Pan American Petroleum Corporation v. Like

381 P.2d 70, 19 Oil & Gas Rep. 286, 1963 Wyo. LEXIS 90
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMay 1, 1963
Docket3122
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 381 P.2d 70 (Pan American Petroleum Corporation v. Like) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pan American Petroleum Corporation v. Like, 381 P.2d 70, 19 Oil & Gas Rep. 286, 1963 Wyo. LEXIS 90 (Wyo. 1963).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McINTYRE

delivered the opinion of the court.

Pan American Petroleum Corporation has appealed from a judgment against it based upon a personal-injury verdict. The verdict was given by a Natrona County jury to Leon Preston Like in the amount of $186,748.95.

The accident from which the litigation arose occurred in the fall of 1957 while Mr. Like was employed as a driller by Loffland Brothers, a drilling firm engaged in the drilling and completion of a gas well in Fremont County, Wyoming, for Pan American. The well was the fifty-third well drilled by Loffland Brothers for Pan American in the same county and field.

The work was being done under a day-work drilling contract. Loffland operated in a customary manner to the extent that it had a driller in charge of each eight-hour tower and a toolpusher in charge of the three daily towers. Like’s immediate superior was Paul Waid, toolpusher for Loff-land Brothers on this particular well." The representative of Pan American'on the well was Erwin Parker Swann.

During completion operations, gas from the well got out of control. A fire ensued and plaintiff-Like was severely burned and injured. The injured workman sued to recover. damages from Pan American, owner of the well, on the theory that Pan American was negligent in one or both of the following particulars:

(1) That it failed to specify or require an adequate blowout pre-venter.
(2) That it failed to specify and furnish drilling mud of the proper weight and consistency.

The contract between Pan American and Loffland Brothers for the well here involved, No. 53, was on a printed form which could cover a situation where ordinary drilling was on a footage basis and completion work on a day-work basis. However, for this well both the drilling and completion were contracted for on a day-work basis.

Although printed portions of the contract specify, in paragraph 5(c), that when operations are on a footage basis the contractor shall be liable for all claims arising as a result of blowouts, explosions or accidents incident to drilling operations, when there are completion operations, the following is specified:

“6. When Pan American shall use Contractor’s crew, drilling machinery, and drilling equipment in the perform-? anee of work necessary for coring, logging, perforating, acidizing, setting liners, swabbing, installing connections, abandoning and other items of work and labor, commonly known as ‘day work,’ it is agreed:
“(a) All day work shall be subject to and under the direct supervision of a designated representative o.f - - Pan American.”

Inasmuch as .the operations being conducted at the time of -the accident were admittedly completion operations' and there were no operations on a footage basis, there *72 can be'no- dispute that paragraph 6(a) was operative, and all work at the time of the accident was subject to and under the direct supervision of Pan American’s designated representative, Swann.

It is undisputed that Pan American specified and Loffland Brothers furnished, for use on this well, a Shaffer double-gate hydraulic-controlled blowout preventer. It included pipe rams which could be closed, in case of an emergency, around pipe or tubing which is round in shape. It also included blind rams which could be closed, in case .of emergency, when nothing at all was inside the preventer. It did not include any kind of device for closing, in case of an ■emergency, around the kelly which is square or hexagon in shape. No other blowout preventer equipment was specified or furnished.

According to the witnesses who testified on the matter, about 38 feet of the kelly was beneath the rig floor and inside the well just before the accident occurred. This meant that the kelly extended through the inside of the blowout preventer and rendered it useless unless and until the kelly could be lifted out. Attached to the kelly and inside the well was tubing extending to a depth of approximately 8,570 feet. The tubing was being used for drill pipe.

Swann, on behalf of Pan American, had directed a cleaning out and circulating operation. He had specified the depth for the bottom of the drill pipe, but he had not specified where the bottom of the kelly should be. In other words, he had not instructed in exact terms for or against having the kelly through the blowout pre-venter.

The evidence was in conflict on the question as to whether the kelly needed to be through the blowout preventer, but it seems to be undisputed that Waid and not Like placed it there and directed what should be done next. The accident, however, happened immediately. Both Waid and Like indicated by their testimony that, after a workman warned of gas blowing out, everything possible was done to withdraw the kelly and close the blowout preventer. The explosion and fire occurred before this could be done.

Standard of Care

It is the contention of defendant-Pan American, as stated by its attorneys, that plaintiff-Like failed to establish by the evidence a duty or standard of care for the drilling of the well in question; that no common practice or custom of the drilling trade or profession was established; and that in failing to set forth such a standard it would be impossible to establish a breach of a nonexistent duty or standard. The trial court, defendant claims, erred in failing to recognize this basic tenet of the requirement on plaintiff to establish a duty, a breach thereof, and resulting damages.

Subsequent to the trial of this case in the district court, we reaffirmed, in Govin v. Hunter, Wyo., 374 P.2d 421, 422-423, the principle that in malpractice suits it is necessary for a plaintiff to prove by the evidence of competent experts that the injury complained of was caused by negligence. We stated in fact that we do not understand how a jury could possibly find the existence of negligence in a malpractice case without a standard to go by.

We now understand it to be the position of Pan American that a similar principle should control in the case before us, and that the trial court’s action in permitting the case to go to the jury had the effect of allowing the jury to determine and apply its own standard of care.

Before extending the malpractice rule to other cases, we must of course look at the reasons for the rule and see whether they apply to the case being considered. In that regard, it is quite apparent the standard of care, against which the acts of a physician in a malpractice action are to be measured, is a matter peculiarly within the knowledge of medical experts and can only be proved by their testimony, unless the conduct required by the particular circumstances is within the common knowledge of laymen. *73 Sinz v. Owens, 33 Cal.2d 749, 205 P.2d 3, 5, 8 A.L.R.2d 757; Beane v. Perley, 99 N.H. 309, 109 A.2d 848, 850.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Amos v. Lincoln County School District No. 2
2015 WY 115 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 2015)
Franks v. Independent Production Co., Inc.
2004 WY 97 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 2004)
Union Pacific Resources Co. v. Dolenc
2004 WY 36 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 2004)
Hynes v. Energy West, Inc.
211 F.3d 1193 (Tenth Circuit, 2000)
Hittel v. Wotco, Inc.
996 P.2d 673 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 2000)
Furman v. Rural Electric Co.
869 P.2d 136 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1994)
Wyrulec Co. v. Schutt
866 P.2d 756 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1993)
MacKrell v. Bell H2S Safety
795 P.2d 776 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1990)
Case v. Goss
776 P.2d 188 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1989)
Claassen v. Nord
756 P.2d 189 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1988)
John C. Hull v. Chevron U.S.A., Inc.
812 F.2d 584 (Tenth Circuit, 1987)
McCarthy v. Whitlock Construction & Supply
715 P.2d 218 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1986)
Union Pacific Railroad v. Richards
702 P.2d 1272 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1985)
Caterpillar Tractor Co. v. Donahue
674 P.2d 1276 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1983)
Mariner v. Marsden
610 P.2d 6 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1980)
Brittain v. Booth
601 P.2d 532 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1979)
Oroz v. Hayes
598 P.2d 432 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1979)
Diamond Management Corp. v. Empire Gas Corp.
594 P.2d 964 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1979)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
381 P.2d 70, 19 Oil & Gas Rep. 286, 1963 Wyo. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pan-american-petroleum-corporation-v-like-wyo-1963.