94-22890. Final Consent Order With Murphy Oil Corporation, Murphy Oil USA, Inc. and Murphy Exploration & Production Company  

  • [Federal Register Volume 59, Number 178 (Thursday, September 15, 1994)]
    [Unknown Section]
    [Page 0]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 94-22890]
    
    
    [[Page Unknown]]
    
    [Federal Register: September 15, 1994]
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
    Economic Regulatory Administration
    
     
    
    Final Consent Order With Murphy Oil Corporation, Murphy Oil USA, 
    Inc. and Murphy Exploration & Production Company
    
    AGENCY: Economic Regulatory Administration, DOE.
    
    ACTION: Final action on proposed consent order.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Department of Energy (DOE) has determined that a proposed 
    Consent Order between DOE and Murphy Oil Corporation, Murphy Oil USA, 
    Inc. and Murphy Exploration & Production Company (Murphy), which was 
    published for public comment in 59 FR 38169 (July 27, 1994), shall be 
    made final. The Consent Order resolves matters relating to Murphy's 
    compliance with the federal petroleum price and allocation regulations 
    for the period January 1, 1973 through January 28, 1981. To resolve 
    these matters, Murphy will pay to DOE $10,700,000. Following receipt of 
    the settlement monies, the Economic Regulatory Administration (ERA) 
    will petition DOE's Office of Hearings and Appeals (OHA) to implement 
    Special Refund Procedures pursuant to 10 CFR Part 205, Subpart V. Those 
    procedures provide persons who claim to have suffered injury from the 
    alleged overcharges with the opportunity to submit claims for payment.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Dorothy Hamid, Economic Regulatory 
    Administration, Department of Energy, GC-44, 820 First Street, NE., 
    Suite 810, Washington, DC 20585, (202) 523-3045.
    
    SUPPLEMENTAL INFORMATION:
    
    I. Introduction
    II. Comments Received
    III. Analysis of Comments
    IV. Decision
    
    I. Introduction
    
        On July 27, 1994, ERA published a Notice announcing a proposed 
    Consent Order between DOE and Murphy, which would resolve matters 
    relating to Murphy's compliance with the federal petroleum price and 
    allocation regulations for the period January 1, 1973 through January 
    28, 1981. 59 FR 38169. That Notice summarized the proposed Consent 
    Order, which requires Murphy to pay to DOE $10,700,000 within thirty 
    (30) days of the effective date of the Consent Order.
        The July 27 Notice supplied information regarding Murphy's 
    potential liability for violations of the regulations applicable to 
    first sales of domestic crude oil (10 CFR Secs. 212.72-212.74), the 
    regulations exempting from the price rules the sale of crude oil 
    produced from ``stripper well'' properties (10 CFR Secs. 210.32 and 
    212.54), and the normal business practices rule (10 CFR Sec. 210.62(c)) 
    in connection with Murphy's first sales of crude oil during the period 
    September 1973 through December 1979. These matters were at issue in a 
    Remedial Order (RO) that OHA issued to Murphy on June 17, 1992 (Murphy 
    Oil Corp., 22 DOE 83,005 (1992)), as modified by a decision and 
    proposed order (D&PO) issued by an Administrative Law Judge of the 
    Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) on January 24, 1994. Ocean 
    Drilling & Exploration Co., et al., 66 FERC 63,002 (1994). The D&PO is 
    now pending before the Commission in Docket No. RO92-5-000. With 
    interest, Murphy's current liability under the D&PO (including ERA's 
    estimate of Murphy's liability for previously unaudited properties and 
    unaudited time periods (yet to be adjudicated by OHA or FERC)) totals 
    approximately $5.2 million.
        The Notice also enumerated the considerations which underlay ERA's 
    preliminary view that the settlement is favorable to the government and 
    in the public interest. The Notice solicited written comments from the 
    public relating to the terms and conditions of the settlement and 
    whether the settlement should be made final.
    
    II. Comments Received
    
        Written comments were received from three parties: Oryx Energy 
    Company, successor to Sun Exploration and Production Company (Sun), a 
    working interest owner on certain crude oil production properties 
    operated by Murphy; the Controller of California (Controller), a 
    participant in the Murphy/Ocean Drilling administrative enforcement 
    litigation before OHA and FERC; and a group consisting of six 
    utilities, fourteen transporting companies and five manufacturers 
    (UTM).
        Sun objects to an ``implication'' it purportedly perceives in 
    paragraph 503(b) of the proposed Consent Order, relating to DOE's 
    promise not to sue any other person, ``presumably including Sun'', as a 
    non-operating interest owner, for alleged crude oil pricing violations 
    at Murphy-operated properties. Sun Comments at 1.1 The Controller 
    and UTM raise concerns about what each perceives to be an impermissible 
    compromise associated with DOE's claim for restitution of overcharges 
    on that portion of Murphy's violations that pertained to production 
    subject to federal royalties.
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        \1\Paragraph 503(b) provides that:
        In addition, where Murphy was the operator of a property that 
    produced crude oil, the DOE shall not initiate or prosecute any 
    enforcement action against any person for noncompliance with the 
    federal petroleum price and allocation regulations relative to such 
    property operated by Murphy.
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    III. Analysis of Comments
    
    A. Applicability of the Consent Order to a party other than Murphy
    
        Echoing allegations it has advanced in another forum,2 Sun 
    asserts that DOE's promise in paragraph 503(b) of the proposed Consent 
    Order not to sue others for overcharges caused by Murphy ``incorrectly 
    implies'' that DOE predicates Murphy's liability upon the ``underlying 
    liability of the other interest owners'', when in fact, as Sun 
    acknowledges, DOE's position in the enforcement litigation is 
    ``predicated solely upon Murphy's alleged misconduct in causing the 
    overcharges.'' Sun Comments at 2. Sun urges DOE to delete the sentence 
    from paragraph 503(b) of the proposed Consent Order (quoted in footnote 
    1) or, at a minimum, make clear that the quoted sentence does not apply 
    to Sun and that the money DOE receives from Murphy is not attributable 
    to resolving a liability that Sun might have to the DOE. Id. at 3-4.
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        \2\Sun brought a civil action against the government in the 
    United States District Court for the District of Delaware, Sun 
    Company, Inc. v. United States, 594 F. Supp. 652 (D. Del. 1984). The 
    District Court granted the government's motion for summary judgment 
    in an unpublished opinion, Sun Company, Inc. v. United States, No. 
    83-204 (D. Del. Jan. 26, 1993), appeal docketed, No. 93-1542 (Fed. 
    Cir. Sept. 2, 1993).
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        Sun's objection misconstrues the effect and purpose of the proposed 
    Consent Order. The proposed Consent Order ``constitutes a legally 
    enforceable contractual undertaking that is binding on'' Murphy and DOE 
    alone and resolves the liability of Murphy alone. (Paragraphs 501 and 
    701). The proposed Consent Order makes no findings concerning the 
    relative rights of Murphy and other working interest owners (such as 
    Sun) on properties where Murphy was the operator, and does not bind any 
    of the working interest owners (such as Sun) who are not parties to its 
    terms. Id. at paragraphs 302, 303, 501, 504. Furthermore, contrary to 
    Sun's misperception, paragraph 503(b) does not ``impl[y]'' any basis of 
    Murphy's alleged liability inconsistent with DOE's position in the 
    Murphy/Ocean Drilling enforcement litigation. Thus, no modification or 
    clarification of paragraph 503(b) is necessary.
    
    B. Settlement Pertaining to the Issue of Federal Royalty
    
        The Controller objects to any compromise of DOE's claim for 
    restitution of overcharges paid to the federal government in the form 
    of royalties, and dismisses the Ocean Drilling D&PO's proposed 
    reduction of the overcharge in this regard as lacking ``any plausible 
    merit.'' Controller's Comments at 1. The Controller also asserts that 
    the Final Settlement Agreement in the Stripper Well Litigation 
    precludes both DOE and Murphy from agreeing to any ``offset'' to 
    restitution owed by Murphy. To the extent that the DOE feels compelled 
    to accept some compromise on the royalty issue, the Controller 
    maintains that the amount of any offset should come wholly from the 
    federal share without any effect on the States' share. Id.
        UTM likewise believe that the D&PO erred on the federal royalty 
    payment issue, and urge that ERA ``seek to recover such royalties on 
    the reduced overcharges from the federal agencies to which they were 
    paid.'' UTM Comments at 2. If ERA does not do so, UTM request that ERA 
    specify the amount of the benefit which the federal agencies have 
    received as their share of the overcharges as reduced by the ALJ and as 
    their share of the overcharges recognized in the settlement. Id. at 2-
    3. UTM believe that such calculations would be a necessary basis for an 
    analysis by OHA of the proper distribution of the amount recovered from 
    Murphy. Id. at 3.3
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        \3\Over and above the approximately $5.2 million that represents 
    Murphy's current liability under the D&PO, ERA calculates the D&PO 
    rejected an additional $68,270 in principal amount as overcharges 
    attributable to payment of federal royalty. Interest on that sum 
    through June 30, 1994, equals $273,528.
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        As an initial matter, it is neither practical nor appropriate to 
    quantify the portion of the $10.7 million proposed settlement sum that 
    exceeds the $5.2 million in restitution under the D&PO that can be 
    ascribed to the royalty payment issue. ERA's evaluation of the risks of 
    continued litigation considered the federal royalty question in 
    combination with risk related to many other issues specified in the 
    July 27 Federal Register Notice. 59 FR at 38170. Any attempt to parse 
    the settlement process's achievement of the $10.7 million amount in 
    order to quantify the portion that could be ``attributable'' to this 
    issue would constitute an unwarranted invasion of the content of the 
    negotiations that preceded the proposed settlement. Such an outcome 
    would discourage settlement activity and certainly would not advance 
    the public interest.
        Second, neither the Final Settlement Agreement in In re Department 
    of Energy Stripper Well Exemption Litigation, M.D.L. No. 378 (D. Kan.), 
    nor the Petroleum Overcharge Distribution and Restitution Act of 1986 
    (PODRA), 15 U.S.C. 4501 et seq.,\4\ provides a guarantee that potential 
    refund recipients such as the Controller or UTM be insulated from the 
    effects of litigation risks associated with ERA's attempts to recover 
    restitution in enforcement actions, whether such risk is realized in 
    the course of litigation or the consideration of reasonable settlement. 
    ERA's assessment of risk attributable to this issue is not at variance 
    with PODRA or the Final Settlement Agreement in the Stripper Well 
    litigation, and is completely consistent with ERA's authority to 
    compromise claims pursuant to 10 CFR 205.199J.
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        \4\The Final Settlement Agreement (effected in 1986) and the 
    PODRA (enacted in 1986) post date both Murphy's payment of the 
    federal royalties (September 1973-January 1981) and the initiation 
    of ERA's formal enforcement proceedings through a Notice of Probable 
    Violation on January 28, 1981.
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        Finally, the concerns of the Controller and UTM about the 
    settlement of the federal royalty issue appear to be premised on their 
    disagreement with the conclusion expressed in the D&PO rather than the 
    question of the reasonableness of the resolution proposed. ERA likewise 
    continues to believe that its interpretation in the litigation of this 
    issue (as well as all the other issues in the case) is meritorious, but 
    recognizes that the adjudicated results can often be at odds with the 
    arguments proffered in litigation. There could be no question that if 
    the federal royalty issue were not settled and were eventually to be 
    lost in litigation, the potential beneficiaries could have no further 
    argument or claim to any portion of the sum not recovered. Absent 
    consideration of compelling policy principles, a resolution by 
    settlement should be based on the possible and probable litigation 
    outcomes; the federal royalty issue is one of those disputes subject to 
    a litigated outcome and therefore appropriate to consider for 
    compromise settlement.5
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        \5\This is particularly so for a question such as the federal 
    royalty issue, which comprises just over 6.5% of Murphy's current 
    liability under the D&PO and approximately 3.2% of the $10,700,000 
    settlement amount.
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        ERA has concluded that the comments of the Controller and UTM deal 
    with matters more appropriately addressed within a proceeding pursuant 
    to 10 CFR Part 205, Subpart V. ERA will not modify the proposed Consent 
    Order in the manner advocated by the Controller of California and UTM.
    
    IV. Decision
    
        ERA has determined that it is in the best interest of the public to 
    make the proposed Consent Order final without change. By this Notice, 
    and pursuant to 10 CFR 205.199J, the proposed Consent Order between DOE 
    and Murphy is made a final Order of the Department of Energy, effective 
    on the date of publication of this Notice in the Federal Register.
    
        Issued in Washington, DC, on September 9, 1994.
    Robert R. Nordhaus,
    Acting Administrator, Economic Regulatory Administration, General 
    Counsel.
    [FR Doc. 94-22890 Filed 9-14-94; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6450-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
09/15/1994
Department:
Energy Department
Entry Type:
Uncategorized Document
Action:
Final action on proposed consent order.
Document Number:
94-22890
Pages:
0-0 (1 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Federal Register: September 15, 1994