Grey Wolf Drilling Company, L.P. v. Denfer Boutte

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 14, 2004
Docket14-03-00735-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Grey Wolf Drilling Company, L.P. v. Denfer Boutte (Grey Wolf Drilling Company, L.P. v. Denfer Boutte) 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
Grey Wolf Drilling Company, L.P. v. Denfer Boutte, (Tex. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

Affirmed and Opinion filed December 14, 2004

Affirmed and Opinion filed December 14, 2004.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

____________

NO. 14-03-00735-CV

GREY WOLF DRILLING COMPANY, L.P., Appellant

V.

DENFER BOUTTE, Appellee

On Appeal from the 268th District Court

Fort Bend County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 110,672

O P I N I O N

Grey Wolf Drilling Company, L.P., appeals the trial court=s judgment in favor of Denfer Boutte on his premises liability claim for damages sustained as a result of a fall while working on the rig.  We affirm.


Anschutz Exploration Corporation operated the Benton Trust #1 Well in Fort Bend County, Texas.  Grey Wolf and Anschutz entered into a drilling contract under which Grey Wolf would perform the drilling work on the well.  Anschutz also hired Halliburton Energy Services to Alog@ the well, i.e., creating a log showing the temperature and depth of the well.  Boutte was employed by Halliburton Energy Services as a wireline operator.


Although drilling rigs vary in size and appearance, they possess several generic features.  To prevent a blowout, well control equipment is installed directly above the borehole.[1]  To elevate the drilling apparatus above the well control equipment, a substructure of steel beams supports a rig floor that is typically ten to thirty feet or more above the surface of the ground.[2]  The rig floor is normally accessed via a metal stairway.  A wall or railing around the perimeter of the rig floor prevents workers from falling over the side of the rig floor.  A prominent Aderrick@ or mast sits atop the rig floor.[3]  Drill pipe is usually stacked beside the rig on a pipe rack, three to four feet above the ground.[4]  Pipe is transported to the rig floor by first rolling it onto an adjacent catwalk, and then dragging it up an inclined slide variously called the pipe ramp, V-door ramp, or slide.[5]  At the top of the pipe ramp is the V-door, an opening in the perimeter of the rig floor or railing through which pipe or other heavy objects can be dragged onto or above the rig floor.[6]

On January 9, 1998, Boutte arrived at the well with the other members of the Halliburton crew (another operator and a supervisor) to Alog@ the well.  In this case, the Alogging@ involved inserting a depth meter (the Atool@) into the uncased well.[7]  Thus, before Halliburton could log the well, Grey Wolf had to pull the drill pipe out of the well, leaving the borehole in danger of collapse.  Accordingly, time was of the essence.

The logging tool was thirty feet long, five to six inches in diameter, and weighed 500 pounds.  The Halliburton crew set up the tool, led it along the catwalk, slid it up the V-door ramp with wires and pulleys, and placed the tool inside the well.  From the rig floor, it was Boutte=s job to guide the tool into the well opening.  The Halliburton crew encountered problems on their first attempt to get the tool down the well hole.  After a few unsuccessful attempts to the get the tool to the bottom, it was decided that the well should be Aswabbed,@ requiring Grey Wolf to put its drilling pipe back in the well.  The Halliburton crew Arigged down@ and left the well site.


At 7:00 p.m., the following day, January 10, 1998, Halliburton returned to the rig in another attempt to log the well.  The Halliburton crew set up their equipment and ran the tool along the catwalk, up the pipe ramp, and into the well.  Halliburton ran the tool 200 to 500 feet down the borehole.  When the crew tested the tool, they could not obtain any readings.  Halliburton again pulled the tool out of the well and ran it in the hole two or three more times, but still could not obtain any readings.  The Halliburton crew then pulled the tool from the well and lowered it onto the catwalk.

The Halliburton crew attempted to use a second tool, but after running it down the hole, discovered it was not working either.  The Halliburton engineer decided to break down the tools and Aswap@ parts.  Each tool has a mechanical part and an electrical part.  Because Halliburton did not know which partCthe mechanical or electricalC

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