United States Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit
United States Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit
United States Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit
3d 198
1996 A.M.C. 543
The Corpus Christi platform is located in the Gulf of Mexico, about eight miles
from Port O'Connor, Texas. Attached to a leg of the platform is a riser, a
vertical pipe through which flows gas and gas condensate. The riser is owned
by Houston. The riser connects to a pipeline, also owned by Houston, that runs
eight miles from the platform to the beach. Although other risers attached to the
platform were fitted with riser guards to prevent damage from allisions, the
riser damaged in the allision lacked any sort of protection.
Workers on the Corpus Christi platform foresaw the allision and promptly
shutdown operations to prevent a fire or explosion. The force of the allision
crushed the concrete riser coating and damaged the riser. Houston ordered
Corpus Christi to shut in its wells so that it could inspect the riser and replace
the damaged section. The repair took two weeks, during which time Corpus
Christi could not use the riser to convey its gas. During the repairs, Corpus
Christi flared gas to prevent the loss of the wells.
The district court conducted a bench trial. At its close, the district court
allocated fault for damage to the riser two-thirds to Zapata, and the remaining
one-third, collectively, to Corpus Christi and Houston.2 Zapata argued at trial-and now argues on appeal--that Corpus Christi did not sustain physical damage
to any proprietary interest; thus, under the "bright line" rule of this circuit
announced in Louisiana ex rel. Guste v. M/V TESTBANK, 752 F.2d 1019 (5th
Cir.1985) (en banc), cert. denied, 477 U.S. 903, 106 S.Ct. 3271, 91 L.Ed.2d
562 (1986), may not recover its losses incurred due to Zapata's negligence. In
support of its argument, Zapata notes that Corpus Christi did not own the
damaged riser, and that it voluntarily flared the gas, the cost of which it now
seeks to recover. Zapata does not dispute, however, that Corpus Christi would
have incurred great harm to its wells if it had not flared the gas during
Houston's repair of its riser.
5
The district court held that the flaring of the gas constituted physical damage to
a proprietary interest of Corpus Christi, thus permitting Corpus Christi to avoid
the TESTBANK bar. The court reasoned as follows:
8. [T]he gas flared by [Corpus Christi] when [Houston] shut in the platform
constitutes the physical damage necessary for [Corpus Christi] to trump
TESTBANK 's restrictive approach to recovery in maritime tort. Because
plaintiffs had to shut in their wells and flare gas to keep from losing those wells
while [Houston] repaired its riser, the proprietary interest of plaintiffs in their
wells and gas is sufficient to enable them to recover for their loss.
9. While the gas was flared voluntarily by plaintiffs after the allision with
[Houston's] riser, it was flared in order to prevent the wells themselves from
being lost. Had plaintiffs done nothing, their wells would have sustained
perhaps permanent physical damage as a direct result of the allision--such
physical damages clearly would have enabled plaintiffs to recover from the
Zapata defendants. However, had plaintiffs not flared gas and had they instead
allowed their wells to be lost, their damages would have been reduced by the
amount of damages which could have been mitigated by flaring. Thus, the
"voluntary" flaring does not bar recovery, as defendants urge, but rather
demonstrates that plaintiffs mitigated their damages. * * *
10. * * * In the case at bar, ... the plaintiffs suffered physical harm: plaintiffs
were forced to burn, or flare, gas in order to avert structural damage to their
wells.
10
The district court thus awarded to Corpus Christi the value of the gas and
condensate that was flared. In addition, the district court awarded Corpus
Christi the revenue lost while its wells were shut in for the repair of the riser.
* In Pennzoil Producing Co. v. Offshore Express, Inc., 943 F.2d 1465, 1473
(5th Cir.1991), we reviewed a district court's application of the rule of law
announced in Robins Dry Dock & Repair Co. v. Flint, 275 U.S. 303, 309, 48
S.Ct. 134, 135, 72 L.Ed. 290 (1927), and reaffirmed by this court in
TESTBANK. Noting the applicable standard of review, we wrote:
12
It is well settled law that, as in most federal actions, in maritime actions the
"clearly erroneous" rule applies to the review of the factual findings of the trial
court. Thus we must accept the district court's findings of fact unless, upon
reading the record and examining the exhibits, we are convinced that they are
demonstrably incorrect. Fed.R.Civ.P. 52(a); Candies Towing Co., Inc. v. M/V
B & C ESERMAN, 673 F.2d 91, 93 (5th Cir.1982).
13
B
14
The damages award in this case had three components--the cost of gas flared by
Corpus Christi to preserve the wells, the revenue lost by Corpus Christi during
the period of the riser's repair, and the cost incurred by Houston of repairing the
damage to the riser. We address each award in turn.
(1)
15
16
Zapata argues that Corpus Christi suffered no physical damage from the
allision, and is therefore entitled to no damages award. In the alternative, it
argues that, if the flaring of the gas (in order to save the wells) suffices as
physical damage, then Corpus Christi is entitled only to the costs incurred by
the voluntary flaring of gas, and not the purely economic loss in gas production
for the two weeks while Houston repaired its riser.
17
Consolidated, 772 F.2d at 1222 (internal citations and some quotation marks
omitted).
20
Corpus Christi points out that in Consolidated, we held that physical damage
that was a consequence of an accident was sufficient to satisfy TESTBANK 's
requirement. In that case, Consolidated Aluminum Corporation's plant
machinery was damaged by the slowing of the flow of gas that was caused by
Bean's negligent puncture to a pipeline some six miles from Consolidated's
facility. We held that Consolidated had stated a claim for physical damages to
its machinery as a result of Bean's negligence and that, therefore, TESTBANK
did not preclude Consolidated's recovery of associated economic losses.
Consolidated, 772 F.2d at 1222.
21
Corpus Christi also points to Pennzoil, a case factually similar to the one at bar.
There we held that damage to a well resulting from the failure to flare gas after
a well was shut in following an allision constituted the kind of physical damage
that made the TESTBANK bar inapplicable. See Pennzoil, 943 F.2d at 1473.
Corpus Christi argues that here, it did "what this Circuit told Pennzoil it should
have done"--flared the gas and prevented the loss of its wells.
22
Corpus Christi would have suffered great physical damages to its wells as a
result of Zapata's negligence. TESTBANK must not be construed as mandating
the narrow and impractical result urged by Zapata: finding a defendant free of
liability when the plaintiff incurs losses, although "voluntarily" so, that
nevertheless are directly attributable to its efforts to avoid the physical damages
that would have rendered that defendant liable for much larger sums. We
therefore agree with the district court that Corpus Christi's costs incurred in
flaring the gas to save its wells constitutes the physical damage to a proprietary
interest, i.e., its gas, sufficient to satisfy the TESTBANK requirements. Corpus
Christi is thus entitled to $58,613, representing the economic loss it suffered
because of the flaring of the gas, to be reduced by one-third (reflecting the
amount of Corpus Christi's own negligence), for a total award of $39,075.33.
(2)
23
24
25
27
Robins
broke no new ground but instead applied a principle ... which refused
recovery for negligent interference with "contractual rights." Stated more broadly,
the prevailing rule denied a plaintiff recovery for economic loss if that loss resulted
from physical damage to property in which he had no proprietary interest.
28
29
30 solely for any lost income or other economic loss from the interruption of its
not
supply of natural gas (e.g., due to being forced to pay higher prices for an alternative
supply) but instead for physical losses, as well as attendant economic damages, to its
own property which occurred as a result of the interruption of Consolidated's supply
of gas "within minutes" of the pipeline's rupture.
31
32
As to Houston's recovery, Zapata takes the position that the district court erred
in finding Houston's damages to be $306,000, because it "arbitrarily rejected
the uncontradicted and unchallenged testimony and evidence presented by
Zapata's expert, Richard Zimmerman," who testified that Houston's damages
were approximately $45,000 to $50,000. Although Zapata acknowledges that
we must review the district court's finding of damages only for clear error, it
cites Strachan Shipping Co. v. Dresser Indus., Inc., 701 F.2d 483, 487 (5th
Cir.1983) for its contention that, in cases where "no credibility choice has been
made by the district court, 'the burden of proving the district court's findings
clearly erroneous is to some extent ameliorated.' " It argues that this is just such
a case, and that the district court violated precedent of this Circuit by
"arbitrarily reject[ing] the testimony of a witness whose testimony appears
credible." Gee Chee On v. Brownell, 253 F.2d 814, 817 (5th Cir.1958). Zapata
admits that Houston is entitled to an award for damage to its riser, but argues
that the award should be no more than the cost to which Zimmerman testified
at trial--the $45,000 to $50,000 cost of a metal sleeve fitted around the
damaged section of the riser. In a similar vein, Zapata also argues that neither
Corpus Christi nor Houston offered any testimony or evidence to contradict
Zimmerman's testimony that, had a riser guard been placed around the pipe,
there would have been no damage to the riser. Zapata concludes that it should
not have been liable to either party, except for the cost of replacing the riser
guard.
35
Citing Freeport Sulphur Co. v. S/S HERMOSA, 526 F.2d 300, 304 (5th
Cir.1976), Houston responds that actual cost of repairs is the proper measure of
damages. Houston contends that the court was not bound to accept
uncontroverted expert opinion testimony, and that its refusal to do so was a
permissible exercise of the district court's discretion that should not be secondguessed on appeal. Houston further points out that, although Zimmerman
testified that the platform was not damaged in the allision, the district court
found specifically that the platform's boat platform was in fact damaged.
Houston further notes the district court's finding that the possibility remained
that, even with a guard, the riser might have sustained some damage. In the
light of that fact, it argues, the district court declined to speculate on the effect
that less severe damage to the riser would have had on Houston's damages.4
36
We are not persuaded that the district court's damages findings are clearly
erroneous. The district court simply chose not to believe all of Zimmerman's
testimony. Indeed, the Supreme Court has observed that it is not error for the
factfinder to reject expert opinion evidence, even if uncontroverted. Sartor v.
Arkansas Natural Gas Corp., 321 U.S. 620, 627-28, 64 S.Ct. 724, 729, 88 L.Ed.
967, 973 (1944). Here, the factfinder acted within his discretion. To be sure, it
is clear from the district court's finding of comparative fault on the part of
Houston that it considered--and accepted part of--the testimony of Zapata's
expert; it simply chose, within its discretion, not to adopt fully that expert's
view as the view of the court with respect to the recoverable damages.
C
37
38
39
Whether
such circumstances exist is a question of fact, and the standard to be
applied on review is the "clearly erroneous" standard. But even if an appellant can
demonstrate that it would be clearly erroneous to say that there are no peculiar
circumstances, the appellant must further show that when the trial court declined the
request to deny prejudgment interest, the trial court abused the discretion that was
created by the peculiar circumstances.
40
Noritake Co., Inc. v. M/V HELLENIC CHAMPION, 627 F.2d 724, 729 (5th
Cir.1980). Thus, we conclude that the factual findings leading to the district
court's decision concerning whether "peculiar circumstances" exist so as to
With this standard in mind, we think that the district court did not clearly err in
concluding that this case did not present "peculiar circumstances" sufficient to
justify denial of the award of prejudgment interest to Corpus Christi and
Houston. The district court found no delay on the part of either of the prevailing
parties; it found no more evidence of a "good faith" dispute than in any other
admiralty case; and it found that apportionment of liability in an offshore
allision case was not a "peculiarity" that would justify denial of the award of
prejudgment interest to Corpus Christi and Houston. We find no clear error in
these conclusions.5
CONCLUSION
42
43
44
45
I join the majority in affirming the award of damages to Corpus Christi for the
flared gas and to Houston for the riser, as well as the award of prejudgment
interest and taxation of costs. However, the majority's denial of Corpus Christi's
delay damages resulting from the shut-in under the guise of TESTBANK
ignores controlling authority in this Circuit and forges a new rule of law
unintended by TESTBANK and its progeny.1 I must dissent.
46
48
Clearing the TESTBANK threshold, however, is not the end of the matter. A
plaintiff's right to recovery still hinges on application of traditional tort
principles including legal duty and foreseeable injury. These principles, of
course, include recovery for foreseeable economic loss caused by a defendant's
negligence. These well-settled principles of negligence, not TESTBANK,
control the ultimate outcome.
49
In this case, we correctly hold that Corpus Christi's sensible action in flaring
gas to save its wells "constitutes the physical damage to a proprietary interest,
i.e., its gas, sufficient to satisfy the TESTBANK requirements." Maj. op. at
202. At this point, Corpus Christi meets the prerequisite; our TESTBANK
inquiry is over. General principles of negligence now govern whether Corpus
Christi can recover damages. The majority, however, resurrects TESTBANK
and fashions a new requirement that each element of recoverable loss must
satisfy TESTBANK. I cannot condone this new rule because it ignores the
lessons of our previous authority in this area of law.
50
equipment for deriving aluminum. Thus, TESTBANK does not apply." Id. We
further explained that the TESTBANK rationale for foreclosing relief for
economic harm was simply inapplicable because the number of potential
plaintiffs was neither indeterminate nor infinite. Id. at 1223.
51
52
On remand, the district court found that the defendant was not liable for the
damage to Consolidated because it was an unforeseeable consequence of the
rupture of the pipeline. 639 F.Supp. 1173, 1183 (W.D.La.1986), aff'd, 833 F.2d
65 (5th Cir.1987), cert. denied, 486 U.S. 1055, 108 S.Ct. 2821, 100 L.Ed.2d
922 (1988). The court relied on the peculiar facts of that case. For example,
Consolidated's plant was located six miles away from the point of rupture, on a
different body of water, and upstream in the gas distribution system.
Additionally, the defendant had no knowledge of Consolidated's connexity to
the pipeline. Finally, Consolidated was so far outside the zone of obvious
danger that no reasonable person would have anticipated that a rupture of the
pipeline would cause damage to "such a remotely located plant." Id.
53
On appeal after remand, a different panel of this Court, per then Judge Politz,
now Chief Judge, affirmed. 833 F.2d 65 (5th Cir.1987), cert. denied, 486 U.S.
1055, 108 S.Ct. 2821, 100 L.Ed.2d 922 (1988). We agreed with the district
court that the defendant could not have anticipated that its failure to follow safe
dredging practices would result in physical damage to a plant several miles
away. Id. at 68. Significantly, we did not resurrect TESTBANK and use it to
foreclose Consolidated's recovery. Rather, we reaffirmed our commitment to a
two-step approach. Initially, TESTBANK must be applied. Once satisfied,
application of traditional tort principles then determines recovery.
54
a tug to tow it. While in tow, the Domar barge was struck by another towed by
the Andrew Martin. Domar recovered delay damages for lost profits from the
use of both the barge and the leased tug. Andrew Martin appealed contending
that TESTBANK barred recovery for the loss of use of the tug because it
suffered no physical damage. This Court rejected this argument and affirmed
the damage award. We held that Domar had a proprietary interest in the bargetug unit noting that it was indisputable "that they functioned as an integrated
unit." Domar, 754 F.2d at 619. Consequently, "TESTBANK is no bar to
Domar's recovery for the loss of use of the unit." Id. Finding no solace in
TESTBANK, Andrew Martin argued, as a matter of law, Domar's damages for
loss of use of the undamaged tug were too tenuous and remote to be reasonably
foreseeable. Again, we rejected the argument. Judge Higginbotham, author of
TESTBANK, wrote for the panel: "On these facts, that Domar's damages were
foreseeable is implicit in the conclusion that the test of TESTBANK is met."
Id.
55
In the case before us today, Corpus Christi suffered two types of economic
damages: flared gas and delay damages from the shut-in. Having satisfied the
TESTBANK prerequisite, Consolidated Aluminum and Domar instruct that
fundamental negligence principles determine Corpus Christi's recovery.
Applying traditional tort principles, these economic damages are recoverable
unless they are unforeseeable or casually unrelated to the allision. When
Zapata's barge collided with the Corpus Christi platform it damaged the gas
riser. This necessitated Corpus Christi's prudent action in flaring gas to avoid
permanent damage to the well. Is it unforeseeable that Corpus Christi would
also suffer economic damages from a shut-in caused by a need to repair the gas
riser? Certainly not. The damages from both the flared gas and the subsequent
shut-in directly flow from the allision. This is not a situation, as presented in
Consolidated Aluminum, where the damages occur in some remote location
unknown and unseen by the tortfeasor. The Zapata barge ran into the Corpus
Christi platform and the attached riser directly leading to both the flared gas and
necessary shut-in.
56
In stripping Corpus Christi of its recovery for delay damages caused by the
shut-in, the majority stresses that these losses were not "tied" to damage to
Corpus Christi's property. The majority maintains that the only property of
Corpus Christi that was damaged was the flared gas. Corpus Christi's
ownership interest in the gas riser, however, is not dispositive as Domar makes
clear. The gas riser, while owned by Houston, was permanently connected to
the northeast leg of Corpus Christi's platform. Thus the riser operates as an
integrated unit with the platform. Under Domar, Corpus Christi, while not the
owner of the riser, can recover its foreseeable economic damages.
57
The new rule of recovery that the majority creates is not dictated by either the
holding or rationale of TESTBANK. It is inconsistent with the approach this
Court has used in both Consolidated Aluminum and Domar. Having satisfied
the TESTBANK inquiry, Corpus Christi should be allowed to recover all
foreseeable economic damages that flow from the allision under traditional tort
principles. Contrary to the majority's claim, allowing this recovery does not
abrogate the bright line rule of TESTBANK. Rather, it is the majority's new
layer of TESTBANK analysis that clouds the water TESTBANK and its
progeny have made clear. I would affirm the award of the foreseeable delay
damages to Corpus Christi.
The district court found Houston negligent for failing to protect the riser from
accidental vessel damage, and Corpus Christi negligent either for failing to
review plans for the riser before allowing Houston to attach the riser, or failing
to require Houston adequately to protect its riser before allowing Houston to
attach the riser
Zapata also complains that costs of the action should not have been taxed
against it, for essentially the same reasons it urges in its prejudgment interest
argument. Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 54(d)(1) states that, with exceptions
not relevant here, "costs other than attorneys' fees shall be allowed as of course
to the prevailing party unless the court otherwise directs." A party that obtains a
favorable judgment on at least a fraction of its claims may be regarded as a
prevailing party, even though that party has not sustained all its claims. United
States v. Mitchell, 580 F.2d 789, 793 (5th Cir.1978). The district court, finding
Zapata two-thirds at fault--a finding we do not disturb on appeal--acted well
within its discretion when it awarded Corpus Christi and Houston their costs of
court
1
The delay damages were based upon the loss in present value of the deferred
production. No attack against these damages or the amount thereof is made by
the appellant except for the attack based on TESTBANK