Pape v. Odeco, Inc.

643 So. 2d 229, 1994 WL 511485
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 21, 1994
Docket93-CA-1005
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 643 So. 2d 229 (Pape v. Odeco, Inc.) 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
Pape v. Odeco, Inc., 643 So. 2d 229, 1994 WL 511485 (La. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

643 So.2d 229 (1994)

David Anthony PAPE
v.
ODECO, INC. and Odeco (U.K.), Inc.

No. 93-CA-1005.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

September 21, 1994.

*230 Aubrey E. Denton, Aaron W. Guidry, Porter, Denton & Kobetz, Lafayette, and Carl J. Barbier and Kelly Barbier, Law Offices of Carl J. Barbier, New Orleans, for plaintiff/appellant.

James H. Daigle and E. John Heiser, Lemle & Kelleher, New Orleans, for defendants/appellees.

Before SCHOTT, C.J., and BARRY, LOBRANO, ARMSTRONG and JONES, JJ.

BARRY, Judge.

In this maritime claim David Anthony Pape appeals a judgment which grants in part a partial summary judgment in favor of ODECO, Inc. and ODECO(UK), Inc. [defendants].[1] Consolidated with this appeal is the writ application in which ODECO and ODECO(UK) sought review of the denial of their partial summary judgment (# 93-C-0712).

According to Pape's original petition, on October 26, 1990 ODECO and ODECO(UK), Delaware corporations doing business in Orleans Parish, owned, operated and/or controlled the drilling vessel OCEAN VALIANT. Pape, a citizen and resident of Great Britain, injured his back while working as a floorhand racking drill pipe on the vessel. He alleged ten acts of negligence. Under La.C.C. art. 2317 he alleged the defendants were owners and/or custodians of the defective pipe racks. He also claimed the defendants were responsible for the design, manufacture and construction of the OCEAN VALIANT. The defendants filed an answer and exceptions of no cause and no right of action based on the facts that Pape and the vessel were in the North Sea and neither ODECO nor ODECO(UK) was Pape's employer or owned the OCEAN VALIANT.

Before judgment on the exceptions, defendants filed for "summary judgment on exceptions of no right ... and no right of action." Defendants claimed there was no genuine issue of material fact and Pape had no claim under the Jones Act, general maritime law, and Louisiana law. They argued that Pape's claim fell under 46 U.S.C. App. § 688(b)[2] and he had no Jones Act and general maritime claim. The defendants also argued that Pape had no claim under La.C.C. arts. 2315 and 2317 because Louisiana law did not apply. They attached a statement of uncontested facts, a request for admissions, Pape's responses, and affidavits of George Holt and Mark Childers.

According to the defendants' statement of uncontested facts, Pape was a citizen, resident and domiciliary of the United Kingdom; he was never a U.S. citizen and never resided in the United States. ODECO(UK) was a foreign corporation organized pursuant to the laws of Delaware with its principal place of business in Aberdine, Scotland. On October 26, 1990 the OCEAN VALIANT was exploring for oil and gas over the continental shelf of the United Kingdom; the rig was never within the territorial waters of Louisiana or the United States. Pape was employed by ODECO(UK) and was treated for his injuries in the United Kingdom. Pape has never received compensation benefits, maintenance and cure and/or social security benefits under U.S. law.

Pape's responses to the defendants' request for admissions admitted: he was a *231 citizen and resident of the United Kingdom; he was employed by ODECO(UK), a subsidiary of ODECO, and he did not know its principal place of business; he was a roughneck on the OCEAN VALIANT on October 26, 1990. When asked to verify that the rig was located in the North Sea on the continental shelf of Scotland, Pape responded that the rig was approximately 100 miles off Montroe, Scotland. Pape could not say "whether it [OCEAN VALIANT] was positioned over the Continental Shelf of the United Kingdom."

In an affidavit George Holt, personnel manager of ODECO(UK), Inc., declared that on October 26, 1990 Pape was a roughneck aboard the self-propelled, semi-submersible rig, OCEAN VALIANT, located on the continental shelf off the coast of Scotland, United Kingdom. Holt noted Pape's British citizenship, his medical treatment in Middlesbrough, England, and his sick pay and social security benefits from the British government. The affidavit stated that the OCEAN VALIANT's daily drilling reports were attached, but the reports are not in the record.

In an affidavit Mark Childers, ODECO Drilling, Inc. Domestic Operations Vice-president, declared that the OCEAN VALIANT was manufactured in South Korea by Hyundai Heavy Industries, Ltd., it was commissioned in October, 1988 and used by Amoco to drill off the coast of China until 1989. The rig moved in early 1990 to the North Sea to drill for Shell Oil Company. Childers stated that the rig was never within U.S. territorial waters or waters overlaying its continental shelf and ODECO did not manufacture or construct the rig.

The defendants attached a letter from J.K. Tierney, a solicitor in Scotland, who stated that the OCEAN VALIANT was in the Scottish area of the UK sector of the continental shelf and Pape had remedies under Scotland law. Mr. Tierney offered to provide an affidavit, but the only document in the record is a letter containing Tierney's unsworn statements. The inclusion or exclusion of the affidavit does not alter our decision.

Pape filed an opposition to the exceptions and summary judgment motion and attached: the deposition of Mark Childers; an affidavit of his attorney's secretary, Alysia Daspit in which she stated that the Louisiana Secretary of State's records show the defendants' principal places of business are in New Orleans; an unsigned copy of a notice of a 1442 deposition; letters relating to Pape's attempts to depose a 1442 corporation designee, whom the defendants would not provide; and a copy of the 1958 United Nations Convention which defines the continental shelf. Pape argued that the defendants did not establish that he was injured in another nation's territorial waters or over another nation's continental shelf.

By deposition Childers testified that he could not state who was the current or prior owner of the OCEAN VALIANT. Childers admitted that in 1990 it was "not my responsibility" to know the OCEAN VALIANT'S construction history and location data, but he "was aware generally of what the rig was doing." He said to the best of his knowledge the rig had never been in U.S. territorial waters or over its continental shelf.

The trial court granted summary judgment (evidently based on the no cause of action exception) and dismissed Pape's petition. Pape filed for a rehearing and/or new trial in order to file a supplemental petition. The trial court granted the motion and leave to file a subsequent petition "to correct, as may be necessary, the identities of the owner and/or operator of the `OCEAN VALIANT'." The first supplemental petition alleged that the defendants had their principal place of business in New Orleans. It also alleged the "negligence, unseaworthiness and fault under applicable British law and/or Scottish law and/or any other applicable law...."

The defendants filed a motion for partial summary judgment as to the claims under the Jones Act, general maritime and Louisiana law and attached the same documents. In a second supplemental petition Pape added as a defendant ODECO Enterprises, Inc., the owner/operator of the rig (its principal place of business in New Orleans).

Pape filed an opposition to the partial summary judgment motion and a statement of uncontested facts. Pape stated he was injured *232 while the rig was in international waters in the North Sea.

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Bluebook (online)
643 So. 2d 229, 1994 WL 511485, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pape-v-odeco-inc-lactapp-1994.