Rayco Drilling Company v. Dia-Log Company

464 P.2d 17, 81 N.M. 101
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 19, 1970
Docket8854
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 464 P.2d 17 (Rayco Drilling Company v. Dia-Log Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rayco Drilling Company v. Dia-Log Company, 464 P.2d 17, 81 N.M. 101 (N.M. 1970).

Opinion

OPINION

GEORGE L. REESE, Jr., District Judge.

This action was commenced in the District Court of San Juan County, New Mexico, by Rayco Drilling Company, appellee herein. Rayco alleged in its complaint that the Dia-Log Company, appellant herein, negligently dropped a tool in the well bore of an oil and gas well, causing certain items to become irretrievably stuck in the hole and necessitating the hole to be whipstocked and a new hole drilled. From an adverse judgment in the amount of $46,889.64, defendant appeals.

Rayco Drilling Company, hereinafter called Rayco, was engaged in drilling an oil and gas well in La Plata County, Colorado, and had reached a depth of 5501 feet when its drill pipe stuck in the hole and a fishing job 1 occurred. The Dia-Log Company, hereinafter called Dia-Log, was a special service company and its business was the furnishing and use of equipment to locate the point above which pipe was loose in the hole (the freepoint) and string shots for detonation to accomplish back-offs or the unscrewing of the pipe at selected points. Rayco employed Dia-Log to furnish and run its equipment, and during the fishing operation a tool known as a Dia-Log Free Point Indicator was by DiaLog dropped in the hole. The trial court found that the Dia-Log employees were guilty of negligence in dropping the tool and that as a proximate result of such negligence Rayco suffered damages from the loss of equipment in the hole and from the expenditures necessarily incurred in setting a whipstock and drilling a new hole from the whipstock outside the original hole and down to the original depth of 5501 feet. On appeal from a judgment against it, DiaLog does not question the finding of negligence, but urges two points for reversal.

These points are:

POINT ONE
“The findings of fact that the dropping of the freepoint indicator caused the wash pipe to be stuck and proximately resulted in loss and damages to plaintiff’s well are contrary to the undisputed evidence, and are based upon conjecture and surmise and not supported by substantial evidence.”
POINT TWO
“The findings of fact and conclusions of law that the plaintiff sustained damages proximately caused by defendant’s negligence, in the amount of $46,889.64, are not supported by substantial evidence.”

The trial court found that Dia-Log negligently dropped its free point indicator in Rayco’s well and thereby caused the wash pipe to become irretrievably stuck, and that this resulted in Rayco being required to abandon the recovery of and to lose the drill collars and equipment in the bottom of the hole and to whipstock the well.

In discussing these findings and the evidence supporting them we shall first discuss the' drill collars and equipment in the bottom of the hole which Dia-Log strenuously argues were irretrievably stuck in the hole before the wash pipe was run and stuck, and from this asserted fact Dia-Log urges the conclusion that regardless of later events Rayco would have suffered substantially the same loss.

We have reviewed the entire record in this case and in our view the evidence not only fails to show that the drill collars were irretrievably stuck in the hole before the wash pipe was run but, contrariwise, supports a reasonable inference that they were not stuck and could probably have been recovered but for the sticking of the wash pipe.

The daily drilling log kept by Rayco and the records kept by Dia-Log and later transferred to a graphic exhibit show the following facts: The hole was drilled with 3]4" drill pipe, 6" and 6fá" drill collars, and 8y¡." bit to a depth of 5501 feet when, on November 25, 1965, circulation was lost due to a fractured formation which had been penetrated by the bit and while coming out of the hole the elevators unlatched and the drilling string fell back into the hole. Due to the fall the drill pipe parted at 1650 feet below the surface and the bottom part of the string, some 3851 feet, fell 1080 feet to the bottom of the hole. This partial string consisted of the 8y" bit about four feet long, 23 drill collars 666 feet long, and 3181 feet of 3^4" drill pipe, total length 3851 feet.

The fall of this string caused the drill pipe to corkscrew and become so crooked above the drill collars that no effective pulling force could or did reach the collars by pulling or jarring on the pipe above them. This was the situation on November 28, 1965 when the services of Dia-Log were commenced. Runs made with the Dia-Log tool from time to time showed that below 1955 feet the drill pipe was completely stuck in torque. The crooked drill pipe was removed from above 4768 feet and there was left in the hole 63 feet of the 3\4" drill pipe which was partially stuck in torque some 42 feet from its top, and the 23 drill collars and bit above described. There is no satisfactory evidence in the record bearing on the questions as to whether the drill collars were stuck in the hole except the fact that the hole was sloughing or caving above the collars and the fact that jarring was attempted for an hour, and after removing the crooked pipe last mentioned, it was necessary to clean out several feet of cavings from the top of the fish in order to reach it. This was done by drilling and circulating down to the top and after reconditioning the hole it was decided to wash around the drill collars before attempting to pull them.

The wash string consisted of a wash shoe 8iHs" o.d. attached to the bottom of six joints (215 feet) of 7$4" o:d. casing arid the casing was attached to the drill string with a 3\4" to 7y" connection. The wash string was run and rotated over the 63 feet of drill pipe and seven feet of the drill collars when the string “tried to stick” and efforts were then made to “work’’ the wash pipe up the hole. The wash pipe was coming out satisfactorily and three joints of drill pipe (90 feet) had been pulled and laid down when the kelly broke and the wash string fell back down the hole, coming to rest seven feet below the top of the collars where washing had been completed.

The size of the hole for the length of the drill collars was about nine inches. The bit was 8yy and the hole did not have time to get out of gauge before the drill collars were dropped back to bottom. It, therefore, would be expected that the wash shoe 8 would be somewhat tight in the hole when going down around the drill collars and it must also be remembered that the 62 feet of drill pipe above the collars was somewhat crooked. The tight hole and the crooked pipe would cause the wash string to try to stick.

The cavings and the fact that the wash pipe “tried to stick” do not support an inference that the drill collars were “irretrievably stuck” before the wash pipe was run. No witness disagreed with the thesis that in nearly all cases it is possible with little difficulty to wash over drill collars situated as were these in this case and remove or fish them out of the hole.

The second part of Dia-Log’s argument under its first point is that there is no substantial evidence to show that the dropping of the free point indicator was the proximate cause of the sticking of the wash string.

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Bluebook (online)
464 P.2d 17, 81 N.M. 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rayco-drilling-company-v-dia-log-company-nm-1970.