Carroll v. Genesis Marine, LLC

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedMay 5, 2021
Docket2:19-cv-13512
StatusUnknown

This text of Carroll v. Genesis Marine, LLC (Carroll v. Genesis Marine, LLC) 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
Carroll v. Genesis Marine, LLC, (E.D. La. 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

EASTERN DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA

MICHAEL R. CARROLL CIVIL ACTION

v. NO. 19-13512

GENESIS MARINE, LLC, ET AL. SECTION "F"

ORDER AND REASONS Before the Court are three motions by Genesis Marine, LLC: (1) motion seeking review of Magistrate Judge Douglas’s order granting the plaintiff’s request for attorney’s fees in connection with a successful motion to compel; (2) motion seeking review of Magistrate Judge Douglas’s order denying Genesis Marine’s motion to compel the plaintiff to travel to Denver, Colorado to submit to an Independent Medical Exam; and (3) motion for summary judgment. For the reasons that follow, the motions are DENIED. Background This personal injury lawsuit arises out of a rupture aboard a barge due to over-pressurization. A tankerman claims that he has experienced dizziness, nausea, headaches, and other symptoms after an air over-pressurization blowout on a barge next to the one on which he was working, monitoring air pressure gauges during a blowback procedure being performed on adjoining barges moored at a dock. At the time of the blowout, the tankerman heard a loud noise, saw air shoot vertically up from the adjoining barge, and felt a pressure change, but otherwise was not directly or

contemporaneously physically impacted by the blowout. In late September 2018, two barges, the GM3804 and the GM3806, which were owned by Genesis Marine, LLC of Delaware, docked at the International-Matex Tank Terminals, LLC, St. Rose Dock in St. Charles Parish, Louisiana to discharge asphalt they were transporting. On September 29, 2018, Michael Carroll was working as a tankerman for Gulfstar Industries, LLC. He was working aboard the GM3806, which was on the “inside,” closest to IMTT Dock 48,

while its twin barge -- the GM3804 -- was on the “outside,” next to the GRM3806. Another Gulfstar tankerman, Charles Sens, was the Person in Charge working aboard the GM3804. Genesis Marine employee Ryan Swafford was working with or observing Sens on the GM3804. After the asphalt was unloaded from the barges, a blowback procedure was being conducted from the IMTT Dock to the GM3806 and GM3804 “[t]rying to clear the product [asphalt] out [by] “hav[ing] air blown through” IMTT’s and Genesis’ hoses.1 Sens set up the

1 According to Carroll, the rupture occurred due to over- pressurization and defective air-pressure release valves; Carroll testified: blowback aboard the GM3804 through the ullage hatch. At first, the blowback was “fine,” meaning “we could hear air traveling through the pipeline and ... our pressure gauges were reading

normally and everything seemed to be going like normal.” Carroll Depo. Tr. p. 100-103 (if pressure is building up in a barge, the gauges “should reflect pressure building”); (as for why he did not see the gauges indicating pressure building, Carroll attributed this to “[a] faulty pressure gauge on an asphalt barge gunked up”). While Carroll was monitoring air pressure gauges on the GM3806, the GM3804 “ruptured.”2 Carroll heard a loud noise, saw “out of the corner of [his] eye” air shoot up from the GM3804, and he felt the pressure change. For his part, Carroll offers different estimates for how far he was from the rupture on GM3804; the closest estimate he offered was his testimony that he was “50 or

They want the valves opened up a certain way to mitigate a lot of risks that could happen. Certain things have to be closed and certain things have to be open to try to keep the product out of the water and people from getting hurt.

Carroll Depo. Tr. p. 96.

2 At times, the parties appear to confuse the barge numbers, but it is undisputed that the barge on which Carroll was working was not the one that experienced the air blowout. 75 feet” away, on a different barge (GM3806), from the rupture on GM3804.3

The IMTT dockside video recorded the over-pressurization or rupture. The video footage does not show Carroll and the vantage is quite a distance from the incident; the video shows what appears to be white smoke (or air)4 shooting vertically in the air above the vessel, for a few seconds. As Carroll described it: “It looked just like a water geyser shooting up in the air probably about a hundred foot.” Carroll Depo. Tr. p. 108.5 The video does not show, but Carroll has testified that: the force of the blowout caused the welds to break from a 200 lb. toolbox, popping its lid

into the air and that the rupture also caused the barge, the GM3804, to raise up three to four feet.6 The mechanics of the rupture are not briefed and Genesis Marine does not point to evidence that would allow an assessment of negligence.7 There is no dispute that there was an over-

3 At best, there is a dispute concerning how close Carroll was working to the rupture. Genesis Marine submits that Carroll was 223.71 feet away from the rupture on the other vessel. 4 According to the testimony in the summary judgment record, the white smoke is a release of air. 5 He also stated that the force of the release caused the top of an 8-foot-long toolbox to fly up about 50 feet in the air. 6 According to the parties’ pretrial submissions, there was significant damage to the GM3804 as a result of the rupture. The Court will not and need not search the summary judgment record to determine the extent of the damage. 7 In Carroll’s complaint, he alleges that the valves owned by International-Matex Tank Terminals, LLC, connected from the IMTT pressurization on the GM3804 and that Carroll claims he was injured as a result. Asked about physical impact, Carroll stated that the rupture did not cause him to fall and that no object hit or struck him; however, he “felt the pressure change” and it was very loud.8

There is nothing in the record to indicate that anyone on the GM3804 suffered any injury due to the over-pressurization incident. Although he was on the adjacent GM3806 -- not the GM3804 that ruptured -- Carroll claims he began experiencing symptoms which he attributes to the blowout. After the rupture, Carroll said he was in shock and began experiencing frequent headaches,

dock to the Genesis barge, through which the air pressure flowed. As Carroll monitored the pressure, he alleges, IMTT personnel released air through the IMTT valves but they failed to monitor the air flow and caused too much air to be released. And, it is alleged, the gauge that Carroll used to monitor the air pressure was defective and failed to indicate correct pressure readings. As he monitored the pressure, the barge became over-pressurized, the pressure relief valve failed to open, and the Genesis barge “ruptured due to shock waves,” which allegedly injured Carroll. 8 Carroll testified:

Q. Am I correct that you suffered no physical injuries as a result of the air shooting out on September 29, 2018? A. I didn’t fall or nothing hit me. ... A. ... It didn’t knock me down or anything like that. It was a very loud bang and I felt the pressure change.

Carroll Depo. Tr. p. 119. indigestion, occasional blurred vision, ringing in his ears, dizziness, nausea, and neck pain.

Carroll continued to work as a tankerman on barges a “handful” of times after the incident. But he ultimately stopped. He claims his first serious migraine symptoms manifested in mid-October 2018 and that he experienced earaches and ringing. He also became agitated. On October 15, 2018, Carroll reported to

his supervisor that he needed to seek medical treatment. The next day, Carroll presented to urgent care, but left before seeing a medical provider. On October 19, 2018, Carroll was referred to Prime Occupational Medicine by his employer, Gulfstar. Complaining of excessive fatigue, ringing in his ears, irregular heartbeat, numbness/tingling, neck pain, muscle pain, dizziness/fainting, and eye trouble, Carroll was treated by Mark Collier, N.P.

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Carroll v. Genesis Marine, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carroll-v-genesis-marine-llc-laed-2021.