Lead Opinion
Sharon S. Dupre, individually and as natural tutrix of the minor Beau Nicholas Dupre, appeals an adverse summary judgment dismissing their claims against Chevron U.S.A., Inc. for damages resulting from the death of Russell P. Dupre, their husband and father, respectively. For the reasons assigned, we vacate and remand.
Background
Russell Dupre, a driller employed by Sun-downer Offshore Services, Inc., was killed while working on Chevron’s outer continental shelf platform located off the coast of Louisiana. Sundowner contracted with Chevron to install a drilling rig on Chevron’s platform and to perform workover operations on its wells. Chevron reserved and exercised its right to approve Sundowner’s rig installation. The platform revision resulting from installation of Sundowner’s rig could only be accomplished with the specific permission of Chevron. This permission was given.
Under the Chevron-approved plan Sun-downer placed its rig on the outer edge of the platform with a portion extending beyond the brink of the platform and over the sea. The Sundowner rig stood approximately 21
Guardrails protected the perimeter of Chevron’s platform. The addition of Sun-downer’s rig, which added a workspace above the rails and over the edge of the platform, markedly changed the dynamics of this area of Chevron’s platform. No guardrails or other protective device were built around the outer edges of the elevated Sundowner rig. None were placed around the traction motor at the top of the rig. Access to the traction motor, which required regular maintenance and inspection, was hampered by its limited work area and the outboard location of its service port. Chevron’s safety inspectors checked the rig for regulatory and safety compliance but did not comment on any dangers involved in the rig configuration.
One month after installation of the rig, Russell Dupre and Johxiny Walker, a fellow Sundowner employee, were instructed to climb to the top of the rig, remove the blower motor, and inspect the inside of the traction motor. The traction motor had begun smoking and operations could not resume until it was repaired. Dupre and Walker unbolted the blower motor but could not pry it loose. They then rocked the motor back and forth in order to loosen it. The motor suddenly broke free and fell toward the outboard side of the rig. Dupre lost his balance and was pulled or fell off the structure, falling to his death in the sea.
Sharon Dupre, individually and in her representative capacity, filed suit against Chevron alleging negligence and strict liability.
Analysis
We review grants of summary judgment de novo, applying the same standard as that applied by the district court.
Article 2315 provides that “[ejvery act whatever of man that causes damage to another obliges him by whose fault it happened to repair it.”
(1) Was the defendant’s conduct a cause-in-fact of the harm? .
(2) Was a duty imposed on the defendant by a general rule of law to protect this plaintiff from this type of harm arising in this manner?
In Louisiana the existence of a duty and its scope are questions of law.
As a general rule, “the owner or operator of a facility has the duty of exercising reasonable care for the safety of persons on his premises and the duty of not exposing such persons to unreasonable risks of injury or harm.”
Sharon Dupre asserts that Chevron neglected certain regulations and that this was the cause of her husband’s death.. 33 C.F.R. § 142.4 provides that holders of leases on the outer continental shelf “shall ensure that all places of employment ... are maintained in compliance with workplace safety and health regulations ... and, in addition, free from recognized hazards.”
The summary judgment record contains expert testimony to the effect that the set-up and placement of the Sundowner rig on Chevron’s platform created a recognized hazard. According to this testimony the rig’s placement on the edge of the platform, coupled with its insufficient work area and lack of guardrails around the traction motor, created a danger to the workers required to service the motor. Unlike the typical vicarious liability case in which the independent
We thus conclude that Chevron had a duty to take reasonable steps to make and keep its platform safe for workers thereon. This duty included areas of its platform altered or modified with its knowledge and approval. Chevron had the duty of assuring that any modifications or additions it allowed to its platform would not contain recognizable hazards and that all normally pccupied areas, including any newly created normally occupied areas, would continue to be adequately protected.
We cannot say as a matter of law that Chevron did not breach this duty, therefore summary judgment in favor of Chevron1 was inappropriate. The question is a factual one; further proceedings aré required.
The judgment of the district court is VACATED and the matter is REMANDED for further proceedings consistent herewith.
Notes
. Dupre also sued I.M.I. Engineering Co., the manufacturer of the rig, who was released on ..summary judgment. That judgment has not been appealed.
. Wilkerson v. Columbus Separate School Dist.,
. Id.
. The Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act, 43 U.S.C. §§ 1331 et seq., extends the law of the adjacent state, which becomes the law of the United States, to actions arising from injuries on outer continental shelf platforms.
. See Seneca v. Phillips Petroleum Co.,
. The dissent suggests that we are here deciding the issue of liability. We do not. Our focus is on Chevron's duty separate and apart from vicarious liability. In that regard we note that vicarious liability was the issue before the court a quo and was, the issue in many of the cases cited in the dissent. The factual determination of liability remains for the trier-of-fact.
. La.Civ.Code art. 2315.
. Mundy v. Dep't of Health and Human Resources,
. Roberts v. Benoit,
. Roberts; see also Ellison.
. Mundy,
. Boudreaux v. Exxon Co., U.S.A.,
. Although the violation of these regulations does not constitute negligence per se, they may be relevant in the establishment of the standard of care owed by a particular defendant to a particular plaintiff. Romero v. Mobil Exploration and Producing North America, Inc.,
. 33 C.F.R. § 142.4(a).
. 33 C.F.R. § 142.4(c)(l)(2).
. 33 C.F.R. § 143.110(a).
. American Petroleum Institute: Recommended Practice for Occupational Safely for Oil and Gas Well Drilling and Servicing Operations (RP 54) 5.3.1.
. See Verrett v. Louisiana World Exposition, Inc.,
. See, e.g., Ham v. Pennzoil Co.,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
Because a proper application of Louisiana law indicates that Chevron was entitled to the summary judgment granted by the district court, I must' respectfully dissent.
Chevron hired an experienced independent contractor to perform drilling work on its platforrri that required expertise that Chevron itself did not possess. The entire rig that was involved in Mr. Dupre’s unfortunate accident belonged to, was designed by, and was operated by Sundowner. Mrs. Dupre certainly could look to Sundowner, her husband’s employer, for compensation. I disagree, however, that Chevron owed Mr. Dupre a duty under Louisiana law under the facts of this case.
The majority argues from first principles of Louisiana tort law, but in fact, I have found no Louisiana case that has held a principal liable for the injury of an independent contractor’s employee on the basis of the principal’s duty to maintain a reasonably safe workplace. By contrast, a long line of summary judgment cases founded on Louisiana law supports the decision of the district court here. For instance, in Boutwell v. Chevron U.S.A., Inc.,
The majority has accepted the plaintiff’s attempt to distinguish these uniformly adverse precedents by asserting that Chevron is liable for its own negligence. The record does not, however, support this position. Contrary to the implication of the majority opinion, nothing in the record before us suggests that Chevron reserved and exercised a right to approve — on safety grounds — the installation of the Sundowner V. There is no reason to suppose that Chevron’s approval of Sundowner V was related to the safety of the rig, as the rig was entirely composed of Sundowner equipment. The decision whether to place guardrails around the outer edges of the elevated Sundowner rig and the traction motor atop it were the responsibility of Sundowner; Chevron had nothing to do with the design and use of Sundowner’s own equipment. Moreover, the fact that the Sun-downer V extended beyond the outer edges of the platform was, as indicated in the affidavit of the plaintiff’s own expert, common offshore practice. It cannot be overemphasized that Chevron’s mere approval of Sun-downer’s installation drawings cannot create a fact issue on Chevron’s possible negligence under our past authorities. If that is what the majority holds, their ruling is inconsistent with Boutwell and Ainsworth, where the acquiescence of the principal in arguably dangerous practices involving the principal’s platform did not create a duty.
Moreover, the majority cannot bootstrap their finding of a duty from the fact that Chevron provided.safety inspectors who occasionally checked Sundowner’s rig for safety compliance. Louisiana law preempts such reasoning. See LeJeune v. Shell Oil Co.,
It is understood that compliance with all applicable .legal requirements and the safe conduct of all drilling operations are and remain the responsibility of any contractor executing a drilling contract or operation for Chevron. Chevron’s maintenance and use of the above and foregoing checklist procedure shall in no manner whatsoever modify, waive, or alleviate the duties and obligations of contractor or modify or enhance Chevron’s duties or responsibilities with respect thereto whether under contract or by law or otherwise.
See, e.g., LeJeune, supra (the relationship between the principal and independent contractor is determined in large measure by the terms of the contract even though Shell had a manual for independent contractor safety and examined the area to be worked on to determine whether it was safe); Bout-well, supra (the language of the contract between the principal and its independent contractor dictates and is primarily controlling when determining the responsibilities of the parties).
It is also erroneous to cite various federal regulations in support of a duty running from Chevron to Mr. Dupre to provide a workplace free from, recognized hazards. The majority focuses on testimony to the effect that the set-up and placement of the Sun-downer rig on Chevron’s platform created a “recognized hazard,” a term used in some of the regulations. However, this circuit has rejected the argument that an MMS regulation can create a duty upon a platform owner. See Romero v. Mobil Exploration and Producing N. Am., Inc.,
Under Louisiana law, Sundowner — not Chevron — had the primary responsibility of providing its employees with a safe place to work, including safe equipment upon which to work and safe methods by which to work. See Kent v. Gulf States Utils. Co.,
Those are the lessons of previous cases based on Louisiana law. If the majority’s artful reconstruction of duties between principal and independent contractor’s employees is adopted, however, those authorities become meaningless. One can hardly distinguish from this ease a case in which a Chevron employee observed oil spilled on the decks or scaffolding hastily erected by the independent contractor. If Chevron allowed work to continue, would it not run afoul of the newly defined duty to provide a reasonably safe workplace? Such a result would fly in the face of the above-cited authorities.
To the extent the majority’s holding is inconsistent with our previous decisions and with Louisiana tort law, it has little prece-dential force. I must respectfully dissent.
