Case Title: Redman v. Ohio Dept. of Indus. Relations

Citation: 1996-Ohio-196

Docket Number: 19942284

State: ohio

Court: Ohio Supreme Court

Date: 1996-04-10T00:00:00Z

Document:
Redman, Appellant, v. Ohio Department of Industrial Relations et al., 
Appellees. 
[Cite as Redman v. Ohio Dept. of Indus. Relations (1996), ___ Ohio St.3d ___.] 
Natural resources -- Oil and gas -- R.C. 1509.08 does not 
unconstitutionally delegate legislative authority to Chief of Ohio 
Division of Mines and Reclamation. 
 
- - 
R.C. 1509.08, which grants to the Chief of the Ohio Division of Mines and 
Reclamation the discretion to ascertain the existence of an “affected 
mine” and a “well-founded” objection in connection with the disapproval 
of a permit to dig an oil or gas well in a coal-bearing township, does not 
unconstitutionally delegate legislative authority. 
- - 
 
(No. 94-2284 -- Submitted  January 23, 1996 -- Decided April 10, 1996.) 
 
Appeal from the Court of Appeals for Franklin County, Nos. 93APE12-
1670 and 93APE12-1671. 
 
2
 
In October 1990, appellant, E.C. Redman, d.b.a. Redman Oil Company, 
submitted applications to the Ohio Department of Natural Resources, Division 
of Oil and Gas (“ODOG”), for permits to drill two oil and gas wells, designated 
Edgar Chambers Well No. 3 in Bristol Township and Harlan Rex Well No. 3 in 
Manchester Township, both in Morgan County.  Pursuant to R.C. 1509.08, 
upon receipt of an application for a permit to drill a new oil or gas well, the 
Chief of ODOG is required to determine whether the well is to be located in a 
coal-bearing township.  If it is, the chief must transmit the application to the 
Chief of appellee Ohio Department of Industrial Relations, Division of Mines 
(“ODM”).1  Accordingly, Redman’s applications were transmitted to ODM. 
 
ODM’s usual practice upon receipt of such an application is to review 
the current mining maps on file in order to determine whether there are any 
coal mines that would be affected by the proposed oil and gas wells.  In this 
case, however, ODM was already familiar with the mining plans of appellee 
Central Ohio Coal Company (“COCCo”) by virtue of an inspection conducted 
at COCCo’s mine office two months earlier by the assistant chief.  
 
3
Accordingly, ODM sent letters to COCCo stating, “Pursuant to [R.C.] 1509.08, 
*** [a]s owner or lessee of an affected mine, you have the right to object to the 
proposed drilling ***.” 
 
On October 18, 1990, COCCo sent letters of objection to ODM, 
accompanied by affidavits of Gary L. Miller, an engineering superintendent 
and employee of COCCo.  The Chief of ODM determined that COCCo’s 
objections were well founded, and disapproved Redman’s applications on the 
basis that the proposed “drilling would interfere with [COCCo’s] proposed 
mining and result in [COCCo’s] inability to recover considerable coal 
reserves.” 
 
Redman appealed the decisions to the Mine Examining Board, and an 
evidentiary hearing was held.  At the hearing, Miller testified that if Redman 
were permitted to drill the two wells in the proposed locations, it would result 
in COCCo’s losing 160,000 clean tons of coal otherwise recoverable from the 
Edgar Chambers No. 3 site and 325,000 tons from the Harlan Rex No. 3 site. 
 
4
 
The board affirmed the decisions of ODM disapproving Redman’s 
permit applications.  In so doing, the board explained in part as follows: 
 
“The contention of [Redman] is that the Division of Oil and Gas and the 
Division of Mines have in the past approved the drilling of wells in the same 
general area, [and] therefore these permits should be approved as in the past.  
The Central Ohio Coal Company, who owns the mining rights in this area, gave 
testimony that they had changed their mining plans and the direction of their 
mine since the letter dated April 9, 1987 was received by [Redman] stating the 
proposed sites would not interfere with any mine operation for ten (10) or more 
years.  The new Mining plans were necessitated by the new environmental 
regulations on sulfur emissions recently passed into law; also the need for 
[COCCo] to stay cost competitive with other fuel suppliers.” 
 
Redman appealed the board’s decisions to the Franklin County Court of 
Common Pleas, pursuant to R.C. 119.12.2  Redman argued in part that R.C. 
1509.08 unlawfully delegates legislative authority to the Chief of ODM.  The 
case was referred to a referee, who recommended that the court find that 
 
5
Redman’s permit applications were properly disapproved by ODM, and affirm 
the board’s decisions to uphold the disapprovals.  In particular, the referee 
reasoned as follows: 
 
“The policies behind the statutory scheme -- safety, conflict resolution 
and the maximum utilization of Ohio’s mineral resources -- are clear.  While 
there is no specific list of criteria to determine what constitutes a well-founded 
objection by an affected mine owner, detailed standards would be problematic; 
the problems and conflicts associated with locating an oil and gas well near a 
particular mining operation are site-specific and variable.  *** Thus, R.C. 
1509.08 gives the Chief of the Division of Mines, a person with expertise in 
mineral extraction, the flexibility necessary to control the development of 
natural resources so that oil and gas can be extracted safely without undue 
disturbance of affected coal mining operations.  In addition, the Board reviews 
the Division’s exercise of discretion, and judicial review is available to assure 
that relevant data have been properly considered.  Accordingly, there has been 
no unconstitutional delegation of authority.” 
 
6
 
The trial court adopted the referee’s report and recommendations, with 
one relevant clarification: 
 
“To construe ‘affected mine’ to mean only mines with active extraction 
operations taking place, would be to jeopardize the economic and efficient 
mining of coal.  If [oil and gas] wells can be placed on land which has already 
been analyzed, probed and planned [for coal extraction], but before actual 
[coal] extraction takes place, then a significant amount of coal could be lost 
*** [and] all the planning and operation would be wasted.  Thus, it is only 
logical to read the R.C. § 4151.01(A) definition of mine as including the land 
in question. 
 
“The Court is aware of [the] concerns that if ‘mine’ is construed to mean 
land which will be mined in the future, the coal companies, which own 
‘thousands and thousands of acres of land in Ohio,’ may oppose all requests for 
permits to drill oil and gas wells on this land, even if no well-defined mining 
plans have been developed.  To that end, the Court clarifies the Report by 
holding that ‘mine,’ as the term applies to ‘affected mine,’ means not only land 
 
7
where active extraction is taking place, but also land which has had extensive, 
well-defined mining plans developed and where future mining has been 
thoroughly planned for and evolved to the point of realization.” 
 
The court of appeals affirmed the judgment of the trial court. 
 
The cause is now before the court pursuant to the allowance of a 
discretionary appeal. 
 
Butler, Cincione, DiCuccio & Dritz and Alphonse P. Cincione; Ashworth 
& McKinniss and John Ashworth, for appellant. 
 
Betty D. Montgomery, Attorney General, and Christopher Jones, 
Assistant Attorney General, for appellee Ohio Department of Industrial 
Relations, Division of Mines. 
 
Simpson, Thacher & Bartlett, Michael P. Graney and Susan L. Simms, 
for appellee Central Ohio Coal Company. 
 
Alice Robie Resnick, J.  The primary issue in this case is whether R.C. 
1509.08 unlawfully delegates legislative authority to the Chief of ODM. 
 
8
 
Section 36, Article II of the Ohio Constitution provides that laws may be 
passed “to provide for the regulation of methods of mining, weighing, 
measuring and marketing coal, oil, gas and all other minerals.”  Pursuant to this 
authority, and pursuant to the police power of the state to control and conserve 
the natural resources of Ohio, see, e.g., State v. Martin (1958), 168 Ohio St. 37, 
40-41, 5 O.O.2d 293, 295, 151 N.E.2d 7, 10-11, the General Assembly has 
enacted a number of statutes regulating the production of coal, oil and gas, 
including R.C. Chapter 1509. 
 
R.C. 1509.05 provides in part that “[n]o person shall drill a new well *** 
without having a permit to do so issued by the chief of the division of oil and 
gas.”  However, under R.C. 1509.08, when a proposed well is determined by 
the Chief of ODOG to be located in a coal-bearing township, the decision 
whether to grant the permit is essentially transferred to the Chief of ODM.   
 
Pursuant to R.C. 1509.08, the Chief of ODOG, upon determining that the 
proposed well is to be located in a coal-bearing township, must transmit copies 
of the permit application to the Chief of ODM.  The Chief of ODM must then 
 
9
notify the owner or lessee of any “affected mine” that the application has been 
filed.  If the owner or lessee timely objects, and “if in the opinion of the chief 
[of ODM] the objection is well founded, he shall disapprove the application.”  
The applicant may then “appeal the disapproval of the application by the chief 
of the division of mines to the mine examining board created under section 
4151.14 of the Revised Code.”3 
 
Redman contends that R.C. 1509.08 is unconstitutional on its face 
because it “fails to provide any definition of the term ‘affected mine’ and 
further fails to provide any guidelines as to what constitutes a ‘well founded’ 
objection.”4 
 
For over a century, the court has adhered to the principle that the General 
Assembly cannot delegate its essential legislative power to administrative 
bodies or officers.  Blue Cross of Northeast Ohio v. Ratchford (1980), 64 Ohio 
St.2d 256, 259, 18 O.O.3d 450, 452, 416 N.E.2d 614, 617; Belden v. Union 
Cent. Life Ins. Co. (1944), 143 Ohio St. 329, 28 O.O. 295, 55 N.E.2d 629, 
paragraph one of the syllabus; Matz v. J.L. Curtis Cartage Co. (1937), 132 
 
10
Ohio St. 271, 8 O.O. 41, 7 N.E.2d 220, paragraph six of the syllabus; 
Cincinnati, Wilmington & Zanesville RR. Co. v. Commrs. of Clinton Cty. 
(1852), 1 Ohio St. 77, 88. 
 
The basic purpose of the nondelegation doctrine is to control unbridled 
agency discretion.   See Matz, supra, 132 Ohio St. at 280-281, 8 O.O. at 45, 7 
N.E.2d at 225.  However, over the years the court has become increasingly 
concerned that a rigid application of the nondelegation doctrine would unduly 
hamstring the administration of the laws.  We have, therefore, developed a 
number of distinctions and exceptions in an effort to balance the need for 
protection from uncontrolled agency discretion and the administrative 
flexibility necessary to allow the government to operate efficiently and 
effectively. 
 
Initially, the court distinguished between the delegation of legislative 
power, i.e., the power to make the law, and the delegation of administrative 
power, i.e., the power to execute the law.  Cincinnati, Wilmington & Zanesville 
RR. Co., supra, 1 Ohio St. at 88.5 
 
11
 
In Belden, supra, 143 Ohio St. at 343, 28 O.O. at 301, 55 N.E.2d at 636, 
the court explained as follows: 
 
“It must be conceded that the legislative body cannot deal with each 
specific case and therefore legislative action in the main must be general in 
character, which is the basis for the rule that it is no violation of the 
constitutional inhibition against the delegation of legislative power for the 
General Assembly to establish a policy and fix the standards for guidance of 
administrative agencies, while leaving to them the making of subordinate rules 
within those fixed standards, and the determination of facts to which the 
legislative policy applies.” 
 
We recognized, however, that there are times when the delineation of 
specific standards would not be necessary to sustain the legislation under 
attack.  In Yee Bow v. Cleveland (1919), 99 Ohio St. 269, 124 N.E. 132, 
paragraph three of the syllabus, the court held that: 
 
“An ordinance imposing on an administrative officer, as a prerequisite to 
the issuance of a license, the duties of ascertaining whether sanitary and 
 
12
drainage arrangements are sufficient to protect the public health and whether 
‘adequate ventilation’ and ‘adequate plumbing and drainage facilities’ are 
provided on the premises, does not confer arbitrary legislative or judicial 
powers upon such officer in a constitutional sense.  If his conduct should prove 
to be arbitrary or palpably unwarranted, resort may be had to the courts.” 
 
In so holding, the court explained that: 
 
“It is exceedingly doubtful whether a fixed standard could be adopted by 
the city in its regulation of those features.  What would prove to be sufficient 
and adequate in one public laundry might be entirely insufficient and 
inadequate in another.  And any attempt to provide by law for the 
multitudinous details defining what would be sufficient and adequate measures 
of regulation, applicable to each and every laundry falling within the class 
mentioned, would seriously tax legislative ingenuity.”  Id., 99 Ohio St. at 274, 
124 N.E. at 133. 
 
Similarly, in State ex rel. Moock v. Cincinnati (1929), 120 Ohio St. 500, 
505-506, 166 N.E. 583, 585, the court found that “[i]t is obvious that the city 
 
13
cannot, by ordinance, prescribe all the terms and conditions under which a 
permit shall be granted for the collection and removal of garbage.  The fact that 
the ordinance did not prescribe the conditions and terms under which a permit 
should be granted, but left their determination to the city manager, did not 
confer legislative power upon him in a constitutional sense.”   
 
This reasoning formed the basis for the impracticability exception set 
forth as follows in Matz, supra, at paragraph seven of the syllabus: 
 
“As a general rule a law which confers discretion on an executive officer 
or board without establishing any standards for guidance is a delegation of 
legislative power and unconstitutional; but when the discretion to be exercised 
relates to a police regulation for the protection of the public morals, health, 
safety or general welfare, and it is impossible or impracticable to provide such 
standards, and to do so would defeat the legislative object sought to be 
accomplished, legislation conferring such discretion may be valid and 
constitutional without such restrictions and limitations.” 
 
14
 
This holding in Matz has served as the basis upon which a wide variety 
of legislative enactments have been upheld as valid delegations of authority.  
Blue Cross of Northwest Ohio v. Jump (1980), 61 Ohio St.2d 246, 252, 15 
O.O.3d 257, 261, 400 N.E.2d 892, 896-897; State v. Schreckengost (1972), 30 
Ohio St.2d 30, 32-33, 59 O.O.2d 60, 62, 282 N.E.2d 50, 52; State v. Switzer 
(1970), 22 Ohio St.2d 47, 50, 51 O.O.2d 69, 71, 257 N.E.2d 908, 910; Carney 
v. Bd. of Tax Appeals (1959), 169 Ohio St. 445, 451-452, 8 O.O.2d 465, 468, 
160 N.E.2d 275, 280; Weber v.Butler Cty. Bd. of Health (1947), 148 Ohio St. 
389, 35 O.O. 351, 74 N.E.2d 331, paragraph two of the syllabus; Akron & 
Barberton Belt RR. Co.  v. Pub. Util. Comm. (1947), 148 Ohio St. 282, 287-
288, 35 O.O. 288, 290-291, 74 N.E.2d 256, 259; Thompson v. Marion (1938), 
134 Ohio St. 122, 128-129, 11 O.O. 549, 552, 16 N.E.2d 208, 211. 
 
Thus, in Ratchford, supra, 64 Ohio St.2d 256, 18 O.O.3d 450, 416 
N.E.2d 614, at the syllabus, we held that: 
 
“A statute does not unconstitutionally delegate legislative power if it 
establishes, through legislative policy and such standards as are practical, an 
 
15
intelligible principle to which the administrative officer or body must conform 
and further establishes a procedure whereby exercise of the discretion can be 
reviewed effectively.” 
 
There are two published Ohio cases in which the issue of unlawful 
delegation has been raised in conjunction with R.C. Chapter 1509.  Both cases 
involved the following italicized language appearing in R.C. 1509.12:  “Unless 
written permission is granted by the chief, any well which is or becomes 
incapable of producing oil or gas in commercial quantities shall be plugged.”  
(Emphasis added.)  These cases, reaching antithetical results, are instructive not 
for their holdings, but for what they fail to do. 
 
The court of appeals in State v. Wallace (1976), 52 Ohio App.2d 264, 6 
O.O.3d 262, 369 N.E.2d 781, upheld the statutory language, but failed to 
address the issue of the need for policy guidelines or standards.  See, also, 
Tiger Corp. v. Call (1982), 8 Ohio App.3d 158, 160, 8 OBR 217, 219, 456 
N.E.2d 554, 557. 
 
16
 
The Findlay Municipal Court in its decision in State v. Wallace (1974), 
40 Ohio Misc. 29, 69 O.O.2d 228, 318 N.E.2d 883, held that R.C. 1509.12 
illegally delegates legislative authority to the Chief of the ODOG.  The court 
relied upon Matz, supra, to reach the conclusion that “[n]o administrative board 
or body may be delegated so much discretion without guidelines and no 
guidelines appear here.”  Id., 40 Ohio Misc. at 31, 69 O.O.2d at 230, 318 
N.E.2d at 885.  The court gave no attention, however, to general policy 
guidelines and the impracticability exception of Matz. 
 
That failure has not gone unnoticed.  Emens & Lowe, Ohio Oil and Gas 
Conservation Law -- The First Ten Years (1965-1975) (1976), 37 Ohio St.L.J. 
31, 72-74, commented as follows: 
 
“*** The ruling of the municipal court as to the constitutionality we 
think was clearly wrong. *** 
“The legislature’s delegation of authority to the Chief of the Division of 
Oil and Gas to determine whether a well is incapable of commercial production 
is precisely the sort of delegation which the Supreme Court of Ohio had in 
 
17
mind when it laid down the exception to the general rule in Matz.  The Ohio oil 
and gas law is a conservation statute, aimed at securing the rational and 
beneficial development of the oil and gas resources of the state.  Wells no 
longer capable of economical production must be properly plugged in order to 
protect the environment and the safety of the populace.  Whether a specific 
well has become incapable of producing oil or gas in commercial quantities is a 
determination that must be made on a well by well basis ***.” 
Other courts have applied similar impracticability exceptions to 
legislation dealing with the conservation of natural resources.  See Colorado 
Interstate Gas Co. v. State corp. Comm. (1963), 192 Kan. 29, 37, 386 P.2d 288, 
293-294; Wotton v. Bush (Cal.1953), 41 Cal.2d 460, 469, 261 P.2d 256, 261; 
1A Summers, Oil and Gas (1954) 182-185, fns. 34 and 35, Section 106 and 
1995 Cumulative Pocket Part, 48.  In State ex rel. Std. Mining & Dev. Corp. v. 
Auburn (1973), 82 Wash.2d 321, 330-331, 510 P.2d 647, 653, the Supreme 
Court of Washington explained: 
 
18
“[T]he specification of standards is not always appropriate in 
administrative actions.  The function of prescribing the conditions under which 
a special use permit [issued to conduct a gravel-mining operation] may be 
enjoyed is one to which this principle is applicable.  Only rarely will the 
environmental factors affecting different special use applications be the same.  
Generally speaking, the conditions imposed must necessarily differ from case 
to case.” 
The relevant thrust of R.C. 1509.08 is to transfer from ODOG to ODM 
the authority to determine the propriety of issuing a permit to dig an oil or gas 
well when the well is to be located in a coal-bearing township.6  This reflects a 
policy choice by the General Assembly that considerations relevant to the 
conservation, mining, development and production of coal play a part in that 
determination.  Accordingly, the inquiry as to the existence of guiding 
principles must necessarily transcend the boundaries of R.C. Chapter 1509, 
which deals only with oil and gas production. 
Former R.C. 4151.03 provided that: 
 
19
“The division of mines shall enforce and supervise the execution of all 
laws enacted for the health and safety of persons and the protection and 
conservation of property within, about, or in connection with mines, mining, 
and quarries, and for such purpose shall make, publish, and enforce necessary 
rules and regulations not inconsistent with the mining laws of this state.”  
Am.Sub.H.B. No. 234, 131 Ohio Laws 234.  See now R.C. 1561.03.  See fn. 1 
above. 
R.C. 1551.31 provides: 
 
“The general assembly hereby finds and declares that: 
 
“(A) Coal is one of the state’s best, most abundant energy resources; 
 
“(B) In recent years the coal industry in this state has experienced 
economic difficulties that have resulted in a loss of jobs in that industry; 
 
“(C) Some coal users are reluctant to use coal from this state because of 
its high sulfur content;  
 
“(D) The increased use of Ohio coal in this state could enable the state to 
be more energy self-sufficient;  
 
20
 
“(E) It is therefore imperative for this state to have a strong, viable coal 
industry in order to create and preserve jobs and improve the economy of this 
state and that, in order to strengthen that industry, methods must be found to 
use Ohio coal in an environmentally acceptable, cost effective manner. 
 
“Accordingly, it is declared to be the public policy of the state, through 
operation of sections 1551.30 to 1551.36 of the Revised Code and other 
applicable laws and authority vested in the general assembly, to assist in the 
development of facilities and technologies that will lead to increased, 
environmentally sound use of Ohio coal.” 
 
R.C. 1551.311 provides: 
 
“The general assembly hereby finds and declares that the future of the 
Ohio coal industry lies in the development of clean coal technology and that 
the disproportionate economic impact on the state under Title IV of the ‘Clean 
Air Act Amendments of 1990,’ 104 Stat. 2584, 42 U.S.C.A. 7651, warrants 
maximum federal assistance to the state for such development.  It is therefore 
imperative that the department of development, its Ohio coal development 
 
21
office, the Ohio coal industry, the Ohio Washington office in the office of the 
governor, and the state’s congressional delegation make every effort to acquire 
any federal assistance available for the development of clean coal technology, 
including assisting entities eligible for grants in their acquisition.  The Ohio 
coal development agenda required by section 1551.34 of the Revised Code 
shall include, in addition to the other information required by that section, a 
description of such efforts and a description of the current status of the 
development of clean coal technology in this state and elsewhere.” 
 
R.C. 1551.32 provides: 
 
“(A) There is hereby established within the department of development 
the Ohio coal development office whose purposes are to: 
 
“(1) Encourage, promote, and support siting, financing, construction, and 
operation of commercially available or scaled facilities and technologies, 
including, without limitation, commercial-scale demonstration facilities and, 
when necessary or appropriate to demonstrate the commercial acceptability of a 
specific technology, up to three installations within this state utilizing the 
 
22
specific technology, to more efficiently produce, beneficiate, market, or use 
Ohio coal; 
 
“(2) Encourage, promote, and support the market acceptance and 
increased market use of Ohio coal through technology and market 
development; 
 
“(3) Assist in the financing of coal development facilities; 
 
“(4) Encourage, promote, and support, in state-owned buildings, 
facilities, and operations, use of Ohio coal and electricity sold by utilities in 
this state that use Ohio coal for generation; 
 
“(5) Improve environmental quality, particularly through cleaner use of 
Ohio coal; and  
 
“(6) Assist and cooperate with governmental agencies, universities and 
colleges, coal producers, coal miners, electric utilities and other coal users, 
public and private sector coal development interests, and others in achieving 
these purposes. 
 
23
 
“(B) The office shall give priority to improvement or reconstruction of 
existing facilities and equipment when economically feasible, to construction 
and operation of commercial-scale facilities, and to technologies, equipment, 
and other techniques that enable maximum use of Ohio coal in an 
environmentally acceptable, cost-effective manner.” 
 
These policy statements establish intelligible principles:  the safety of 
persons; the conservation of property; the maximum utilization, development 
and production of coal and coal technology in an environmentally and 
economically proficient manner; and the prevention of physical and economic 
waste.  Similarly, the principles underlying R.C. Chapter 1509 are safety, R.C. 
1509.08 and 1509.18; protection of correlative rights, R.C. 1509.01(I) and 
1509.40; and the prevention of physical and economic waste, R.C. 1509.20, 
1509.24, 1509.27 and 1590.28. 
 
These principles provide sufficient guidance to the Chief of ODM in 
resolving conflicts arising from the simultaneous quest to produce oil/gas and 
coal.  Moreover, they far exceed in specificity others which the court has 
 
24
sustained.  For example, in Carney, supra, 169 Ohio St. at 453, 8 O.O.2d at 
469, 160 N.E.2d at 280-281, the court upheld certain delegating tax legislation 
on the following basis: 
 
“We are not here confronted with a situation in which no policy 
determination and no standards for guidance have been established by the 
General Assembly.  On the contrary, one standard is established, one positive 
policy is determined, one precise goal is specified.  This standard, this policy 
and this goal are all contained in one word, uniformity.” 
 
To require the establishment of precise standards to guide the Chief of 
ODM in the exercise of his duties under R.C. 1509.08 would amount to an 
insistence on the impracticable.  Moreover, it would tend to frustrate the 
flexibility required to accommodate the multifarious and unforeseen details 
composing every conflict arising from drilling an oil or gas well in the vicinity 
of a coal-mining operation in a coal-bearing township.  The establishment of 
detailed standards is no more practicable, necessary or desirable here than in 
Yee Bow and State ex rel. Moock, supra; nor is it any less incongruous with the 
 
25
need for flexibility.  Thus, we agree with the referee that “detailed standards 
would be problematic; the problems and conflicts associated with locating an 
oil or gas well near a particular mining operation are site-specific and variable. 
***  In addition, the Board reviews the Division’s exercise of discretion, and 
judicial review is available to assure that relevant data have been properly 
considered.” 
 
In addition, the General Assembly has established particular standards 
under R.C. 1509.221 to govern the issuance of a permit to drill or inject a 
substance into a well for the exploration or extraction of certain minerals other 
than oil or natural gas.  It is therefore apparent that the General Assembly has 
made a policy decision that specific standards are impracticable and 
unnecessary to achieve the legislative purposes sought to be accomplished 
under R.C. 1509.08. 
 
“Absent a showing of abuse of discretion in such determination, and here 
none has been demonstrated, the decision of the legislative body in such 
respect should not be disturbed by a court.”  Schreckengost, supra, 30 Ohio 
 
26
St.2d at 33, 59 O.O.2d at 62, 282 N.E.2d at 53.  See, also, Jump, supra, 61 
Ohio St.2d at 252, 15 O.O.3d at 261, 400 N.E.2d at 896-897. 
 
Accordingly, we hold that R.C. 1509.08, which grants to the Chief of 
ODM the discretion to ascertain the existence of an “affected mine” and a 
“well-founded” objection in connection with the disapproval of a permit to dig 
an oil or gas well in a coal-bearing township, does not unconstitutionally 
delegate legislative authority. 
 
Redman also argues that “[t]he operative effect of [R.C.] 1509.08 is an 
unconstitutional delegation of legislative authority when it is applied to the 
facts of this case.”  In particular, Redman assails the chief for “ignor[ing] the 
fact that Mr. Redman already had preexisting wells on those same leases” and 
for arbitrarily determining that COCCo was the owner of an “affected mine.”  
As to the latter contention, Redman takes issue with the fact that the chief “did 
not check the active mine map [as was the usual practice, and] afforded COCO 
the opportunity to object based solely on his belief that at some time in the 
future COCO planned to mine the area encompassing the proposed well sites.” 
 
27
 
To the extent that this argument purports to describe a lack of guidance 
due to the absence of specific standards, it is duplicative of Redman’s previous 
arguments.  Moreover, it serves, instead, to illustrate that the problems of 
permitting oil and gas wells in coal-bearing townships are, in fact, “site-
specific and variable.” 
 
To the extent that it purports to challenge the chief’s authority to proceed 
by adjudication rather than rule-making, it is now well settled that “the decision 
whether to proceed by rule making or adjudication to resolve a dispute lies 
primarily in the informed discretion of the administrative agency.”  Hamilton 
Cty. Bd. of Retardation & Developmental Disabilities v. Professionals Guild of 
Ohio (1989), 46 Ohio St.3d 147, 151, 545 N.E.2d 1260, 1265.  “Since the type 
of proof required can vary from case to case, it was reasonable, and thus lawful, 
for the [chief] to leave such a decision to the adjudicative process.”  Ratchford, 
supra, 64 Ohio St.2d at 262, 18 O.O.3d at 454, 416 N.E.2d at 619.  See, also, 
Dressler Coal Corp. v. Call (1981), 4 Ohio App.3d 81, 4 OBR 161, 446 N.E.2d 
785. 
 
28
 
To the extent that Redman challenges the chief’s actions as arbitrary and 
unreasonable, we disagree.  As to Redman’s contention that the chief ignored 
the fact that Redman already had other wells in close proximity to Edgar 
Chambers Well No. 3 and Harlan Rex Well No. 3, the record does not disclose 
the extent to which the chief considered the presence of Redman’s preexisting 
wells in reaching his decision to deny Redman’s applications in the case sub 
judice.  Instead, Redman would have us assume that the chief acted arbitrarily.  
We cannot make such an assumption, given that the board specifically found 
that COCCo was forced to change its mining plans after the previous wells 
were approved in 1987, due to new environmental regulations and economic 
factors.  It is entirely reasonable to reach a different conclusion under such 
different circumstances, especially in light of the testimony that the new 
proposed wells would result in COCCo’s loss of considerable coal reserves. 
 
As to Redman’s contention that the chief did not check the active mine 
map, we find nothing arbitrary in proceeding under R.C. 1509.08 to notify 
COCCo of the proposed wells based upon ODM’s personal knowledge of 
 
29
COCCo’s mining plans.  Redman’s contention in this regard amounts to a 
proposition that the chief must ignore his actual knowledge of COCCo’s 
mining plans in the absence of an active mine map on file.  We find no 
authority in R.C. 1509.08 or elsewhere to support this proposition, and Redman 
fails to offer any. 
 
Lastly, we cannot find the chief’s interpretation of the term “affected 
mine” as used in R.C. 1509.08 to encompass more than active mining 
operations to be unreasonable.  The issue of whether a mine is an “affected 
mine” under R.C. 1509.08 only comes to surface when a proposed well is or is 
to be located in a coal-bearing township.  R.C. 1509.01(Q) defines “coal 
bearing township” as “a township designated as such by the chief of the 
division of mines under section 4151.11 of the Revised Code.”  In turn, former 
R.C. 4151.11 (now R.C. 1561.06) provided in part that: 
 
“The chief shall also designate the townships in which coal is being 
mined or in which coal is found in such thickness as to make the mining of such 
 
30
coal probable at some future time as ‘coal bearing townships’ as such term is 
used in Chapter 1509. of the Revised Code.”  (Emphasis added.) 
 
Considering R.C. 1509.08 in light of former R.C. 4151.11 and the 
general legislative policy goals bearing on the production of coal, we cannot 
find it unreasonable to interpret the term “affected mine” to encompass more 
than active mining operations. 
 
In light of the foregoing, the decision of the court of appeals is affirmed. 
 
Judgment affirmed. 
 
MOYER, C.J., SLABY, F.E. SWEENEY, PFEIFER and COOK, JJ., concur. 
 
DOUGLAS, J., dissents. 
 
LYNN C. SLABY, J., of the Ninth Appellat eDistrict, sitting for WRIGHT, 
J. 
 
FOOTNOTES 
 
1 Now the Division of Mines and Reclamation with the Department of 
Natural Resources.  Pursuant to Sections 3 and 10 of 1995 S.B. No. 162, the 
 
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Department of Industrial Relations was abolished and its functions transferred 
to several other agencies, which collectively “constitute the continuation of the 
Department of Industrial Relations.”  Section 3 of S.B. No. 162, effective 
October 29, 1995.  Further, Section 3 provides that “[n]o validation, cure, right, 
privilege, remedy, obligation, or liability is lost or impaired by reason of the 
transfer,” and that all of the departments’ “rules, orders, and determinations 
continue in effect as rules, orders, and determinations of [the transferee 
agencies] until modified or rescinded by those departments.”  Thus, for 
purposes of this appeal, we will refer to the various affected agencies and 
statutes as they existed during and are relevant to the proceedings in this case. 
 
2 The board first issued a decision concerning Redman’s applications to 
drill Edgar Chambers Well No. 3 and Harlan Rex Well No. 3 on February 14, 
1991.  That decision was appealed by Redman to the Franklin County Court of 
Common Pleas on March 14, 1991 and designated case No. 91CVF-03-2091.  
However, discovering that its February 14, 1991 decision had not been served 
by certified mail on Redman, the board, on April 10, 1991, reissued its 
 
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decision, which Redman appealed on April 25, 1991.  This appeal was 
designated case No. 91CVF-04-3253 in the Franklin County Court of Common 
Pleas.  The two appeals were consolidated by the trial court and will hereafter 
be referred to as a single action or case.   
 
On October 6, 1992, after case Nos. 91CVF-03-2091 and 91CVF-04-
3253 were already litigated and awaiting decision by the trial court, Redman 
applied with ODOG for permits to drill two other wells, designated as Harlan 
Rex Well No. 4 and Edgar Chambers Well No. 4, each near the corresponding 
No. 3 well.  The same procedure was followed administratively with respect to 
these applications resulting, ultimately, in disallowance.  Redman appealed the 
decision of ODM with respect to Harlan Rex Well No. 4 and Edgar Chambers 
Well No. 4 to the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas, designated case 
No. 93CVF-04-2666.   
 
On April 28, 1993, COCCo filed a motion with the trial court to 
consolidate case No. 93CVF-04-2666 with case Nos. 91CVF-03-2091 and 
91CVF-04-3253, which the trial court granted on June 23, 1993.  Redman 
 
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contends that, pursuant to our holding in Mezerkor v. Mezerkor (1994), 70 
Ohio St.3d 304, 638 N.E.2d 1007, the absence of a Civ.R. 54(B) certification 
prevented the immediate appealability of case Nos. 91CVF-03-2091 and 
91CVF-04-3253, thus requiring a remand to the trial court to decide case No. 
93CVF-04-2666.  We find Mezerkor to be inapplicable to the unique set of 
facts involved in the case sub judice, inasmuch as case Nos. 91CVF-03-2091 
and 91CVF-04-3253 had been fully litigated and were poised for judgment in 
the common pleas court.  In such circumstances Mezerkor does not apply even 
though the cases had been consolidated.  The consolidation was only to ensure 
that the same judge would dispose of  all of the cases.  It is in the best interest 
of judicial economy for us to proceed to consider the issues raised.   
 
3 R.C. 4151.14 has been recodified at R.C. 1561.10.  The provisions of 
R.C. Chapter 4151, like other statutes in Title 41 of the Revised Code relative 
to the regulation of the production of coal, oil and gas, have been either 
repealed or amended and renumbered, effective October 29, 1995.  See fn. 1 
above. 
 
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4 Although at first blush it would appear that the primary focus of our 
inquiry should be on the term “well founded,” since this is the ultimate 
substantive determination to be made by the chief, it cannot be ignored, as 
Redman persuasively argues, that “if there is no ‘affected mine,’ no objection 
can be made and the permit to drill would be issued.”  Accordingly, our inquiry 
must focus on the totality of discretion accorded the chief of ODM by R.C. 
1509.08. 
 
5 One writer has astutely depicted this as a classic statement 
demonstrating that “[t]he early method of escape from the proposition that 
legislative power may not be delegated was by pretending that ‘filling up the 
details’ was not an exercise of legislative power.”  Davis, Administrative Law 
Text (3 Ed.1972) 37, Section 2.06.  See, also, 1 Davis & Pierce, Administrative 
Law Treatise (3 Ed.1994) 66-67, Section 2.6. 
 
6 R.C. 1509.08 provides that upon receiving an application, “the chief of 
the division of oil and gas shall determine whether the well is or is to be 
located in a coal bearing township.”  The term “coal bearing township,” 
 
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however, is defined as “a township designated as such by the chief of the 
division of mines under section 4151.11 of the Revised Code.”  R.C. 
1509.01(Q).