Monsanto Company v. Milam

480 S.W.2d 259, 1972 Tex. App. LEXIS 2523
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 19, 1972
Docket562
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 480 S.W.2d 259 (Monsanto Company v. Milam) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Monsanto Company v. Milam, 480 S.W.2d 259, 1972 Tex. App. LEXIS 2523 (Tex. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinion

TUNKS, Chief Justice.

Victor Milam, appellee, brought this suit against Monsanto Company and an employee of Monsanto Company, Herbert Hutson, for burn injuries sustained at Monsanto’s Chocolate Bayou Plant. Judgment based upon the answers to special issues was rendered for plaintiff Milam against defendant Monsanto, but not against defendant Hutson, in the amount of $83,750.00. Monsanto has appealed. There was no appeal of the judgment in favor of Hutson. In this opinion Monsanto will sometimes be called the defendant.

In March of 1966, various contractors, including Milam’s employer, A. A. Pruitt, were hired to perform a routine scheduled maintenance program at Monsanto’s plant. A. A. Pruitt was specifically contracted to remove and reinstall valves and equipment from the various departments for repair maintenance by other contractors.

Department 19, which is the part of the plant where the fire occurred and plaintiff was injured, is the area for converting hydrocarbon crude products into a by-product, propylene, which is a heavy gas vapor. Although this department is a sealed system and during the maintenance was decontaminated and depressurized, it still would contain a sufficient mixture of gas which would ignite if a flame were introduced into the pipes.

On March 14, 1966, the day before the fire, this system was pressured up whereupon three check valves were found to be defective. Pruitt’s crew, which included Milam, removed these valves for repair. Shortly before the fire on March 15, a Monsanto employee noticed that one of the valves which was called the 19-P.I.C.-5 valve appeared to have been installed improperly. After discussing this problem with Hutson, the Monsanto employees received permission 'from their supervisor, Vonnie Moore, to check the action of that valve by “stroking” it. This permission was given at approximately 6:00 p. m. “Stroking” a valve means turning the valve’s action — in this case from closed to open and back to closed.

At approximately 7:00 p. m. on that date, Pruitt requested of Vonnie Moore a work or fire permit to install the check valves removed the day before. Those were in the area where the 19-P.I.C.-5 valves were being or had been stroked. (This is a major point of dispute.) Moore issued the permit, Pruitt’s crew including Milam took their “cherry picker” crane, which had a gasoline engine, and impact wrenches into the area. While installing a second check valve, a fire erupted and spread out over the area resulting in second degree burns over approximately 15% of Milam’s body-.

The portion of the plaintiff’s petition alleging the basis of the defendants’ liability is in the following language:

“At the time of the occurrence of March 15, 1966, at or about the hour of 7:30 o’clock p. m., out of which this suit arises, your plaintiff was working in the course and scope of his employment for A. A. Pruitt Contractor, at Monsanto’s Chocolate Bayou Plant, located approximately twelve miles south of Alvin, in Brazoria County, Texas. Defendant, Herbert Hutson, acting in the course and *262 scope of his employment for the defendant, Monsanto Company, carelessly and negligently permitted highly volitale gases to escape into the area where plaintiff and his fellow employees were working, thereby causing an explosion and fire inflicting serious and painful injuries and burns to various parts of plaintiff’s body. The incident made the basis of this suit was proximately caused by the negligence of the defendants.”

The defendants did not except to that pleading.

The first ten special issues that were submitted by the court to the jury inquired as to whether “the defendant, Monsanto Company,” was negligent in (1) the untimely issuance of a permit to work in the area where the fire occurred; (2) the untimely testing of the 19-P.I.C.-5 valve; (3) the failure to stop the work being done by the crew of which the plaintiff was a member; and (4) the failure to warn plaintiff of the testing of the 19-P.I.C.-5 valve. Proximate cause issues were included. Those issues were all answered in the affirmative.

Special issue number 11, submitted to the jury was:

“Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that at the time of and on the occasion in question the defendant, Herbert Hudson, permitted gas to escape into the area where plaintiff' was working?”

That issue was answered in the negative. Special issues 12 and 13 were negligence and proximate causes conditionally submitted and not answered.

Special issues 14 and 15 were contributory negligence and proximate cause issues as to Milam’s failure to keep a proper lookout. Number 14 was answered in the negative and 15, conditionally submitted, was not answered. Special issue 16 was a sole proximate cause issue and 17 was unavoidable accident, both answered in the negative.

The defendants objected to each of the first ten issues on the basis, among others, that there was no pleading by plaintiff to support its submission. The plaintiff did not file, nor request permission to file, a trial amendment. Those objections were overruled by the trial court. The appellant’s first point of error is based upon the trial court’s submission of such issues over such objection.

In the trial court the defendants objected to special issue number 11, quoted above on the ground that it was a general issue in that it did not inquire about any specific act or omission of Hutson in permitting the gas to escape. That objection was overruled. Thus, in the trial court the plaintiff in requesting the issue took the position that it was not general but was specific. It was in substantially the language of plaintiff’s pleading, but that fact would not excuse its submission over objection if it was a general issue. Kainer v. Walker, 377 S.W.2d 613 (Tex.Sup.1964). If special issue number 11 was specific then plaintiff’s pleading that Hutson negligently permitted the gas to escape was a specific allegation of negligence on the part of Hutson and on the part of Monsanto through its employee, Hutson. If such was the case, then the general allegation that the incident was caused “by the negligence of the Defendants” was controlled by that specific allegation and such pleading would not support the submission of issues as to other acts or omissions of the defendants than that of Hutson in permitting gas to escape. Roosth & Genecov Production Co. v. White, 152 Tex. 619, 262 S.W.2d 99 (1953); Knight v. Caloudas, 409 S.W.2d 904 (Tex.Civ.App. — Houston 1966, no writ). The matters inquired about in the first ten issues are not confined to Hutson’s permitting the gas to escape.

The determination as to whether a pleading or an issue is “specific” or “general” in a personal injury negligence case is often difficult. See Pope, Broad and Narrow Issues, 26 Tex.B.J. 921 (1963). *263 However, in this case it is not necessary to determine whether the plaintiff’s quoted pleading was so general as to be subject to exception or whether special issue 11 was subject to the objection that it was general. The jury answered that issue in the negative.

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Bluebook (online)
480 S.W.2d 259, 1972 Tex. App. LEXIS 2523, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/monsanto-company-v-milam-texapp-1972.