system through which gas is transported to a central
point in Hansford County, Texas. There, the gas is processed for
the extraction of gasoline and other liquid hydrocarbons. These
byproducts are either utilized or sold, and the residue of natural
gas is sold to pipeline companies. Appellant's first appearance
before the Oklahoma Corporation Commission in connection with the
Peerless proceedings was on January 17, 1947, after the entry of
the order setting a minimum price on all natural gas taken from the
Guymon-Hugoton Field. Phillips moved that the Commission either
vacate the order insofar as applicable to it, or clarify the
application of the order to gas not actually sold at the wellhead.
On February 4, 1947, the Commission issued Order No.19702, refusing
to vacate or further clarify its general minimum price order. The
Commission concluded that Phillips had no standing to complain of
the general order, since the company was currently complying with
it by realizing on the average, from sale and utilization of
byproducts and sale of gas, the minimum price set.
On appeal, the Oklahoma Supreme Court consolidated the two cases
and, with respect to Phillips, stated:
"Our discussion of the Cities Service appeal is here applicable.
We find no basis in the due process and equal protection clauses of
the Federal and State Constitutions for condemning the orders
appealed from in their application to Phillips."
203 Okl. 35, 48,
220 P.2d 279,
292 (1950).
Page 340 U. S. 192
It is apparent from this opinion that the court below took
jurisdiction and passed upon the constitutional issues raised. We
assumed, therefore, that the court, noting the evidence of injury
contained in the record, found no technical defects in the
pleadings before the Commission which would deprive Phillips of
standing to appeal. We noted probable jurisdiction of the appeal to
this Court in order to secure a complete picture of the issues at
stake.
Appellant does not argue that the orders violate the Commerce
Clause, art. 1, § 8, cl. 3. In other respects, the appeal
presents only minor variations of the issues raised by Cities
Service. Phillips argues that it is not a purchaser, but merely a
producer; that, unlike the situation in
Cities Service,
the order, as applied to it, lacks any connection with correlative
rights, the interest of the public, monopolistic practices, or
discrimination. The distinction is without a difference: the
connection between realized price and conservation applies to all
production in the field, whether owners purchase from others or
not, and whether they own pipelines or not. In a field which
constitutes a common reservoir of gas, the Commission must be able
to regulate the operations of all producers or there is little
point in regulating any.
Phillips also relies heavily on the contention that the orders
are unreasonably vague. In substance, this argument is nothing more
than that the determination by an integrated company of proceeds
realized from gas at the wellhead involves complicated problems in
cost accounting. These problems are common to a host of valid
regulations. There is nothing to indicate that Phillips will be
penalized for reasonable and good faith efforts to solve them.
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK is of the opinion that the alleged federal
constitutional questions are frivolous, and that the appeal
therefore should be dismissed.