Odeco Oil & Gas Co. v. Petroleum Helicopters, Inc.

857 F. Supp. 29, 1994 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9285, 1994 WL 327605
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedJuly 6, 1994
DocketCiv. A. No. 92-0114
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 857 F. Supp. 29 (Odeco Oil & Gas Co. v. Petroleum Helicopters, 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
Odeco Oil & Gas Co. v. Petroleum Helicopters, Inc., 857 F. Supp. 29, 1994 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9285, 1994 WL 327605 (E.D. La. 1994).

Opinion

ORDER AND REASONS

MENTZ, District Judge.

I. Background

Plaintiff, Odeco Oil & Gas Company (“Ode-co”), brought this suit against Petroleum Helicopters, Inc. (“PHI”) for maintenance and cure benefits paid by Odeco to eleven of its seamen employees who were injured in a PHI helicopter crash on August 26, 1991. PHI filed a third-party complaint against Fafnir Bearings, a Division of the Torrington Company (“Fafnir”). The Odeco employees involved in the crash pursued their claims for personal injuries in two other suits filed in Louisiana federal court and Texas state court: (1) Bass, et al. v. Odeco, Inc., et al., United States District Court, Western District, Louisiana, Lafayette-Opelousas Division, Civil Action No. 92-0057L/0 (the “Louisiana litigation”) brought by Odeco employees, Anthony Bass, Greg Dowden, and Terry McMahon; and (2) Rood, et al. v. Petroleum Helicopters, Inc., et al., District Court, Bra-zoria County, Texas, 23rd Judicial District, Civil Action No. 92-C-0184 (the “Texas litigation”) brought by Odeco employees Leonard Rood, Willis H. Waits, Roger Ross, Arthur Sandoz, Kennis Davis, Terry Brown, James Bates, and Gary Davis.

In the Texas litigation, Fafnir, PHI, and Odeco, among others, were named as defendants. Odeco filed a cross-claim against Fafnir and PHI for recovery of maintenance and cure paid to the plaintiff/employees. The litigation settled on October 18, 1993, when defendants, Fafnir, PHI, and other parties excluding Odeco, agreed to pay an undisclosed amount to the plaintiffs. At that time, the plaintiffs dismissed their claim against Odeco with prejudice, and the Court entered a “nonsuit without prejudice” as to Odeco’s claim for reimbursement of maintenance and cure benefits.

In the Louisiana litigation, Odeco was named as a defendant by plaintiffs, Bass and McMahon. Plaintiff Dowden did not sue Odeco. Other defendants named included Fafnir and PHI. Odeco did not assert a [30]*30cross-claim against Fafnir and PHI for reimbursement of maintenance and cure payments. The claims against Odeco were dismissed well before trial via summary judgment. Bass and McMahon settled then-claims against Fafnir and PHI prior to trial. Dowden’s case went to trial in January, 1994, and a judgment was entered in his favor against Fafnir and PHI.

On July 14, 1992, prior to the settlements and judgment entered in the Texas and Louisiana litigation, the parties to this suit entered a stipulation pursuant to which PHI and Fafnir agreed to reimburse Odeco for maintenance and cure benefits “made by it in the usual and customary practices of Odeco ... according to percentages of fault assessed against each if there is a judgment, or in the event of a settlement according to the percentage of the settlement paid by PHI and Fafnir.”1 In accordance with the parties’ request, this Court placed the stipulation under seal and stayed the litigation pending resolution of the employees’ claims.

Now that the employees’ claims have been brought to conclusion, Odeco seeks to lift the stay and to obtain a summary judgment enforcing the stipulation against Fafnir and PHI for $726,524.68 in maintenance and cure payments made by Odeco on behalf of all eleven injured employees. There is no opposition to the motion to lift the stay.

Fafnir and PHI agree that the stipulation applies to maintenance and cure paid to the [31]*31plaintiffs in the Louisiana litigation, but contest any obligation to reimburse Odeco for payments to the plaintiffs in the Texas litigation. They maintain that under the settlement bar rule Odeco is precluded from recovering any payments it made to the plaintiffs in the Texas litigation because in that case Odeco was a non-settling co-defendant and asserted cross-claims against Fafnir and PHI for maintenance and cure.

II. Analysis

Under the settlement bar rule, a co-defendant does not have a right of contribution against a settling defendant. See Leger v. Drilling Well Control, Inc., 592 F.2d 1246 (5th Cir.1979). The rationale for the rule is to protect the finality of settlements.

A rule that a hable defendant could enter into a post-trial settlement with the plaintiff and then initiate an action for contribution against the defendants that settled with the plaintiff before trial would, among other things, shatter the traditional finality of settlements. The departure of a plaintiff through settlement would no longer mark the end of a lawsuit. With motions for equalization of damages thinly disguised as actions for contribution, defendants that have suffered an adverse judgment could continue to harass defendants that settled with the plaintiff prior to trial. The dockets of the federal courts, already bloated, would sweh further.

Hardy v. Gulf Oil Corp., 949 F.2d 826, 836 (5th Cir.1992).

The settlement bar rule does not apply in the case at bar because Fafnir and PHI signed a stipulation prior to the settlement of the Texas litigation agreeing to reimburse Odeco for maintenance and cure paid to or on behalf of all eleven employees involved in the crash. The stipulation is unambiguous. In it the parties acknowledge that there were various pending or anticipated suits on behalf of eleven injured Odeco employees and that Odeco was seeking reimbursement for payments made to these employees or their survivors. The parties specifically stated that the stipulation was entered to save time and expense by staying Odeco’s suit pending resolution of the employees’ claims. The stipulation anticipated that Odeco might be named a defendant in some of the employees’ suits and that Fafnir and PHI might resolve some claims by settlement. There is nevertheless no language in the stipulation that limits its terms to maintenance and cure payments made to plaintiffs in the Louisiana litigation or to plaintiffs in suits where Odeco was not a non-settling co-defendant. There is likewise no language that excludes reimbursement for payments made to the plaintiffs in the Texas litigation. Accordingly, the Court finds that there is no genuine dispute that the stipulation applies to maintenance and cure payments made to all eleven Odeco employees regardless of whether they litigated their claims in the Texas suit.

Odeco’s claim for contribution in the Texas litigation does not alter the scope of the stipulation because it was dismissed without prejudice as a nonsuit.

The rationale for the settlement bar rule does not apply in this case. Odeco’s motion to enforce the stipulation is not the situation the settlement bar rule was devised to handle — that is where a non-settling tortfeasor initiates a post-settlement action for contribution of damages against a co-defendant who entered into an earlier settlement with the plaintiff. In that situation, the settling defendant expects to be relieved of any further liability to pay damages. In the Texas litigation, Odeco was adjudged not liable for damages when the plaintiffs dismissed with prejudice their claims against Odeco. In the case at bar, Odeco is not pursuing a post-settlement action for contribution of damages for which it was liable to the plaintiffs in the Texas litigation. Instead, it seeks to enforce a prior stipulation for reimbursement of maintenance and cure.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
857 F. Supp. 29, 1994 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9285, 1994 WL 327605, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/odeco-oil-gas-co-v-petroleum-helicopters-inc-laed-1994.