Baxter v. Sonat Offshore Drilling, Inc.

734 So. 2d 901, 1999 WL 321566
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 14, 1999
Docket98 CA 1054
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 734 So. 2d 901 (Baxter v. Sonat Offshore Drilling, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baxter v. Sonat Offshore Drilling, Inc., 734 So. 2d 901, 1999 WL 321566 (La. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

734 So.2d 901 (1999)

Paul W. BAXTER and Mrs. Kathy R. Baxter
v.
SONAT OFFSHORE DRILLING INC.

No. 98 CA 1054.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

May 14, 1999.

*903 Ralph Brewer, Baton Rouge, for Plaintiff-Appellant Paul W. Baxter.

Timothy C. Cerniglia, New Orleans, for Defendant-Appellee Sonat Offshore Drilling, Inc.

Before: CARTER, C.J., SHORTESS, J., and Edward A. de la HOUSSAYE,[1] J. Pro Tem.

SHORTESS, J.

Paul W. Baxter (plaintiff) filed suit under the Jones Act[2] against his employer, *904 Sonat Offshore Drilling, Inc. (defendant), alleging he was injured on December 30, 1993, while in the service of the semisubmersible oil rig DF-77.[3] Plaintiff alleged in the petition that he was struck in the back of the head while working on the vessel and "to this day has not been informed and has been unable to find out what struck him." He contended he sustained serious injuries due to defendant's fault and the unseaworthiness of the vessel.

After a six-day jury trial, the jury rendered a verdict finding defendant was not negligent and the vessel was not unseaworthy. The trial court rendered judgment in accordance with the verdict and dismissed plaintiffs suit. Plaintiff appeals, alleging nine assignments of error.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

In December 1993 defendant hired plaintiff as a roustabout on its offshore drilling rig DF-77. Plaintiff worked one seven-day hitch, went home for fourteen days, then came back for his second hitch on December 28. Kerr McGee owned the rig, and it required all employees leaving for the rig on December 28 to give urine samples at its shore base for a drug screening. According to Richard E. Dennis, an employee of Security Services U.S.A., Limited, who collected the samples, plaintiff was very irritated with the test procedures. He testified plaintiff threatened to sue if the results were positive, although plaintiff denied that. A result of more than 300 nanograms per milliliter' is considered a positive result for codeine. An analysis of plaintiffs urine showed it contained 10,120 nanograms per milliliter of codeine.[4]

On the same day plaintiffs positive test results were sent to Kerr McGee, December 30, plaintiff was found lying face down on a walkway on the blowout preventer (BOP) deck. Dwin Allen Runge, the vessel's medic, was called. Plaintiff was conscious but still lying face down when Runge arrived. Plaintiff's hard hat was about two feet from him and his jacket was near his head. Runge knelt by plaintiff and examined him. Plaintiff was oriented as to time, person, and place. Speaking in a very low voice, he told Runge he heard a loud noise, like an explosion, and the next thing he knew he was lying face down and his head and neck hurt. Runge's examination of plaintiff revealed no blood or scrapes on plaintiff's scalp. He found a discolored spot on plaintiffs scalp that Runge thought was a bruise and a bump at the base of plaintiff's skull. Runge stated he had no idea how long the bump had been on plaintiffs head or even what caused it. Roy Alemand, Kerr McGee's senior drilling foreman, arrived at the scene after Runge and then left to call for a medivac helicopter. Before the helicopter arrived, plaintiff told Runge he remembered going down stairs, picking up his jacket, and hearing a loud sound.

Billy Jenkins, second-in-command on the rig, went to the scene with Runge. He did not notice plaintiff's jacket but saw his brand new hard hat. He examined the hat and found no marks on it. After plaintiff was taken to the treatment room on a stretcher, Jenkins felt the back of plaintiff's head and neck. He found nothing unusual. He stated if there was a bump on plaintiff's head, "it was no more than something like you'd be born with."

*905 John B. Castilaw, Kerr McGee's offshore installation manager who was in charge of the rig, arrived at the scene a few minutes before plaintiff was taken to the treatment room. Plaintiff appeared fully conscious.

Plaintiff was flown by helicopter to Terrebonne General Medical Center in Houma. He was assessed upon admission as alert and oriented. He told the nurse who completed the admission form that he was bending to pick up his jacket when something hit him in the back of the head. Dr. Sherif K. Sakla examined plaintiff and found him "slightly sluggish" but "very fluent." He was alert and oriented as to time place, space, year, and president, but he claimed to have no memory of the incident. Sakla found a bruise on the back of plaintiff's head, behind his right ear. He ordered a CAT scan, which was negative. Because plaintiff's senses seemed to be dulled, he ordered him admitted for observation of a possible concussion and called for a consultation by a neurosurgeon. He stated that doctors give their patients the benefit of the doubt and admit them on the face value of their complaints, even if their gut feeling is that those complaints are exaggerated.

Dr. Carson McKowen, a neurosurgeon, examined plaintiff at Sakla's request. He testified Sakla was concerned that plaintiff was "faking." McKowen found no objective evidence consistent with someone being rendered unconscious by a blow to the head. The only objective finding was tightness of the neck muscles, which could have been caused by the helicopter ride. He testified plaintiff "sounded like he was interested in being injured."

Plaintiff testified that on the day of the incident, someone—he was not sure who— asked him to check the BOP's. He went down some stairs and then everything went blank. He testified the next thing he remembered was waking up at Terrebonne General about twelve hours later. He stated he does not remember talking to anyone during those twelve hours.

McKowen stated it was medically inconsistent for plaintiff to remember the incident on admission but not remember it four hours later. Nurses assessed plaintiff every three to four hours after his admission and found him alert and oriented. McKowen believed the manner in which plaintiff claimed amnesia was "inappropriate for someone who has truly been knocked unconscious and had amnesia surrounding a traumatic event."

Defendant retained a neurosurgeon, Dr. Carlos Pisarello, to review plaintiff's medical records and the depositions in this case. He showed the jury a CAT scan film of someone diagnosed with a concussion and compared it to plaintiff's film. He stated plaintiffs CAT scan was completely normal, which proved, in his opinion, that plaintiff "must have" faked being found unconscious or halfway conscious. "[T]he CAT Scan doesn't lie," he testified. He further opined that it was "completely impossible" for someone to recall the details of an accident and then have total amnesia of the event a few hours later. He also noted that someone who regains consciousness while lying face down will, as a reflex action, turn over rather than continue to lie face down and that someone who has just regained consciousness will be disoriented and incoherent, unlike plaintiff herein.

At trial plaintiff testified all he knew about the accident was one minute he was walking, and the next thing he knew, he awakened in the hospital. He had no idea how the accident happened. He agreed he could have blacked out, fallen backward, and hit his head on a steel wall or the deck. He stated that the incident was similar to a drug-induced blackout he once suffered but that the blackout on the rig was not drug-induced.

Jenkins conducted an investigation for Sonat but found nothing that could have caused plaintiff to fall and nothing that could have struck him in the head.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
734 So. 2d 901, 1999 WL 321566, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baxter-v-sonat-offshore-drilling-inc-lactapp-1999.