Isadore v. Probe Offshore, LLC

815 So. 2d 876, 2001 WL 1618873
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 19, 2001
Docket01-777
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 815 So. 2d 876 (Isadore v. Probe Offshore, LLC) 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
Isadore v. Probe Offshore, LLC, 815 So. 2d 876, 2001 WL 1618873 (La. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

815 So.2d 876 (2001)

Herbert James ISADORE
v.
PROBE OFFSHORE, L.L.C., et al.

No. 01-777.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

December 19, 2001.
Writ Denied April 12, 2002.

*877 James P. Ryan, Morrow & Morrow, Opelousas, LA, Counsel for Plaintiff/Appellant: Herbert James Isadore.

Michael Gerard Lemoine, Breaud & Lemoine, Lafayette, LA, Counsel for Defendant/Appellee: Probe Offshore, L.L.C.

Court composed of ULYSSES GENE THIBODEAUX, BILLIE COLOMBARO WOODARD, and GLENN B. GREMILLION, Judges.

WOODARD, Judge.

Mr. Herbert Isadore filed suit against Probe Offshore, L.L.C. (Probe) for personal injuries, received in an explosion at an oil field plant site in Louisiana, while welding. After discovery and shortly before trial, Probe filed a motion for summary judgment, seeking to dismiss his claims, based on the Two Contract Statutory Employer Defense. The trial court ruled in Probe's favor. Mr. Isadore appeals, contending that there were disputed issues of fact that precluded summary judgment. We affirm.

* * * * *

Mr. Isadore, a field welder, sustained injuries from an explosion that occurred on October 18, 1999, at an oil and gas storage facility in the Lake Rosemound Field near St. Francisville, Louisiana.

*878 This case's history is germane to the legal issues, which we must resolve.

On July 12, 1984, the plant site landowner, Mr. Lloyd Lindsey, Sr., executed an Oil, Gas, and Mineral Lease to Texaco. Later, Texaco built a collection plant site on that property. The plant site included various pressure vessels, separators, piping, and a tank battery, consisting of two large metal oil storage tanks and a small fiberglass water tank, which a small earthen containment levee surrounded.

Following Texaco's petition in 1988, the Louisiana Office of Conservation established two drilling and production units at the Lake Rosemound Field, Sand Units A and B. Initially, the property, which this lease described and covered, contained both Sand Units A and B. However, through a series of Partial Releases, from July 1989 through October 1993, that portion of the Lindsey property, which was described in the original July 12, 1984 Mineral Lease, located outside the boundaries of Sand Unit A, was released. When Mr. Isadore was injured, the plant site was located entirely within Sand Unit A on the land described in the lease as of the last Partial Release of October 19, 1993. The plant site serviced the wells located in the mineral lease.

Then, Texaco sold its interest in the Lake Rosemound Field to various interest owners, including Aegis Energy, Inc. (Aegis), which became the operator in the early 1990's. As such, on June 1, 1993, Aegis executed a contract, known as a Joint Operating Agreement (JOA), with the other mineral interest owners. The JOA required Aegis to take charge of all operations, conducted in the Field, on behalf of the other mineral interest owners, including exploration, drilling, collection of royalties, allocation of expenses, and plug and abandonment operations, etc. This 1993 JOA specifically includes, as an exhibit, the July 12, 1984 Mineral Lease on which the plant site is located.

In 1995, Aegis approached Probe's owner, Dr. B.R. Eubanks, to ask him if he would participate in Lindsey Well No. 3, which was being drilled on the Lindsey property, covered by the July 12, 1984 Mineral Lease (Sand Unit A). In July of 1995, Dr. Eubanks purchased a 57% working interest in that lease through three Partial Assignments to him from Aegis. In May of 1995, as part of these assignments, Dr. Eubanks executed a letter agreement for Aegis to act as the field's operator, based on a JOA, identical to the one, which Aegis had executed with the other working interest owners in 1993. Additionally, in late July of 1995, Dr. Eubanks executed a Partial Assignment, giving one percent of his 57% interest in the July 12, 1984 Mineral Lease, to Probe. Thus, Dr. Eubanks owned 99% of his 57% working interest in the July 12, 1984 Mineral Lease and Probe owned one percent of Dr. Eubanks' 57% working interest in the lease.

Because Dr. Eubanks owned a majority interest in the Lake Rosemound Field, as well as in the July 12, 1984 Mineral Lease, in the summer of 1995, all interest owners in the field decided to appoint his company, Probe, to be operator, replacing Aegis. Accordingly, Probe assumed Aegis' June 1993 and May 1995 JOA's contractual rights, duties, and obligations. These duties included collecting and paying royalties, billing the other interest owners for their proportionate share of expenses, hiring third parties to provide services on the lease, and executing the JOA amendments.

Beginning in July of 1998, field production ceased being economical. Accordingly, on August 30, 1999, Probe contracted with Southern Well Abandonment and Peddling (SWAP) to plug and abandon one of the wells and to dismantle the remaining *879 surface equipment at the plant site, up to the earthen containment levee surrounding the tank battery. It contracted to remove, only, the standard normal equipment used in collection and storage of oil and gas, specifically, a heater treater, separator, and associated piping. The site contained an amine plant, to strip carbon dioxide from the natural gas produced from the wells, which had already been removed from the surface in late 1998. Additionally, there was a plant to remove liquid hydrocarbons from natural gas. Propax, a separate company which owned this equipment, planned to be responsible for its removal.

On the explosion's date, October 18, 1999, Mr. Isadore was using a blowtorch to cut pipe outside the containment levee, which was connected to the tank battery. He ignited flammables within the pipe, which, ultimately, set afire the tank battery, causing a violent explosion. The explosion burned his body, primarily, his arms and left hand.

Mr. Isadore filed suit against Probe. As an affirmative defense, Probe asserted tort immunity under the Two Contract Theory in La.R.S. 23:1061. After completion of discovery and setting this matter for trial, Probe filed a summary judgment motion and the trial court granted it.

It found that Probe had satisfied both components of the Two Contract Defense, specifically, that Probe had entered into a contract with a third party for work to be performed, as well as with SWAP for partial fulfillment of this work. It ruled that Probe met the first contract requirement through, either, Probe's Partial Assignment of the July 12, 1984 Mineral Lease or the 1993 and 1995 JOA's, in which Probe assumed the contractual duties as Operator of the Field in 1995.

Mr. Isadore appeals the trial court's ruling. He maintains that the trial court erred in granting Probe: (1) the Two Contract Defense, when there was evidence that the only contract, which was applicable to the plant site where the accident occurred, was a September 19, 1985 surface lease not applicable to Probe; (2) immunity under the July 12, 1984 Mineral Lease and the undated JOA, when, neither contract contains any language obligating Probe to restore the plant site to its original condition; (3) immunity under the July 12, 1984 Mineral Lease and the undated JOA, when both of these contracts had expired before Probe contracted with Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
815 So. 2d 876, 2001 WL 1618873, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/isadore-v-probe-offshore-llc-lactapp-2001.