Pembrook v. Phillips Petroleum Company

463 S.W.2d 236, 1971 Tex. App. LEXIS 2587
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 22, 1971
DocketNo. 4378
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 463 S.W.2d 236 (Pembrook v. Phillips Petroleum Company) 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
Pembrook v. Phillips Petroleum Company, 463 S.W.2d 236, 1971 Tex. App. LEXIS 2587 (Tex. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

COLLINGS, Justice.

Jimmie G. Pembrook brought suit against Phillips Petroleum Company to recover damages for injuries sustained because of a fire which ignited when a large earth moving machine operated by him struck and broke pipelines owned by the defendant. Plaintiff alleged that he was employed by a subcontractor in remodeling the Hutchinson County Municipal Airport and had just commenced to build an access road to the job site when the pipelines were struck by the heavy machine he was operating. The defendant filed a motion for summary judgment asserting that there was no genuine issue of fact upon which defendant’s duty to avoid contact between [237]*237its pipelines and the heavy equipment operated by plaintiff could be predicated. The motion of defendant Phillips Petroleum Company for summary judgment was granted and Jimmie G. Pembrook has appealed.

Appellant Pembrook relies upon one point contending that the court erred in granting Phillips’ motion for summary judgment. It is conceded that there is a fact issue on the question of damages. Appellant asserts however, that the pleadings, depositions and affidavits present triable disputed material issues of fact on the question of appellee’s liability. He contends there is a triable issue of fact in each of the following particulars and that Phillips was negligent (A) in failing to post suitable warnings to persons approaching the high pressure gasoline line above the surface; (B) in failing to bury the high pressure gasoline line a reasonable depth below the surface of the soil; (C) in failing to keep the area around the pipe where it was aboveground free from foliage and vegetation; (D) in failing to bury the line below plow depth; that Phillips was negligent; (E) in failing to warn those persons and firms, including the plaintiff, involved in the performance of the construction contract that the pipelines in question were misleadingly represented as to their actual location by the contract maps; (F) in failing to notify those persons and firms, including the plaintiff, involved in the performance of the construction contract, first as to the true location of the underground pipeline in question, and second, that the lines were aboveground at the point in question; and that if B. G. Glenn’s knowledge of the pipeline in question and its location and the fact that it was above ground obliterates any duty otherwise owed by Phillips, which appellant Pembrook does not concede, nevertheless, (G) there is an issue of fact as to whether B. G. Glenn was aware of the danger posed by the pipeline both as to its location and as to its position above the surface of the soil, obscured by foliage and vegetation.

Appellee Phillips Petroleum Company contends that under the pleadings and summary judgment proof it had no duty to take any measure other than those it had already taken to prevent the contact with its lines and that the summary judgment was therefore properly granted. We agree with appellee’s contention. The facts and circumstances of the case, including its background are extensive and complicated, and are substantially as hereinafter set out. As noted there are some conflicts in the evidence, but the facts material to the judgment appealed from are undisputed,

Phillips acquired pipeline rights-of-way in 1943 and 1944 for the 3" and 6" pipelines in the Mary Whitley Survey where the accident in question occurred. These rights-of-way, along with many others, were obtained from the Whittenburg estate covering ranch land and such grants covered land almost adjacent to the Phillips Refinery and liquid processing center at Phillips, Texas. The terrain is rough and filled with canyons and ravines. It is short grass country and contains many oil wells. The surface of the land is still owned and being operated by the Whitten-burgs. The grants to Phillips provided that pipelines would be buried below plow depth. However, it is undisputed that the Whittenburgs knowingly permitted Phillips to maintain the pipelines above the ground at certain places for over 20 years and never objected thereto or asked that such lines be buried. An instance where the pipelines were not buried was at the site of the accident here in question. An old abandoned fill-in oil well pit lay in the path of the 3" and 6" pipeline easements so that Phillips, when it laid the lines in 1944, constructed such lines over the pit on “A” frames. On each side of the pit the pipelines were returned into the ground. The pipelines were placed on the “A” frames because of the corrosive nature of the soil in the old filled-in pit. Roy Whittenburg stated that if the time ever came when the estate needed any of the [238]*238lines to be buried which were not already buried, the estate would exercise its right to require it. He stated, however, that no request had ever been made to Phillips to bury the two pipelines and that such lines were in “good standing” until such time as the Whittenburgs objected. We overrule appellant’s contention that Phillips was negligent in failing to bury the line below plow depth. The provision in the lease from the Whittenburgs that the pipelines would be buried below plow depth was made to protect possible future cultivation by the Whittenburgs and was for their benefit. The evidence shows conclusively that neither the Whittenburgs nor the county, who bought a portion of the land for airport purposes, ever objected to Phillips’ failure to so bury the lines. Phillips was not guilty of a breach of duty because of such failure.

In 1949 the Whittenburgs sold a parcel of the land out of the Mary Whitley survey to the County of Hutchinson for the construction of a municipal airport near Borger. The conveyance included the area where the 3" and 6" pipelines rested on the “A” frames across the old slush pit. The airport was built during the year 1950. Prior to the final construction of the runways, which necessitated the filling of ravines and canyons to form a flat mesa above the surrounding hills, the 3" and 6" pipelines in question along with several other lines of various types were gathered into a common encasement where such lines crossed the runways. The county did not encase such lines all the way across its property but only for a distance necessary to accommodate the runways. On both the east and west sides of the main runway the nine lines including the 3" and 6" lines, in leaving the corridor or encasement, were fanned out to their original locations.

By 1951 the airport was completed. It had a north-south paved runway and an east-west sod runway. The county left the lines undisturbed at a point about 700 feet east of the main airport runway upon the mesa. The work of taking up the old lines was done by Claude Robinson, a contractor for the county. There is a sharp drop in elevation from the mesa level through the canyon country to the “A” frames. The “A”’ frames upon which the pipelines in question rest are about 150 feet west of the east boundary line of the airport property which is marked by a fence and a county road. Signs on the fence straightaway from the pipelines on the “A” frames state: “CAUTION-HIGH PRESSURE PIPELINES — PHILLIPS PETROLEUM COMPANY.” Warning signs over the other lines are situated in the east fence.

The Commissioners Court of Hutchinson County was in control of the airport property and was aware of the pipelines on the “A” frames for many years prior to the 1965 construction. It is undisputed that all times since the county acquired the property in 1949 the pipelines were above ground on the “A” frames with the knowledge and assent of such county officials.

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Bluebook (online)
463 S.W.2d 236, 1971 Tex. App. LEXIS 2587, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pembrook-v-phillips-petroleum-company-texapp-1971.