Plantation Pipe Line Co. v. Tate

15 Va. Cir. 154, 1988 Va. Cir. LEXIS 275
CourtCaroline County Circuit Court
DecidedNovember 1, 1988
DocketCase No. CL87-000092
StatusPublished

This text of 15 Va. Cir. 154 (Plantation Pipe Line Co. v. Tate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Caroline County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Plantation Pipe Line Co. v. Tate, 15 Va. Cir. 154, 1988 Va. Cir. LEXIS 275 (Va. Super. Ct. 1988).

Opinion

By JUDGE WILLIAM H. LEDBETTER, JR.

This litigation results from an incident that occurred on March 26, 1987, in which a bulldozer operated by the defendant Beavon and owned by the defendant Tate struck and ruptured an underground petroleum pipeline owned by Plantation Pipe Line. At the time, Tate and his employee, Beavon, were digging a pit under contract with the defendant, Lipscomb, on her property, for the purpose of burying debris. Although Tate and Lipscomb disagree as to which of them came up with the idea of burying (rather than hauling away) the debris, the fact remains that the excavation was done by Tate and his employee, Beavon. It is undisputed that the pit was dug within a granted easement, duly recorded, owned by Plantation Pipe Line.

In its motion for judgment, Plantation Pipe Line alleged negligence on the part of all three defendants and further alleged that the defendants violated their [155]*155respective duties under Virginia’s Underground Utility Damage Prevention Act (Va. Code § 56-265.14 et seq.). In separate responsive pleadings, the defendants denied liability. In addition, Beavon filed a counterclaim against Plantation Pipe Line and a cross-claim against Lipscomb for personal injuries that he suffered as a result of the rupture.

The case was tried to a jury on September 21 and 23, 1988. On motion of Lipscomb, the court struck the evidence of Beavon on his cross-claim against her, and despite various motions to strike, submitted all other issues to the jury. Twenty-three instructions guided the jury’s deliberations; twelve proposed instructions were refused for reasons stated to the record.

The jury returned a verdict in favor of Plantation Pipe Line against Tate and Lipscomb iii the amount of $25,000.00; and, on Beavon’s counterclaim, found in favor of Beavon against Plantation Pipe Line and assessed damages at $15,000.00.

After the jury had been pulled and discharged, the parties (except Beavon) made appropriate post-verdict motions. By agreement, the court delayed entry of a judgment on the verdicts pending submission of the motions in writing, with supporting memoranda. Therefore, no final order was sketched or entered. The purpose of this opinion is to address the post-verdict motions, and these rulings will be incorporated in a final order in this case.

Plantation Pipe Line’s Motion to Set Aside the Verdict on Its Motion for Judgment

Plantation Pipe Line, dissatisfied with the amount of its verdict against Tate and Lipscomb, moves the court to set aside that verdict and enter final judgment in its favor for $31,502.11. Plantation Pipe Line argues that the court has authority to grant the motion under Va. Code § 8.01-430 and that the motion should be granted because the evidence adduced at trial plainly establishes, without contradiction, that it sustained damages totalling $31,502.11.

In order for the court to set aside the jury verdict, it must find that the verdict is plainly wrong or without credible evidence to support it. In order for the court [156]*156to enter final judgment in an amount different from that contained in the jury’s verdict, the court additionally must find that the issue of liability is clearly decided by the verdict and that there is evidence to support it and that reasonable people could not differ as to the specific, or "liquidated," amount of damages to be awarded.

Plantation Pipe Line’s claim of damages is summarized in Plaintiff’s Exhibit # 9, containing eleven separate items. (Each of these items was the subject of testimony by Plantation Pipe Line officials and employees, and documentation admitted as trial exhibits, over the objections of Tate and Lipscomb.) Some of the items represent expenses which company employees said were paid to third parties to repair and inspect the pipeline. Other items represent the costs of work performed by Plantation Pipe Line employees. A third category pertains to the "lost product," i.e., the aviation fuel which escaped from the pipeline as a result of the rupture and ensuing fire.

It is elementary that the party claiming damage has the burden of proving by the greater weight of the evidence each item of damage he claims and to prove that each item was proximately caused by the malfeasance of the defendant(s). The court instructed the jury accordingly. (Instruction # 18.) Every item of damage was the subject of objection by Tate and Lipscomb, which the court overruled for the reasons stated to the record. Preserving their objections, these defendants cross-examined the witnesses for Plantation Pipe Line extensively on these items of damage. Neither Tate nor Lipscomb conceded a single item; instead, they questioned them all and raised numerous points regarding their validity and the reasonableness or necessity of the amounts claimed. The jury was permitted to consider every item of damage claimed by Plantation Pipe Line, but the jury also heard much of that evidence called into question by cross-examination and in closing arguments.

The essence of Plantation Pipe Line’s contention in support of its motion seems to be that a plaintiff is entitled to recover the exact amount of his claim if he produces evidence in support of his claim and the defendant produces no contradictory evidence. The position is untenable. As noted above, the burden is on the plaintiff to prove each item of his claim, not on the defendant [157]*157to disprove it; and the merits of a plaintiff’s claim, or of particular items of damage claimed, may be brought into question by an attack upon the credibility of the plaintiff’s evidence or by other methods short of a presentation of evidence that directly refutes the claim.

At no time during the trial did Plantation Pipe Line suggest that the jury should not be allowed to fix the amount of damages in the event that the jury returned a verdict in its favor. In fact, several instructions were given, without objection of Plantation Pipe Line, which informed the jury that it had the responsibility of determining the amount of damages if it found in favor of Plantation Pipe Line. (See, e.g., Instruction # 1(9); Instruction # 6; Instruction # 18; Instruction # 19.).

In this case, the jury reasonably could have discarded the plaintiff’s evidence with respect to some of the items and discounted other items. In that process, the jury could have concluded that Plantation Pipe Line had satisfactorily proven damages totalling only $25,000.00, rather than the full and exact amount shown at the bottom of Plaintiff’s Exhibit # 9.

It is the opinion of the court that reasonable people may differ in their conclusions of fact to be drawn from the evidence, and in the weight to be given the testimony, regarding the amount of damage sustained. Accordingly, the plaintiff’s motion to set aside the jury’s verdict of $25,000.00 and to enter judgment in the amount of $31,502.11, is denied.

Plantation Pipe Line’s Motion to Set Aside the Verdict on Beavon’s Counterclaim

As noted above, the jury awarded Beavon $15,000.00 on his counterclaim for injuries sustained in the accident. In order for Beavon to recover against Plantation Pipe Line, the jury had to have found that (1) Plantation Pipe Line was negligent, (2) Plantation Pipe Line’s negligence proximately caused Beavon’s injuries, and (3) Beavon was free of contributory negligence. See Instruction # 23.

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Bluebook (online)
15 Va. Cir. 154, 1988 Va. Cir. LEXIS 275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/plantation-pipe-line-co-v-tate-vacccaroline-1988.