Young v. Kilroy Oil Co. of Texas, Inc.

673 S.W.2d 236, 1984 Tex. App. LEXIS 5334
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 12, 1984
Docket01-82-0592-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 673 S.W.2d 236 (Young v. Kilroy Oil Co. of Texas, Inc.) 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
Young v. Kilroy Oil Co. of Texas, Inc., 673 S.W.2d 236, 1984 Tex. App. LEXIS 5334 (Tex. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

OPINION

DUGGAN, Justice.

In this personal injury suit involving federal maritime law, Plaintiff Glen Young appeals a take-nothing judgment rendered in favor of defendant Cities Service Company following a jury verdict awarding plaintiff $505,000 in damages. Kilroy Oil Company of Texas, Inc., was originally a defendant but was dismissed prior to trial.

The plaintiff’s claim arose from an injury which occurred on an offshore oil drilling platform approximately forty miles off the coast of Texas in the Matagorda Bay area. Defendant Cities Service Company (hereafter “Cities”), as leaseholder of the drilling site, was in the process of developing oil and gas production at this location. Cities had entered into a Master Service Agreement with defendant Frank’s Casing Crew and Rental Tools, Inc. (hereafter “Frank’s”), whereby Frank’s was to furnish a casing crew to run easing into the well.

*240 “Running casing’’ is the process of inserting joints of casing into a well and coupling them with joints previously run. Plaintiff, an employee of Frank’s, was a “pipe stabber,” who worked above the rig floor from a “stabbing board.” Other members of the crew would raise a joint of casing to him. He would then grasp the pipe with his arms and line it up with the pipe already in the well so that the workers below could screw the two pieces together. These joints of pipe weigh from 1,500 to 3,800 pounds and must be perfectly round in order to “make up” properly. As a result of wrestling with “out-of-round” pipe for ten to twelve hours, the plaintiff suffered a severe back injury. He sued (1) his employer, Frank’s; (2) the operator of the lease, Cities; and (3) the owners of the “jack-up” rig OCEAN KING, Ocean Drilling and Exploration Company and Odeco, Inc. (both hereafter “Odeco”). Cities’ answer included a cross-claim against Frank’s for contractual indemnity in the event that plaintiff recovered against Cities, “including, but not limited to attorney’s fees, expenses, and court costs.”

Immediately prior to trial, plaintiff entered into a Mary Carter Agreement with Frank’s and Odeco, pursuant to which he accepted $100,000 from Frank’s and $25,-000 from Odeco in full settlement of his claims against these two defendants. He then proceeded to trial against Cities with Frank’s and Odeco remaining as parties to the lawsuit. The jury found that Frank’s failed to adequately supervise the plaintiff, that Cities negligently furnished bad or out-of-round pipe, and that the plaintiff failed to seek relief, all of which proximately caused his back injury. Odeco was not found negligent. In answer to the comparative negligence issue, the jury found that Frank’s was 50% negligent, Cities was 40% negligent, and the plaintiff was 10% negligent. Damages were found to be $505,000.

In spite of such jury findings, the court entered a plaintiff take-nothing judgment based on the Master Service Agreement between Frank’s and Cities. That Agreement contained an indemnity clause requiring Frank’s to indemnify Cities for, among other things, any liability and related expenses for personal injuries resulting from the performance or nonperformance of the Master Service Agreement. The trial court found that Frank’s was obligated to indemnify Cities in the amount of $202,000, or 40% of the damages awarded by the jury, and that, pursuant to the Mary Carter Agreement, the plaintiff had agreed to indemnify Frank’s against any recovery growing out of this litigation against Frank’s by Cities, exclusive of any attorney’s fees. Judgment was rendered in favor of Cities against Frank’s in the amount of $50,046.01 for attorney’s fees, and the plaintiff was awarded nothing. Only the plaintiff perfected an appeal.

On January 21, 1983, some seven months after the judgment was entered, the district clerk of Harris County issued a writ of execution at Cities’ behest against Frank’s for the $50,046.01. However, before any of Frank’s property was seized, Frank’s posted with the district clerk a cash deposit of $59,054.30 in lieu of a su-persedeas bond in an attempt to supersede the judgment entered against Frank’s and in favor of Cities pending the outcome of this appeal.

On February 3, 1983, after reviewing motions filed by the parties and hearing argument of counsel, the trial court issued an order finding that Frank’s filed the cash deposit in lieu of supersedeas bond, “purportedly in accordance with Rule 364 of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure,” intending to supersede the judgment entered June 23, 1982, against Frank’s and in favor of Cities. The order further found that Frank’s did not properly perfect an appeal by filing a bond or affidavit with the clerk within thirty days after the judgment was signed, as required by Rule 356(a). Consequently, the court vacated the writ of su-persedeas issued by the district clerk, declared it to be null and void, and ordered the district clerk to pay Cities in full satisfaction and discharge of the judgment. Cities was paid, and the remaining cash was returned to Frank’s.

*241 Before considering the plaintiff-appellant’s four points of error and Frank’s two cross-points, we address two “points of argument” asserted by appellee, Cities.

First, as to the plaintiff-appellant, Cities contends that the issues presented by the plaintiff are moot and that this court must, accordingly, dismiss the appeal for lack of jurisdiction. Alternatively, Cities insists that the brief filed by Frank’s must be quashed and its “appeal” dismissed. Both assertions were presented by Cities’ pre-submission motion to this court. By our pre-submission order of April 8, 1983, we denied both motions to avoid piecemeal disposition of the appeal and to afford all parties full opportunity to be heard by supplemental briefs. Cities has reurged both arguments by its briefs, and all parties’ briefs and oral arguments have been considered.

As to plaintiff-appellant, Cities argues that the only judgment rendered by the trial court has been satisfied in full and completely discharged by the district clerk’s issuance of a check to Cities following the foreclosure upon the cash deposited by Frank’s in lieu of a supersedeas bond. As authority, Cities cites cases holding that a satisfied judgment is legally defunct. Since no party has any further liability under the judgment, Cities reasons, this court can grant no effective relief and should dismiss the appeal. We disagree.

Generally, questions involved in an appeal become moot when the judgment is voluntarily satisfied or complied with by the complaining party, and the appellate court will not thereafter retain jurisdiction to decide the case. City of Mesquite v. Rawlins, 399 S.W.2d 162, 169 (Tex.Civ.App.—Tyler 1966, writ ref’d n.r.e.) (where the judgment creditor, the city, was estopped to appeal after accepting payment of the judgment amount). Here, the complaining party, the plaintiff-appellant, was ordered to take nothing, notwithstanding a jury finding that $202,000 of his total damages was attributable to Cities’ negligence. The action of third parties (here, the payment into the court’s registry by Frank’s) will not be permitted to deny an appellant his opportunity for appellate review of a judgment injurious to him. Plaintiff’s points of error are predicated upon the court finding Cities to be indemnified against liability for plaintiff’s injuries.

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Bluebook (online)
673 S.W.2d 236, 1984 Tex. App. LEXIS 5334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-kilroy-oil-co-of-texas-inc-texapp-1984.