Salinas Energy Corp. v. American Pipe & Tubing, Inc. CA5

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 25, 2013
DocketF063636
StatusUnpublished

This text of Salinas Energy Corp. v. American Pipe & Tubing, Inc. CA5 (Salinas Energy Corp. v. American Pipe & Tubing, Inc. CA5) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Salinas Energy Corp. v. American Pipe & Tubing, Inc. CA5, (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Filed 3/25/13 Salinas Energy Corp. v. American Pipe & Tubing, Inc. CA5

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

SALINAS ENERGY CORPORATION, F063636, F064071 Defendant, Cross-Complainant and Appellant, (Super. Ct. No. CV-268189)

v. OPINION AMERICAN PIPE & TUBING, INC.,

Cross-Defendant and Respondent.

APPEALS from a judgment and order of the Superior Court of Kern County. Sidney P. Chapin, Judge. Murchison & Cumming, Edward G. Farrell III, for Cross-Complainant and Appellant. Acker & Whipple, Jerri L. Johnson and Erin M. Lahey for Cross-Defendant and Respondent. -ooOoo- Plaintiffs Darrell and Susan Wilson (collectively the Wilsons)1 sued defendant and cross-complainant Salinas Energy Corporation (Salinas) for injuries Darrell Wilson sustained while attempting to repair a positive displacement pump on an oil lease Salinas owned. Salinas filed a cross-complaint against cross-defendant American Pipe & Tubing, Inc. (APT) for comparative equitable indemnity and declaratory relief.2 The trial court granted APT‟s summary judgment motion on the cross-complaint. APT thereafter filed a motion for attorney fees under Code of Civil Procedure section 1038,3 which the trial court granted. Salinas separately appealed from the judgment entered after the summary judgment motion was granted, and the amended judgment entered after the attorney fees motion was granted; at the parties‟ request, we consolidated the two appeals. On appeal, Salinas argues (1) there are triable issues of material fact that prevent the grant of summary judgment, and (2) the post judgment order awarding attorney fees must be reversed because the motion was untimely and Salinas had reasonable cause to bring and maintain the cross-complaint against APT. As we shall explain, we affirm the judgment but reverse a portion of the attorney fees order. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Salinas has an oil lease in San Ardo, California, on which are two water disposal wells, #7-27 and #16-27, each powered by a centrifugal or “jockey” pump that pushes the water into the ground. In September 2008, when one of the pumps malfunctioned, Salinas looked for a positive displacement pump, which pumps groundwater back into

1We will refer to the plaintiffs by their first names, not out of disrespect, but to avoid any confusion to the reader. 2 The cross-complaint named other cross-defendants who are not parties to the judgment or this appeal. 3 Undesignated statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure.

2. the ground via the water disposal well, to replace it until the faulty jockey pump could be repaired. Salinas contacted APT, a small company that buys and sells used oil field equipment, for help finding a pump to lease. APT was able to locate a pump, which Salinas agreed to lease from APT and ACES Enterprises, Inc. (ACES). According to Salinas, the pump was “sold” as part of a package that, in addition to the pump itself, included an electric motor and a “skid” or base. No piping or tubing, however, arrived with the pump, and there were no valves or pipes attached to it. APT was not asked to install the pump or to supply any apparatus, including a pressure relief device. APT did not know or control how Salinas would install the pump, and was not responsible for installing it. Salinas hired Pacific Trucking, a Paso Robles construction company, to install the pump on well #7-27 on September 30 and October 1, 2008. Installing a positive displacement pump involves connecting the pump to the wellhead with the necessary piping, tubing and valves as the owner or pump installer sees fit. Positive displacement pump systems generally have a pressure relief device, a safety valve that prevents the pump system from over-pressurizing by relieving the pressure at a set point, and which is necessary to assure safe and efficient functioning. During this installation, Salinas‟s senior operator Bren Randolph noted a pressure relief device was not installed on the pump system and recognized its absence was a safety concern. In mid-November 2008, Pacific Trucking, under the supervision of Salinas‟s supervisor Frankie Strange, disconnected the pump from well #7-27 and installed it on well #16-27, although Salinas never operated the pump on that well. About one month later, Salinas instructed Pacific Trucking to remove the pump from well #16-27, and took the pump off the lease. On June 17, 2009, Salinas brought the pump back to the lease and instructed Pacific Trucking to install it on well #7-27. On June 23, Salinas‟s operations manager

3. Jon Harding met with Keith Morris of ACES and Steve Brown of APT to discuss a vibration problem with the pump. After this meeting, Morris contacted Darrell, an experienced pump mechanic, who agreed to repair the pump. Morris hired him as an independent contractor. On the morning of June 26, 2009, Darrell arrived at the Salinas lease, turned on the pump and observed the vibration issue. He took readings on both disposal wells, changed the valves in the pump and then tested the pump to see if it was running correctly. Later that afternoon, Salinas‟s production foreman Jerry Burwick saw Darrell receive a call on his cell phone, which Burwick believed was from Morris. When Darrell finished the call, he told Burwick the person on the phone suggested closing, or partially closing, the master valve to put “back pressure” on the pump to test it further. Burwick saw Darrell partially close the master valve on the wellhead and then have a second conversation on his cell phone. Darrell told Burwick that Morris instructed him to partially close the master valve and chain it in place while simultaneously increasing the back pressure on the pump. Burwick told Darrell that such a procedure would be unsafe because the system might explode if the back pressure increased with the master valve partially closed. At Darrell‟s request, Burwick drove over to well #16-27, about 150 yards away, and shut down the charge pump powering that well to see if that made any difference to well #7-27. As he was driving back, Burwick heard a loud explosion and saw Darrell fall to the ground; Darrell had been seriously injured by a ball valve that had flown off the wellhead and struck him in the abdomen. In mid-July 2009, Salinas hired safety consultant Terri Judkins to investigate the incident, determine the cause and prepare a report of her findings (the Judkins report). Judkins found the incident was partly due to Salinas‟s failure to abide by its safety policies, particularly the “stop work” policy that requires any person on the lease who witnesses an unsafe practice to stop lease operations. Judkins also attributed the incident

4. to a failure to install a pressure relief device on the discharge side of the pump system. Greg Wagner, Salinas‟s resident manager/vice president, sent the report to Salinas‟s headquarters in Perth, Australia. The Pleadings On August 24, 2009, Darrell and his wife, Susan, filed a complaint to recover damages for Darrell‟s injuries and Susan‟s loss of consortium, naming Salinas as the sole defendant. The complaint contained four causes of action: (1) negligence, (2) negligence per se, (3) strict products liability, and (4) negligent design, manufacture and assembly.

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