Hooper v. Wilkinson

252 So. 2d 137
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 20, 1971
Docket3464
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 252 So. 2d 137 (Hooper v. Wilkinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hooper v. Wilkinson, 252 So. 2d 137 (La. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

252 So.2d 137 (1971)

Kennith E. HOOPER and Ronald Lee Trahan, Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
M. H. WILKINSON, Travelers Insurance Company, et al., Defendants-Appellees and Appellants.

No. 3464.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

August 20, 1971.
Rehearing Denied September 23, 1971.

*138 Jones, Kimball, Patin, Harper, Tete & Wetherill by James C. Hanchey, Lake Charles, for defendants-appellants.

Alvis Roche, Lake Charles, for plaintiffs-appellees.

*139 Holt & Woodley by Edmund E. Woodley, Lake Charles, for defendants-appellees.

Before FRUGÉ, HOOD and DOMENGEAUX, JJ.

DOMENGEAUX, Judge.

On July 18, 1967 Augenstein Construction Company was engaged in laying a pipeline between the locations of Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company and Stauffer Chemical Company, pursuant to a contract with Pittsburgh, in Calcasieu Parish, Louisiana. The pipeline was being laid between two existing lines in a right of way measuring between 40 and 60 feet in width. In connection with the operation, a dragline was being operated in the area by its owner, M. H. Wilkinson, under a verbal contract with Augenstein. Wilkinson had previously been working on the same site under contract to Loftin and Goss Construction Company who was a subcontractor of Augenstein. The ground was wet and boggy necessitating the use of wooden mats, measuring 4 × 24 feet and weighing one ton each, to support the dragline. Toward the end of the day, while Wilkinson was stacking these mats out of the way, one of them slipped and struck a riser connected to one of the existing pipelines. The riser was a two-inch pipe which protruded a short distance above the ground and was connected to the buried pipeline some three feet below the ground. As a result of the blow, a leak occurred at or near the junction of the riser and the buried pipeline, and natural gas, which was flowing through the line under pressure, began to escape.

Because it was suspected that the damaged line belonged to it, Continental Oil Company was contacted and asked to send out some men. Two men, James Cromwell and William Wilson went to the site and ascertained that a small quantity of natural gas was leaking from the pipe. These men, however, were safety engineers and were unfamiliar with the company's pipelines and so they returned to the refinery and placed a telephone call to the Gillis headquarters of Continental Pipeline. They, in turn, called Dan Robicheaux, their field foreman, by radio and he went to the site. Mr. Robicheaux ascertained that the line belonged to Continental and called his office to have them determine whether they had plats that would show whether the line had a cut-off valve below the leak. While he was awaiting a reply from the office he obtained the services of two employees of Augenstein, Kennith E. Hooper and Ronald Lee Trahan, to dig around the riser in an effort to determine whether a cut-off valve was present. A third Augenstein employee, one Ashworth, also began to dig but ceased doing so soon thereafter.

Hooper and Trahan continued to dig for approximately one hour and were climbing out of the hole they had dug, when suddenly the leak became enlarged allowing a large flow of gas to escape with a great deal of force. Alleging that they were injured by the sudden escape of gas, Hooper and Trahan initiated the instant litigation in tort.

By an original and several supplementing petitions plaintiffs named as defendants Wilkinson and his insurer, Travelers Insurance Company, Continental Oil Company and its insurer, Hartford Accident and Indemnity Company, Loftin and Goss and its insurer, Continental Insurance Company, and five individuals including Dan Robicheaux and Bill Wilson, the only two of the five that were cited and served and thus made parties to the action.

Continental Oil Company and Loftin and Goss, together with their insurers, filed motions for summary judgment which were granted by the trial court. The judgments of dismissal were appealed to this court and we affirmed as to Loftin and Goss but reversed and remanded as to Continental. The latter had based its motion on the premise that plaintiffs were its borrowed employees at the time of the blowout and thus limited to workmen's compensation claims against it, but it was our opinion that a material issue of fact existed in the contention. Hooper v. Wilkinson, La.App., 225 So.2d 66.

*140 Trial on the merits was finally had before a jury which found Wilson and Wilkinson to be free from negligence proximately causing the accident, and which held Continental, Hartford, and Robicheaux liable to plaintiff Hooper for $5,000.00 and to plaintiff Trahan for $300.00. The three defendants cast appealed that judgment to this court alleging numerous specifications of error in the jury's conclusions.

The first of these involves the finding of the jury that plaintiffs were not borrowed employees of Continental. As we stated in Hooper v. Wilkinson, supra, when this case was previously before us, two tests are used in determining whether an individual is a borrowed employee: 1) Whose business was the employee engaged in, and 2) who had authoritative control of the employee. Therein we stated that Augenstein had a substantial interest in minimizing the damage to Continental's pipeline, as Wilkinson was in the employ of Augenstein when he struck the riser. Although we noted that Robicheaux gave plaintiffs instructions as to where to dig, what to look for, not to make sparks, etc., we also said that, "There can be little question but that Augenstein had the right to control plaintiffs or to remove plaintiffs from the job had they so desired". We quoted from the landmark case of Benoit v. Hunt Tool Co., 219 La. 380, 53 So.2d 137, wherein the Supreme Court said:

"Since Guillory was in the general employ of Hunt Tool Company, it must appear from the evidence in order for it to be relieved from liability that the relation of master and servant which existed between them had been suspended, and that a new like relation between Guillory and Morris & Meredith had been created and was in existence at the time of the accident.
"Under the circumstances of this case we concluded that it was the work of Hunt Tool Company which was being performed, and that that company had not relinquished the right to control Guillory in the performance of it. * *
* * * * * *
"We therefore conclude that Guillory was not the borrowed servant of Morris & Meredith but was the servant or employee of Hunt Tool Company at the time the accident occurred." (Emphasis ours.)

See also Fontenot v. National Transfer Company, 99 So.2d 795 (La.App.1st Cir. 1957.)

Of course when this case was before us the first time, we did not have the benefit of the oral testimony adduced at trial. We now have it before us, and we find that the testimony given by plaintiffs in their depositions is significantly different from that which they gave at trial. Thus the general tenure of their depositions is that Robicheaux, the Continental employee, guided and controlled their digging operations, whereas at trial they denied this, admitting to having received only minimal instructions from Robicheaux. The only other persons having direct personal knowledge of who controlled the digging operations were Hob Nail, Augenstein's supervisor and Robicheaux. Nail's version of the incident is unavailable, he having died soon after the accident.

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Bluebook (online)
252 So. 2d 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hooper-v-wilkinson-lactapp-1971.