Jimmy Reed and Cindy Reed v. Shell Offshore Inc.

872 F.2d 680, 1989 WL 40663
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 25, 1989
Docket88-3144
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 872 F.2d 680 (Jimmy Reed and Cindy Reed v. Shell Offshore Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jimmy Reed and Cindy Reed v. Shell Offshore Inc., 872 F.2d 680, 1989 WL 40663 (5th Cir. 1989).

Opinion

EDITH H. JONES, Circuit Judge:

Shell Offshore Inc. was found liable as the custodian of a defective thing, Louisiana Civil Code Art. 2317, after Jimmy Reed fell through a hole in a grated floor of an offshore platform. The issues are whether the hole, covered with a sheet of plywood, was dangerously defective; whether judgment should have been rendered for Shell because as a matter of law, the accident was caused by the fault of a third party; and whether the trial court should have asked the jury to apportion fault to plaintiff’s employer and an independent contractor as well as Shell. Finding one aspect of the third issue to have merit, we must reverse and remand for new trial.

I. BACKGROUND

Jimmy Reed arrived at Shell’s platform on the outer continental shelf off the coast of Louisiana on July 21, 1985. He was the foreman for L & L Sandblasting, Inc., which had been hired by Shell to perform certain blasting and painting services on the platform. B & D Inspections, Inc. was also hired to oversee and supervise the work being done by L & L. B & D’s independent inspector, Darrell McLemore, described to Reed the work that was to be done on the platform. In particular, he informed Reed that some work would be performed beneath the deck of the platform, in an area accessible through a hole in its grating. Two days after he arrived, Reed lifted a 4 x 8-foot piece of plywood and fell into the opening that it covered. He testified that he was never warned that the opening lay underneath the plywood and the board was neither tied down nor secured nor was its purpose marked in any way.

One of Reed’s witnesses was a galley-hand who had served two-week tours of duty on the platform for nearly two months before the accident. He testified that the hole had been created some two to five weeks earlier by some workers who had cut out a section of grating and had not replaced it. Another witness supported Reed’s testimony that the plywood was nei *682 ther tied down nor marked with a warning sign.

Shell’s testimony, to the contrary, explicitly pointed to L & L as the company which removed the grating and replaced it with plywood to facilitate employees’ access to the piping beneath the deck. Darrell McLemore, the B & D inspector, testified that a week or so before the accident occurred, he saw that a manhole cover was missing, so he told a foreman of the L & L crew to place a sheet of plywood over it. He also testified that he had the plywood marked and tied down and that he personally warned Reed about the hole.

The jury found Shell liable as the custodian of a defective thing pursuant to Louisiana Civil Code Art. 2317. Shell, however, was exonerated from liability pursuant to Louisiana Civil Code Art. 2322 governing an owner’s strict liability for a building in “ruin.” The jury found Reed 50% negligent. The net judgment in favor of Reed and his wife was $165,000.

II. SHELL’S LIABILITY UNDER ARTICLE 2317

We turn first to Shell’s liability under Louisiana Civil Code Art. 2317. 1 Shell would liken its status in this case to that of the defendant in Stine v. Creel, 417 So.2d 1243 (La.App.1982), which, in attempting to have its roof repaired, was sued by a workman who negligently fell through the roof. As the Louisiana court held:

... RCC 2317 gives Stine no relief. Clearly Crown Zellerbach had custody of the warehouse. But the roof of the building, under the facts of this case, does not constitute a defective thing that caused injury to Stine. Again, it was not the roof that caused the injury — it was the manner about which Stine sought to remove it that caused the injury. 417 So.2d at 1246.

Stine is distinguishable. There, the plaintiff was injured, at least in part, by the very defect that he had been hired to repair. In this case, there was disputed testimony as to whether the plywood had been placed over the hole by L & L to suit its purposes or by Shell as a part of structural repairs to the platform. 2 Because of this conflict, the jury was entitled to decide that Shell or a contractor other than L & L had placed unmarked, non-secured plywood over that hole in the grating. Reed, consequently, was not injured by the dangerously defective condition that L & L had been hired to repair, nor was he injured by any act of L & L in furtherance of its repair work.

Our recent decision in Boutwell v. Chevron, 864 F.2d 406 (5th Cir.1988), reinforces this conclusion. In Boutwell, summary judgment was affirmed for Chevron, the platform owner, on a claim by a contractor’s employee who tripped and fell through an un-barricaded hole. There, however, the evidence showed that the worker’s employer had cut the hole in the platform to further its operations. We found, based on Stine, that Art. 2317 would not support liability.

As Stine does not justify a judgment n.o.v. for Shell, we likewise see no basis to award a new trial on this issue. The jury was faced with a substantial evidentiary conflict, and we cannot say that a new trial is required to verify their decision.

III. DAMAGES UNDER ARTICLE 2317

Shell alternatively contends that under our ruling in Nance v. Gulf Oil Corporation, 817 F.2d 1176 (5th Cir.1987), interpreting the scope of Louisiana’s comparative negligence statute, it was entitled to have the jury apportion negligence among Reed, Shell, L & L and B & D. The court *683 refused to submit issues of L & L’s and B & D’s negligence to the jury. Although Nance was subsequently enacted by the Louisiana legislature, Art. 2324 (specifically authorizing the allocation of fault to a statutorily immune employer) (Amend. 1987), the Louisiana appellate courts have refused to apply the comparative fault provision existing between 1980-1987 to apportion fault between a solidary obligor and a statutorily immune employer. Snyder v. Taylor, 523 So.2d 1348, 1355 (La.App.2d Cir.1988); Senez v. Grumman Flexible Corp., 518 So.2d 574, 577 (La.App. 4th Cir.1987), writ, denied, 521 So.2d 1151 (La.1988); Chatelain v. Project Square 221, 505 So.2d 177, 186 (La.App. 4th Cir.1987). We must bow under Erie to the short-lived authority of the Louisiana cases contrary to Nance, as this case was tried in 1987. The trial court did not err in refusing to submit L & L’s liability to the jury.

With regard to B & D’s fault, Reed argues that Olsen v. Shell Oil Co., 365 So.2d 1285 (La.1979), prohibits the application of the comparative fault statute to a building owner whose liability is tested by “strict liability” standards in Louisiana. In Olsen, the Louisiana Supreme Court stated that:

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872 F.2d 680, 1989 WL 40663, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jimmy-reed-and-cindy-reed-v-shell-offshore-inc-ca5-1989.