Le Bleu v. Shell Petroleum Corporation

161 So. 214, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 518
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 14, 1935
DocketNo. 1472.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 161 So. 214 (Le Bleu v. Shell Petroleum Corporation) 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
Le Bleu v. Shell Petroleum Corporation, 161 So. 214, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 518 (La. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

LE BLANC, Judge.

The defendant appeals from a judgment in the lower court which condemned it to pay the plaintiff $900 for damages to his house alleged to have been caused by its negligence in exploding a charge of dynamite on’ his premises while making geophysical investigations and exploring the neighboring country for mineral indications by means' of the seismograph. The demand was for $1,000, and plaintiff has answered the appeal asking for an increase in the award to that sum.

Plaintiff’s house is situated in the country in or near the settlement in Calcasieu parish known as Chloe. On June 6, 1934, the defendant company obtained a permit from him to go upon his land to shoot charges of dynamite in conducting their explorations. The agreement between them was that- defendant would pay plaintiff $5 for each shot or blast and, in addition, pay for any damages to the improvements on his premises. Under this agreement, defendant set off one discharge on June 7, and one on June 8, 1934, from the effects of which plaintiff claims that the earth trembled so that his dwelling house was greatly shaken and weakened in all its five apartments, that it swagged and leaned four inches out of line to the west, that the chimney cracked, the foundation was displaced, the gables caved in, and in fact that it was damaged beyond repair.

Plaintiff’s cause of action grows out of article 2315 of- the Civil Code, and in order to recover he must be able to show that he has suffered damage as alleged by him and that the damage was caused through the fault or negligence of the defendant. Mcll-henny v. Roxana Petroleum Corporation, 10 La. App. 692, 122 So. 165. The defendant not only contends that plaintiff has not shown fault or negligence on its part, but that the testimony' shows on the contrary' that the damage to his house, instead of having been caused by any -vibrations of' earth following the dynamite explosions, was due to poor workmanship in its construction ; that the piers on which it rested were improperly placed on or in the ground, and when they settled they became uneven causing- the whole building to be' thrown out of line.

Plaintiff's house was originally a box house erected on a lot approximately a mile and a quarter from the site on which it is presently located. That box house was built in 1910. The year in which it was moved to its present location is not shown. It is ’, known, however, that even after its remov-’ al, it rested on wooden piers. In 1920, plaintiff undertook rather extensive repairs and added new rooms to the original structure. The piers for the new rooms were brick and those under the old portion of the house changed 'from wood to brick. In changing these last piérs, however, the. house was not jacked, up and then let' down bn the néw piers. The piers were built up under the ’ house to reach the sills which’ rested on them. There were thirty-six 'piérs in all, some with their foundations built in the ground, and others whose foundations rested on the surface.

The explosions.- of dynamite, which plain-, tiff complains o.f as causing the damage to his house, consisted' of 300 pound's of 100 per cent, blasting gelatin, each, placed in holes 65 feet below the surface of the earth, drilled especially for that purpose. These holes were 4½ inches in diameter each, the one in *215 which the first discharge took place being at a distance of 752 feet from the plaintiff’s house and the second about 175 feet further than the first.

The plaintiff introduced his own testimony, that of his wife, of a relative, Mrs. Mitchell Le Bleu, and also that of two of their friends, Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Boudreaus, to show the difference in the condition of the house after the discharge of the first blast by defendant on June 7, 1984. Whilst they differ in some details and some of them tell of changes in condition that it is very difficult indeed to believe could have taken place, they all in effect state that as they knew the house before, it was absolutely strong and solid, level on its piers, the floors did not shake, the doors and windows swung open and' could' be raised- -and -lowered easily; whereas after the date of the-blast, defects of this nature were readily perceptible. As an example of some parts of- that testimony which we think is, to say the-least, a bit exaggerated, we might refer to that of some of these ladies who stated that-the roof did not leak before; whereas after the explosion, there were leaks in the house. Mrs. Le Bleu, plaintiff’s wife, goes even further in her testimony and says that the vibrations from the blast caused some shingles to shake from the roof. The testimony regarding the roof, on the contrary, is positive, that it was in a very poor condition.before, the photographs offered in evidence affording further proof of that fact, and some of plaintiff’s own witnesses admit that it leaked. The plaintiff’s own testimony, of course, is the strongest of all with regard to the almost total wreckage of his house by the blast. He says that every door and every window in the house is now “somewhat off”; that 23 out of the 36 piers under the house “were all shot up”; and that you can stand. on the floor now “and shake the furniture down, or they- all vibrate.” The chimney, he says, is broken in two places and that the west gable is about 4 inches out of place. .All of this he attributes to the blast of dynamite. When asked to state what he observed when the explosion took place, he says: “I was sitting in the room and the first thing I saw in the corner of the room and the whole house vibrated, from six inches to a foot”

It might be noted at this time that although in his petition plaintiff alleges that the damage was caused from both explosions, most of his testimony relates to the first only. On the day of the second blast, he was not in the house but sitting under a tree in his yard. He speaks of its effects in a general way only and does not refer to any specific damage such as .was caused by the first explosion. 1

Plaintiff offered the testimony of Mr. Adolph A. See, a gentleman who had some experience in blasting with dynamite in a salt mine, and who states it as his opinion that nothing less could have shaken plaintiff’s house but a large blast of dynamite “somewhere near around.” We doubt very much that Mr. See intended to speak with the authority of an expert on the effect produced by the blasting of dynamite such as it is conducted by the defendant in this case. His experience in the salt mine was not the same as that of a person engaged in the work being done by the defendant, and -he himself frankly admits that he never had made a study of the effect of vibration that was caused even by a mine blast.

The defendant produced three expert witnesses who testified on the subject of high explosives and their effects when discharged in causing the earth to vibrate; One, Mr. George Carr, its employee who directed the. work on the occasion when the damage to plaintiff’s house is alleged to have occurred; another, Mr. Lamar C. Le Bron of the Hercules Powder Company, with over seven years’ experience in different departments, some .of it as supervising and conducting blasting v/ork in the manufacture of various types of high explosives and electric designators; and Mr. I. M. Griffin, Jr., salesman and service manager of the Illinois Powder Manufacturing Company and who also at one time did seismograph work for the defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
161 So. 214, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 518, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/le-bleu-v-shell-petroleum-corporation-lactapp-1935.