Delton Coutee v. Global Marine Drilling Company

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 16, 2005
DocketCA-0004-1293
StatusUnknown

This text of Delton Coutee v. Global Marine Drilling Company (Delton Coutee v. Global Marine Drilling Company) 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
Delton Coutee v. Global Marine Drilling Company, (La. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

04-1293

DELTON COUTEE

VERSUS

GLOBAL MARINE DRILLING COMPANY

********** APPEAL FROM THE FIFTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF LAFAYETTE, NO. 20015646 HONORABLE MARILYN CARR CASTLE, DISTRICT JUDGE

**********

ULYSSES GENE THIBODEAUX CHIEF JUDGE

Court composed of Ulysses Gene Thibodeaux, Chief Judge, Billy Howard Ezell, and James T. Genovese, Judges.

AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND RENDERED.

Delos E. Flint, Jr. George J. Fowler, III Lawrence R. Demarcay, III Fowler, Rodriguez & Chalos 400 Poydras Street - 30th Floor New Orleans, LA 70130 Telephone: (504) 523-2600 COUNSEL FOR: Defendant/Appellee - Global Marine Drilling Company

Eugene A. Ledet, Jr. RIVERS, BECK, DALRYMPLE & LEDET P. O. Drawer 12850 Alexandria, LA 71315-2850 Telephone: (318) 445-6581 COUNSEL FOR: Plaintiff/Appellant - Delton Coutee THIBODEAUX, Chief Judge.

In this Jones Act negligence case, plaintiff, Delton Coutee, appeals the

judgment of the trial court in favor of defendant, Global Marine Drilling Company

(Global Marine). The trial court concluded that Mr. Coutee failed to prove that the

Global Marine vessel from which he fell was unreasonably unsafe for its intended

purposes under the Jones Act. The trial court also found that Mr. Coutee was entitled

to a cure award of $1,885.11, but that Global Marine paid Mr. Coutee $17,633.00 in

settlement advances which offset the cure award; thus, Mr. Coutee is not entitled to

attorney fees in conjunction with his cure award.

For the following reasons, we reverse the judgment of the trial court with

respect to its finding that failure to provide hand/guard rails was not negligence per

se and finding that Global Marine was not callous and recalcitrant, arbitrary and

capricious, or willful, callous, and persistent when it refused to pay Mr. Coutee the

amount of cure benefits to which he was entitled. We award $10,000.00 in attorney

fees for Global Marine’s refusal. We further reverse the judgment of the trial court

and find that Mr. Coutee sustained a back injury as a result of Global Marine’s

negligence per se and render judgment awarding $100,000.00 in general damages,

$60,000.00 for past lost earnings, and $300,000.00 for future loss of earnings. We

affirm the judgment with respect to its finding that the SALA block was not defective

and that Mr. Coutee was entitled to additional cure benefits.

I.

ISSUES

We shall consider whether:

(1) the trial judge erred in finding that Global Marine’s failure to provide guardrails on the platform erected

1 around the Blowout Preventer Stack (BPS), a regulatory safety violation, was excused due to storage space constraints and his use of a safety harness;

(2) the trial judge committed legal error by failing to strike the testimony of Dr. Rayland K. Beurlot; and,

(3) the trial court’s refusal to award compensatory damages and attorney fees was error.

II.

FACTS

Mr. Coutee filed suit against Global Marine under the Jones Act, 46

U.S.C. § 688. There is no dispute that Mr. Coutee fell off of the Blowout Preventer

(BOP) stack on January 7, 2001, while working as a seaman on the drilling vessel

Glomar Adriatic II (Glomar) on his third day of an eleven-day work period. The BOP

stack is located underneath the drill floor and is used to control well pressure while

drilling.

The BOP stack consists of several hydraulically-powered valves that are

stacked one on top of the other. Customarily, crews working on the BOP stack use

riding belts to climb the stack. When Mr. Coutee fell from the BOP stack, he was in

the process of “nippling down” (removing) the BOP stack lubricator. The lubricator

is attached to the BOP stack by a flange, or the “hydrill,” by four large nuts and bolts.

The hydrill is just above the lubricator. The lubricator equipment is also used to

control pressure during wireline operations. It is common practice to change out the

lubricator’s bell nipple during drilling, completion, and wire line operations.

In an effort to assist its employees in the removal of the equipment

located directly above the hydrill, Global attached a half-moon shaped platform that

measured four feet long and one-and-a-half feet at its widest point. Use of the

2 platform began in the 1990s. The platform was not permanently attached to the

hydrill, but was held there by steel strapping. The form of attachment used made it

possible to remove the platform when not in use. Don Jeffery Bass, who was

employed by Global Marine as a night tool pusher at the time of Mr. Coutee’s

accident, testified that prior to using the temporary platform, employees had to

perform the nipple down procedure while sitting down in a riding belt. Mr. Coutee

testified that he was familiar with performing the nipple down procedure because it

had to be done each time the rig completed drilling a well. The employees

performing the nipple down procedure were also equipped with a safety harness that

included an inertia reel. The inertia reel is set to stop the fall of a person when the

speed of the fall from the platform reaches a certain velocity. Mr. Coutee agreed that

having a platform to stand on made conducting the nipple down procedure easier.

On the day of the accident, Mr. Coutee and a co-employee, Eddie Bell,

put on their safety harnesses and climbed onto the platform deck to nipple down the

lubricator. To loosen the bolts, a hammer wrench is used. The process of removing

the flange involved attaching the wrench to the bolt with the proper “bite” and pulling

on the wrench to get the bolt loose. Next, a rope is tied to the handle of the wrench

and while one worker holds the bite of the wrench on the bolt, the other uses the

sledge hammer to hit and break the bolt. Mr. Coutee testified that if the person

holding the rope on the handle of the wrench leans forward, the bite that the wrench

has on the bolt is released which may cause that person to lose his balance. In the

present case, three of the four flange bolts were successfully removed using the above

equipment and process. However, the fourth bolt could not be removed using the

hammer wrench; therefore, a pipe wrench was used instead. Mr. Coutee also testified

that he did not use a rope when trying to remove the fourth bolt. Instead, he used

3 only his hands to pull on the pipe wrench. In the process of loosening the bolt, Mr.

Coutee lost his balance and fell approximately four feet from the platform before the

inertia reel stopped his fall. Mr. Coutee asserts that the inertia reel of his safety

harness did not work properly, causing him to fall lower and faster than he should

have, and that platform was dangerous due to the lack of handrails.

Mr. Coutee indicated on an accident report that his complete body was

sore. He also stated that his neck, back and hip, both the right and left sides, were

affected by the fall. After his eleven days on the rig, Mr. Coutee testified that his

level of pain increased. He saw several physicians and underwent numerous

diagnostic tests for his pain. Global Marine referred Mr. Coutee to his first physician,

Dr. Robert Smith, an industrial medicine specialist. He was first seen on January 29,

2001. By November 2001, Dr. Smith determined that Mr. Coutee had reached

maximum medical improvement (MMI). While treating with Dr. Smith, Mr. Coutee

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