Goss v. Kellogg Brown & Root Inc.
This text of 232 S.W.3d 816 (Goss v. Kellogg Brown & Root Inc.) 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.
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[818]*818MAJORITY OPINION
In this personal injury action, Armón Alan Goss, Teresa A. Goss, Bryan Hall, Carol Hall, Sean Hall, Shane Hall, Roby G. Plemons, Karen Plemons, Jessica Plemons, Jeffery C. Kuper, Diane Kuper, Sarah Ku-per, Erin Kuper, and Pacific Employers Insurance Company, (collectively, “appellants”) appeal a take-nothing judgment rendered in favor of Kellogg Brown & Root, Inc. (“KBR”), individually and as successor in interest to the M.W. Kellogg Company, on several grounds. We affirm.
After an explosion and fire on March 27, 2000 (the “explosion”) at the Houston K-Resin Unit (the “plant”) of Phillips Petroleum Company (“Phillips”), appellants sued KBR for negligence. At trial, the jury did not find KBR negligent, and the trial court entered a take-nothing judgment against appellants. Appellants challenge this judgment on the grounds that the trial court erred in admitting and excluding various items of evidence and in allowing KBR to use-a peremptory challenge improperly. Because appellants’ third issue is central to our disposition of this case, we address it first.
That issue contends that the trial court erred in excluding a critical portion of the opinion of appellants’ expert witness, George Melhem, because it was relevant and rehable. The explosion occurred after a tank (the “tank”), holding a highly reactive form of butadiene, was closed off to be serviced, but the material remaining inside the tank was not removed before chemical reactions inside the tank progressed to create more pressure than the tank could contain. Appellants alleged that when KBR was hired in 1995 to review the documentation for pressure relief systems at the plant,1 it should have recognized that the pressure detection, relief, and warning system for the tank was inadequately designed and recommended a better safety system for the tank, including: (1) a larger pressure relief valve and other pressure monitoring and relief devices to prevent it from exploding; and (2) warning mechanisms to alert workers to evacuate the area if an explosion is imminent.
KBR contended, in part, that the size of the pressure relief valve on the tank was not a cause of the explosion because a downstream block valve had been closed, preventing the relief valve from operating at all, i.e., regardless of its size. Among other things, appellants sought to counter this contention with Melhem’s opinion that the tank would have ruptured even if the relief valve had not been disabled because it was too small to relieve the amount of pressure that had built up inside the tank. KBR moved to strike this opinion on the grounds that it was not: (1) relevant because it did not address the circumstances that actually occurred, but only those that might have occurred under other circumstances; or (2) rehable because it was speculative and based on invalid assumptions and calculations.2 The trial court granted this motion.
As applicable here, the proximate cause element of a negligence claim requires proof of “cause in fact,” which, in this case, is whether KBR’s alleged negligence was a substantial factor in causing the explosion or injuries without which either would not have occurred. See West[819]*819ern Invs., Inc. v. Urena, 162 S.W.3d 547, 551 (Tex.2005). Conversely, if KBR’s alleged negligence merely furnished a condition that made the explosion and injuries possible, it was not a cause in fact. See id. Moreover, cause in fact cannot be established by mere conjecture, guess, or speculation. Id. In addition, to be relevant, expert testimony must be sufficiently tied to the facts of the case that it will aid the jury in resolving a factual dispute. Exxon Pipeline Co. v. Zwahr, 88 S.W.3d 623, 629 (Tex.2002),
It is undisputed in this case that the pressure relief valve on the tank had been deliberately blocked well before the explosion and that a larger relief valve in such an inoperable condition could not have prevented or postponed the explosion. Although appellants contend that Melhem’s excluded opinion, about what the relief valve would have done under different circumstances than actually occurred, is relevant to KBR’s defense, appellants cite no authority or rationale to show how such evidence is probative of the actual cause in fact of the explosion or injuries under the circumstances that actually occurred, and in which the relief valve was not a factor. Because appellants’ third issue thus fails to demonstrate the relevance of Melhem’s excluded opinion, it is overruled.
With regard to appellants’ remaining issues, a judgment may not be reversed on appeal unless the error eom-plained of probably caused the rendition of an improper judgment. Tex.R.App. P. 44.1(a)(1). An error in admitting or excluding evidence satisfies this standard only where the complaining party demonstrates that the judgment turns on the complained-of evidence.3 For an error in awarding peremptory strikes, the complaining party need only show that the trial was materially unfair, which, in turn, generally requires only a showing that the trial was hotly contested and the evidence was sharply conflicting. Lopez v. Foremost Paving, Inc., 709 S.W.2d 643, 644 (Tex.1986). Because we conclude, as discussed below, that appellants failed to offer legally sufficient evidence of causation, we further conclude that the evidentiary and voir dire rulings they complain of, even if erroneous, were harmless.4
The remaining evidence that appellants rely on to show that KBR’s alleged negligence was a cause of the explosion and fire consisted of Melhem’s expert opinion that KBR’s failure to design and recommend a better safety system for the tank caused the explosion. However, Mel-hem’s testimony and exhibits do not contain an opinion on whether any specific combination of pressure detection, relief, and warning devices (that KBR should have designed and recommended) could or would have actually prevented the explosion or injuries.5 Instead, he merely described in general terms various types of devices that can be used for these pur[820]*820poses. Without an opinion and supporting evidence showing that some specific safety system design could and would, under the particular circumstances of this case, have actually prevented the explosion or injuries, there is no evidence that KBR’s failure to formulate and recommend such a design was a cause of the explosion or injuries.6 Because legally sufficient evidence of causation was essential to appellants’ recovery, the absence of such evidence is fatal to their claims, and their other grounds for challenging the take-nothing judgment could, thus, not have caused the rendition of an improper judgment.7 Accordingly, appellants’ issues are overruled, and the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
FROSt, J., concurring.
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232 S.W.3d 816, 2007 Tex. App. LEXIS 6621, 2007 WL 2330744, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goss-v-kellogg-brown-root-inc-texapp-2007.