Baroid Equipment, Inc. F/K/A Shaffer, Inc. v. Odeco Drilling, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 13, 2005
Docket01-99-00658-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Baroid Equipment, Inc. F/K/A Shaffer, Inc. v. Odeco Drilling, Inc. (Baroid Equipment, Inc. F/K/A Shaffer, Inc. v. Odeco Drilling, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baroid Equipment, Inc. F/K/A Shaffer, Inc. v. Odeco Drilling, Inc., (Tex. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

Opinion issued October 13, 2005






In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas

____________


NO. 01-99-00658-CV


BAROID EQUIPMENT, INC. F/K/A SHAFFER, INC. AND VARCO SHAFFER COMPANY, Appellants


V.


ODECO DRILLING, INC.; ODECO ENTERPRISES, INC.; DIAMOND-M ODECO, LTD.; AND REXNORD CORPORATION, Appellees


***


ODECO DRILLING, INC.; ODECO ENTERPRISES, INC.; AND DIAMOND-M ODECO, LTD., Appellants



BAROID EQUIPMENT, INC. F/K/A SHAFFER, INC. AND VARCO SHAFFER COMPANY, Appellees



REXNORD CORPORATION, Appellant



BAROID EQUIPMENT, INC. F/K/A SHAFFER, INC. AND VARCO SHAFFER COMPANY, Appellees




On Appeal from the 333rd District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 92-46895





O P I N I O N

          This is an appeal from a bench trial, after which the trial court awarded contract damages and attorney’s fees to Odeco Drilling, Inc., Odeco Enterprises, Inc., and Diamond-M Odeco, Ltd. (collectively, “Odeco”) against Baroid Equipment, Inc., f/n/a Schaffer, Inc., and Varco Shaffer Company (collectively, “Baroid”). The trial court also awarded Baroid damages and attorney’s fees on its indemnity cross-claim against a co-defendant, Rexnord Corporation (“Rexnord”). The primary issue presented by the appeal is whether Odeco, the operator of a semi-submersible drilling rig and purchasing agent for the rig builder, entered into an oral contract with Baroid, an equipment supplier to the rig, that created warranties running to Odeco, which were greater than, and in addition to, the warranties Baroid made to the rig builder, who was the actual purchaser of the equipment.

BACKGROUND

          Odeco owns and operates semi-submersible drilling rigs. This case involves a component of those rigs called a chain riser tensioner system (“CRTS”). A riser is an enclosed system between the ocean floor and the bottom of the rig that houses the drill pipe and related accessories so that they are insulated from the water. The riser is a series of 50-foot pipes that are attached to the blowout preventer, which sits on the ocean floor. Because rigs are subject to the heave of the ocean, it is necessary to keep the riser pipe taut by maintaining tension on it. The tension is created by means of a riser tensioner system, which allows the rig to move up and down while maintaining constant tension on the riser.

          Early riser tensioning systems employed wire rope. However, around 1980, the NL Shaffer division of NL Industries, Inc. (hereinafter, “Baroid”) , began marketing a tensioner system that used a chain, rather than a wire rope (CRTS).

A. Odeco, Baroid, and the OCEAN ODYSSEY

          Odeco began to discuss using a CRTS in 1979 or 1980, in connection with one of its semi-submersible rigs, the OCEAN ODYSSEY. Odeco had been doing business with Baroid and its predecessor companies, since 1954. Odeco viewed chains as an alternative to wire rope for its tensioners because of the increased depth rating required for ocean-going rigs and because wire rope was more difficult to store on the rigs. Odeco, with Baroid’s assistance, prepared performance specifications for the OCEAN ODYSSEY’s chain riser tensioners and made calculations concerning the size and number of chain riser tensioners needed. Although Odeco knew that a CRTS had never been manufactured before, it was satisfied with Baroid because Baroid had invented the concept of ocean heave compensation equipment.

          Tom Bishop, a Baroid production planner, and later Baroid’s vice-president of sales, testified that, in 1980-81, he was assigned to the Odeco account. Odeco was the largest account in Baroid’s New Orleans office and a long-time Baroid customer. Both Bishop and his supervisor at the time, Vinny Barone, talked to Odeco about the advantages of chain riser tensioners. Those advantages included a five-year life expectancy, an ability to bend the chains over a smaller radius, and an ability to avoid the high stresses and prevent the slippage caused by wire rope. Additionally, chains weighed less than wire rope and were easier to inspect and maintain.

          In 1981, Stanley Baleson, Baroid’s district manager in New Orleans, arranged for Baroid’s engineers to put on a major presentation about CRTSs for Odeco. At the presentation, Baroid touted the advantages of a CRTS, as set forth in Baroid’s catalog, which had been distributed to long-standing Baroid customers such as Odeco.

          In February 1981, Baroid quoted Odeco a price for a CRTS to be placed on the OCEAN ODYSSEY. The OCEAN ODYSSEY was completed in 1983 and chartered to an oil company for drilling in the Gulf of Alaska. Because the CRTS was a new invention, there was no service history for chain riser tensioners before the OCEAN ODYSSEY went into service. The chains on the OCEAN ODYSSEY’s tensioners were manufactured by Whitney, a division of Dresser Industries. The Whitney chains failed shortly after the OCEAN ODYSSEY went into operation.

B. The OCEAN ALLIANCE

          While the OCEAN ODYSSEY was under construction, Odeco became involved in the building of a second semi-submersible rig, the OCEAN ALLIANCE. Around 1980, British National Oil Company (hereinafter, “Britoil”) and Ben Line Steamers, Ltd. (hereinafter, “Ben Line”) began discussing the construction of a semi-submersible drilling rig. The rig was to be built according to a contract with Britoil. At the end of the term, the parties contemplated that Britoil and a contractor would each own a one-half interest in the rig. Britoil and Ben Line agreed that Odeco would serve as the contractor through Ben Odeco Limited, a company jointly owned by Ben Line and Odeco.

          1. Ownership, Leasing, and Operation of the OCEAN ALLIANCE

          The construction and financing of the OCEAN ALLIANCE involved creating a new company, St. Vincent Drilling Limited (hereinafter, “St. Vincent”), the shares of which were owned 50% by Britoil and 50% by Ben Odeco. The rig was actually ordered and owned by Lloyds Leasing Limited (hereinafter, “Lloyds Leasing”) and leased by St. Vincent. The contract between Lloyds Leasing and St. Vincent provided that, at the end of the lease term, St. Vincent could continue to lease the rig for a nominal amount or instruct Lloyds Leasing to sell the rig, with St. Vincent receiving the majority of the proceeds.

          In December 1981, Britoil, Ben Odeco Limited, and St.

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Baroid Equipment, Inc. F/K/A Shaffer, Inc. v. Odeco Drilling, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baroid-equipment-inc-fka-shaffer-inc-v-odeco-drill-texapp-2005.