Barnsdall Oil Co. v. Ohler

1915 OK 397, 150 P. 98, 48 Okla. 651, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 681
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 1, 1915
Docket6287
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 1915 OK 397 (Barnsdall Oil Co. v. Ohler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barnsdall Oil Co. v. Ohler, 1915 OK 397, 150 P. 98, 48 Okla. 651, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 681 (Okla. 1915).

Opinion

Opinion by

MATHEWS, C..

This action was instituted for the recovery of damages for personal injuries. The parties hereto will be designated as they appeared in the lower court. The petitioner, in substance, alleges that he was employed by defendants as a member of a tubing crew, who were engaged in pulling tubing from oil wells and at the time of the injury were putting back tubing in an oil well, and that in so doing it was necessary for him to stand on a platform called a tubing board, constructed on the derrick about 40 feet above the derrick floor. Plaintiff further alleged that defendant was negligent .in the construction of said derrick and tubing board in nailing a timber or board across the tubing board so that the end thereof extended about 18 inches over and beyond the edge of the tubing board; that while engaged in putting tubing in said well, as an employee of defendant, with other employees, they used a heavy wire line lifting and hoisting said tubing, which line ran through a pulley at the top of the derrick, and that while engaged in lowering the tubing into the well, the said line caught over the projecting end of said board, and when the weight of the tubing pulled said line taut, this caused the tubing board upon which plaintiff was standing to be pulled off the girt around the derrick upon which one end of the tubing board was resting, which caused plaintiff to fall to the floor of the derrick, a distance of 40 feet, from which he received severe injuries. The petition contained no statement as to who constructed and installed the tubing board, but merely cites that' defendant and its employees did. As far as the necessities of this opinion require, we will only set out the fifth paragraph of defendant’s answer, which is as follows:

*654 “For additional defense to plaintiff’s petition the defendant says that plaintiff’s injury, if any be received, was the result of a concurrent negligence of himself and of those with whom he was working as his fellow servants in the same line of work, and his injury, if any he received, was attributable entirely to his own want of care and to the want of care of those who were, at the time, engaged with him in the same line of labor.”

Plaintiff met this answer with a denial, and at the trial a verdict was returned- in favor of plaintiff, and from the judgment upon this verdict defendant appealed to this court.

There is but one vital, controlling point in this case. The theory upon which the plaintiff launched his petition, and which the trial court adopted and upon which be submitted the case to the jury, was that the tubing board upon an oil derrick was a permanent part thereof and a completed instrumentality and a place in which to work, and that it was a personal, primary, nonassignable, non-delegable, positive duty of the defendant, under such conditions, to furnish plaintiff, while working for defendant in pulling tubing and replacing the same when it became necessary for him to use the tubing board, a completed instrumentality and a reasonably safe place in which to work, and that under those conditions defendant could not interpose as a defense its contention that the plaintiff, with other employes of defendant, composing a tubing crew, could not hold defendant liable for a negligent act of plaintiff, or of a fellow servant, in installing the tubing board preparatory to using the same in replacing tubes and rod in the oil well.

The facts in the case are that the plaintiff, one J. W. Smiley, Less Craig, and another, at the time of the accident, composed what is known as a tubing crew in the *655 employ of defendant. It seems that the way a tubing crew work together is for one of the crew to stand on what is known as the tubing board, in order to handle the upper.end of the piping when drawn from the well, and to arrange the upper end of the pipe against the tubing board, and when the piping is being put in the well, he stands on the same tubing board to place the line around the top of the tubing so it can be lowered into the well, the other members of the crew remaining on the .ground in various capacities.

When the tubing crew came to the derrick the day before the accident to pull the tubing, the tubing board was on the sixth girt of the derrick, and it was taken down to the ground and was then by plaintiff and Smiley again hoisted and placed on the fourth girt of the derrick. Smiley and the plaintiff both ascended the ladder to the fourth girt and proceeded to install the tubing board by placing the board so that one end rested- on the east and one on the west girt of the derrick, having a play of about four inches on each side of the two girts. In order to brace the tubing board so as to make it secure enough to permit the laying of one end of the drawn piping against it, they then proceeded to nail crosspieces on-the top side of the board, two of the crosspieces extending the entire width of the board and back to the legs of the derrick, there being four crosspieces, the plaintiff nailing all of the crosspieces except the west one, which Smiley arranged and nailed, the crosspiece placed on by Smiley extending over and beyond the front end of the tubing board about a foot or 18 inches, and the crosspiece did not exactly coincide with the west girt, but was about two inches to the east of it. It took about 15 minutes to install the tubing board, and then the crew first *656 pulled the tubing, all of the crew being on the ground except the plaintiff, who occupied the tubing board, and attended to the duties of that position as above stated. After the piping had been drawn from the well, when it was being replaced the next day, the plaintiff, on the tubing board, had placed the elevator line around the piping to be lowered, but while the line was slack, in some way it got caught on the projecting portion of the crosspiece nailed on the tubing board by Smiley, and when it was drawn tight by the weight of the piping, which was about 9,000 pounds, the line coming perpendicular,' pulled the tubing board off of the girt supporting the same, and thereby plaintiff was thrown from said tubing board to the floor of the derrick, a distance of about 40 feet; the plaintiff receiving véry severe injuries.

There can be no controversy upon the point that plaintiff and Smiley and other employees of defendant were fellow servants at the time they were installing the tubing board. The evidence is conclusive thereon, and plaintiff admits it. There is also no controversy as to how the accident that occasioned the injury occurred, it being uncontested that the accident was occasioned by the wire line, when slacked, getting caught on the projecting end of the plank or timber nailed on the tubing board by Smiley, a coemployee, and when the weight of the tubing was placed on the wire rope, it, becoming taut, pulled the end of the tubing board off of the west girt of the derrick upon which it was resting.

Defendant advances two reasons why the plaintiff should not recover, as follows:

“(a) That the appellee’s own negligence, not contributory negligence, but primary negligence, caused his injury.
*657

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1915 OK 397, 150 P. 98, 48 Okla. 651, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 681, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barnsdall-oil-co-v-ohler-okla-1915.