Minton v. Intercontinental Terminals Company, LLC

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Texas
DecidedOctober 2, 2023
Docket4:21-cv-00143
StatusUnknown

This text of Minton v. Intercontinental Terminals Company, LLC (Minton v. Intercontinental Terminals Company, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Minton v. Intercontinental Terminals Company, LLC, (S.D. Tex. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT October 02, 2023 SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS Nathan Ochsner, Clerk HOUSTON DIVISION MINTON et. al. § No. 4:21-cv-00143 Plaintiffs, § v. § § INTERCONTINENTAL § TERMINALS COMPANY, LLC et. § al. § Defendants. § ______________________________ § § IN RE: INTERCONTINENTAL § No. 4:19-cv-1460 TERMINALS COMPANY, LLC § DEER PARK FIRE LITIGATION §

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

Pending before the Court is Defendant Intercontinental Terminals Company, LLC’s (“ITC”) Motion to Exclude Expert Testimony Concerning Inapplicable OSHA Regulations. ECF No. 276; see also In re Intercontinental Terminals Company LLC Deer Park Fire Litigation, 4:19-cv-01460 (“Munoz”), Mot. Exclude, ECF Nos. 1474.1 The issue before the Court is whether certain opinions of Plaintiffs’ expert, Russ Elveston, concerning “the application of, and ITC’s alleged violations of, 29 C.F.R. § 1910.119,” OSHA’s Process Safety Management (“PSM”) regulation

1 On September 29, 2022, based on the parties’ consent, this bellwether consolidated case was deconsolidated from the Munoz consolidated case and transferred to this Court to conduct all proceedings pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 636(c). Order Transferring, ECF No. 12; see also Munoz, 4:19-cv-1460, Order Transferring, ECF No. 1332. This order is filed in both cases so that the remaining plaintiffs are aware of the actions in this bellwether consolidated case. should be excluded pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 702. ECF No. 276 at 5; Munoz, 4:19-cv-1460, ECF No. 1474 at 5. After thoroughly considering the

pleadings,2 expert reports, and the applicable law, the Court concludes that Mr. Elveston’s proposed expert testimony addressing ITC’s purported violations of § 1910.119 must be excluded because that OSHA regulation is inapplicable to

Tank 80-8’s operations and does not establish the appropriate standard of care, which is a question of law for the Court to decide. Therefore, pursuant to Rule 702, Mr. Elveston’s testimony would not be helpful to the jury.3 I. BACKGROUND.

A. The Underlying Litigation. This action involves a fire at ITC’s Deer Park, Texas facility that burned from March 17, 2019 to March 20, 2019. Most of the Plaintiffs in the consolidated action are residents of the surrounding community who have sued for personal injuries they claim to have suffered arising from their exposure to the toxic chemicals released

into the atmosphere from the fire (“PI Plaintiffs”). The remaining Plaintiffs are various businesses who have sued for financial damages they claim to have suffered

2 Defendant NSK Ltd. (“NSK”) filed a response, ECF Nos. 288, 289; Munoz, 4:19-cv-1460, ECF Nos. 1501, 1503, and Plaintiffs filed a response, wherein they joined NSK’s response and raised an additional argument, ECF Nos. 290, 291; Munoz, 4:19-cv-1460, ECF Nos. 1502, 1504. ITC filed a reply, ECF No. 304; Munoz, 4:19-cv-1460, ECF No. 1522. 3 ITC also sought to strike the testimony of NSK’s OSHA expert, Dr. Andrew Wolford. ECF No. 276 at 2; Munoz, 4:19-cv-1460, ECF No. 1474 at 2. Because Plaintiffs have dismissed their claims against NSK, and no party plans to call him as a witness, this motion as to NSK’s expert is moot. See ECF No. 304 at 19–20; Munoz, 4:19-cv-1460, ECF No. 1522 at 19–20. because of the fire’s impact on the surrounding area, including the waterways (“Commercial Plaintiffs”).

On March 16, 2019, two truckloads of butane were injected into Tank 80-8. ECF Nos. 277-4 at 2–7, 277-8 at 2–9; Munoz, 4:19-cv-1460, ECF Nos. 1475-4 at 2– 7; 1475-8 at 2–9. Plaintiffs allege that Tank 80-8’s circulation pump ran from

March 16, 2019 into the following day. On the morning of March 17, 2019, the liquid level in Tank 80-8 rapidly decreased without setting off any alarm; approximately thirty minutes later, the fire ignited. ECF Nos. 277-4 at 2–7, 277-8 at 2–9; Munoz, 4:19-cv-1460, ECF No. 1503 at 8. Fifteen storage tanks containing chemicals

burned. Following the fire, ITC investigated the root cause. Buehler Dep. 123:3–4, ECF No. 56-10; Munoz, 4:19-cv-1460, ECF No. 1381-10. According to ITC’s Root Cause Analysis Report, the loss of primary containment leading to the fire occurred

within the manifold power frame of Tank 80-8—an atmospheric tank that stored naphtha enriched with butane. Root Cause Analysis Rept. at ix, ECF No. 56-9; Munoz, 4:19-cv-1460, ECF No. 1381-9. Approximately three months before the fire, a new NSK Model 5313 bearing

was installed in Tank 80-8’s pump. ECF No. 56-9; Munoz, 4:19-cv-1460, ECF No. 1381-9. A post-fire metallurgical analysis of the NSK Model 5313 bearing indicated that the bearing’s individual balls had internal voids. ECF No. 56-9;

Munoz, 4:19-cv-1460, ECF No. 1381-9. The Root Cause Analysis Report concluded that the internal voids compromised the bearing’s structural integrity. ECF No. 56-9; Munoz, 4:19-cv-1460, ECF No. 1381-9. As a result, the structure experienced

vibrations that caused the mechanical seal gland to dislodge and allow naphtha to escape from its sealed chamber. ECF No. 56-9; Munoz, 4:19-cv-1460, ECF No. 1381-9. The leaking naphtha’s vapor ignited and started the fire. ECF No. 56-9;

Munoz, 4:19-cv-1460, ECF No. 1381-9. The PI Plaintiffs bring claims for injuries allegedly suffered because of the fire, including negligence and gross negligence claims against ITC. See ECF No. 85; Munoz, 4:19-cv-1460, ECF No. 544. On September 18, 2023, all Plaintiffs

voluntarily dismissed their claims against NSK. ECF Nos. 311, 313; Munoz, 4:19- cv-1460, ECF No. 1532. The first of the bellwether personal injury cases is set for trial on November 6, 2023. ITC filed this Daubert motion in advance of trial.

B. Russ Elveston’s Report. Russ Elveston is Plaintiffs’ OSHA expert. Elveston’s Report, ECF No. 290-2 at 2; Munoz, 4:19-cv-1460, ECF No. 1502-2 at 2. Mr. Elveston is “a licensed Professional Engineer and former OSHA Safety Engineer and Compliance Safety

and Health Officer (CSHO) with over 45 years of experience.” ECF No. 290-2 at 2; Munoz, 4:19-cv-1460, ECF No. 1502-2 at 2. Relevant herein, Mr. Elveston offers the following opinion: it is my expert opinion that the OSHA PSM applied to Tank 80-8 and its butane blending operations. Further, even if this Court decided that ITC was not technically legally bound to comply with OSHA PSM in relation to Tank 80-8, ITC’s conduct in not having a robust PSM program falls beneath the standard of care in the industry and represented a deliberate decision to refrain from implementing containment measures it had already found to be necessary in the 2014 MOC and HAZOP. Whether or not ITC’s position regarding the scope of the atmospheric tank exemption is legally correct, nothing prevented ITC from implementing a PSM program in accordance with the standard of care in the industry, and its apparent decision not to do so simply because it believed the atmospheric tank exemption did not require such a program was tantamount to placing its corporate head in the sand. ITC’s failure to adopt a comprehensive and robust PSM created an unacceptable and extreme degree of risk of a catastrophic outcome, given the recognized hazards relating to loss of containment fire and explosion, of which ITC was subjectively aware at the time of the 2014 MOC and HAZOP for the addition of the butane injection line.

ECF No. 290-2 at 5; Munoz, 4:19-cv-1460, ECF No. 1502-2 at 5.4 II. STANDARD FOR EXPERT TESTIMONY. Federal Rule of Evidence

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Minton v. Intercontinental Terminals Company, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/minton-v-intercontinental-terminals-company-llc-txsd-2023.