Benton v. Wheless Drilling Company

440 S.W.2d 373, 1969 Tex. App. LEXIS 2819
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 17, 1969
Docket15397
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 440 S.W.2d 373 (Benton v. Wheless Drilling Company) 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
Benton v. Wheless Drilling Company, 440 S.W.2d 373, 1969 Tex. App. LEXIS 2819 (Tex. Ct. App. 1969).

Opinion

COLEMAN, Justice.

This is an admiralty suit brought by Jerry Benton, the employee of an independent contractor, to recover damages against a vessel owner, Wheless Drilling Company, *375 for injuries received by him while working at unloading pipe from the vessel, which was located in navigable waters. A judgment based on a jury verdict was rendered for the defendant.

Appellant was injured when a heavy drill pipe rolled from the pipe rack of ap-pellee’s submersible drilling barge down onto the floating cargo barge in which appellant and two other employees of the James Casing Crew were working stacking pipe.

The James Casing Crew, Inc. was hired by Wheless Drilling Company to come aboard its vessel and assist its crew members in discharging pipe from the vessel onto the cargo barge tied up alongside, and then to run casing into the well drilled on this site by appellee. When they reached the scene the vessel was rigged to discharge the pipe. The cargo barge was in place alongside the pipe rack. The guard rail, normally set along the outer edge of the pipe rack to prevent pipe falling overboard, had been removed and two pipe runners had been put in place leading from the drilling barge down into the cargo barge.

The pipe racks were located on the front of the drilling barge on either side of a solid metal catwalk six feet in width. The pipe racks and the catwalk were about six feet above the lower deck of the drilling barge. The drilling platform and the derrick were located toward the middle of the barge. The platform was eight to ten feet above the catwalk. A “V” shaped chute, called the V-door, set in the drilling platform led down to the catwalk. Back of the drilling platform was the engine room and at the end of the barge were living quarters. Along the edge of the pipe racks some 3" holes were cut into the “H” beams in which two-inch pipes could be placed, to prevent pipe from rolling off. There were three of these holes. No chocks were in place when the crew arrived, and none were used prior to the accident.

As soon as the Casing Crew changed into their working clothes the operation of removing the drill pipe began. Appellee’s employees were pulling the pipe from the hole. As one joint of pipe cleared the platform, the string of pipe in the hole was secured and top joint unscrewed. This joint was swung out over the catwalk and released in the V-door. It would slide down the V-door onto the catwalk guided by one of the men in the Casing Crew. Another one of the James Casing Crew, Inc. men and one of appellee’s employees would then roll this joint of pipe onto the pipe rack and remove the protective rubber. One of them would then roll it out of the way on the pipe rack. Meanwhile another length of pipe would be coming down the V-door. It appears that the James Crew man would also push the pipes over the side onto the runners. It would then roll down into the cargo barge, which was some six feet or more below. Three members of the James Crew were in the cargo barge. It was their duty to straighten the pipes out and see that they were properly stowed. The other man in the Casing Crew was on the drilling barge, but not on the pipe rack.

Prior to the accident some thirty-five to fifty joints of pipe had been rolled down into the cargo barge. The men in the cargo barge were “working on the second layer.” There were a number of joints of pipe on the pipe rack. The James Crew had been working between thirty minutes and an hour.

N. C. Coffman, Jr., appellee’s tool pusher, was in overall charge of the operations. His position corresponds to that of a captain of a ship. He was on board and had been watching the operation. At the time of the accident he was resting in the living quarters. He testified that they were getting ready to set the production string and that he called on the James Casing Crew to help him lay down the drill pipe and put the casing in because he needed more hands than he ordinarily had in his crew. He said that no one with the casing crew talked to him about how they were going to load the pipe aboard the cargo barge. He left that up to them. It was their job to “load *376 it out.” He did not tell them how to go about doing their work.

He testified that it was appellee’s obligation to furnish the casing crew the means to get the pipe from the pipe rack onto the cargo barge. It was his job to see that the drilling rig and the equipment on it was in good operating order. If he saw someone on the vessel doing something in an unsafe manner, it was his duty to correct the situation. If he had thought that it was unsafe for the James Casing Crew to do the work they were doing in the way they were doing it with the equipment they had available, he would have corrected them. The guard rail stays up on the pipe rack all the time until preparations are made to load something out. He could not remember seeing any chocks out there on the pipe rack before ihe accident. He did not tell the casing crew where any equipment was that was not in the vicinity of the pipe rack. He didn’t notice whether they were using chocks. He didn’t see any chocks and it is customary that they be made available. He testified that if there were too many joints of pipe on the rack and someone was working below it, the 2" pipe can be put in the 3" holes on the edge of the pipe rack and the pipe can’t roll off. Chocks are customarily put up when the work of rolling the pipe off the pipe rack is stopped for awhile. He said that the 2" pipe usually is kept at the pipe rack, but he couldn’t “specify about that one night.” He said that there are always pieces of wood that could be used as chocks.

He testified: “Well, if you get too many too far ahead, laying the pipe down, you get stacked up too many joints on the pipe rack and they are not getting them loaded out on the cargo barge fast enough, you would have to chock it, just safety first to keep it from rolling off the barge, not that it would roll off, but men working up there taking rubbers off or trying to straighten the pipe around, they could roll off, but if they’ve got too many up there they should chock the pipe.”

He also testified that it was safer to have two men with soft ropes at either end of the rack to slow the roll of the pipes. Rope was available for this procedure. It was not usual for a crew to shove four or five pieces of pipe over the edge at one time because it would make more work in “trying to straighten it up.”

Freddie Hebert, one of appellee’s employees, was called as a witness by appel-lee. Prior to the accident he was working on the pipe rack removing the rubbers. He didn’t remember when the railing was taken off or who took it off. Quite a few pipes, maybe 20, had been rolled off the pipe rack into the barge before the accident. About 15 pipes were on the pipe rack at the time of the accident. He did not see the pipe that hit appellant roll off, and he did not roll it off. None of the other men could have rolled it off. The barge was level and they had had no trouble with rolling pipe. Two-inch pipe was usually used as chocks to keep pipe from rolling off the pipe rack. Pieces of 2" pipe were available the night of the accident. Pieces of wood could be used as chocks and wood was available.

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Bluebook (online)
440 S.W.2d 373, 1969 Tex. App. LEXIS 2819, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benton-v-wheless-drilling-company-texapp-1969.