Stewart v. Dixilyn-Field Drilling
This text of 552 So. 2d 710 (Stewart v. Dixilyn-Field Drilling) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Jean C. STEWART, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
DIXILYN-FIELD DRILLING, et al., Defendants-Appellants,
Halliburton Company, Defendant-Appellee.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.
Thomas & Hardy, Robert W. Thomas, Lake Charles, and Wm. Henry Sanders, Jena, for plaintiff-appellant.
Juneau, Judice, Michael W. Adley, Lafayette, for defendant-appellant, Dixilyn.
Barnett, Pitre, Kathleen Kay, Lake Charles, for defendant-appellant, U.S. Fire.
Plauche, Smith, Allen L. Smith, Lake Charles, for defendant-appellee.
Before YELVERTON, KNOLL, and KING, JJ.
KNOLL, Judge.
Jean C. Stewart, Dixilyn-Field Drilling Company, and its insurer, U.S. Fire Insurance Company, appeal the dismissal of Stewart's claim against Halliburton Company on a motion for summary judgment.
Stewart, Dixilyn-Field, and U.S. Fire contend that there were numerous issues of material fact which precluded Halliburton's *711 dismissal on a motion for summary judgment. We affirm.
FACTS
On August 18, 1985, Dixilyn-Field employed Stewart as a floorhand on Dixilyn-Field Rig 87, a jack-up drilling rig performing work in the Gulf of Mexico.
In mid-August 1985, Rig 87 had been shut down and evacuated because of a hurricane in the Gulf of Mexico. After the storm passed, Rig 87 was relocated over the drilling platform and well where it had been working. Stewart and other Dixilyn-Field employees were preparing the rig to recommence drilling.
Prior to the recommencement of drilling, it was necessary to test the rig's piping under pressurized conditions so that any leaks and structural deficiencies might be detected and repaired. After the blowout preventers and choke manifold were successfully tested to 5000 p.s.i. using Halliburton's pumping equipment, David Hardage, the Dixilyn-Field toolpusher, ordered a test of all the steel piping from the mud tanks to the rig itself.
The Halliburton pumping equipment is located in a special room on a level below the drilling floor, and provides higher pressure pumping capacity than the rig's mud pumps. Mark Anthony Jones, the sole Halliburton employee on Rig 87, was the only person who was authorized to operate the Halliburton equipment.
Dixilyn-Field's driller, Gary Hobbs, instructed Jones that the rig crew was going to test several lines which had been disconnected and resecured after the temporary rig move. Jones stated that he was instructed to first apply low pressure, and then to test the lines up to 5000 p.s.i. It was undisputed that all of the lines to be tested were owned and maintained by Dixilyn-Field, and that it was the rig crew's duty to open and close various valves to direct the pressurized fluid, sea water, to those areas which Dixilyn-Field wanted tested.
Hobbs instructed Stewart to go to the level where the accident happened to visually check the lines for leaks as the Halliburton pump pressurized them.
After Hobbs authorized the commencement of testing, Jones began pumping in to the rig piping system using the Halliburton pump. As Jones applied pressure, a bull plug blew out of a pipe on the level Stewart was checking. Although the plug did not strike him, sea water and an undetermined amount of drilling mud from the rig's mud pumps struck Stewart in the back of the head, shoulders, and middle of the back, injuring him.
Stewart sued Dixilyn-Field, its insurer, U.S. Fire, and Halliburton, alleging negligence on the defendants' parts. After Stewart and Jones' depositions, Halliburton filed a motion for summary judgment, contending that there were no issues of material fact and that it was not negligent.
In granting Halliburton's motion for summary judgment, the learned trial court, in written reasons, stated:
"Halliburton owed no legal duty to Stewart in this case, and had no control over him. It was the duty of the driller and his crew to make the necessary piping connections, to select the pipes to be tested, and to detect any defects in the pipe made evident by the pressure. The very reason for Halliburton's service was to detect defects in the pipe not observable by visual inspection. In absence of any proof whatsoever that the pressure was not correctly supplied, Halliburton should not be held liable because a defect did in fact exist which caused an injury."
SUMMARY JUDGMENT
Stewart, Dixilyn-Field, and U.S. Fire contend that Halliburton's employee negligently failed to advise Dixilyn-Field's employees of the dangers attendant to the pressuring-up procedures, and that Halliburton's employee negligently failed to insure that Dixilyn-Field's employees were not standing in a zone of danger when he pressurized the pipe in question.
The standard for appellate review of summary judgments was outlined in Vermilion Corp. v. Vaughn, 397 So.2d 490 (La.1981), at page 493:
*712 "A motion for summary judgment is properly granted only if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to material fact, and that mover is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. La.C.C.P. art. 966. Because the mover has the burden of establishing that no material factual issue exists, inferences to be drawn from the underlying facts contained in the materials before the court must be viewed in the light most favorable to the party opposing the motion. To satisfy his burden the mover must meet a strict standard by a showing that is quite clear what the truth is, and that excludes any real doubt as to the existence of any genuine issue of material fact. The papers supporting mover's position are closely scrutinized, while the opposing papers are indulgently treated, in determining whether the mover has satisfied his burden." (Citations omitted.)
In the case sub judice, in addition to the various pleadings, the trial court reviewed the depositions of Stewart and Jones in conjunction with the affidavits of Hobbs, Hardage, and a safety expert, Frank Nice.[1]
The facts surrounding the accident in question are not disputed. However, Stewart, Dixilyn-Field, and U.S. Fire contend that Halliburton's employee had a duty to independently assess the safety of the pressuring-up procedure, and that as part of that duty Jones neither warned Stewart of the danger presented by the pressurized pipes nor secured the area where the testing was taking place.
Halliburton does not contest the fact that Jones did not take the safety steps advocated. Rather, it contends that Stewart was an employee under the control of Dixilyn-Field, that Dixilyn-Field supervisory personnel directed Stewart to station himself in the vicinity of pipes which were being tested, and that Dixilyn-Field controlled which pipes were in fact tested. Accordingly, it argues that it owed no duty to Stewart to take the safety steps advanced by Stewart, Dixilyn-Field, and U.S. Fire.
We agree with the trial court that the issues Stewart, Dixilyn-Field, and U.S. Fire raise are not questions of fact, but are more appropriately issues of law. Our inquiry, then, is whether the trial court erred when it determinated that the undisputed facts did not give rise to any legal duty on Halliburton's part.
In Pitre v. Opelousas General Hosp., 530 So.2d 1151 (La.1988), the Louisiana Supreme Court summarized the duty/risk analysis at page 1155:
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