Melancon v. Texaco, Inc.

510 F. Supp. 948, 1981 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9494
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedMarch 31, 1981
DocketCiv. A. 77-651
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 510 F. Supp. 948 (Melancon v. Texaco, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Melancon v. Texaco, Inc., 510 F. Supp. 948, 1981 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9494 (E.D. La. 1981).

Opinion

OPINION

ROBERT F. COLLINS, District Judge.

This matter was tried to the Court, sitting without a jury, on January 31, 1980 through February 6, 1980. Post-trial briefs were filed on February 28, 1980. Closing arguments were heard on March 26, 1980. Pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 52(a), the Court makes the following Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law:

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. Plaintiffs in this matter are Loyman Melancon, Rodney Eymard and the E & M Oyster Company, Inc. All plaintiffs are domiciled in Louisiana, and the E & M Oyster Company, Inc. has its principal place of business in the Parish of Jefferson, State of Louisiana. Defendants in this matter are Texaco, Inc. and Houston Contracting, Inc. Defendant Texaco, Inc. has acknowledged its responsibility to defend Houston Contracting, Inc., and defendants do not contest the Court’s diversity jurisdiction. See pretrial order, paragraphs 3, 4, record, document no. 56. The Court finds that defendants are not domiciled nor do they have their principal places of business in the State of Louisiana. The Court, therefore, finds that complete diversity of citizenship exists between plaintiffs and defendants.

2. The incidents made the subject matter of this litigation occurred in Barataría Bay, Parish of Jefferson, State of Louisiana. Plaintiffs allege that they were lessees of an oyster bed in Barataría Bay. Plaintiffs further allege that defendants damaged plaintiffs’ leased oyster bed on February 1 and February 14, 1976, when defendants’ drilling rig, Mr. Harvey, ran aground on or near the plaintiffs’ oyster bed while the rig was being transported to and from a drilling site. Plaintiffs seek damages for the loss of oysters, contending that this loss was proximately caused by the groundings of the Texaco drilling rig.

3. Defendant, Texaco, Inc., is the owner of State Mineral Lease No. 356, executed May 11,1936. This lease includes within its boundaries the waterbottoms located in Township 20 South, Range 24 East, Parish of Jefferson. Texaco’s Mineral Lease was recorded in the Jefferson Parish conveyance records office at C.O.B. 129, folio 431. Mineral Lease No. 356 is coextensive with the Barataría Bay waterbed area leased by plaintiffs for the production of oysters.

4. At the time of the incidents made the subject matter of this cause, plaintiffs Loyman Melancon and Rodney Eymard were the lessees of State Oyster Lease number 15944. At trial, plaintiffs proved their chain of title by introducing the testimony of Michael L. Myers, Sr., a surveyor employed by the Louisiana Wildlife and Fisheries Commission. Factually, there is little dispute as to the chronology of plaintiffs’ acquisition of the oyster lease in question. The parties instead heatedly contest the legal significance of the chain of title.

The testimony of Myers demonstrated that the oyster beds in question were first leased by Emile Bouvier, who applied for State Oyster Lease number 15944 on December 14, 1959. See Exhibit D-13 for a map of the area in question. On November 7, 1960, State Oyster Lease number 15944 was granted to Bouvier. See Exhibit P-1, A-2. That lease expired January 1, 1975. The area leased was east of the Middle Bank Light, a landmark which appears on all the maps.

At an undetermined time, Bouvier transferred his interest in lease 15944 to Nelson Duet. See Exhibit P-la. Subsequently, on January 31, 1969, Duet assigned the entire lease to Louis J. Eymard, plaintiff Rodney Eymard, Louis Eymard’s son, and to plaintiff Loyman Melancon, Louis Eymard’s son-in-law. See Exhibit P-la. Significantly, plaintiff E & M Oyster Company was not a party to this assignment because it was not formed until 1974. There is no evidence in the record which demonstrates that the E & M Oyster Company ever obtained an interest in this oyster lease after the company’s formation in 1974.

*950 On December 30, 1974, prior to the expiration of lease 15944, plaintiffs Melancon and Eymard filed an application numbered U577 to renew the western portion of lease 15944, plus an additional fifty acres. Exhibit P-lb. At the same time, Louis J. Eymard, the father of plaintiff Rodney Eymard, filed an application to renew the eastern portion of lease 15944. Because of a backlog of work at the Louisiana Wildlife and Fisheries Commission, the lease area plaintiffs sought to renew was not surveyed until February 23, 1976. On May 24, 1976, a new lease was granted, numbered 23485. See Exhibits Pl-6, D-17. Significantly, the 1976 lease named only Rodney Eymard and Loyman Melancon as lessees. No mention was made of the E & M Oyster Company as lessee. The testimony of Myers makes it clear that pursuant to the policies implemented by the Louisiana Wildlife and Fisheries Commission, plaintiffs’ lease remained legally valid from the period of January 1, 1975 through May 23, 1976, the period of time during which plaintiffs’ renewal application, number U577, was on file.

The Court finds that plaintiffs Melancon and Eymard were the lessees of oyster lease 15944 during February 1976, at the time of the incidents made the subject matter of this litigation. The Court also finds that plaintiff E & M Oyster Company was not a lessee of oyster lease 15944 at the time of the incidents made the subject matter of this litigation. The Court further finds, based upon the evidence presented, that lease 15944 and application U577 were properly recorded with the Louisiana Wildlife and Fisheries Commission and in the conveyance office books of the Parish of Jefferson. See Exhibits P-1A, P-1B. Furthermore, the testimony of Lawrence W. Holzenthal, Jr., Texaco’s district surveyor in charge of plotting the proposed route for the rig, Mr. Harvey, demonstrates that Holzenthal was aware of the existence of plaintiffs’ lease, number 15944. Holzenthal testified that his maps showed the location of the lease in question, at the time he plotted Mr. Harvey’s route to and from the drill site.

5. In February of 1976, defendant Texaco began moving its drilling rig, Mr. Harvey, to a drill site identified as well number 19. The rig, Mr. Harvey, is a 200 foot by 50 foot by 14 foot submersible steel drilling barge. See D-12. The final drill site location was several hundred feet west of the northwestern corner of oyster lease 15944. Testimony of Lawrence Holzenthal; see also defendant’s exhibits 13, 17. It was the responsibility of defendant’s employee, Lawrence Holzenthal, to plot the route of ingress and egress of the drilling rig to well number 19. Holzenthal testified that on January 7, 1976, he went out to the area in question and sounded the bottom of the bay to obtain information as to the depth of the water. While performing these soundings, Holzenthal testified that he saw oyster poles, which are used by oyster men to stake the boundaries of an oyster lease. Significantly, Holzenthal testified that when his crew sounded that part of the proposed route near plaintiffs’ oyster bed for water depth, he made no notation as to whether the tide was high or low. At trial, Holzenthal acknowledged that great tidal fluctuations occur in Barataría Bay depending upon the time of day and the weather. Holzenthal also testified that the Mr. Harvey draws five and one-half feet to seven feet of water.

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Bluebook (online)
510 F. Supp. 948, 1981 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9494, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/melancon-v-texaco-inc-laed-1981.