Priority Artificial Lift Services, LLC and EP Energy E&P Company, L.P. v. Michael Chiles

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 21, 2024
Docket14-22-00473-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Priority Artificial Lift Services, LLC and EP Energy E&P Company, L.P. v. Michael Chiles (Priority Artificial Lift Services, LLC and EP Energy E&P Company, L.P. v. Michael Chiles) 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
Priority Artificial Lift Services, LLC and EP Energy E&P Company, L.P. v. Michael Chiles, (Tex. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Reversed and Remanded and Majority and Concurring and Dissenting Opinions filed March 21, 2024.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-22-00473-CV

PRIORITY ARTIFICIAL LIFT SERVICES, LLC AND EP ENERGY E&P COMPANY, L.P., Appellants V.

MICHAEL CHILES, Appellee

On Appeal from the 281st District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 2016-13626

MAJORITY OPINION

Appellee Michael Chiles was working at an oil and gas processing facility in West Texas when pressurized fluid unexpectedly shot out of the end of a hose he was carrying. Chiles was thrown to the ground and taken to the hospital shortly thereafter, where he was diagnosed with a torn rotator cuff that required two separate surgeries to repair. Chiles sued appellant Priority Artificial Lift Services, LLC (“Priority”) and appellant EP Energy E&P Company, L.P. (“EP Energy”) for damages caused by the incident. The parties proceeded to trial and the jury returned a verdict finding Priority and EP Energy liable for Chiles’ injuries and assessing approximately $4 million in damages. The trial court signed a final judgment incorporating the jury’s findings.

Priority and EP Energy appealed the trial court’s final judgment and Chiles filed a cross-appeal. Because we sustain Priority’s issue challenging the trial court’s refusal to submit its borrowed employee jury question, we reverse the trial court’s final judgment and remand the case for further proceedings.

BACKGROUND

I. An Overview of the Parties’ Relationships

EP Energy is a Houston-based oil and gas company. At the time of the incident, EP Energy held an oil and gas lease and a commercial surface lease to operate an oil and gas processing facility near Big Lake, Texas. EP Energy operated vertical heater treater tanks at this location, which were used to separate produced fluid into oil, gas, and water.

In 2011, EP Energy entered into a Master Service Agreement with Priority, pursuant to which Priority agreed to provide EP Energy with lease operators and other employees. The agreement states that Priority would operate as an independent contractor and its employees were “subject to [Priority’s] sole and exclusive supervision, direction and control, and shall not be deemed, in fact or in law, to be employees of” EP Energy. Pursuant to this Agreement, Priority supplied EP Energy with two lease operators involved in the underlying incident: Clay Mateo and Abel Martinez.

2 EP Energy entered into a separate Master Service Agreement with Hawk Trucking. Hawk Trucking also operated as an independent contractor for EP Energy and provided the company with vacuum trucks and water hauling services. Chiles was working for Hawk Trucking at the time of the incident.

II. The Incident

On May 3, 2014, Greg Simms was working as EP Energy’s worksite supervisor at the Big Lake oil and gas processing facility. The location’s heater treater tanks were scheduled to be cleaned that day and Simms called Hawk Trucking to request that Chiles be sent to perform the job. The heater treater cleaning process was comprised of three steps: (1) vacuuming the old water from the tanks and “bleeding out” the remaining pressure; (2) pumping the tanks full of clean water mixed with biocide; and (3) allowing the biocide mixture to sit in the tanks for approximately five hours before it was vacuumed out. According to Simms, the biocide would kill bacteria that could develop in the water and eventually “eat[] holes” in the heater treater tanks.

When Chiles arrived at the location, he attended a Job Safety Analysis (“JSA”) meeting led by Simms. According to trial testimony from EP Energy safety specialist Todd Smith, the purpose of a JSA meeting is to break down the tasks being performed at the job site that day and identify particular hazards. Therefore, a JSA meeting generally is conducted “prior to engaging in an activity on the job site” so that everyone on location is aware of “potential hazards.” Simms testified that Mateo and Martinez were not at the job site when he led that day’s JSA meeting.

After the conclusion of the JSA meeting, Chiles started the heater treater cleaning process. While Chiles was working, Simms was sitting in his truck, talking on the phone, and dealing with a power outage at another facility. Around 3 this time, Mateo and Martinez showed up at the job site. According to Martinez, he and Mateo tried to check in with Simms but, because Simms was on the phone, they just jumped into work and started helping. Chiles recalled seeing Mateo and Martinez in the area where he was working.

According to Chiles, he was in the process of hooking hoses up from the heater treater tanks to his truck when he was “blasted in the face with fluid” and thrown to the ground. Unbeknownst to Chiles, Mateo had opened the valve on the heater treater tank and caused pressurized fluid to shoot from the end of the hose that Chiles was carrying. Describing the incident, Martinez said Mateo “opened the — the valve and chaos ensued.” Chiles was transported to a nearby hospital and, after further medical consultations, was diagnosed with a torn rotator cuff on his left shoulder.

Safety specialist Smith investigated the incident involving Chiles. Discussing the incident’s “root cause,” Smith said Mateo “opened the heater treater valve without verbal or hand signal acknowledgement.” Smith agreed that, if Mateo had “followed the JSA, he would have allowed Mr. Chiles to actually double check all the connections before the valves were open.” Smith acknowledged that Mateo “was not given proper JSA orientation on this particular job” and agreed that Simms’ failure to review the JSA with Mateo was “not meeting the expectation[s]” of EP Energy.

According to Smith, Mateo also was not properly identified as a short- service employee (“SSE”). Under EP Energy policy, an SSE is one that (1) has less than six months experience in the current job, or (2) has less than six months continuous employment with the current employer. Smith stated that an SSE is assigned a mentor to “instruct that short service worker on the EP way.” An EP Energy worksite also is required to implement “a method for visually identifying

4 short service workers, e.g., [a] different colored hard hat, hardhat stripe, or arm band.”

In sum, Smith opined that “[c]ontrol of the site was lost and the expectations by the site leadership weren’t met.” Acknowledging that “Simms was supposed to be Clay Mateo’s mentor,” Smith explained that Simms “lost control of this operation.”

III. The Lawsuit and Subsequent Trial

Chiles filed suit in March 2016, seeking damages stemming from the 2014 incident. The parties proceeded to trial in April 2022. The jury heard testimony from 14 witnesses and reviewed numerous exhibits. After the close of evidence, a single liability question was submitted to the jury, to which the jury answered as follows:

Question No. 1

Did the negligence, if any, of those named below proximately cause the occurrence in question?

E.P. Energy E&P Company, L.P.: Yes Priority Artificial Lift Services, L.P.: Yes

Hawk Trucking: No

Michael Chiles: No

The following proportionate responsibility inquiry was submitted as Question No. 2:

Question No. 2

For each person or company, you found caused or contributed to the occurrence, find the percentage of responsibility attributable to each:

5 E.P. Energy E&P Company, L.P.: 80%

Priority Artificial Lift Services, L.P.: 20% Hawk Trucking: 0

Michael Chiles: 0

In total, the jury assessed $3,865,000 in compensatory damages. The trial court signed a final judgment on June 1, 2022, incorporating the jury’s liability and damage findings.

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Bluebook (online)
Priority Artificial Lift Services, LLC and EP Energy E&P Company, L.P. v. Michael Chiles, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/priority-artificial-lift-services-llc-and-ep-energy-ep-company-lp-v-texapp-2024.