Deweese v. Patterson Uti Drilling Co.

2010 OK 10, 229 P.3d 540, 2010 WL 487151
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 11, 2010
Docket101,686
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2010 OK 10 (Deweese v. Patterson Uti Drilling Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Deweese v. Patterson Uti Drilling Co., 2010 OK 10, 229 P.3d 540, 2010 WL 487151 (Okla. 2010).

Opinions

EDMONDSON, C.J.

T1 The issue on certiorari is whether the Court of Civil Appeals erred when it reversed the judgment entered upon a jury verdict in favor of plaintiffs, Donald Deweese and his wife, Pamela, because the trial court instructed on res ipso loquitur.1 Plaintiffs contend the appellate court reached its erroneous decision by weighing the evidence and substituting its judgment on contested factual matters for that of the jury. Upon eertio-rari previously granted, we reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals and reinstate and affirm the judgment of the trial court.

2 Donald Deweese was seriously injured on July 1, 2001, while he was working as an independent contractor providing bulldozing services to Patterson Drilling Company (Patterson) in a "rigging-up" operation. Patterson owned the drilling rig and its various components and had contracted with Lane Motor Freight Lines (Lane) to move all the components from an old drilling site to the new one. The move required that all the rig components be taken apart ("rigged down") at the old location, then loaded onto trucks and moved to the new location and reassembled ("rigged up"). Lane contracted with Eller Trucking (Eller) for the use of a tandem truck to move the rig and for the services of Mr. Eller as its operator.

T3 The rigging-up procedure required moving two sets of rig substructures, each consisting of a bottom "pony" sub and an upper "top" sub, from the truck and stacking the top subs onto the pony subs. These substructures are massive fron pieces which must be strong enough to support the derrick and other rig components; they are approximately 47 feet long, 11 feet tall and weigh more than 50,000 pounds each. At the time of the accident, Mr. Deweese was the operator of the dozer and was assisting a forklift driver and the Eller truck driver in an effort to place a top sub onto a pony sub when the top sub toppled off the pony sub and fell onto the cab of the bulldozer, erush-ing the cab and severely injuring Mr. Dew-eese.

IL

T4 The Deweeses brought suit in negli-genee for damages against the independent contractors, Lane and Eller, and also against Patterson, the drilling contractor and rig owner. The Deweeses settled with the independent contractors prior to trial. Proceeding to jury trial against Patterson alone, they presented evidence to show that Patterson had control of all activities at the work site; [542]*542owned, maintained and controlled all the rig components, including the top sub and the pony sub involved in the accident; and failed to adequately plan, supervise and manage the rigging-up procedure.

T5 Their evidence, though controverted, included the following: (1) Patterson's tool-pusher was the overall supervisor and had ultimate authority, the "final say," on all matters including safety; (2) on the day of the accident, the toolpusher was not present to supervise the operation even though stacking the subs was the most dangerous part of the rigging-up procedure; (8) Patterson's "relief" toolpusher on duty that day was unfamiliar with the rig, the location and the people involved, and was not present during the stacking effort; (4) Patterson did not include the rigging-up procedure in its safety manual and did not have a safety meeting regarding the process; and (5) though aware that the safest method to stack the subs was by using a crane, Patterson did not require or allow for the expense of a crane, accepting instead the lowest bid from rig movers.

T6 Further: (6) Patterson had provided a location which was too small and cramped for the normal procedure of using two gin trucks to lift the top sub from the tandem truck with their winches; (7) the derrick had been assembled too close to the location, so there was not adequate space for the trucks to work, necessitating that smaller vehiclee-the forklift and Mr. Deweese's dozer-were used instead; (8) the pony sub was an unsafe instrumentality because it did not have full-length channel iron guides which would have prevented the top sub from falling; and (9) the top runners of the pony sub should have been cleaned and lubricated. The last two points were offered to show that Patterson should have altered the pony sub by preparing and equipping it with full-length channel guides into which the bottom rails of the top sub could have been placed in order to safely slide the top sub into stable position. Testimony was presented to show this modification could have been accomplished easily and inexpensively and would have prevented the accident from happening.

17 Over defendant's objection, the trial court instructed the jury on res ipsa logui-tur. The jury found in favor of the Dewees-es and fixed their damages at $3,200,000. In light of the settlement previously reached between the Deweeses and Eller and Lane, the trial court granted Patterson a setoff in the amount of $1,000,000. Patterson appealed.

IIL

T8 Based on its analysis of the evidence, the Court of Civil Appeals concluded that the res ipso loquitur instruction was not warranted and reversed the matter for new trial. First, it found that plaintiffs failed to establish "who or what" had caused the accident; that while plaintiffs had presented evidence supporting several possible theories of fault, including a combination of negligence on the part of the independent contractors together with the defective condition of the pony sub, they never "pointed to one actor or precise act that caused the sub to fall" nor had they "decided on one cause of the accident." (Opinion, pp. 12-18.) Second, it found the evidence showed, as a matter of fact, that Patterson had no control over the equipment used in the process, stating that Patterson "did not have exclusive control over the instrumentality that caused the accident; in fact, it apparently had no control over any instrumentality involved in the accident;" further it viewed the evidence as showing that the independent contractor, Lane, was in control of the subs during their move and that Donald Deweese had "more control of the instrumentality than Patterson." (Opinion, pp. 18-14.)

T9 That court's unpublished opinion expressly recognizes that there was evidence before the jury which showed that Patterson had responsibility for, and control over, the entire operation and that Patterson failed to use due care in conducting the operation. The court related that testimony was elicited to show plaintiff's injury may have been attributable in part to actions of other independent contractors, but that the accident "would not have happened if there had been full channel guides on the pony subs; if a crane had been used; 'if Patterson had had the foresight to perhaps clean and lubricate the top runners on the pony sub'; if the top [543]*543sub 'hadn't gone a little bit crooked and perhaps hit a guide and kicked up on the sub and then slid off; or 'if perhaps the tool pusher for Patterson had been there and had a safety meeting before they started and said here's the way we need to put those subs together'." (Opinion, p. 9.)

IV.

[ 10 On certiorari, plaintiffs argue that res ipsa loquitur is applicable under the facts of this case and that the Court of Civil Appeals reached its erroneous conclusions by intruding into the exclusive province of the jury and substituting its own judgment on contested factual issues for that of the jury. They contend that in doing so the appellate court also disregarded established decisions of this Court governing proper application of res ipsa loquitur.

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Related

Smith v. Hines
2011 OK 51 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 2011)
Deweese v. Patterson Uti Drilling Co.
2010 OK 10 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 2010)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2010 OK 10, 229 P.3d 540, 2010 WL 487151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deweese-v-patterson-uti-drilling-co-okla-2010.