Martinez v. Vintage Petroleum, Inc.

80 Cal. Rptr. 2d 449, 68 Cal. App. 4th 695
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 18, 1998
DocketB114300
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 80 Cal. Rptr. 2d 449 (Martinez v. Vintage Petroleum, Inc.) 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
Martinez v. Vintage Petroleum, Inc., 80 Cal. Rptr. 2d 449, 68 Cal. App. 4th 695 (Cal. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

Opinion

YEGAN, J.

In negligence parlance, this is a superseding cause case. Appellant, Alfonso Martinez, was employed by Clark Engineering and Construction Company (Clark), an independent contractor, to work in an oil field operated by Vintage Petroleum, Inc. (Vintage). Appellant was injured when a natural gas pipe burst. He sued Vintage on a negligence theory. Although a jury agreed that Vintage was a substantial factor in causing appellant’s harm, it also found that the negligence of appellant’s coworkers was a superseding cause that relieved Vintage of liability. Appellant contends there was no superseding cause as a matter of law, that the trial court gave an incorrect jury instruction on the issue and that its special verdict form compounded the error. We affirm.

Facts

Vintage operates an oil field near Sea Cliff beach. In 1995, oil pipelines in the field were damaged by landslides. Vintage hired Clark to reroute the oil line by connecting it to an abandoned natural gas line above the slide area. Tying the two lines together required that the natural gas pipeline be cut.

The natural gas pipeline was part of a “gas lift” system that used pressurized natural gas to recover oil from wells. Vintage shut down the “gas lift” system two years before appellant’s injury. When the system was shut down, the compressors were turned off and gas was removed from the pipelines for sale. Many lines were “depressurized” as a result of this process. Others were not. Vintage did not maintain a record of which pipes had been depressurized.

Clark’s foreman, Lonnie Henderson, was in charge of locating a natural gas line to use for the new oil line and of connecting the two lines together. Henderson had worked in this oil field for about 25 years and was very *698 familiar with it. He found two conveniently located natural gas pipes for the new oil line. Henderson traced the lines and believed the lines were open, i.e., depressurized, from end to end.

Henderson, appellant and Moe Millikan, a welder employed by another independent contractor, Adobe Welding, went to cut the pipe Henderson had chosen.

Millikan testified as follows: Henderson showed him which pipe to cut, and Millikan used a blowtorch to make a small hole in the pipe. As he did so, gas blew out of the pipe, extinguishing the torch. He told Henderson the pipe had pressure in it and that his torch blew out. Henderson left to check that the valves were open. When he returned, Henderson said he could not “bleed” the line and explained he would use a pipe cutter to “bleed” the pressure by cutting it. As Henderson applied a pipe cutter to the line, gas escaped with an audible hiss. Henderson stood back and watched for a few minutes, attempting to let the pressure subside. It did not. Instead, the pipe burst. A section of it flew into the air striking and severely injuring appellant, who was clearing brush about 25 feet away.

Henderson contradicted Millikan’s testimony. According to Henderson, Millikan cut the first hole in the pipe and told Henderson that he had a flame. Henderson understood this to mean that vapor inside the pipe caught fire from Millikan’s torch. He believed there might be some residual low pressure inside the pipe and some vapor that might catch fire. Henderson decided to use pipe cutters to avoid starting a fire. Before doing so, he checked nearby valves to make sure the line was open. He also placed his hand near the hole Millikan cut, to see if he could feel any gas escaping. He did not detect any escaping gas.

Henderson testified that he began to cut the pipe and heard a hissing sound almost immediately. He turned to warn Millikan and appellant, but the pipe burst before he could. Henderson denied saying he would use the pipe cutters to “bleed” pressure from the line. He also denied watching the pipe for several minutes after he began to cut it and before it burst. Henderson testified that he would never have cut into the pipe if he had believed it was pressurized.

Henderson, Millikan and three other oil field workers agreed that, if Clark was hired to cut a pipeline, it was Clark’s responsibility to make sure the line was depressurized and safe before cutting it.

Appellant called two expert witnesses who opined that the pipe burst because it was carrying pressurized natural gas. Neither expert believed it *699 physically possible that the explosion was caused by Millikan’s welding torch, or some other sort of fire, because the gas escaping from the pipe would have extinguished any flame and because there would not have been enough air inside the pipe to ignite the gas. Appellant’s safety expert opined that Vintage was at fault because it should have known the pipe contained pressurized gas and made sure that the pressure was released before anyone cut into the line.

Vintage’s expert testified the pipe contained a pocket of gas at low pressure that was ignited by Millikan’s welding torch. According to this witness, a high-pressure explosion would not explain the flame Millikan said he saw coming from the pipe or the smoke other witnesses described. Only a fire explosion would create enough force to cause the pipe to whip about and bend the way it did during the incident.

Instructions

Vintage requested that the trial court instruct the jury on the issue of superseding cause. Appellant argued the instruction was not supported by the evidence because the harm that occurred—an explosion—was foreseeable, even if the negligence of Henderson and Millikan was not.

The trial court instructed the jury on the issue of superseding cause but it did not give the pattern instruction, BAJI No. 3.79, which provides: “If you find that defendant [(first actor)] was negligent and that such negligence was a substantial factor in bringing about an injury to the plaintiff but that the immediate cause of the injury was the negligent conduct of [a third person] [defendant (second actor)], the defendant [(first actor)] is not relieved of liability for such injury if: flQ 1. At the time of such conduct defendant [(first actor)] realized or reasonably should have realized that [a third person] [defendant (second actor)] might so act; [or the risk of harm suffered was reasonably foreseeable]; or [10 2. A reasonable person knowing the situation existing at the time of the conduct of the [third person] [defendant (second actor)] would not have regarded it as highly extraordinary that the [third person] [defendant (second actor)] had so acted; or [10 3. The conduct of the [third person] [defendant (second actor)] was not extraordinarily negligent and was a normal consequence of the situation created by defendant [(first actor)]. [1Q [Extraordinary means unforeseeable, unpredictable, and statistically extremely improbable.]”

Instead of the pattern instruction which is worded in the negative, the trial court gave a modified BAJI No. 3.79 which states the relevant principles in the affirmative: “If you find that defendant Vintage Petroleum was *700

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
80 Cal. Rptr. 2d 449, 68 Cal. App. 4th 695, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martinez-v-vintage-petroleum-inc-calctapp-1998.