Roberts v. Cardinal Services, Inc.

266 F.3d 368, 2002 A.M.C. 83, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 21256, 2001 WL 1082538
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedOctober 2, 2001
Docket00-31232
StatusPublished
Cited by196 cases

This text of 266 F.3d 368 (Roberts v. Cardinal Services, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roberts v. Cardinal Services, Inc., 266 F.3d 368, 2002 A.M.C. 83, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 21256, 2001 WL 1082538 (5th Cir. 2001).

Opinion

*371 WIENER, Circuit Judge:

This maritime action was brought in district court against DefendanL-Appellee Cardinal Services, Inc. (“Cardinal”) under the Jones Act, 1 and against Defendant-Appellee Kerr-McGee Corporation (“Kerr-McGee”) as successor-in-interest to Oryx Energy Company, under the Louisiana Civil Code’s provisions governing negligence, 2 premises liability, 3 and strict liability, 4 which are incorporated by reference through the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act (“OCSLA”). 5 Suit was filed by Plaintiffs-Appellants Rusty Roberts and his wife, Sandra Roberts, individually and on behalf of their minor children (collectively “Plaintiffs”) after Rusty Roberts, an employee of Cardinal, was injured while working on a stationary offshore platform owned by Oryx and subsequently acquired by Kerr-McGee. 6 The Plaintiffs now appeal the district court’s grants of summary judgment dismissing their claims against Cardinal and Kerr-McGee. We affirm.

I. Facts and Proceedings

Cardinal provides a range of services to the energy industry in Louisiana and Texas as well as in the Gulf of Mexico offshore those states. Among the oil and gas well services performed by Cardinal in those areas are wireline, electric line, plugging and abandoning (“p&a”), cementing, and pumping services, as well as acquisition and interpretation of oilfield data. Cardinal’s offshore services are performed on both fixed and movable facilities belonging to others as well as on board its own “liftboats.”

Roberts worked for Cardinal in its p&a department from 1996 until the date of his injury in 1998, first as a p&a helper and then, following a promotion, as a p&a operator. The Kerr-McGee platform on which he was injured while helping to perform a p&a operation is located on the outer Continental Shelf in the Gulf of Mexico, off the Louisiana coast. He was injured by the accidental firing of a perforation gun attached to a wireline that was being used on the platform by the crew of which he was a member in connection with plugging a well. (A “wireline” is a continuous cable used to perform various subsurface functions in a well, including the lowering and raising of various tools, instruments, and other devices. One of the downhole tools used on a wireline is a “perforation gun,” a device that originally used cartridges similar to rifle or pistol ammunition but evolved to use “shaped charges,” cylinder-shaped ammunition which is cone-shaped internally and fires directionally. It is formed in layers, one a brittle compound of explosive material and the other a metal alloy. When fired by any of several methods, this bazooka-like ammunition shoots a short, concentrated stream of molten alloy or “plasma” in the direction at which the open end of the charge’s conically shaped interior is aimed. Generally, perforating guns are used either early in the life pf a well to fractionate (“frac”) a hydrocarbon-bearing formation or zone so as to commence or enhance production or, late in the life of a well or of a particular formation, to perforate casing or tubing in prep *372 aration for “squeezing” or sealing off the well or the zone to “plug and abandon” it.)

On the evening of Roberts’s injury, the Cardinal crew was attempting a p&a job on the platform in question. Cardinal was responsible for all aspects of the project, Kerr-McGee having reserved only the right to observe and inspect Cardinal’s work to ensure its satisfactory completion. The Cardinal crew had assembled a perforating gun, with its shaped charges aimed in a single direction, and had lowered the gun into the well on a wireline. This particular gun included an exterior sleeve and was rigged to fire when the pressure around it increased to a predetermined pounds-per-square inch (psi) level. During its initial descent down the well, the gun encountered a closed or partially closed downhole valve, so the crew reversed the downward direction of the wire-line, raising it and the attached perforation gun to the top of the wellbore, close to which Roberts was standing. A valve in the well tubing below was then opened by a Cardinal employee, resulting in a sudden increase in pressure in the wellbore, which presumably caused the gun to fire. 7 Unfortunately, the shaped charges happened to be aimed in Roberts’s direction, and he was severely injured when they fired.

In their lawsuit, the Plaintiffs asserted negligence claims against Roberts’s employer, Cardinal, under the Jones Act, advancing that he was a seaman. They brought negligence, premises liability, and strict liability claims against Kerr-McGee as owner of the platform, asserting responsibility under Louisiana law as incorporated by reference in the OCSLA. 8

Cardinal filed a motion for summary judgment in which it asserted that Roberts did not have a sufficient temporal connection to a Cardinal vessel or fleet of vessels to be a Jones Act seaman. Agreeing with Cardinal as a matter of law, the district court granted summary judgment and dismissed the Plaintiffs’ claims against the employer.

Kerr-McGee also filed a motion for summary judgment in which it asserted that the Plaintiffs could not prevail on any of the theories of Louisiana law that they proffered under the OCSLA. As the Plaintiffs did not oppose Kerr-McGee’s summary judgment motion on the premises liability claims asserted under articles 2317.1 and 2322 of the Louisiana Civil Code, the court granted Kerr-McGee’s motion as to those claims, and the Plaintiffs do not re-urge them on appeal.

The Plaintiffs conceded that, in its contract with Cardinal for the performance of the May 1998 p&a operation, Kerr-McGee had not retained the requisite operational control to support the imposition of liability for the allegedly negligent acts of its independent contractor, precluding recovery against Kerr-McGee vicariously for any negligence of Cardinal. The Plaintiffs therefore grounded their arts. 2315 and 667 negligence and strict liability claims against Kerr-McGee on allegations that *373 the use of a wireline perforation gun in the p&a operation on Kerr-McGee’s platform was an “ultrahazardous activity.”

The district court granted Kerr-McGee’s summary judgment motion and dismissed these claims after refusing to classify wireline perforation as ultrahazar-dous under' Louisiana law because it is a common activity in the oilpatch that can be and indeed generally is performed safely. Plaintiffs timely filed a notice of appeal.

II. Analysis

A. Standard of Review

We review a grant of summary judgment de novo, applying the same standard as the district court. 9

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Bluebook (online)
266 F.3d 368, 2002 A.M.C. 83, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 21256, 2001 WL 1082538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-cardinal-services-inc-ca5-2001.