Blassingame v. Halliburton Oil Well Cementing Co.

317 S.W.2d 111, 9 Oil & Gas Rep. 1159, 1958 Tex. App. LEXIS 2267
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 3, 1958
DocketNo. 3398
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 317 S.W.2d 111 (Blassingame v. Halliburton Oil Well Cementing Co.) 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
Blassingame v. Halliburton Oil Well Cementing Co., 317 S.W.2d 111, 9 Oil & Gas Rep. 1159, 1958 Tex. App. LEXIS 2267 (Tex. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

GRISSOM, Chief Justice.

H. C. Blassingame, Sr., as next friend for his eighteen year old son, H. C. Blas-singame, Jr., sued A. O. Wellman & Sons, Ted Weiner, Paul DeCleva, Texas Crude Company, Texas Crude Oil Company and Halliburton Oil Well Cementing Company, Inc., for damages caused by an injury to H. C. Blassingame, Jr., in an explosion at a plugged oil well on the Blassingame farm. He alleged that the “operators” pronounced the well a dry hole and twice purported to plug it; that in the first attempt the “operators” employed Halliburton to do the plugging and it acted as agent for the defendant “operators”; that said operators pulled the casing and made a second attempt to plug the well about April 3, 1954; that they employed C. E. Knight and Company to remove the casing and then plug the well and in so doing Knight and Company acted as agent of said operators; that defendants knew the well was producing large quantities of gas and air and had the duty to plug it in such manner as would prevent gas and air from escaping; that in attempting to plug the well they were guilty of negligence in (1) failing to plug it; (2) failing to plug it so as to prevent gas and air from escaping; (3) in failing to fill the well with rock, sediment or mortar composed of suitable material, in violation of Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. Article 6005; (4) in failing to plug the well before drawing the casing so as to prevent gas from escaping, in violation of said article; (5) in failing to plug the well so as to confine the gas, oil and water to the strata in which they were found, in violation of Article [113]*1136029(2); (6) in attempting to plug the well without complying with directions of the Railroad Commission; (7) in exploding shots of nitro-glycerine in said well when removing casing therefrom, after the first plugging operations had been completed; (8) in not welding the steel cap on top of the surface casing; (9) in not securing the steel cap so as to prevent gas and air from escaping; (10) in failing to inspect the well after drawing the casing and the second plugging operation to see if gas and air were escaping and (11) in failing to place signs near the well warning plaintiff that it might blow out.

The depositions of Blassingame, Sr., and Jr., and Weiner and DeCleva and Pendle-ton were taken. Plaintiff relied upon the res ipsa loquitur doctrine to establish the negligence of Halliburton. Halliburton made the depositions a part of a motion for summary judgment, alleged there was no controverted issue of fact as to negligence of Halliburton or that any act or omission, of Halliburton proximately caused the minor’s injury and that said minor’s contributory negligence was a proximate cause of his injury and barred his recovery as a matter of law. The court sustained said motion and entered judgment for Halliburton and plaintiff has appealed.

In several points plaintiff contends, in effect, that the depositions raised issues of fact as to Halliburton’s negligence and that it was a proximate cause of the minor’s injury and as to the minor’s contributory negligence.

Texas Crude Company and Texas Crude Oil Company had charge of the drilling and employed O’Neal Drilling Company to drill the well. Halliburton was employed by the “operators” to put in cement plugs at 7,770 feet and 7,960 feet and to put in a cast iron plug at 2,200 feet. Knight and Company was employed to pull the casing and plug the well according to the Railroad Commission’s directions. Halliburton’s plugging operations were done January 29th and 30th, 1954. Knight and Company did its plugging on April the 3rd or 4th, 1954. There was evidence that the only pressure encountered in drilling the well was between 800 and 1,000 feet. After Halliburton rendered its service, a metal dome was affixed to the top of the well. In its center was a small metal square which could be turned with a wrench. On the day the minor was injured, J. Hooks, an employee of D. S. & R. Company, came to the well site with a bull dozer to clean up. The minor and Hooks went to the well, obtained a wrench and, after Blassingame, Sr., had arrived the three of them decided to open the valve with a wrench and check the pressure in the well. Hooks partly opened the valve and there was a loud roar as air escaped. Hooks closed the valve. Blassingame, Sr., testified that when Hooks opened the valve it made so much noise “you couldn’t hear anything”; that Hooks left it open for half a minute and then closed it; that he noticed the pressure before it was closed; that about twenty or thirty minutes after Hooks closed the valve, he, Blassingame, Sr., turned the valve; they talked about the pressure and how nice it would be if they could use it; that when Blassingame, Sr., turned the valve he left it on for about the same length of time that Hooks had; that he turned it on a little more than Hooks and the sound was louder; that about the time Hooks went back to his bull dozer, a Mr. Robertson, who farmed an adjoining tract of land and worked in oil fields, drove up and suggested they open the valve. The minor said he went to his tractor and got a wrench and gave it to Robertson and he and his father and Robertson agreed to again open the valve. Blassingame, Sr., testified that he went to the minor’s tractor and got the wrench; that, before Robertson turned it on, Blassingame, Sr., told him he had turned it on before Robertson arrived and about the pressure; that Robertson opened the valve more than Blassingame, Sr., had; that no one raised any objection; that when it was turned on this time the noise was very loud; that it could have “blowed four minutes”; that after three or four [114]*114minutes it began' to “ease off” to where they could hear each other; that they then walked back to the well, thinking the pressure was down; that it appeared to start up again and they walked to the edge “and it had changed from air to kind of a bluish gray gas” that you could see; that Robertson put his hand on the valve and got a jellow oil stain on his hand and showed it to Blassingame, Sr.; that they then “looked into the hole and then she blew”; that he didn’t know whether Robertson had cut off the valve or not. Blassingame, Sr., testified that his son had walked to the north side and was picking up ice caused by something from the well when there was a noise like a dynamite blast and drilling mud, rotary mud and hard pieces of concrete came out of the well and the metal plate on' top of the well was blown north about 110 feet. Blassingame, Sr., testified:

“Q. —what purpose ■ did you all have in opening the valve there? A. Just to see whether there was any danger in it or not, I guess.”

He further testified that nobody knew about the air until “we opened the valve”; that he had not complained about the plugging job before the explosion; that he didn’t then know it hadn’t been done right; that the steel plate plug was on top of the well a month or two before the explosion; that during the time the plugging operations were going on he didn’t see anybody down there but “Knight’s people”; that Knight was the one who pulled the casing and plugged the well.

H. C. Blassingame, Jr., testified that he was at the well when Knight was shooting the casing; that he didn’t see any of the plugging except the last done by Knight; that Knight had not started plugging when he left the well site on a Sunday afternoon, but the next time he was there they had a dome shaped thing on it and the next time they had a steel plate on it; that there was a 13. inch casing in.

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Bluebook (online)
317 S.W.2d 111, 9 Oil & Gas Rep. 1159, 1958 Tex. App. LEXIS 2267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blassingame-v-halliburton-oil-well-cementing-co-texapp-1958.