Begovich, Gonzales and Plaisance v. Texas Company

209 F. Supp. 412, 18 Oil & Gas Rep. 21, 1962 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4754
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedOctober 12, 1962
DocketCiv. A. 4754
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 209 F. Supp. 412 (Begovich, Gonzales and Plaisance v. Texas Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Begovich, Gonzales and Plaisance v. Texas Company, 209 F. Supp. 412, 18 Oil & Gas Rep. 21, 1962 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4754 (E.D. La. 1962).

Opinion

WEST, District Judge.

^his suit was brought in 1954 by the partnership then composed of Jack Begovich, Sr., Almon Gonzales, and Frank Plaisance, against The Texas Company (now known as Texaco, Inc.) for alleged damages to oyster bedding grounds. Since the filing of the suit, Jack Begovich, Sr. died and his heirs were properly substituted as parties plaintiff. The case was tried to the Court, without the intervention of a jury, and at the commencement of the trial, the plaintiffs stipulated *413 that there was no question of trespass involved, but that plaintiffs’ claim rested entirely on the alleged negligent destruction of plaintiffs’ oysters by representatives of the defendant company. At the close of plaintiffs’ case, the defendant moved for a judgment of involuntary dismissal, pursuant to Rule 41(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, 28 U.S.C.A., and the motion was granted. In connection therewith, the Court makes the following Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law.

FINDINGS OF FACT

1.

Complainants are members of a partnership, and are all citizens of the State of Louisiana. Defendant is a corporate citizen of a state other than Louisiana, authorized to do and doing business in the State of Louisiana.

2.

Defendant was the lawful owner of two contiguous mineral leases granted to it by the State of Louisiana on May 11, 1951, and November 22, 1952, respectively, which mineral leases were duly recorded and included all or substantially all of the bottom of Lake Athanasio, sometimes also known as Bay Seago,'in St. Bernard Parish, Louisiana.

3.

Subsequent to the granting of these mineral leases to the defendant, the State of Louisiana granted to the plaintiffs a bedding-ground lease for the cultivation of oysters covering 1,200 superficial acres of the water bottom of the same Lake Athanasio. Lake Athanasio covers approximately 3,400 acres, and this bedding-ground lease did not delineate the specific 1,200 acres of this 3,400 acre lake bottom covered by the bedding-ground lease.

4.

No survey was ever made showing the exact location of the 1,200 acres covered by the bedding-ground lease, and no “ranges, monuments, stakes, buoys, and the like” were ever employed by the plaintiffs to “locate accurately and fix the limits of the water bottoms embraced in each lease” as required by Section 425 of Title 56 of the Louisiana Revised Statutes. A copy of plaintiffs’ lease covering “1200 acres in Bay Seago” was filed in evidence attached to a survey of Bay Seago made on January 16, 1953, by James N. McConnell. While the certification by McConnell on the survey states that he “marked . . . the boundaries and limits of a portion of the bed or bottom of Bay Seago for oyster bedding purposes, containing 1200 superficial acres”, nevertheless the survey actually shows all of Bay Seago, and no such indications of boundaries of the 1,200 acres actually leased appears on the survey. The evidence clearly established that no such markers or boundary designations were present at the times involved in this litigation.

5.

The plaintiffs took the position that their 1,200 acres of bedding-grounds were “scattered throughout the entire lake”, and they did, in fact, cultivate oysters on scattered areas throughout the lake bottom. It is an established fact that the plaintiffs did bed oysters in areas covered by defendant’s mineral leases on the water bottom of Lake Athanasio.

6.

During the year preceding the filing of this law suit on November 1, 1954, the defendant company, pursuant to its rights and obligations under the mineral leases above referred to, conducted certain dredging operations for the purpose of dredging two approach canals to sites in Lake Athanasio selected by their engineers as locations for prospective oil wells. These approach canals were used to float drilling rigs and other necessary equipment to and from the drilling sites.

7.

These approach canals were dredged by the defendant across portions of the bottom of Lake Athanasio, and within the area covered by defendant’s mineral leases. The canals also crossed areas of the lake bottom on which plaintiff had *414 bedded oysters for cultivation, and as a consequence, some of the oysters thus bedded were destroyed. The first canal dredged was about 1,200 feet long and 75 feet wide, necessitating a spoil bank of about 100 feet on each side of the canal, and the second canal was about 2,800 feet long and 75 feet wide with a spoil bank of about 100 feet on each side of the canal.

8.

In dredging the approach canals, the defendant used the method known as the dipper-dredge method, which consisted of digging the canal with a dragline bucket or dipper and simply depositing the spoil removed along the sides of the dredged canal, beneath the water. This, of course, resulted in the spoil thus removed from the dredged area being deposited along the sides of the canal in such a manner as to necessarily cover up any oysters that might be bedded in that area. Oysters thus covered up will, in all probability, be destroyed. The Court finds no evidence that any excess or unnecessary amount of spoil was thus deposited along the sides of the canal, nor that the defendant was in any way negligent in the manner in which this dipper-dredging operation was performed.

9.

It would have been possible to have used a suction dredge in digging the canal. If this system had been used, it might have been possible to have removed the spoil from the dredged area by suction, and to have deposited the spoil at some location along the bank, and to have thus avoided covering up any bedded oysters with the spoil. This method of suction dredging is considerably more expensive than the method of dipper-dredging used by the defendant, and the evidence is far from conclusive that such a method would even have been practical under the circumstances of this case.

10.

The dipper-dredge method of dredging these canals is the method most often used by the oil industry, and the use of such a process does not, of itself, constitute negligence.

11.

Lake Athanasio being considered navigable waters, the required permits for dredging the access canals were obtained by the defendant from the United States Army Corps of Engineers, and the method of dredging was also approved.

12.

For five or six months prior to October 9,1953, defendant’s engineers were in the area of Lake Athanasio preparing for the selection of possible oil well sites. On or about October 9, 1953, Allan N. Peirce, III, the claims and right of way agent for the defendant company, was notified that the engineers had selected a well site and had set out stakes for an approach canal from the south entrance to the lake, coming from a small island to the south called Coon Nest Island, through Canal Pecal, into Lake Athanasio, but that the plaintiffs had objected to the use of that particular route on the grounds that it would traverse and damage a considerable length of their best oyster beds. Whereupon, Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
209 F. Supp. 412, 18 Oil & Gas Rep. 21, 1962 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4754, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/begovich-gonzales-and-plaisance-v-texas-company-laed-1962.