Federal Circuits, 9th Cir. (January 24, 1980)
Docket number: 78-1565
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Larry A. Boggs, Dept. of Justice, Washington, D. C., argued for defendant-appellant; Dirk D. Snel, U. S. Dept. of Justice, Washington, D. C., on the brief.
Robert M. Westberg, San Francisco, Cal., argued for plaintiff-appellee; Turner H. McBaine, San Francisco, Cal., on the brief.Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of California.Before WALLACE and KENNEDY, Circuit Judges, and WILLIAMS,* District Judge.WALLACE, Circuit Judge:Standard Oil Co. of California (Standard) appeals from the district court's award of summary judgment to the United States, in litigation involving the Navy's and Standard's unit operation of the Elk Hills Naval Petroleum Reserve. The matters in controversy are: (1) whether the Acting Secretary of the Navy exceeded his statutory authority, or misinterpreted relevant unit plan contract (UPC) provisions, by determining that certain land owned by Standard (called section "7R"), located outside the Elk Hills Reserve but adjoining it to the north, was properly included within the Unit; and (2) whether the Acting Secretary's determination of "fair and equitable" terms and conditions for such inclusion was consistent with certain statutory and contractual provisions. The district court awarded summary judgment in favor of the United States on both issues. We affirm in part and reverse and remand in part.I.The complicated history of the origin, development, and operation of the Elk Hills Reserve is set forth in United States v. Standard Oil Co. (Asphalto ), 545 F.2d 624, 626-28 (9th Cir. 1976) (per curiam).1 Therefore, we set forth only those facts crucial to resolution of the matter before us.The Act of June 17, 1944, 58 Stat. 280, later reenacted and codified as 10 U.S.C. 7426, empowers the Secretary of the Navy to enter into petroleum unit plan contracts for the protection of the Elk Hills Reserve. It stated at all times relevant herein:2 (a) The Secretary of the Navy may contract for joint, unit, or other cooperative plans of exploration, prospecting, conservation, development, use, and operation of lands owned or controlled by the United States inside naval petroleum reserve numbered 1 (the Elk Hills Reserve) and lands owned or leased by private interests (1) inside naval petroleum reserve numbered 1; or (2) outside naval petroleum reserve numbered 1 on the same geologic structure.10 U.S.C. 7426(a). (Emphasis supplied.) This statute was passed specifically to enable the Secretary of the Navy to enter into the instant unit plan contract with Standard. See Asphalto, supra, 545 F.2d at 627. The UPC was executed in 1944, and amended in 1948 by the "Amendatory and Supplementary Agreement" (A & S agreement).The relevant UPC provisions are sections 15(b) and 2(a)(5). The latter was added by the A & S agreement in 1948. Section 15(b) states:It is contemplated that it may hereafter be desirable to include under the terms of this contract other lands located outside of the present limits of the Reserve but which lie on the same geologic structure underlying the present limits of the Reserve. If and when any such situation shall arise, Navy and Standard will endeavor to agree upon the terms and conditions on which such additional lands may be included under this contract . . . . If Navy and Standard shall be unable to agree upon the terms and conditions on which such additional lands may be included, the Secretary of the Navy shall decide such terms and conditions upon a fair and equitable basis, and such decision in each such instance shall be final and shall be binding upon Navy and Standard.(Emphasis supplied.) Section 2(a)(5) added the following definition of "same geologic structure":Same geologic structure . . . as used in the Act of June 17, 1944, the legislative history relating thereto, and this contract shall be deemed to mean and encompass only the oil pools and reservoirs underlying in whole or in part the present boundaries of the Reserve.In 1973 Standard discovered the Tule Elk Oil field underlying certain Standard property, section 7R, adjacent to the Elk Hills Reserve. It is undisputed that the Tule Elk Oil field extends in part under the 1944 boundaries of the Reserve. On January 18, 1974, the Acting Secretary of the Navy determined that it was therefore "desirable," within the meaning of section 15(b), to include section 7R under the unit plan contract.After making this desirability determination, the Acting Secretary requested Standard to cease all production from section 7R and to agree to include section 7R in the Unit. Standard refused, stating that in each past instance in which an underlying oil field had extended within the Reserve, but was not on the "Elk Hills structure"3 as known in 1944, the Navy had not sought to include the overlying land, but rather had protected Navy lands within the Reserve by offset production.4 Upon Standard's refusal, the Acting Secretary instituted the instant action, and sought and received a preliminary injunction against all production by Standard from section 7R.The Acting Secretary and Standard then entered into negotiations to determine the terms and conditions of compensation to Standard for the inclusion of section 7R within the Unit. No agreement was reached. The Acting Secretary then made a unilateral decision regarding "fair and equitable" terms and conditions. He rejected Standard's claim for compensation in the amount of the "equitable equivalent" of the property value which Standard would lose by inclusion. Instead, the Acting Secretary determined that Standard would be compensated for the inclusion of section 7R by receiving "consideration oil" equal to one-third of the estimated recoverable oil beneath section 7R, at a delivery rate of 20,000 barrels of oil per day. This compensation purportedly tracked the measure previously agreed upon by the parties in negotiations for other inclusions within the Unit.The government's motion for partial summary judgment urged the district court to find that Standard's "section 7R was (properly) included under the UPC." Standard, in response, submitted that the following genuine issues of material fact, among others, precluded partial summary judgment on the inclusion issue: (1) whether section 7R is "on the same geologic structure" within the meaning of 10 U.S.C. 7426(a), so as to authorize the Acting Secretary to include section 7R under the UPC; (2) whether the Navy had recognized, in past dealings with Standard, that it lacked authority to include land overlying oil fields that extend within the Reserve but are unconnected to the geologic structure known in 1944 as the Elk Hills anticline; (3) whether Standard had consented to the Acting Secretary of the Navy, instead of the Secretary, making determinations pursuant to 15(b) of the UPC; and (4) whether there was adequate consideration paid to Standard to support specific enforcement of section 15(b) of the UPC by a court order including section 7R within the unit.Thus, the issues of material fact tendered by Standard implicated both the "inclusion" and the "fair and equitable" terms and conditions issues, although the government's motion sought summary judgment only as to "inclusion." Standard sought to link the two issues. It claimed that the district court could not, as the government's motion requested, grant partial summary judgment on the inclusion issue and then later decide, at trial, whether the Acting Secretary's terms and conditions determination was "fair and equitable." Standard argued that the "desirability" of including section 7R in the Unit could not be determined without also deciding the cost i. e., the terms and conditions of such inclusion.Moreover, Standard's own motion for partial summary judgment was directed not at the inclusion issue, but at the "fair and equitable" terms and conditions issue. Standard sought a declaration that the contractual standard "on a fair and equitable basis" in section 15(b) requires that the Secretary of the Navy, upon deciding terms and conditions for the inclusion of additional lands, provide Standard with compensation in the amount of the "equivalent" of the rights which Standard would lose by inclusion.5The district judge first granted summary judgment in favor of the government on the inclusion issue. He found that section 7R was on the "same geologic structure" within the meaning of section 15(b). The court disagreed with Standard that "inclusion" could not be decided separately from the "fair and equitable" terms and conditions question.6 In addition, because Standard had "tendered the issue of the fairness of the terms offered by the Navy, and both parties have had a full and fair opportunity to argue the issue," the district court awarded summary judgment to the government on the "fair and equitable" terms and conditions issue. Standard claims that the district court's summary disposition of each issue inclusion, and "fair and equitable" terms and conditions was improper.II.The major issues of material fact offered by Standard with respect to the inclusion issue were: (1) whether 10 U.S.C. 7426(a) empowered the Acting Secretary to include section 7R; and (2) whether the Navy had recognized, in past dealings with Standard, that it lacked authority to include land overlying oil fields extending within the Reserve but unconnected to the Elk Hills anticline.7 The first issue is properly one of law, not fact, since it requires interpretation of the UPC terms in light of a congressional statute. We first consider, therefore, whether as a matter of law the district court correctly interpreted section 15(b) of the UPC in light of 10 U.S.C. 7426(a).A.Standard argues that by the term "same geologic structure," as used in 10 U.S.C. 7426(a), Congress meant to limit the Navy's unit contracting authority to lands on the Elk Hills anticline, which was the extent of the Elk Hills "geologic structure" known in 1944. The government urges, in response, that Congress intended, by "same geologic structure," to authorize the Navy to enter into unit contracts for common production of all lands overlying oil fields extending at least partly within the Reserve. The Government's position is founded the premise that Congress intended to enable the Navy to protect from drainage all oil fields found, in 1944 or thereafter, to underlie Navy lands within the 1944 boundaries of the Reserve. Standard's interpretation limits the Navy to protection from drainage of the single oil field known in 1944, which was confined to the Elk Hills anticline. Section 2(b)(5) of the UPC, executed by both parties as part of the A & S agreement in 1948, defines "same geologic structure" precisely according to the government's view, as including "only the oil pools and reservoirs underlying in whole or in part the present boundaries of the Reserve."8The purpose of the Act of June 17, 1944 was to protect Navy lands within the Reserve from drainage. See S.Rep.No.948, 78th Cong., 2d Sess. 2 (1944). The Act provides for three methods by which the Navy can prevent owners of lands adjoining the Reserve from draining oil fields underlying Navy-owned or Navy-controlled lands. First, the Navy can contract with owners and lessees of such land for (a) conservation of their oil and gas or (b) compensation for estimated drainage in lieu of drilling or operating offset wells. 10 U.S.C. 7424. Second, and alternatively, the Navy can execute unit plan contracts for common production/conservation of oil from Navy lands and lands outside the Reserve but "on the same geologic structure," 10 U.S.C. 7426(a). Third, if neither of the first two methods is successful, the Navy can condemn and purchase lands outside the Reserve but on the "same geologic structure." 10 U.S.C. 7425(a).With regard to the grant of condemnation authority, the Senate Report for the Act of 1944 states:"(T)he Navy Department should have the power to condemn lands adjacent to the reserve, if condemnation proceedings are necessary to conserve oil in the reserve in the ground for future emergency use. . . . It has been, and will undoubtedly continue to be, the policy of the Government not to condemn or acquire privately owned oil lands for the purpose of establishing additional reserves for the Navy, unless such acquisition is necessary to protect the oil in the lands that Navy now controls."S.Rep.No.948, 78th Cong., 2d Sess. 6-7 (1944) (emphasis supplied). The House Report ascribes a similar purpose to the condemnation provision:The Navy Department's position has been that its powers must be commensurate with its responsibility for the carrying out of the congressional policy to conserve the Government's oil in the ground. Whenever that oil is subject to diminution by drainage from privately owned lands or leases, it is the Navy's view that it must be in a position to stop such drainage, by condemnation if need be. Inasmuch as the harm caused by drainage is the same irrespective of whether the drainage is to lands within or without the boundaries of the reserve, adequate protection requires that the condemnation power extend to privately owned lands or leases outside the reserve as well as inside.The committee has concurred in this view, recognizing that the Navy's purpose as well as the committee's is to afford protection of what Navy now has and not to embark upon a program of enlarging the reserve per se by condemning private lands.H.R.Rep.No.1529, 78th Cong., 2d Sess. 16 (1944) (emphasis supplied).The Senate and House Reports speak of protecting the oil beneath the Navy's lands, not of protecting only the oil within a particular anticline underlying them. Standard has produced nothing in the legislative history suggesting that Congress wished to foreclose the Navy from either condemning or executing unit plan contracts to prevent drainage of oil fields not yet discovered. The sole item of legislative history produced by Standard to support its interpretation of "same geologic structure" consists of testimony in 1944 before the Senate Naval Affairs Committee, in which the Officer-in-Charge of the Navy's Reserve Operations defined the Elk Hills geologic structure as an "anticlinal structure."9 This isolated testimony before a Senate Committee does not vitiate the clear expressions of congressional intent in the House and Senate Reports. We conclude, therefore, that Congress did not intend the term "same geologic structure," as used in section 7425 pertaining to the condemnation authority, to limit the Navy to protection of lands on the Elk Hills anticline. Rather, we find that section 7425 authorizes the Navy to protect all Navy-owned or controlled lands within the Reserve from draining by condemning drainage lands outside the Reserve.Congress limited both the unit plan contract and condemnation methods to lands outside the Reserve on the "same geologic structure." By using the same term in analogous provisions, Congress presumptively intended to grant the same authority in each. See Atlantic Cleaners & Dyers, Inc. v. United States, 286 U.S. 427, 433, 52 S.Ct. 607, 76 L.Ed. 1204 (1932); Hodgson v. Prophet Co., 472 F.2d 196, 204 (10th Cir. 1973); Sampsell v. Straub, 194 F.2d 228, 230 (9th Cir. 1951), cert. denied,Try vLex for FREE for 3 days
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