Fallow v. Houston Oil Field Material Co.

28 F. Supp. 47
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Louisiana
DecidedJune 9, 1939
DocketNo. 2919
StatusPublished

This text of 28 F. Supp. 47 (Fallow v. Houston Oil Field Material Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fallow v. Houston Oil Field Material Co., 28 F. Supp. 47 (W.D. La. 1939).

Opinion

PORTERIE, District Judge.

This is an action ex delicto, or in tort brought by the plaintiff for the recovery of damages alleged to have been caused through negligence of the defendant in connection with work being done on a well being drilled in search of oil or gas.

Plaintiff alleges that he entered into a contract with the defendant, Houston Oil Field Material Company, whereby said company agreed to take charge of and superintend the setting of a Baker Cement Retainer in the well being drilled in search of oil or gas, and to take charge of and superintend the freeing of and recovery of the setting tool from the cement retainer after same had been set in the well at a depth of 4,920 feet.

Plaintiff contends that defendant, through its agent and employee, A. B. Cannon, was negligent in the performance of the contract in question, in that the said A. B. Cannon, as the agent and employee of defendant company, failed through carelessness on his part to release the setting tool from the cement retainer, and that the said Cannon issued orders and instructions to workmen on said well to pull the tubing and setting tool out of the hole, and that, on account of the fact that the setting tool was not released from the cement retainer which was cemented in the bottom of the well, the strain on the tubing caused same to break or part at a tubing collar approximately 400 feet from the top of the hole, with the result that the remainder of the string of 'tubing was left in the hole.

Plaintiff alleges that he has used diligent efforts to recover the tubing left in the hole, and clean out same, but that he has been unsuccessful, and, therefore, seeks as damages in this suit an amount sufficient to enable petitioner to drill another well to the depth where the cement retainer was set by defendant.

The negligence complained of on the part of A. B. Cannon, as the agent and employee of defendant, is that the said Cannon failed to rotate the tubing in the well in a proper manner and a sufficient number of times to release the setting tool from the Baker Cement Retainer which had been cemented at a depth of 4,920 feet.

In answer to plaintiff’s contentions, defendant denies that there was any contract entered into by plaintiff and defendant. Defendant admits that Cannon “* * * did superintend the setting of a Baker Cement Retainer * * *” but denies that he was acting in pursuance of any contract.

Defendant further set forth in its answer that, if the Court should hold that there was any contractual relationship between plaintiff and defendant, it denies that its agents or employees were in any way guilty of negligence or fault, and defendant avers that the damage complained of was caused by several things, namely

(a) That the plaintiff, his agents or employees used defective pipe and tubing in said well;

(b) That plaintiff, his agents and employees used what is known as “Quick-Set” cement in the setting of said retainer instead of slow-set or other cement of a similar character;

(c) That plaintiff retained general control over the operations of said retainer and well, and refused to allow the said Cannon to have complete charge of same;

(d) That plaintiff, his agents and employees refused to “pull” the tubing when it was ascertained that same was defective;

(e) That plaintiff, his agents and employees, after having knowledge that the liquid or cement being pumped into the said well through the said tubing was showing up in the wrong casing, refused to pull said tubing at the request of the said Can-' non before it was too late to do so;

(f) That the tubing and material was in such bad condition that it was not fit for use for the purpose for which plaintiff was using it, which fact was known to plaintiff, [49]*49his agents and employees, or should have been so known to them; and that all of said acts or any of them, on the part of the said plaintiff, his agents or employees, constituted negligence on its part in the said operations, and constituted the proximate cause or causes of the parting of said tubing;

(g) That plaintiff, his agents and employees at the time of the said operation in the course of setting the Baker Cement Retainer were repeatedly advised against proceeding with such operation in view of the defective tubing and pipe and the improper type of cement being used, so that such conditions could be remedied if possible, all of wdiich was done without avail.

Defendant further defends this suit on the ground that defendant is not legally liable for any negligence on its part, by reason of the general custom prevailing in the industry to the effect that those engaged in the character of work involved herein assume no responsibility for damages or losses of any kind occasioned by the use of tools in such work, and also defendant relies upon an alleged stipulation by plaintiff against liability on defendant’s part.

Testimony of witnesses, and exhibits offered, brought out the following facts: On July 16, 1936, according to the log in evidence, Long & Wolfe, drilling contractors, commenced drilling operations for the drilling of a well for the plaintiff in the southern part of Caddo Parish, at Robson, Louisiana, which was known as Cupples No. 1. The well was abandoned at 4,002 feet, but Mr. Roger Wolfe, of Long & Wolfe, stated that he intended to complete the well to a depth of 5,000 feet at a later date. In the spring of 1937 such arrangements were made with the same drillers and the well was drilled to a total depth of 5,675 feet, with 5%" casing being set at 5.000 feet. It was completed on April 10, 1937, and (according to the drillers’ log) was again abandoned. The last operations were under the entire charge of E. S. White, a geologist — W. J, Fallon, the owner, remaining in New York.

In the course of the operations from 4.000 feet down, the usual cores were taken and drill stem tests were made, and samples of formations were furnished to the Arkansas Natural Gas Company and the Gulf Refining Company. Mr. Roger Wolfe, the driller, had found no pay oil or gas sand, and testified that when he moved off after completion of the well he considered it a dry hole, or a non-producer. Two geologists, called as witnesses, who were familiar with the structure and formation of the area on which the well was drilled, were of the opinion that there was no oil there in paying quantities and that the area was condemned.

After Long & Wolfe moved off, E. S. White stated that he decided to go back into the well and make a test of a “section of the porous material” from around 4,878 to 4,890 feet. His testimony was to the effect that in making this test the operators put in 100 sacks of cement in setting the 5%" casing; that after the cement had set they went in with a gun perforator and found the plug which had been pumped down on top of the cement at the time the job was previously cemented was up to 4,200 feet; they believed there was probably a hole in the 5%" casing at that depth which had allowed the pressure originally placed on the cement plug to come back up to that point, which hole had to be plugged with cement before they could make a test of the formation between 4,878 and 4,890.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 F. Supp. 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fallow-v-houston-oil-field-material-co-lawd-1939.