Opinion
No. 9264.
April 22, 1942. Rehearings Overruled May 13, 1942.
Appeal from District Court, Travis County; J. Harris Gardner, Judge.
Action by F. W. Merrick, Incorporated, against Overton Refining Company and others, to set aside an oil well permit. From an adverse judgment, defendants appeal.
Affirmed.
A. A. Garrett, of Tyler, and Wheeler Wheeler, of Austin, for appellant Overton Refining Co.
Gerald C. Mann, Atty. Gen., and Edgar W. Cale and James D. Smullen, Asst. Attys. Gen., for appellant Railroad Commission of Texas.
L. L. James, of Tyler, for appellee.
This is a Rule 37 case. It is the third time this same well and same tract of land has been before this court for review. Originally we held that the well was not authorized as an exception to the rule either to prevent confiscation or to prevent waste. While the motion for rehearing on the first appeal was pending, the Supreme Court announced its decision in Gulf Land Company v. Atlantic Refining Company, 134 Tex. 59, 131 S.W.2d 73, and we then confined our decision to the issue of confiscation only. See Ward Oil Corporation v. Overton Refining Company, Tex. Civ. App. 131 S.W.2d 700.
Upon a retrial of said case after a remand thereof the trial court again sustained the permit. On the second appeal we expressly held the permit void, and the issue of confiscation was finally adjudicated, absent changed conditions. There-after the Commission again granted said permit (the well having already been drilled, it was but a permit to operate it) on the recited grounds to prevent confiscation and to prevent waste. The ground on which it was applied for was as an offset to well No. 4 on the Reynolds adjoining tract on the east, which well was then under attack in a pending suit, and was there-after finally set aside by the District Court. See Reynolds v. Ward Oil Corporation, Tex. Civ. App. 157 S.W.2d 457. Consequently, not only has the issue of confiscation been definitely adjudicated, but the record here presented shows that if said tract contained .29 of an acre instead of 1/15th of an acre as was shown in a former trial (see Ward Oil Corp. v. Overton Ref. Co., Tex. Civ. App. 139 S.W.2d 292, 293), the one well thereon which had been producing for several years had already extracted many times as much oil as the maximum amount of oil originally in place beneath it as estimated by expert engineers.
On the issue of waste applicant's own witness testified before the examiner for the Commission that, though in his opinion the "more wells more oil" theory was correct, no waste under the then existing conditions was occurring on this tract without the well here involved. In this general area, near the town of London, excessive drilling had occurred, and had already caused premature encroachment of water, and "channeling and by-passing." See 131 S.W.2d 700, 701. The underground conditions common to the field generally were substantially uniform in this area except those created by denser drilling than prevailed in the field generally. If, therefore, any efficacy be attributed to the fact findings of the Commission on which the spacings provided in Rule 37 are predicated, — that is, that lack of uniformity in the drilling pattern, and denser drilling in a given area than obtains in the surrounding areas creates a low pressure therein causing premature encroachment of water upon such more densely drilled area, thus causing waste, — then it must follow that increasing such density by drilling still more wells in such overdrilled area cannot as a matter of law prevent waste. A fire cannot be extinguished by adding more of the same fuel on which it feeds. Waste caused by over density of drilling manifestly will not be prevented by increasing that density still more.
In view of the numerous cases involving this issue, not necessary to cite here, and the fact findings of the Commission on which Rule 37 is based, it would, we think, be a reductio ad absurdum to hold, under the uncontroverted facts shown, that it is necessary to drill two wells on 1/15 of an acre of land in order to prevent waste.
The error of the trial court, conceding it to be error, in confining the evidence upon the trial to the matters presented to the Commission, is harmless, where as here, such evidence before the Commission and the documentary evidence presented to the trial court taken in connection with matters finally adjudicated on former appeals involving the same subject matter, show as a matter of law that the permit is invalid. And clearly we think it so shows. The judgment of the trial court is therefore affirmed.
Affirmed.