Hargrave v. Acme Tool & Tester Co.

269 P.2d 913, 125 Cal. App. 2d 34, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1836
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 4, 1954
DocketCiv. 19914
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 269 P.2d 913 (Hargrave v. Acme Tool & Tester Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hargrave v. Acme Tool & Tester Co., 269 P.2d 913, 125 Cal. App. 2d 34, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1836 (Cal. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

DRAPEAU, J.

On July 16, 1950, plaintiff was one of a drilling crew employed by Loffland Brothers Company, an oil well drilling contractor. Said company had contracted to drill several wells for Richfield Oil Company. The latter company had a contract with the harbor department of the city of Long Beach to drill and operate numerous wells on city property in the harbor area.

*35 As drilling operations on Well No. A-15 were nearing completion, to wit: a depth of 3,400 feet, it was necessary to conduct a water shut off test in compliance with section 3220 et seq., Public Resources Code. By the terms of its contract, Richfield was required to select the testing company. In this ease, it selected defendant Acme Tool and Tester Company, which supplied the testing tools.

Defendant Hale was drilling foreman for Richfield, and defendant Watson was his ■ subforeman or tool pusher. The Loffland drilling crew, working under drilling superintendent Dahlitz, consisted of five men: foreman Morris, derrick man Holcomb, and three floor men or rotary helpers: Steinberg, Chastain and the plaintiff, Hargrave.

In making the water shut off test, it was necessary to attach the testing tool to the bottom of the drill pipe by threading it into the final joint at the lower end of a section of drill pipe, and then lower the tester to the desired depth; in this case, 2,000 feet below the surface.

Both the statute and the rules of Richfield required the use of caps or plugs in drilling wells in the harbor district. They were used in capping the drill pipe at the surface, as the pipe was being raised or pulled out of the well bore or “hole” and disconnected into sections or “stands.” Their use was to prevent and protect against pollution and fire hazard, and also for safety of the crew.

Richfield had instructed Loffland to have available, and to use plugs in any operation that might cause a spillage.

In a majority of instances, the company furnishing the testing tools also furnished plugs and chains.

At the appointed time, Acme delivered the testing equipment and brought along two lightweight plugs, weighing about 1% pounds each, equipped with 6 to 8-foot chains, including swivels and snap catches. When the testing tool was ready for lowering into the hole, superintendent Dahlitz discovered that Acme’s plugs were not the proper size to fit Loffland’s drill pipe. As a result, Loffland’s plugs were used. These weighed 25 pounds each. Also, when it was found that the chains furnished by Acme would not fit the bails or handles of the Loffland plugs, a length of 1-inch manila rope was spliced to the bail or handle of each plug.

The testing tool was lowered to the proper depth in the hole, the test was run, and then it was pulled up for a few feet to “break it loose.” The drilling crew then commenced *36 to raise it out of the hole, and in doing so, used the two Loffland plugs in capping the upper open ends of the drill pipe. As the men were all experienced, Dahlitz gave them no specific instructions. Neither did he instruct them concerning the manner of using the Loffland plugs.

In coming out of the hole, the crew screwed one of the plugs into the top of the drill pipe, which was held in position a short distance above the derrick floor. Then the free end of the rope (the other end being spliced to the bail of the plug) was tied to the elevator link by a bowline knot, which did not pinch or jam and could be readily untied. The drill pipe was pulled up about 85 feet so it would be unjointed at the bottom of the third section. Three sections make up a stand, and this stand was then set to one side and racked.

The derrick man, Holcomb, who was in the derrick at about the level of the top of the stand, unscrewed the plug and let it hang from the elevator link by the short end of rope. In the meanwhile, the other plug was used to cap the next stand. When the elevator was lowered, the first plug was untied from the link and the second plug tied to it. This process was repeated several times without incident.

After the crew had commenced to “come out” with the testing tool, Dahlitz and Watson, the subforeman for Rich-field, left for a field service office nearby. Dahlitz had observed part of the operations which had been carried on in the usual manner when such plugs were used.

Morris, the Loffland foreman, who was in immediate charge of the crew, decided that the untying and tying of the plugs was too slow and cumbersome. He directed that a cat hook (a large, heavy hook with an eye at the top, and a spring latch closing the hook), should be tied to the easing hook just below the traveling block which held the elevator links; and that th§ free end of the plug rope should be tied to the bail of the plug, forming a rope loop attached to the bail. This was done. In resuming operations, the crew at the derrick floor, instead of tying or untying the rope, merely snapped or unsnapped the rope loop through the cat hook.

After several more stands of pipe had been pulled out, and as the derrick man was removing the plug from the top of the stand in the upper position of the derrick, the rope loop for some reason got out of the cat hook by twisting or some other means. It fell, and before the crew could get *37 out of the way, the plug struck plaintiff Hargrave on the arm, severely injuring him.

An examination made after the accident failed to show any failure or defect in the plug, the rope or the cat hook, all of which were introduced in evidence.

Mr. Holcomb, the derrick man for Loffland, testified that “the cat hook was used in this case to give more length so the rope wouldn’t twist so much. ... I unscrewed the plug with my hands, and at that time with the length of the ropes, why it gave enough free movement to unscrew the plug completely. After this means was taken, you could unscrew the plug all the way out without it twisting so much. ... I don’t remember how many stands we pulled until the plug dropped. ... It was just the same procedure over and over, pulling one stand and loosening the plug, and the elevators go back down again for another stand. . . . Well, in twisting the plug out and unscrewing the plug the twist in the rope caused it to come out of the cat hook. . . . The plug dropped. . . . I was unaware of the fact that it was out of the cat hook because it was slightly over my head . . . and as I took the plug out of the pipe and reached over back of the elevator to turn it loose, I was surprised by the fact that it was out of the cat hook. It pulled out of my hand and dropped. . . . I hollered ‘Watch out,’ but the plug fell pretty fast.”

Appellant urges that the failure of Acme to provide the proper items in accordance with the custom in the field was negligence which proximately contributed to the accident. Further, that there was “ample evidence from which the jury could have inferred negligence on the part of Richfield in failing to provide the proper tools and in permitting the use of makeshift tools that were unsafe, contrary to their duty by both custom and contract to furnish such proper tools and safety devices.”

In this connection, appellant points out that respondent Hale, drilling foreman for Richfield, testified (when examined under Code Civ.

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Bluebook (online)
269 P.2d 913, 125 Cal. App. 2d 34, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1836, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hargrave-v-acme-tool-tester-co-calctapp-1954.