Pioneer Natural Gas Co. v. K & M PAVING CO.

374 S.W.2d 214
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 4, 1963
DocketA-9247
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 374 S.W.2d 214 (Pioneer Natural Gas Co. v. K & M PAVING CO.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pioneer Natural Gas Co. v. K & M PAVING CO., 374 S.W.2d 214 (Tex. 1963).

Opinion

GREENHILL, Justice.

This is a suit by K & M Paving Company against Pioneer Natural Gas Company for the loss of an earth moving machine by explosion and fire as a result of the machine’s cutting one of the Pioneer Natural Gas Company’s buried pipelines on the outskirts of Lubbock, Texas. In the district court, the jury verdict and judgment was for the plaintiff in the amount of $12,500. The Court of Civil Appeals affirmed. Tex.Civ.App., 359 S.W.2d 533.

Article 1436b, Vernon’s Texas Civil Statutes Annotated, authorizes gas transmission companies to lay and maintain lines under public roads and highways of Texas, and this pipeline was laid in accordance with that statute. The statute prescribes minimum heights for power lines, but it does not prescribe depths for pipelines. The State Highway Commission may, if it so desires, designate the place where the pipes or fixtures shall be laid; but it did not do so. And it may require the company, at the company’s expense, to relocate any lines or fixtures to permit the widening or changing of traffic lanes by giving 30 days’ written notice to the company. And it may specify the pipes or items to be moved and the place to which they shall be moved. As will be discussed later, the Highway Department did notify Pioneer that work would be done on that highway; but Pioneer was not directed, under the statute, to move or relocate any of its lines.

In 1956, pursuant to the statute, Pioneer filed notice with the district office of the Texas Highway Department in Lubbock that it was going to lay this 3-inch pipeline in the right-of-way of U. S. Highway 62. The line was to be used to distribute gas to customers as contrasted with a transmission *216 line. Plats were filed with the department in its Lubbock office, showing the location of the line. At the time the pipes and other equipment were installed, the area was outside the City of Lubbock. At the time of the accident, the area had been taken into the city, though the road was still a part of a state highway and federal highway system.

The ditch or trench for the pipeline was dug in 1956 by L. P. Harris, an independent contractor. He testified that his ditching machine cut to the full depth of 48 inches for the laying of the line. J. H. Hord, Pioneer’s construction engineer, testified that Pioneer, when the pipe was laid, maintained at least a 36-inch ditch in the vicinity of the accident. George Kirchoff, Pioneer’s division engineer, testified that Pioneer’s instructions were to have at least 30 inches of cover for the line; that Pioneer paid Harris for the laying of the line at least 30 inches below the surface. There was no evidence that it was laid at a lesser depth. There was no testimony from any witness, lay or expert, that the line was laid to an insufficient depth or what a proper depth would be. There was testimony that the line might not have been cut if there had been a casing. But there was no testimony that the line should have been encased or what a proper casing would have been.

About December 13, 1957, Pioneer received from the Texas Highway Department a letter stating that it was in the process of planning improvements to four different highways in Lubbock County. The letter contained no right-of-way specifications or any notice of the date when the construction might begin. The letter did say that detailed maps and right-of-way requirements would be furnished Pioneer at a later date. About January 6, 1958, Pioneer received from the Texas Highway Department a transmittal letter to which was attached preliminary right-of-way maps for two projects on U. S. Highway 62. The maps did not show specific requirements for right-of-way, nor did the letter direct Pioneer to move or lower any of its lines or other facilities.

On January 30, 1959, James C. Kerr, President of Kerr Paving Company and of K & M Paving Company, entered a contract with the Texas Highway Department to improve and widen four miles of U. S. Highway 62 in Lubbock County, Texas. Kerr assigned the contract to the Kerr Paving Company. We shall refer to Respondent herein as Kerr or K & M. As part of the construction, Kerr used a large earth scraper, owned by K & M, which had its own motor and was also pushed by a caterpillar tractor to cut down the grade of the road. The scraper, which weighed 26,000 pounds, and tractor had a combined power of 230 horse power. While eng'aged in this scraping, the scraper .struck Pioneer’s gas pipeline.

In its operation, the scraper cut several inches off the surface on each pass, and the pipe was struck on the third or fourth time the scraper passed over this particular area. There was an explosion and a fire, which destroyed the scraper.

At the time the machine struck the pipeline, the pipeline was buried at a depth of approximately two feet. Kerr’s foreman, Joe Cope, testified that he took an elevation at the point, and that the pipe was 24 inches below the surface when struck. Other witnesses for Kerr testified that the pipe was 15 to 18 inches below the surface when it was struck. When the pipe was laid, the road was unpaved. Prior to the present road work, there had been other road work which apparently had cut some of the covering from over the pipeline. At the point where the machine struck the pipeline in the highway right-of-way, the pipeline was laid in a zig-zag pattern, as shown on the plat filed with the Highway Department. The pipe when struck was at the place where it was shown to be on the plat.

Kerr stated that he proceeded to do the cutting and scraping on the assumption that *217 the area was clear of obstructions and that all gas lines were visibly marked. He testified, over objection, that there was a custom of the Highway Department to notify all parties, including utilities, to move their obstruction from the highway; and that usually the utilities would move or lower their lines or would notify the contractor of anything in the way. He looked for written warning signs though there were meters, which he saw, all up and down the highway, adjacent to buildings but off of the right-of-way.

Joe Cope, [plaintiff’s] Kerr’s foreman, testified that he saw the meters which were along the highway but not on the right-of-way, and a Christmas tree or large gas regulator across the street which indicated to him that there might be a line along the road. He and the Highway Department Engineer noticed the regulator and other gas company equipment, “and so we discussed should we call the gas company. * * * ” It was decided that no call should be made because there was not any indication [to him] that “the [gas] line would be going that way.” He assumed that the line was off of the right-of-way and that it went directly from the regulator to a large meter off of the right-of-way in a straight line. The problem as to the zigzag course of the pipeline at this point is relevant to the question as to whether Kerr was contributorily negligent in failing to correctly ascertain the path of the line. Under our disposition of the case, it is unnecessary to pass on that point.

Like Kerr, Cope said he worked on the assumption that the right-of-way had been cleared or that he would be notified. He conceded that he had made mistakes, and that he definitely made a mistake in this instance.

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Bluebook (online)
374 S.W.2d 214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pioneer-natural-gas-co-v-k-m-paving-co-tex-1963.