FWA Drilling Co. v. Lambert

418 S.W.2d 878, 1967 Tex. App. LEXIS 2700
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 26, 1967
DocketNo. 5818
StatusPublished

This text of 418 S.W.2d 878 (FWA Drilling Co. v. Lambert) 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
FWA Drilling Co. v. Lambert, 418 S.W.2d 878, 1967 Tex. App. LEXIS 2700 (Tex. Ct. App. 1967).

Opinion

OPINION

FRASER, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal from an order of the District Court of Crane County, Texas, overruling appellant’s plea of privilege to be sued in Wichita County, Texas, the place of its residence and principal place of business. The trial court sustained appellee’s controverting plea alleging venue in Crane County, Texas, under the provisions of subdivisions 9a and 29a of Article 1995, Vernon’s Ann Texas Revised Civil Statutes.

This action was brought by appellee asking damages on behalf of herself and four minor children because of the death of her husband, who was killed on December 3, 1963 in Crane County, Texas, while working oh an oil well. It appears that appellant had ordered repair work done on a mud pump during the time when a different crew (that is, a different crew from the one of which deceased was a member) was on duty, November 17, 1963. The death of appellee’s husband was caused by the blowing up or blowing off of the attachments of the mud pump, one of which apparently struck him in the head. It appears that he survived only a few moments after the accident. Appellant, through its tool pusher and driller, had ordered a welder, who was a co-defendant in this lawsuit, to repair the mud pump, as it had become unusable. There is much conflict as to certain factual matters regarding the au[880]*880thorization and conduct of this repair job, which we will go into later. The record reveals that while the appellee sued both the welder and appellant drilling company, both of whom entered pleas of privilege, only the drilling company appeals from the order overruling the two pleas of privilege. Also, it must be pointed out and kept in mind that appellee states in her brief that she waives her contention under subdivision 29a of Article 1995, T.R.C.S. and relies entirely for support of the lower court’s judgment on subdivision 9a of said Article 1995.

As stated, only the drilling company is the appellant here and it claims, under Point 1, that appellee’s suit against appellant is one to recover exemplary damages for gross negligence, and subdivision 9a of the venue statute has no application to a suit based upon gross negligence; and under Point 2, appellant claims that the evidence failed to prove conduct on the part of the appellant constituting gross negligence; and under Point 3, appellant urges that there is no evidence to prove that the employees who were involved with the work complained about were corporate officers and vice-principals of the appellant. Point 4 will not be discussed, as it deals with Article 29a of the venue statute, which appellee specifically says in her brief she no longer claims has any applicability to the present controversy.

We believe that the appellant’s points of error must be overruled and the decision of the trial court overruling the plea of privilege affirmed. It appears from the record that the deceased was a roughneck working on derricks for the appellant, and that George R. Scott was the evening tower driller in charge of the crew at the time the accident occurred on December 3, 1963, on appellant’s Rig No. 9. The deceased was engaged in a process known as jetting the pits, and Mr. Scott saw the pressure on the pump being used to jet the pits suddenly go up and heard a noise at about the same time. He states that he saw the deceased, Robert Lambert, lying on the ground about 20 feet away from the pump, his head badly injured; and, according to Mr. Scott, Mr. Lambert was dead before he was taken away from the rig. Mr. Scott, the driller, examined the mud pump and found that the lines and connections had blown away from the pump and were lying about 30 feet from the pump. He stated that in his opinion some small piece of gravel or something similar had plugged the jet, causing the sudden rise in pressure which resulted in the connections blowing off the pump, striking and killing Lambert. He further stated that plugging of the jet didn’t happen very often, but it does happen occasionally. The driller further testified that he had never seen a welding job done like this because, as he said, “You just don’t weld to mud pumps because sooner or later it gives away, and any welding done on a mud pump would be merely a temporary measure to get you out of a bind until you can get the pump rebored.” Scott stated that the first he knew that a weld had been placed on the mud pump was after the accident, and that if he had known it had been welded, he would have gone ahead and used the pump under the orders of the tool pusher to clean the pits, but that he would not have let any of the men under him get on that side of the pump with the pump in movement. That never before had he seen a steel collar stuck up and welded on the side of a mud pump, and if he had been the driller on tower when the work was done, he wouldn’t have repaired the mud pump in that manner because “you just don’t do things like that”. The collar, nipple, pop-off valve and' the high pressure mud line that blew off weighed between 75 and 100 pounds, and it apparently blew approximately 30 feet, hitting Mr. Lambert in the head, splitting his hard hat and inflicting fatal injuries.

The welder testified to various difficulties that he encountered in doing this job, and further testified about the nature of the welding with reference to cast iron. This testimony was apparently elicited because the steel collar was welded to a cast [881]*881iron pump. The welder described the proper way for the repairs to be made and, in his opinion, the air chamber of the pump should have been taken to a machinist and then rebored to a larger size, then re-threaded so that a larger nipple could be screwed in, and this is not unusual at all. He testified that when he had finished, that he made out the invoice for the work and took it up to the doghouse to be signed by the driller, the practice being for the company to keep one copy and the welder the other. Mr. Hooper testified that when he gave the invoice to the driller, he told him that the pump was cast (apparently meaning cast iron), and that the weld had checked (meaning that it had cracked) and it wasn’t a good weld, and that it should be sent to a pump company or something and repaired properly, and that they would probably have to rebore it and rethread it. He said he does not think he told the driller that it was dangerous, and stated as follows :

“Q And did you say anything to them at the time of the original weld that that would not work?
A Yes, sir. When I made out the invoice, I carried it up in the doghouse, finished the, that is, wound my spool up, and I made out the invoice and carried it up inside the doghouse; and when the driller signed the ticket, I told him that the pump was cast and the weld had checked and it wasn’t a good weld. It should be sent to a pump company or something and repaired properly, that they would probably have to rebore it and rethread it.
Q Did you tell him it was dangerous at that time?
A No, sir, I don’t suppose I did. I mean, you assume that it is if there is pressure involved, or I would if someone told me that. I mean, from what I know about it, I would be afraid to work around something under a bunch of pressure or something, but at the same time it was still on, I assumed good enough that they could use it for an emergency there until they could get it repaired properly.
Q What was the driller’s name?
A Hipp, I believe.”

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Bluebook (online)
418 S.W.2d 878, 1967 Tex. App. LEXIS 2700, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fwa-drilling-co-v-lambert-texapp-1967.