Miller v. Louisiana Gas Service Co.

601 So. 2d 700, 1992 WL 113637
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 15, 1992
Docket91-CA-890
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 601 So. 2d 700 (Miller v. Louisiana Gas Service Co.) 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
Miller v. Louisiana Gas Service Co., 601 So. 2d 700, 1992 WL 113637 (La. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

601 So.2d 700 (1992)

Michael Leroy MILLER and Donald Leroy Miller
v.
LOUISIANA GAS SERVICE COMPANY, et al., Louisiana Power & Light Company, and Zurich American Insurance Company.

No. 91-CA-890.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.

May 15, 1992.
Writ Denied September 25, 1992.

*701 Charles A. Verderame, New Orleans, for plaintiffs/appellees/cross-appellants.

John P. Manard, Jr., G. Bruce Parkerson, Phelps Dunbar, New Orleans, for defendant/appellee/cross appellant.

W. Malcolm Stevenson, Robert E. Rougelot, Nora F. McAlister, Monroe & Lemann, New Orleans, for defendant/appellant.

Steven Dow Oliver, Windhorst, Gaudry, Talley & Ranson, Harvey, for intervenor/appellant/cross appellee.

Before KLIEBERT, GRISBAUM and WICKER, JJ.

*702 WICKER, Judge.

Michael Leroy Miller and his father, Donald Leroy Miller, were both burned in a gas explosion while working to install a new gas main outside Hammond, Louisiana in Tangipahoa Parish. The Millers worked for Lloyd E. Joiner Construction Company under the latter's contract with Louisiana Gas Service Company (LGS). The Millers sued LGS and United Gas Pipeline Company, both owners and/or former owners of pipelines and gas mains in the area. The Millers joined Louisiana Power and Light Company (LP & L) as a defendant when they learned of that company's previous ownership of gas mains in the area. Zurich-American Insurance Companies intervened in the suit for repayment of worker's compensation benefits paid to the two men.

Following presentation of the Millers' evidence in a several-day bench trial, the judge dismissed United Gas from the suit. No one has appealed this dismissal. He ultimately rendered judgment in favor of the Millers and against LP & L. He also awarded Zurich its worker's compensation intervention.

LP & L has appealed the denial of its exception of prescription, the finding of liability on its part, certain remarks of the judge concerning pretermitted contractual claims between LP & L and LGS, and damages. LGS has appealed the damage award. The Millers have appealed the characterization of LGS as a statutory employer and the denial of their other theories of recovery against LGS. They also asked that judgment in favor of Zurich be amended to reflect its entitlement to payments made since the date of trial and to specify that Zurich's recovery be made only out of funds actually awarded to them. Zurich appeals the absence of an award for interest and for worker's compensation paid between the date of trial and a final judgment in these proceedings. We affirm in part, amend in part, and render.

Both United Gas and LP & L had gas mains in and around Hammond in the fifties. In 1955 LP & L approved the addition of a new gas main along Highway 51 to service customers along this route, including Oliver Treated Lumber Company. (Although the witnesses and parties refer to this gas main by various names, for simplicity we will refer to it as the Oliver main.) This main was in service by 1956. However, it apparently was tied into a United Gas main without the knowledge or consent of United Gas.

In the meantime the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission ordered LP & L to divest itself of all its gas operations. LP & L created LGS by incorporation; and LGS entered into a purchase agreement for LP & L's water and gas facilities. The actual sale took place on September 30, 1958. At this point LP & L owned LGS stock, and LGS's first board of directors were former LP & L directors. LP & L divested itself of LGS stock in October of 1960.

LP & L had in 1956 created a system-wide map of all its gas lines in the area, but the map inadvertently omitted the Oliver main. A file card (mains card), however, was prepared showing the existence of the Oliver main and placed in LP & L's file in 1956. United Gas also began a system-wide map of its gas facilities at the same time; but, since it was not aware that the Oliver main was tied into its other lines, that main was also omitted from the United Gas map.

United Gas added a new main in 1966 and also sold some of its facilities to LGS in 1966, including the new main. In that year LGS prepared new mains cards for the Oliver main and the new United Gas main, and both these cards were put in the mains card file. LGS prepared a new mains card in 1978 to replace these two old ones; but the new mains card omitted the Oliver main.

The former United Gas main had begun to leak by 1983, so LGS prepared a work order to Joiner, the Millers' employer, to replace it. The work papers (job folder) included a diagram of what purported to be all the gas lines in the area, but the Oliver main was not included. Gas flow to the old United Gas and adjacent mains was cut off so that the men could cut out the old line and lay a new one alongside. When the gas flow was restarted on June 22, 1983, it *703 came through the overlooked Oliver main into the cut out section, where it was ignited by the torches the Millers were using. Because Michael Miller was standing in front of his father, he bore the brunt of the explosion.

The judge awarded Michael Miller a total of $900,000.00, plus interest, and Donald Miller a total of $7,963.70, plus interest. He awarded Zurich $105,873.59 and $292.48 for each of the two plaintiffs, less an amount for the Millers' attorneys fees and costs to be determined at a later hearing. He dismissed the tort claim against LGS and ruled in the Millers' favor on the prescription issue. He reasoned in part:

The Court finds that Louisiana Power and Light's exception of prescription should be overruled, under the legal theory of contra non valentum agere nulla currit praescriptio. Contra non valentum is applicable here because it was impossible for the plaintiffs to discover that Louisiana Power and Light Company had previously owned the line until the plaintiffs engaged in extensive discovery. The co-defendants answers to discovery uncovered this fact. Louisiana Gas Company had to do extensive discovery regarding the origin of the line and why this line was not on their cards. Even after discovering that Louisiana Power and Light Company built the line, the plaintiffs still didn't find out until later that Louisiana Power and Light had provided erroneous maps.
Louisiana law holds that prescription does not run against one who cannot ascertain the facts on which to base his claim....
....
The Court finds that several Louisiana Power and Light documents were incomplete and in error as of 1958 when Louisiana Power and Light sold this line to Louisiana Gas and at the time of the fire. These were serious errors and omissions without any warnings disclaimers or cross references on the mains cards to alert subsequent draftsmen....
....
The Court has no doubt that the faulty record keeping on the part of defendants, Louisiana Power and Light and Louisiana Gas Company caused this accident and the plaintiffs injuries.... The accident would not have happened had Lloyd E. Joiner personally known of the [Oliver] line.

PRESCRIPTION

The explosion which injured Mr. Miller took place on June 22, 1983; and Miller sued LGS and United Gas on November 4, 1983. At that time no one was aware that the exploding main was tied into a United Gas main by LP & L almost thirty years earlier. Right after the explosion LGS began a search for information about how the accident could have happened.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
601 So. 2d 700, 1992 WL 113637, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-louisiana-gas-service-co-lactapp-1992.