Pate v. Western Geophysical Co. of America
This text of 91 So. 2d 431 (Pate v. Western Geophysical Co. of America) 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.
Opinion
Frank J. PATE, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
WESTERN GEOPHYSICAL COMPANY OF AMERICA, Defendant-Appellant.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.
Simon & Carroll, Shreveport, for appellant.
McClendon & Benton, J. F. McInnis, Minden, for appellee.
AYRES, Judge.
This suit was consolidated with the case of Hulion v. Western Geophysical Company of America, 91 So.2d 435, for the purpose of trial, and by agreement of counsel both cases were submitted for decision upon the merits in the trial court at the same time and on the same evidence. Separate decrees and judgments were entered in each case. In a like manner the cases were argued, briefed and submitted on the appeal in this court.
Plaintiffs separately and individually seek to recover compensation for damages to the water well of each of plaintiffs and for the cracks and breaks in the walls of a hollow tile building of plaintiff Pate and for the cracks and breaks in the walls, foundation and floor of a cinder block building of plaintiff Hulion, alleged to have resulted from the negligence of defendant in the use of explosives while conducting geophysical explorations and observations in the vicinity of plaintiffs' properties. In the alternative, plaintiffs allege liability of defendant irrespective of the fault or negligence in the use of these explosives under the doctrine of absolute liability.
From separate judgments in favor of each of the plaintiffs for $1,750, the defendant has appealed. Each of the plaintiffs has answered the appeal, praying that the award in his favor be increased to $1,950.
It is not disputed that plaintiffs owned the buildings and wells in question; that defendant used explosives in its geophysical operations in the vicinity of said properties; that the depth of the water in the wells decreased since their completion and that cracks, breaks and defects appear in the buildings. The defendant, however, denies there was any causal connection between its blasting operations and the damages complained of by plaintiffs. Defendant also placed at issue the extent and amount of the damages claimed.
Plaintiffs' properties are situated in a rural section about three miles north of Ringgold, Bienville Parish. Pate's building, constructed of hollow tile and used *432 for a cafe, was completed about March 1, 1954, at a cost stipulated to exceed $3,000. Hulion's residence was completed about October 1, 1953, at a cost exceeding $4,000. The water wells of both plaintiffs were producing, before defendant's operations were conducted, ample water supply for the use of plaintiffs and their families and for the restaurant operated by Pate. Immediately following these operations, both wells ceased producing water. For some time no water was had from the Pate well, and at the time of trial, about a year and a half following defendant's operations, its production was far below normal, even after winter rains. The lowering of pipes in the Hulion well succeeded only in clogging the pump and pipes with mud, whereupon the well had to be deepened for water to be obtained. The Pate well had been producing water in abundance for several years, even sufficient to supply, above normal use, water for 30 to 40 head of cattle during the summers.
Prior to defendant's operations of October 21, 1954, plaintiffs' buildings were in good condition. Immediately thereafter the breaks and cracks in the walls, foundation and floor became apparent.
Neither plaintiff had given defendant a permit or permission to conduct its operations on their property. Plaintiff Pate particularly objected to defendant's operations in his vicinity. Two days prior to the explosive operations, Pate requested that his premises, building and well be inspected by defendant's representative prior to the beginning of such operations, which inspection, however, was refused.
The record consists of 428 pages of testimony, 58 photographs and numerous other exhibits. Our learned brother of the district court was ingenious in the development of the particulars and pertinent facts, as disclosed in his written opinion. Our review and painstaking study of the record leads to the conclusion that His Honor's findings were amply supported by the proof contained in the record. Finding no manifest error therein, it appears neither necessary nor important that we detail the established facts in any great particularity.
However, it may be stated that plaintiff Hulion and his wife were away from home at the time the explosives were set off by defendant. Upon returning, the damage to their residence was discovered and it was only through inquiry of their neighbors they learned the cause. Plaintiff Pate was operating his restaurant at the time. He heard the sound of the explosives, felt the building shake, heard the dishes rattle and saw the mortar dust shaken from the walls by the explosion. Notwithstanding that plaintiffs and their wives and a host of other witnesses testified that the buildings were in good condition, free of breaks and cracks, before the explosions, and that immediately thereafter the defects occurred, the defendant contends that the blasting operations conducted by it could not and did not cause the damages of which plaintiffs complained. Two of the witnesses, Bonie Godfrey and Atticus M. Norrel, testifying for plaintiff, recalled the blasting operations and hearing the shots fired and feeling the jar of the vibrations, which they characterized as severe.
The defendant admitted exploding charges of high explosives in quantities of 15 to 20 pounds each within 800 feet of the Hulion residence and within 2,900 feet of the Pate restaurant. Other shots were made of similar size and character in the vicinity but at greater distances from the two buildings.
The defense is based almost exclusively upon expert testimony given by one Dr. Louis Don Leet, no doubt an outstanding authority with respect to seismic operations and phenomena, who was most positive in this opinion that plaintiffs' damages did not result from defendant's operations. From his study of the location of the various shots complained of and from his mathematical *433 calculations and computations, he stated there could not have been enough force from any of them to have damaged either of those structures, referring to plaintiffs' buildings, or the wells. The force and effect of the Doctor's testimony is considerably minimized by the very purpose for which the explosions were made. As explained by him, the purpose of these geophysical operations through the explosive method is to set in motion vibrations in the earth, which vibrations, on reaching masses of rock or other substances, are rebounded and recorded upon instruments on the earth's surface for use in the study and determination of the character, depth and substance of the formations beneath the earth's surface. If these charges are of sufficient intensity and force so as to penetrate deeply into the earth and rebound to the surface, it would appear inconsistent that such explosions could not and would not produce vibrations horizontally. The effect of Dr. Leet's most informative and learned scientific explanations would lead to the conclusion, which he expressed in most positive terms, that defendant's operations could not and did not cause the damages as plaintiffs alleged; but, as opposed to this scientific hypothesis, we are confronted with the fact, overwhelmingly established by the evidence, that the damages occurred immediately following defendant's operations. To ascribe this fact to sheer coincidence would be a speculative and illogical procedure.
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91 So. 2d 431, 7 Oil & Gas Rep. 24, 1956 La. App. LEXIS 960, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pate-v-western-geophysical-co-of-america-lactapp-1956.