Clark v PHI, Inc et al
Filing
163
OPINION - ORDERED that plaintiff is entitled to recover $1,324,646.24 from PHI, Inc. and Allianz Global and Specialty AG as set forth in document. Signed by Judge Helen G. Berrigan on 7/16/2014.(kac)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
EASTERN DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA
FERRIS CLARK SR.,
CIVIL ACTION
VERSUS
NO. 12-411
PHI, INC., BELL HELICOPTER TEXTRON
INC. and ALLIANZ GLOBAL
CORPORATE & SPECIALTY AG
SECTION: C (5)
OPINION
Plaintiff Ferris Clark claims damages from defendants PHI, Inc. and Allianz Global and
Specialty AG, (collectively “PHI”) and defendant Energy XXI GOM, LLC (“Energy XXI”) for
alleged negligence leading to personal injury in a helicopter accident on March 24, 2011.1 The
Court conducted a bench trial in this matter from October 28, 2013 to October 29, 2013. Having
considered the testimony and reviewed all of the evidence, the Court finds, for the reasons that
follow, that PHI alone is liable to Plaintiff for the total amount of damages caused by this
accident - $1,324,656.24.
I. Background
At the time of this accident, Plaintiff was an employee of Wood Group Production
Services.2 Wood Group staffs, operates, and maintains oil platforms belonging to Energy XXI.3
1
(See Rec. Doc. 8 (Amended Complaint).)
(Trial Tr. vol. 1, 185:11-12, Oct. 28, 2013.)
3
(Trial Tr. vol. 1, 185:18-23; Trial Tr. vol. 2, 408:19-25, Oct. 29, 2013.)
2
Plaintiff worked as an “A” Operator on one such platform - the Main Pass 68.4 On March 24,
2011, Plaintiff radioed for transport from Main Pass 68 to a different platform, Main Pass 73A.5
PHI provides transportation services between Energy XXI’s platform.6 Shortly after Plaintiff
radioed, a Bell 206L helicopter owned and operated by PHI and piloted by James Kemper, a PHI
employee, picked up Plaintiff with another passenger already aboard the helicopter.7 In order to
refuel, the helicopter landed on a different platform, Main Pass 61A (“MP61A”), owned and
operated by Energy XXI.8
Before landing on the MP61A, Kemper requested and received a “green deck” from the
platform operator, indicating that he had permission to land.9 After the landing, Kemper
remained at the controls with the engine running while Plaintiff refueled the helicopter.10 This
“hot refueling” process lasted approximately 7 minutes, at the conclusion of which Plaintiff
reboarded the helicopter and prepared for takeoff.11
Winds were light and the helicopter was traveling “light,” i.e. below its maximum flight
weight.12 Kemper decided to take off from the MP61A headed northbound, into the prevailing
wind and in the general direction of the MP61A’s gas compressors and vent boom.13 He was
4
(Trial Tr. vol. 1, 185:24-186:1.)
(Id. at 188:7-12.)
6
(See Trial Tr. vol. 2, 428:9-11.)
7
(Trial Tr. vol. 1, 188:23-189:9.)
8
(Id.)
9
(Id. at 87:15-25.)
10
(Id. at 88:10-22.)
11
(Id. at 93:18-20, 190:6-12.)
12
(Id. at 71:5-9, 110:5-17.)
13
(Exs. 9.1, 9.2, & 10.1.)
5
2
aware that the flare boom could vent unignited gas and that this gas could cause his engine to
malfunction or even cause an explosion.14 He had been trained to avoid the area downwind or
directly above the venting equipment for precisely this reason.15 Having landed and taken off
from MP61A many times, he knew that it did not have a visual warning system to alert him that
the platform was venting.16 Finally, Kemper was aware that he could have taken off in a different
direction, such as southbound, away from the prevailing wind, or using a “sidestep” maneuver to
hover off of the platform to the west, before taking off northbound into the prevailing wind.17
At approximately 4:58 P.M., Kemper brought the helicopter to a 3-foot hover above the
helipad.18 After checking to make sure he had clearance, Kemper brought the helicopter up to a
10 foot hover and then went into forward flight.19 He was 20 feet from the helipad when he
cleared the platform between the compressors and the flare boom.20
At that moment, approximately 19 seconds after taking off, Kemper and Plaintiff heard a
loud bang and felt the helicopter “yaw” or pull its nose to the left - a motion consistent with loss
of engine power.21 Kemper glanced at his instruments and saw the torque gauge reading high.22
Believing incorrectly that the helicopter’s engine had totally failed, Kemper initiated emergency
14
(Trial Tr. vol.1, 67:23-68:10.)
(Id. at 68:19-69:13.)
16
(Id. at 67:14-22, 75:13-17.)
17
(Id. at 71:5-72:13.)
18
(Id. at 82:11-12.)
19
(Id. at 82:20-22.)
20
(Id. at 82:22-23.)
21
(Id. at 55:22-56:3, 159:13-25, 192:1-3, 339:19-340:4.)
22
(Id. at 60:5-9.)
15
3
landing procedures, by lowering the collective and cutting off power to the engine.23 As a result,
the helicopter fell roughly 120 feet into the water.24 The impact caused the bottom of the
helicopter and Plaintiff’s seat to partially collapse.25
After the helicopter had already hit the water, Kemper pulled the collective back up,
causing the main rotor to spin under the helicopter's fully functional engine.26 The helicopter,
which had landed slightly unevenly, inverted under the torque of the main rotor.27 As the
helicopter turned over, the rotor blades, each of which weighed half as much as a small
automobile, beat against the surface of the water.28 The beating of the blades reverberated into
the cockpit where Plaintiff, the pilot, and the other passenger were still seated.29 The force was
great enough to cause one of the rotor blades to snap off completely.30
After taking on water, the engine died, and the rotor blades stopped spinning.31 As the
cockpit filled with water, Plaintiff could not immediately locate his restraint to unfasten it.32
Plaintiff was “half knocked out;” he blacked out before he was able to free himself.33 He
23
(Id. at 56:2-6, 81:21-82:1.) The collective is a control in the cockpit that increases and
decreases the pitch or angle of the rotor blades, causing the helicopter to either rise or fall. (Id. at
56:25-57:3.) It simultaneously increases or decreases the fuel supply to the engine. (Id. at 116:8117:1.)
24
(Id. at 130:22-131:1.)
25
(Id. at 122:21-124:13, 285:19-25.)
26
(Id. at 129:4-7, 129:13-16.)
27
(Id. at 129:17-19, 121:10-122:7.)
28
(Id. at 122:2-4, 192:6-8.)
29
(Id.)
30
(Trial Tr. vol. 2, 529:2-4.)
31
(See Trial. Tr. vol. 1, 192:10-11.)
32
(Id. at 192:12-13.)
33
(Id. at 192:14-17.)
4
eventually made it out of the helicopter and to the surface of the water, although he does not
remember how.34
After Plaintiff, Kemper, and the other passenger gathered at the surface, a boat took them
to platform 73A for medical treatment.35 Plaintiff immediately noted pain in his upper back and
neck.36 The medical staff placed him in a neck brace.37 Reliving the accident on the platform,
Plaintiff cried openly in public for the first time in his life.38 From platform 73A, a helicopter
transported the accident victims to West Jefferson Hospital where doctors performed a CT scan
and an X-Ray on Plaintiff.39 The hospital discharged Plaintiff approximately two and a half hours
after he had arrived, telling him to follow up with his family doctor if necessary.40
The next morning, Plaintiff woke up in pain.41 His neck and back were hurting, and his
fingers were numb and burning.42 During the next few days, he would also experience
nightmares, sleeplessness, anxiety, and profound sadness.43 Four days after the accident, Plaintiff
was seen by his family doctor, Dr. Andy Watson, who ordered an MRI and referred Plaintiff to
specialists for his various symptoms.44
For the sleeplessness and mental health issues, Dr. Watson referred Plaintiff to a
34
(Id. at 192:20-193:6.)
(Id. at 195:10-15, 227:2-9.)
36
(Id. at 195:10-15.)
37
(Id. at 195:19-24.)
38
(Id. at 195:25-196:3.)
39
(Id. at 227:10-17.)
40
(Id. at 228:7-18.)
41
(Id. at 197:17-19.)
42
(Id. at 197:22-24.)
43
(Id. at 198:1-9.)
44
(Id. at 197:20-25, 199:2-6; Ex. 42.4.)
35
5
psychologist, Dr. Anne Henderson.45 Dr. Henderson referred Plaintiff to a psychiatrist, Dr. Mark
Webb, who was selected by Plaintiff’s worker’s compensation case manager.46 Plaintiff has
treated continuously with Dr. Webb and Dr. Henderson since being referred to each.47 The
doctors have diagnosed Plaintiff with moderate-to-severe depression, severe anxiety, and severe
post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) as a result of the helicopter accident.48 Dr. Henderson has
recommended that Plaintiff treat these symptoms with cognitive behavioral therapy, including
six to twelve sessions of therapy following the trial in this matter.49 Dr. Webb believes that
Plaintiff will benefit from taking oral psychiatric medication through at least 2016.50
Dr. Watson referred Plaintiff to an orthopedist, Dr. Patterson, for his neck and back
pain.51 Dr. Patterson had recommended an active, exercise-oriented therapy regimen.52 However,
a month into seeing Dr. Patterson, Plaintiff switched to a different orthopedic specialist
recommended by his worker’s compensation case manager, Dr. David Lee.53 Dr. Lee
recommended conservative treatments, including oral medication, epidural steroid injections,
and physical therapy.54 This conservative approach only succeeded in relieving Plaintiff’s pain
on a temporary basis.55 Dr. Lee currently recommends that Plaintiff undergo a three-level
45
(Id. at 8:3-4.)
(Id. at 31:8-15.)
47
(Id. at 198:24-29.)
48
(Id. at 9:21-10:14, 15:1-7, 34:10-35:17, 42:10-12.)
49
(Id. at 10:17-25, 21:10-18.)
50
(Id. at 43:2-13, 53:12-24.)
51
(Id. at 199:2-6; Ex. 42.4.)
52
(Id. at 232:2-7.)
53
(Id. at 201:3-5, 232:8-11.)
54
(Id. at 202:8-15.)
55
(Id.)
46
6
cervical discectomy and neck fusion.56
At early visits with Dr. Lee, Plaintiff complained of numbness and tingling in his hand, in
addition to pain in his neck and back.57 After conducting a nerve induction test, Dr. Lee referred
Plaintiff to one specialist, Dr. Talbot, who operated on Plaintiff’s hand.58 After the surgery,
Plaintiff’s hand condition became worse, leading Dr. Lee to refer Plaintiff to another specialist,
Dr. Stokes, who performed a second surgery on Plaintiff’s hand.59 Since that surgery, Plaintiff
has had no trouble with his hand.60
Investigation into this accident revealed that the loud bang and temporary loss of power
that the helicopter experienced during takeoff were the result of a relatively mild compressor
stall.61 Investigation further showed that the MP61A was venting unignited, compressed gas
from its vent boom at roughly the same time as Kemper was taking off from the platform, as a
result of an automated shutdown of the platform’s number one compressor.62
Plaintiff instituted the current action against defendants PHI, Inc., their liability insurer,
Allianz Corporate and Global Specialty, Inc., and the helicopter manufacture, Bell Helicopter
Textron, Inc. on February 13, 2012.63 Plaintiff amended his complaint to name the platform’s
owner, Energy XXI, as a defendant in March 2012.64 On December 21, 2012, the Court granted
56
(Dr. David Lee Depo. 34:1-10, Nov. 6, 2013.)
(Ex. 42.3; Trial Tr. vol. 1, 201:8-13.)
58
(Id. at 201:14-16.)
59
(Id. at 201:17-20.)
60
(Id. at 202:1-4.)
61
(Id. at 124:14-16.)
62
(Ex. 64.)
63
(Rec. Doc. 1.)
64
(Rec. Doc. 8.)
57
7
summary judgment against Plaintiff, on his claims against Bell Helicopter Textron, Inc.65
Plaintiff’s claims of negligence against PHI, Allianz, and Energy XXI were tried before the
Court with no jury on October 28 and 29, 2013.
II. Claims and Defenses
Plaintiff claims against both PHI and Energy XXI under general maritime law for
allegedly negligent acts and omissions that caused his neck, back, hand and wrist injuries, as
well as his depression, anxiety, and PTSD. He seeks to hold PHI liable for its pilot, Jim
Kemper’s, negligence in flying toward the MP61A’s vent boom, failing to properly diagnose and
respond to the helicopter’s mid-flight compressor stall, and failing to properly perform an
emergency landing.66
Plaintiff further seeks damages from Energy XXI’s for its allegedly negligent failure to
warn Kemper that the platform was venting unignited gas at or near the time of takeoff, either
through the platform operators or with an automated visual warning system installed on the
platform.67 Thus, Plaintiff argues that PHI and Energy XXI are jointly and severally liable for the
injuries that he sustained in the March 24, 2011 accident and as a foreseeable result thereof.68
PHI argues that Energy XXI was the lone proximate cause of Plaintiff’s injuries, both
because Kemper was not negligent in any act or omission on March 24, 2011 and also because
Energy XXI’s failure to warn superseded any possible negligence on Kemper’s part.69
65
(Rec. Doc. 60, 64.)
(Rec. Doc. 149 at 2-7.)
67
(Id. at 7-9.)
68
(Id. at 10.)
69
(Rec. Doc. 148 at 8-18.)
66
8
Energy XXI, in turn, argues that Kemper’s negligence was the sole proximate cause of
the March 24 crash.70 It argues that it owed no duty to warn Kemper directly that the platform
was going to vent because the venting occurred after the helicopter was in flight and headed
toward the vent boom.71 Energy XXI further challenges the existence of any duty to install an
automated warning system in light of pervasive industry practice.72
In the event that liability is established, both defendants dispute the amount of general
damages and medical expenses legally caused by the March 24, 2011 crash.73
III. Jurisdiction
The Court has a duty to examine the basis of its subject matter jurisdiction, even when
not prompted to do so by the parties in a particular case.74 Because the basis of jurisdiction has
choice of law implications in the case at bar, the Court hereby renders the following findings
regarding subject matter jurisdiction.
In bringing this cause of action, Plaintiff has invoked this Court’s admiralty/maritime
jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1333 and Rule 9(h) of the Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure.75 Maritime jurisdiction over a tort requires “both a maritime situs and a connection to
traditional maritime activity.”76 Plaintiff’s claims have proper maritime situs because the
70
(Rec. Doc. 152 at 33-49.)
(Id. at 9-26.)
72
(Id. at 26-33.)
73
(Rec. Doc. 148 at 18-20; Rec. Doc. 149 at 49-62.)
74
Menchaca v. Chrysler Credit Corp., 613 F.2d 507, 511 (5th Cir. 1980) (citing 13 C.
Wright, A. Miller & E. Cooper, Federal Practice and Procedure s 3522 (1975)).
75
(Rec. Doc. 1.)
76
Hufnagel v. Omega Serv. Indus., Inc., 182 F.3d 340, 351 (5th Cir. 1999) (emphasis in
original) (citations omitted); accord Executive Jet Aviation, Inc. v. City of Cleveland, 409 U.S.
71
9
defendants’ alleged negligence became operative over navigable waters,77 (allegedly) causing
Plaintiff to sustain injuries when his helicopter crashed into the Gulf.78 Plaintiff’s claims further
have a sufficient nexus to traditional maritime activity because PHI’s helicopter was engaged in
a ferry function traditionally performed by waterborne vessels.79 The fact that PHI was engaged
in a traditional maritime activity extends admiralty jurisdiction to Plaintiff’s claims against
Energy XXI, even though they were not involved in the ferrying.80
IV. Standards for Analysis
With the exercise of general maritime jurisdiction comes the application of substantive
maritime law.81 Traditional principles of tort are applicable under maritime law.82 To establish
maritime negligence, a plaintiff must demonstrate that there was a duty owed to him by the
defendant, a breach of that duty, an injury, and sufficient causal connection between the
defendant’s conduct and the plaintiff's injury.83
Whether a defendant owes a plaintiff a legal duty is a question of law.84 Existence of duty
249, 271 (1972).
77
(Among other vessels that navigated near the MP61A, there was a jack-up barge which
was pictured in a photograph entered into evidence. Ex. 9.1; Trial Tr. vol. 1, 63:1-6.)
78
See Egorov, Puchinsky, Afanasiev & Juring v. Terriberry, Carroll & Yancey, 183 F.3d
453, 456 (5th Cir. 1999) (“In determining whether the tort occurred on navigable water, this
court looks to where the alleged wrong took effect rather than to the locus of the allegedly
tortious conduct.”) (citing Wiedemann & Fransen APLC v. Hollywood Marine, Inc., 811 F.2d
864 (5th Cir.1987); Kuehne & Nagel v. Geosource, Inc., 874 F.2d 283, 288-89 (5th Cir.1989)).
79
Smith v. Pan Air Corp., 684 F.2d 1102, 1112 (5th Cir. 1982); Ledoux v. Petroleum
Helicopters, Inc., 609 F.2d 824, 824 (5th Cir. 1980) (per curiam).
80
Jerome B. Grubart, Inc. v. Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Co., 513 U.S. 527, 541 (1995).
81
East River. S.S. Co. v. TransAmerica DeLeval, Inc., 476 U.S. 858 (1986).
82
Daigle v. Point Landing, Inc., 616 F.2d 825, 827 (5th Cir.1980).
83
Canal Barge Co., Inc. v. Torco Oil Co., 220 F.3d 370, 376 (5th Cir. 2000).
84
Florida Fuels, Inc. v. Citgo Petroleum Corp., 6 F.3d 330, 333 (5th Cir. 1993).
10
is measured by the scope of the risk that conduct foreseeably entails and depends on the
foreseeability of the harm suffered by the complaining party.85 A duty may be owed only with
respect to an interest that is foreseeably jeopardized by negligent conduct.86 Foreseeability is
determined by reference to what an ordinarily prudent person would expect in the defendant’s
position.87
Negligence is actionable, only if it is the legal cause of an injury to the plaintiff.88 Legal
causation requires something more than a “but for” relationship with the injury; the negligence at
issue must be a “substantial factor” in bringing about the injuries complained of.89 In other
words, “some responsibility for the effect must accompany the cause.”90
V. Analysis
A. PHI’s Liability
PHI is liable for any damages negligently caused by its pilot in the course and scope of
his employment under the doctrine of respondeat superior.91 Plaintiff’s claims of Kemper’s
negligence are three-fold and relate to: (1) his decision to fly toward the MP61A’s vent boom,
(2) his erroneous diagnosis of engine failure during the flight, and (3) his failure to properly
85
Canal Barge Co., Inc., 220 F.3d at 377.
In re Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Co. LLC, 624 F.3d 201, 211 (5th Cir. 2010).
87
In re Signal Int’l, LLC, 579 F.3d 478, 492 (5th Cir. 2009).
88
In re Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Co. LLC, 624 F.3d at 213-214 (quoting Donaghey v.
Ocean Drilling Explor. Co., 974 F.2d 646, 649 (5th Cir. 1992)).
89
Id.
90
Chisolm v. Sabine Towing & Transp. Co., Inc., 679 F.2d 60, 63 (5th Cir. 1982).
91
See Stoot v. D & D Catering Serv., Inc., 807 F.2d 1197, 1199 (5th Cir. 1987) (“The
recognized principle of agency law that imposes vicarious liability upon employers for the
wrongful acts committed by employees while acting in the course of their employment is well
ingrained in the general maritime law.”).
86
11
auto-rotate after diagnosing an engine failure.
1. PHI is liable for Kemper’s decision to fly toward the MP61A’s vent boom.
Both Energy XXI and Plaintiff argue that Kemper behaved negligently in choosing to fly
in the general direction of the MP61A’s compressors and vent booms on March 24, 2011.92 They
have argued that Kemper’s training, PHI’s policies, industry recommended practices, and the
circumstances presented combined to impose a duty on Kemper to avoid the flight path that he
ultimately chose.93 PHI argues that Kemper appropriately weighed the risks and benefits
associated with taking off northbound, given that he did not know and was not warned that gas
would definitely be venting at the time of his takeoff.94
Under traditional negligence principles applicable to maritime cases, a helicopter pilot
owes his passengers a duty to exercise reasonable care in providing for their safety.95 The pilot
must exercise reasonable care to protect his passengers against an unreasonable risk of harm
arising out of his services, including the risk of injury from the foreseeable actions of a third
party.96
The question facing the Court is whether Kemper’s flight plan exposed Plaintiff to an
unreasonably great risk that the helicopter would ingest unignited gases thereby resulting in
92
(Rec. Doc. 149 at 5-6; Rec. Doc. 152 at 33-36.)
(Id.)
94
(Rec. Doc. 148 at 14-15.)
95
In re Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Co. LLC, 624 F.3d at 211.
96
See In re Dearborn Marine Serv., Inc., 499 F.2d at 279 (“actionable negligence may
consist of failure to take precautions against foreseeable acts of third persons, and this rule
applies though the conduct of the third person is itself negligent.”) (citing Restatement (Second)
of Torts § 302).
93
12
Plaintiff’s injury. An unreasonably great risk is one that a reasonable pilot in Kemper’s position,
and with Kemper’s level of training and experience, would have chosen to avoid because it
outweighed the utility of the conduct at issue.97
Kemper was trained that unignited gas could vent from a platform “at any time,” in other
words, without warning.98 Kemper’s training referred him to Helicopter Safety AdvisoryRecommended Practice (HSAC-RP) 92-4, which further provides that “un-ignited gas vents can
release reasonably large volumes of methane gas under certain conditions.”99 These conditions
are not enumerated in the advisory, implying that the pilot should always be prepared. PHI’s
General Operations Manual put Kemper on notice that an entire platform might be unsafe for
helicopter operations if it is downwind of the vent boom.100 Even a lay person would understand
that getting closer to the vent boom raises the risk of ingesting harmful gas. Kemper was further
trained to plan his takeoff from a fixed platform “to observe and avoid the area downwind of the
vent, remaining as far away as practicable from the open end of the vent boom.”101 All of these
factors combine to form a general prohibition against flying toward the vent boom at takeoff.
In describing his takeoff route, Kemper testified that he passed directly between the
platform compressors and the vent boom, equidistant from both.102 Doing so would have required
the helicopter to come within approximately 22 feet of the open end of the vent boom, which
97
Restatement (Second) of Torts §§ 289, 291.
(Trial Tr. vol. 1, 75:4-6.)
99
(Exs. 17.1-17.2,53.1, 61.4.)
100
(Ex. 61.4.)
101
(Ex. 53.1) (emphasis in original); (see also Aeronautical Information Manual (AIM),
ch. 10-2-1h2, Ex. 58.6) (stating the same).
102
(Trial Tr. vol. 1, 83:1-13.)
98
13
appears slightly closer than where the helicopter started before takeoff.103 There is perhaps room
to debate whether coming this close to the vent boom was unreasonable, in light of the very
general training and instructions that Kemper received regarding the vent boom’s dangers.
However, based on the evidence presented, the Court finds that Kemper brought the helicopter
much closer to the open end of the vent boom than he actually admitted.
As explained more fully below, a preponderance of the evidence suggests that this
accident was caused by gases vented from the MP61A’s number one compressor automatically
shutting down. Because the capacity of the number one compressor is only 13 cubic feet, it can
only vent for five to six seconds, creating a “plume” of limited area that dissipates within one to
two seconds.104 Under these circumstances, Kemper had to have passed within five feet of the
vent boom for this accident to have happened as the evidence suggests.105 Without question,
Kemper should have known on March 24, 2011, if he did not already,106 that coming this close to
the open end of the vent boom placed his helicopter at extremely high risk of a compressor stall,
among other hazards.107
A reasonable pilot would have concluded that this risk outweighed any possible benefit
from taking off as Kemper had planned. The only utility gained by Kemper’s decision to takeoff
103
104
(See Exs. 9.1, 9.2, & 10.1; Trial Tr. vol. 1, 62:3-65:1; Trial Tr. vol. 2, 533:21-23.)
(Trial Tr. vol. 2, 465:25-469:12; see also id. at 446:4-7; Trial Tr. vol. 1, 170:25-
171:5.)
105
(Trial Tr. vol. 2, 469:11-12.)
When Kemper was asked whether he thought he was far enough from the vent boom
to be safe, he evaded the question, stating that he was not expecting any gas. (Trial Tr. vol. 1,
84:4-9.) The Court draws a negative inference from this response.
107
Kemper was also trained not to come within 13 feet of any hard obstacle. (Trial Tr.
vol. 2, at 352:3-5.)
106
14
northbound was the added engine efficiency of taking off into the prevailing wind.108 However,
he admitted that wind conditions were mild and the helicopter was not carrying a great deal of
weight.109 Under the circumstances, he could have easily taken off using a sidestep maneuver to
fly westward off of the platform before flying northward, into the wind to achieve “translational”
lift.110 Such a takeoff would have avoided the hazard that caused the malfunction in this case
altogether. While PHI’s training indicates that the maneuver should only be used “when
environmental conditions/obstructions leave no other course of action,”111 a reasonable pilot
would have regarded unignited gas as an environmental condition worth avoiding.112 A
reasonable pilot in Kemper’s position would have taken off using the sidestep maneuver.113
This conclusion is bolstered by HSAC-RP 92-4, which cautions pilots to remain “as far
away as practicable from the open end of the vent boom” during takeoff.114 Under this guidance,
a pilot should not come any closer to a vent boom unless there is no “practicable” alternative to
doing so. In this case, the sidestep maneuver constitutes a practicable alternative. Again, this
recommendation is relevant not only as evidence of industry-wide practice, but also because it is
expressly incorporated into PHI’s training and General Operations Manual.115
The facts and circumstances of this case support that Kemper behaved negligently in
108
(Trial Tr. vol. 1, 65:17-22.)
(Id. at 71:2-9.)
110
(See Trial Tr. vol. 1, 72:6-13, 153:4-154:2; Trial Tr. vol. 2, 516:4-7.)
111
(PHI, Inc., Pilot Training Manual, Ex. 62.6.)
112
(Trial Tr. vol. 2, 515:25-516:15.)
113
(Tr. vol. 1, 153:4-154:2.)
114
(Exs. 53.1, Ex. 58.6.)
115
(Ex. 61.4.); Canal Barge Co., 220 F.3d at 377; Johnston v. Pool Co. of Texas, No. 934140, 1994 WL 643113 (E.D. La. Nov. 14, 1994).
109
15
attempting to takeoff almost directly toward the vent boom.116 PHI is therefore liable for any
damages legally caused by that decision.
2. Plaintiff has not shown that Kemper’s decision to abort takeoff was negligent. PHI is
nonetheless liable for damages caused by that decision.
Plaintiff and Energy XXI next argue that Kemper negligently misdiagnosed the engine
malfunction that he experienced shortly after takeoff, leading him to overreact and attempt to
land the helicopter.117 It is undisputed that during the accident, Kemper incorrectly determined
that the helicopter’s engine had failed altogether, when in reality it had stalled temporarily.118
Although Kemper was familiar with compressor stalls before March 24, 2011, it never occurred
to him that the engine might have stalled.119 Plaintiff and Energy XXI argue that Kemper
inadequately consulted his gauges and equipment before determining that he had no engine.120
Without question Kemper should have known that he was experiencing a compressor
stall.121 Nevertheless, Plaintiff has not shown that a reasonable pilot who had experienced a
116
(Trial Tr. vol. 1, 83:14-18.)
(Rec. Doc. 149 at 4; Rec. Doc. 152 at 43.)
118
(Trial Tr. vol. 1, 56:2-4, 58:21-25, 104:2-4.)
119
(Id. at 58:21-59:3.)
120
(Rec. Doc. 149 at 4; Rec. Doc. 152 at 44, 46.)
121
A reasonable pilot would have been able to tell the difference between a stall and an
engine out in an instant. (See Trial Tr. vol. 1, 132:4-8.) As explained by the experts at trial, a
compressor stall and an engine out emergency are different animals. A compressor stall is
indicated by a pop or bang, with a spike in torque and perhaps oscillations in some other related
instrument readings. (Id. at 133:8-16; Trial Tr. vol. 2, 335:9-19, 522; Ex. 7.1.) The helicopter
experts analogized a stall to the backfiring of a car engine. (Trial Tr. vol. 1, 130:6-15; Trial Tr.
vol. 2, 525:2-526:5.) By contrast, an engine out triggers a veritable “Christmas tree” of warning
lights. (Id. at 522:10-14.) There is a caution “ENG OUT” light and an audible siren. (Id. at
519:17-25.) Multiple gauges, including rotor RPM, compressor, power turbine, turbine outlet
temperature, and torque would drop instantaneously. (Id. at 520:12-522:14.) The rotor RPM drop
triggers its own warning light. (Id. at 520:12-18.) The engine failure causes an electrical
117
16
compressor stall when Kemper did would have chosen to keep flying his aircraft.
Emergency landing is the only proper response to total engine failure.122 However, it is
also the appropriate response to a compressor stall big enough to impact the engine’s ability to
generate power.123 A pilot cannot know for certain how big a stall is until he lands and inspects
the engine.124 In the case of any stall, a pilot should ideally reduce engine power and check his
gauges to ascertain the magnitude before deciding whether to keep flying.125
The problem with this advice from Kemper’s perspective is that he may not have had
enough time to reduce power and check his gauges before he needed to decide whether or not he
needed to abort the takeoff. His stall occurred while the helicopter was in forward flight, with its
nose down, traveling at a relatively high rate of speed and low altitude.126 This combination of
altitude and airspeed is commonly referred to as the height/velocity curve, “h/v” curve, or
“deadman’s” curve because the possibility of emergency landing is already very low.127 The fact
that the nose was down increased the risk that an emergency landing would result in casualty or
injury.128 Taking time to properly diagnose the engine’s ability to function might have
generator to fail which triggers a third light. (Id. at 520:22-521:1.)
A reasonable pilot could have immediately recognized that Kemper was experiencing a
stall from the tell-tale pop and the absence of any significant drop-off in instrument readings.
(Ex. 60.69) (listing training in “Simulated Engine Failure” scenarios, “Equipment Examination,”
and “System Malfunctions”).
122
(Trial Tr. vol. 1, 118:16-17.)
123
(Id. at 118:16-17, 135:5-8; Trial Tr. vol. 2, 343:15-18.)
124
(Id. at 343:17-18.)
125
(Id. at 524:6-16; Trial Tr. vol. 1, 176:2-7.)
126
(Id. at 97:1-7161:7-11; Trial Tr. vol. 2, 340:14-25.)
127
(Id.)
128
(Id. at 342:16-20; see also Trial Tr. vol. 1, 97:10-16 )
17
compromised Kemper’s ability to raise the nose if landing proved necessary.129 Lowering the
collective immediately raised the nose and increased the chances of a safe landing on the skids
and fuselage.130 Those parts of the helicopter are at least designed to give way on impact.131
No one suggests that Kemper should have just ignored the stall and kept flying his
helicopter.132 While Plaintiff’s expert, Vaughn Ross, testified that Kemper had time to check his
gauges before he needed to act, he never reconciled this opinion with the actual time constraints
on Kemper’s decision-making.133 Instead, he granted that the altitude was a “big deal” and that
Kemper was in a “tough position” all things considered.134 Meanwhile PHI’s expert, Douglas
Stimpson, testified that a reasonable pilot would not have had time to check his gauges and
would always lower the collective in the case of an engine malfunction to raise the nose and “get
the torque out” of the engine, before doing anything else.135 The Court is ill-equipped to resolve
these conflicting perspectives without more information about the timing issues and Kemper’s
training for this scenario. Under these circumstances, the Court cannot rule out the chance that a
reasonable pilot would have chosen to land the helicopter out of an abundance of caution, even if
he knew that the helicopter’s engine had only stalled.
While this conclusion is fatal to a finding of Kemper’s fault for his decision to land, it
does not excuse PHI from any liability for damages caused by the landing. PHI is vicariously
129
(Trial Tr. vol. 2, 341:21-342:8.)
(Id. at 342:16-20; see also Trial Tr. vol. 1, 117:8-9.)
131
(Trial Tr. vol. 2, 285:19-25.)
132
(Trial Tr. vol. 1, 176:2-7.)
133
(Id. at 132:4-8.)
134
(Id. at 163:4-164:2.)
135
(Trial Tr. vol. 2, 345:7-346:9.)
130
18
liable for the sum total of damage within the scope of, and legally caused by, Kemper’s negligent
decision to fly toward the vent boom. A reasonable pilot would have foreseen that flying toward
the vent boom might necessitate a risky emergency landing, such as this one. As explained
below, the fact that Energy XXI vented gas without providing Kemper a direct warning does not
break this chain of causation. PHI is therefore liable for any injury resulting from this hastily
executed emergency landing.
3. Kemper’s failure to properly “autorotate” was negligent.
Finally, both Plaintiff and Energy XXI have argued that Kemper’s execution of
emergency landing procedures fell below the standard of care expected of commercial helicopter
pilots because he failed to “roll” the throttle to flight idle during the maneuver.136
The emergency landing that Kemper attempted in this case is called “autorotation.”137 It
is a maneuver whereby the pilot shuts down the helicopter’s engine and attempts to land without
it. The helicopter’s descent forces air through the main rotor causing it to spin under the force of
gravity.138 As discussed, the ability to safely autorotate is compromised if the pilot begins in the
H/V curve.139
There are five steps to a proper autorotation. First, the pilot lowers the collective to
eliminate rotor pitch and power to the engine.140 Next, the pilot turns the engine all the way off
136
(Rec. Doc. 149 at 2-4; Rec. Doc. 152 at 44-45.)
(Trial Tr. vol. 1, 56:5-6.)
138
(Id. at 117:13-19.)
139
(Trial Tr. vol. 2, 347:8-19.)
140
(Id. at 117:8-10.)
137
19
by “rolling” the throttle to flight idle.141 Toward the bottom of the descent, the pilot “flares” the
helicopter to further decrease the rate of descent and forward movement.142 Finally, he raises the
collective to allow any residual torque from the engine to cushion the landing.143
If a pilot fails to roll the throttle, the main rotor will spin at full engine power when the
pilot raises the collective.144 The resulting torque can lead to loss of directional control.145 It can
further lead the helicopter to invert or flip over, which actually happened in this case.146 The
helicopter’s flight manual and Kemper’s training called for him to roll the throttle each time he
attempted to autorotate, without exception.147
Kemper has maintained that rolling the throttle to flight idle was not an absolute
requirement.148 Even PHI has not attempted to defend this view.149 PHI argues instead that this
failure was not a legal cause of Plaintiff’s injuries because the helicopter would have inverted
even without the rotor torque.150 The Court does not accept this argument, as it was contradicted
by several witnesses.151 Furthermore, the question is not whether the helicopter would have
141
(Id. at 117:9-10; Trial Tr. vol. 2, 529:8-12.)
(Trial Tr. vol. 1, 117:20-24; Trial Tr. vol. 2, 528:2-3.) The meaning of “flare” was not
explained during trial.
143
(Trial Tr. vol. 1, 118:3-4; Trial Tr. vol. 2, 528:3-4.)
144
(Id. at 346:14-19.)
145
(Id.)
146
(Trial Tr. vol. 1, 118:23-119:3; see also Trial Tr. vol. 2, 357:24-358:2.)
147
(Trial Tr. vol. 1, 119:21-23; Trial Tr. vol. 2, 356:23-25, 529:8-17; see also Ex. 60
(training logs).)
148
(Trial Tr. vol. 1, 57:16-19, 178:15-19.)
149
(Rec. Doc. 148 at 14.)
150
(Rec. Doc. 148 at 14; see Trial Tr. vol. 2, 281:21-282:2.)
151
This argument was directly contradicted by multiple witnesses. (See Trial Tr. vol. 1
121; Trial Tr. vol. 2, 346-47, 358, 528-29.)
142
20
inverted eventually under the natural current of the Gulf. The question is whether the rotor
torque caused the helicopter to flip over violently, contributing to Plaintiff’s injuries in this case.
Finally, PHI’s expert, Douglas Stimpson, attempted to defend Kemper by arguing that no
pilot, himself included, would have had time to roll the throttle to flight idle under the
circumstances present on March 24, 2011.152 However, this opinion was contradicted by the
circumstances. Kemper had 10 seconds of descent within which to act.153 Moreover, the throttle
that Kemper was supposed to “roll” is located on the collective that he had to manipulate to
begin autorotation in the first place.154 A reasonable pilot in his position would have been able to
operate it during that time.
Kemper was unquestionably negligent for failing to roll the throttle in this case. PHI is
therefore vicariously liable for damages incurred as a result of his failure to do so.
B. Energy XXI’s Liability
Plaintiff claims that Energy XXI was negligent for failing to warn Kemper, either directly
or through an automated warning system, that its platform was venting unignited, compressed
gas when the helicopter took off.
The parties have not identified, and the Court has been unable to locate, a body of case
152
(Id. at 357:19-23.) Plaintiff argues that this testimony is irrelevant because Kemper
would have made the wrong choice no matter how much time he had. (Rec. Doc. 149 at 3.)
While the inability of a reasonable pilot to roll the throttle in the time allotted does not serve to
defeat Kemper’s negligence in failing to even attempt to roll the throttle, it fatally undermines
causation, in that Kemper would not have had time to roll the throttle, even if he had not
unreasonably ruled out the possibility of a stall.
153
(Trial Tr. vol. 1, 160:20-23; Ex. 8.7.)
154
(Trial Tr. vol. 1, 116:9-10.)
21
law dealing specifically with the duties of a platform owner to its business invitees under general
maritime law.155 PHI has suggested that Energy XXI’s liability should be analyzed under
Louisiana law because state law serves to fill any gaps in general maritime law.156 However, the
Court need not look to state law to analyze a platform owner's duties to its business invitees; a
much simpler analogy exists under controlling precedent.
The Fifth Circuit has treated a slip owner like the owner of a vessel for purposes of
determining the nature and scope of the slip owner's duty to warn.157 Because a platform owner is
a landowner for purposes of the general maritime law, like the slip owner,158 it follows that the
platform owner's duties would be governed by the same principles. Under this analogy, the
owner of a fixed platform owes a duty of ordinary care to its business invitees, which includes a
duty to warn of harm that is reasonably foreseeable.159 “The circumstances of the danger and the
155
The reasons for this gap in the extant case law are simple. The Outer Continental Shelf
Lands Act (OCSLA) “defines the body of law applicable” to fixed platforms in the outer
continental shelf and commands the application of the laws of the adjacent state to claims filed
under its auspices. Rodrigue v. Aetna Casualty and Surety Co., 395 U.S. 352, 365-66 (1969).
Although OCSLA does not displace general maritime law where both could apply, it often
governs platform-related tort claims because there is no maritime jurisdiction over injuries that
occur on a platform. Hufnagle v. Omega Serv. Indus., Inc., 182 F.3d 340, 350, 351-52 (5th Cir.
1999). Notwithstanding Jerome B. Grubart, supra platforms present an infrequent opportunity
for the application of maritime law. Cf. id.
156
(Rec. Doc. 148 at 8.)
157
See Casaceli v. Martech Intern., Inc., 774 F.2d 1322, 1331 (5th Cir. 1985) (citing
Daigle v. Point Landing, Inc., 6161 F.2d 825, 827 (5th Cir. 1980)).
158
See, e.g., Offshore Logistics, Inc. v. Tallentire, 477 U.S. 207, 218-19 (1986).
159
Casaceli, 774 F.2d at 1328-29; accord Kermarec v. Compagnie Generale
Transatlantique, 358 U.S. 625, 630 (1959) (“It is a settled principle of maritime law that a
shipowner owes the duty of exercising reasonable care towards those lawfully aboard the vessel
who are not members of the crew.”); see also Florida Fuels, Inc. v. Citgo Petroleum Corp., 6
F.3d 330, 335 (5th Cir. 1993) (wharfowner owes any business invitee on his property the duty to
exercise reasonable care in all the circumstances).
22
defendant’s knowledge of the risk determine the required degree of care.”160
1. Energy XXI had no opportunity to warn Kemper directly that gas was venting.
As previously stated, this accident was caused by gas that vented when the MP61A’s
number one compressor automatically shut down at approximately 5 P.M. Platform personnel
have consistently maintained that this compressor shutdown was the source of the gas ingested
by Kemper’s helicopter since the initial investigation.161 The only evidence suggesting otherwise
is the MP61A’s flare and venting report, which indicates that another 132,000 cubic feet of
compressed gas was vented from the platform at some point on March 24, 2011 for “[t]esting,
[u]nloading, [and] [c]leaning” purposes.162 Platform personnel have disavowed knowledge of any
such venting at the time that Kemper’s helicopter was operating on the platform.163 While they
may be partial to Energy XXI’s interests, it is equally probable that they are telling the truth and
this venting happened at a different time, when neither they nor PHI’s helicopter were present.
The MP61A has a horn to alert platform operators when platform equipment like the
number one compressor automatically shuts down.164 The main purpose of the horn is to prompt
the operator to service the equipment and bring it back on line.165 Plaintiff and PHI argue that the
platform operators on board the MP61A negligently failed to warn Kemper that the platform was
venting unignited gas just before it caused the compressor stall that led him to attempt an
160
Casaceli, 774 F.2d at1329 (citations omitted).
(Trial Tr. vol. 2, 388-390.)
162
(Ex. 14.1.)
163
(Trial Tr. vol. 2, 409:7-18, 418:13-18, 427:25-428:5, 449:16-21.)
164
(Id. at 380:6-381:1.)
165
(Id. at 381:10-22.)
161
23
emergency landing.166 Energy XXI argues that its employees could not have breached a duty to
warn Kemper because the venting occurred while the helicopter was already airborne, moments
before it passed by the vent boom.167 The parties dispute whether this shutdown occurred well
enough in advance of Kemper’s takeoff to impose a duty on Energy XXI to warn him or make
breach of that duty a causal factor in Plaintiff’s injuries.
As an initial matter, notwithstanding the timing issue, any duty to warn a pilot directly
would depend on an operator’s knowledge, actual or constructive, that the pilot was attempting
to takeoff during the limited window in which the gas posed a threat.168 As explained below, that
window was only seconds long. Here, the platform operators neither knew nor had reason to
know that Kemper would be departing during that window. They could not see the helicopter
from the master control center.169 While apparently, they could hear it, there is no indication the
sound of the helicopter told them what it was doing from moment to moment. Kemper never
turned off the helicopter because it was “hot fueling.”170 Kemper’s only “green deck” request
came before he landed on the platform, some 7 minutes before he took off.171 Finally, the
platform operators were not air traffic controllers, and PHI’s pilots did not treat them as such.172
When the alarm sounded to indicate the compressor shut down, no one expected their first
166
(Rec. Doc. 148 at 8; Rec. Doc. 149 at 7-8.)
(Rec. Doc. 152 at 8.)
168
Cf. Daigle, 161 F.2d at 828 (finding no duty to warn where ship’s master could not
see the plaintiff because master had neither knew nor had reason to suspect that his maneuvering
endangered the plaintiff).
169
(Trial Tr. vol. 2, 419:19-420:4.)
170
(Trial Tr. vol. 1, 88:10-22.)
171
(Id. at 93:18-20.)
172
(See id. at 169:8-15.)
167
24
reaction to be determining what Kemper’s helicopter was doing; they had a duty to respond to
the compressor shutdown.173 On these facts, the Court finds no duty for the platform operators to
warn Kemper.
Furthermore, Plaintiff has not proven that this alleged failure to warn even contributed to
this accident. The accident happened approximately 7 seconds after the helicopter went into
forward flight from its 10-foot hover.174 To avoid this accident, Kemper would have needed to
receive a direct warning before he committed to taking off into the prevailing wind. One expert
testified that from the moment an operator is alerted to a compressor shutdown, it takes, at most,
7 seconds for gas to vent and dissipate into the atmosphere.175 This means that the platform
operators heard an alarm either at the same time as Kemper was entering forward flight or
shortly thereafter. This would not have allowed them to issue a warning to Kemper over the
radio. Although some of the evidence contradicted this time estimate,176 it does not persuade the
Court that the operators’ collective omission is causally related to this accident.
2. Energy XXI had no duty to install an automated warning system to warn Kemper that gas was
venting.
Plaintiff and PHI have also argued that Energy XXI was negligent for failing to install a
lighted warning system to warn pilots of imminent venting in the event of automated compressor
173
(Trial Tr. vol. 2, 381:10-22.)
(Id. at 511:18-21.)
175
Mr. Smith testified that it would take the compressor 5.5 seconds to vent its contents
leaving a plume capable of causing a stall for approximately 1 to 2 seconds. (Id. at 467:21-25,
495:6-16.)
176
The operators testified from memory that they remembered seeing the helicopter go
down approximately 20 seconds after they heard the alarm. (Id. at 423:23-25.)
174
25
shutdowns.177 However, Plaintiff fails to establish that Energy XXI owed a duty for his safety to
install such a system.
The evidence presented belies any notion that warning systems of this kind have been
adopted industry-wide. None of the witnesses, in their near-century of combined experience
working on oil platforms had ever seen such a warning system installed.178 Nor has Plaintiff
pointed to any industry guidelines recommending their installation.179 The aviation guidance that
Plaintiff has provided only cautions platform owners to install and, pilots to be on the lookout
for, a visual warning in the case of “large scale” or “high volume” venting.180 The 13 cubic feet
of gas released automatically by the MP61A’s number one compressor does not qualify as “large
scale” or “high volume.”181
More to the point, Energy XXI only owed a duty to install a rotating red beacon or some
other form of visual warning system insofar as it was foreseeable that a pilot would ignore his
training and deliberately fly toward the vent boom.182 A premises owner is under no general
obligation to warn his invitees of risks about which they are equally knowledgeable.183 Kemper
was well acquainted with the risk that unignited gas could automatically vent leading to the
situation that he experienced on March 24, 2011. He was further adequately trained to avoid that
177
(Rec. Doc. 148 at 11; Rec. Doc. 149 at 8-9.)
(Trial Tr. vol 2, 427:12-15, 449:10-15, 471:19-472:1.)
179
(Id. at 472:2-7.)
180
(Exs. 53.1, 58.7.)
181
(Trial Tr. vol. 2, 446:4-7, 469:3-6.)
182
Daigle, 6161 F.2d at 827.
183
See, e.g., Hite v. Maritime Overseas Corp., 380 F. Supp. 222, 226 & n.9 (E.D. Tex.
1974) (collecting cases); see also Restatement (Second) of Torts § 343A.
178
26
risk. Energy XXI had no reason to expect he would ignore his training.
Finally, given that it takes a pilot as much or more time to make it from the helipad to the
vent boom as it does for the platform to vent gas after the alarm sounds, a visual warning system
would not help pilots on the MP61A avoid danger. On the contrary, as Energy XXI has argued, it
would lull pilots into a false sense of security regarding approaching the vent boom, thereby
increasing the danger to careless pilots like Kemper. The current policy of forbidding pilots to
fly anywhere near the vent boom is clearly preferable and apparently sufficient to prevent
accidents, if properly followed.
In light of the foregoing, Energy XXI is not liable to Plaintiff for the commission of any
maritime tort. As PHI is the only party liable to Plaintiff for negligence, the Court need not
address PHI’s claims of superseding negligence vis-a-vis Energy XXI.
D. Damages
Having determined that liability issues in this case, the Court must determine whether
there is a causal nexus between PHI’s negligence and the various injuries noted in Plaintiff’s
complaint. Plaintiff seeks to recover for past and future mental, cervical, and hand/wrist pain and
suffering, medical expenses, and lost wages and income.184 PHI disputes all aspects of the
damages claimed.185
1. Psychological Damages
Plaintiff has shown by a preponderance of the evidence that he has suffered and will
184
185
(Rec. Doc. 149 at 10-26.)
(Rec. Doc. 148 at 19.)
27
suffer mental pain and suffering as a result of this accident. He began suffering nightmares,
anxiety, and sleeplessness immediately after.186 He experiences flashbacks of the accident, vivid
nightmares, phobias, memory issues, panic attacks, and crying episodes.187 He is terrified of the
sensation of water above his neck level, which causes him to avoid showers.188 He can still hear
the sound of the rotor blades beating against the water, from when he was trapped in the
cockpit.189 Plaintiff experiences triggers that remind him of the accident on a near daily basis.190
Needless to say, Plaintiff had none of these symptoms before the accident.191
Drs. Henderson and Webb have diagnosed Plaintiff with severe anxiety, mild-to-severe
depression, and severe post-traumatic stress disorder.192 Both doctors linked the onset of these
conditions to Plaintiff’s accident on March 24, 2011.193 The lingering impact of these conditions
on Plaintiff’s life has been at once wide-ranging and acute. Plaintiff has lost interest in the
activities of life and withdrawn from society.194 He has nightmares of home invasion so vivid
that he sleeps with a shotgun in his hand.195 One night he almost shot a friend trying to enter his
home.196 He is afraid to operate a motor vehicle in any amount of traffic.197 Plaintiff’s
186
(Trial Tr. vol. 1, 198:1-9, 203:8-204:14.)
(Id. at 42:13-16, 195:25-196:5, 203:8-204:14.)
188
(Id. at 204:21-25.)
189
(Id. at 204:18-20.)
190
(Id. at 12:10-12, 38:11-39:4.)
191
(See generally id. at 193-207.)
192
(Id. at 9:21-10:16, 15:1-7, 34:10-35:17, 42:10-12.)
193
(Id. at 19:19-22, 45:20-46:2.)
194
(Id. at 15:10-14, 35:1-6, 42:13-16..)
195
(Id. at 207:2-5.)
196
(Id. at 207:8-13.)
197
(Id. at 206:9-14.)
187
28
sleeplessness and interpersonal trust deficits contributed to his break-up with his girlfriend.198
These symptoms will never fully subside.199
The Court is satisfied there is a causal link between Plaintiff’s psychological condition
and this accident. Further, regardless of how others might have reacted to this accident, or have
in fact reacted to it, it is clear that Plaintiff was severely traumatized.
The parties have stipulated to an amount for past medical expenses that incorporates his
past treatments for this condition.200 Regarding future treatment, Plaintiff will likely experience
the effects of PTSD for the rest of his life.201 However, he will most likely reach maximum
psychiatric improvement from his relationship with Dr. Webb in March 2016, five years from
the date of this accident.202 Dr. Henderson anticipates that Plaintiff will need at most twelve more
sessions following trial.203 Plaintiff has stipulated to the cost of future treatment calculated by
PHI’s vocational expert, which is not itemized in terms of mental health expenditures.204
Under the circumstances, the Court will award $400,000 total in general damages for
these psychological injuries, with $350,000 allocated toward past mental pain and suffering and
$50,000 allocated toward future mental pain and suffering. While Plaintiff will continue to suffer
under the weight of this accident, he appears to have made significant strides through his
treatment with Drs. Webb and Henderson. The Court makes this observation both based on the
198
(Id. at 205:17-206:1.)
(Id. at 53:18-21.)
200
(Ex. 40.1.)
201
(Id. at 53:18-21.)
202
(Id. at 42:2-13.)
203
(Id. at 21:10-20, 28:19-29:10.)
204
(Ex. 77 at 5.)
199
29
doctors’ testimony and Plaintiff’s demeanor and composure as he recounted this incident at trial.
2. Physical Damages: Cervical Spine
Plaintiff has further proven injury to his cervical spine as a result of this accident. He told
medical staff on board Energy XXI’s platform about his neck pain immediately after the accident
and received a neck brace.205 The morning after, he “felt like he had been in a fight.”206 His neck
and back hurt and he had pain and numbness radiating into his fingers.207 The Monday following
the accident, Plaintiff had an appointment with his family doctor, Dr. John Watson, wherein he
noted these symptoms.208 According to his treating orthopedist, Plaintiff was in “a lot of pain”
when he first sought treatment and has maintained some complaints of pain throughout his
treatment.209 Epidural steroid injections have only succeeded in relieving this pain on a
temporary basis.210 Physical therapy has similarly proven ineffective.211 According to the only
evidence presented, Plaintiff has no previous history of these symptoms.212
a. Causation of Injury
Dr. Lee attributes these symptoms to herniation at the C3-4 disc, partial collapsing of the
C4-5 and C5-6 discs, and a likely strain of Plaintiff’s back muscles as he tried to wiggle out of
his helicopter restraint.213 Dr. Lee testified that the partial collapsing at C5-6 had resulted in
205
(Trial Tr. vol. 1, 195:10-24.)
(Id. at 197:17-19.)
207
(Id. at 197:21-198:2.)
208
(Ex. 42.)
209
(Lee Dep. 23:16-24:6, 55:15-20.)
210
(Trial. Tr. vol. 1, 202:8-203:1.)
211
(Id. at 202:16-19.)
212
(Lee Dep. 50:12-22, 78:2-79:1.)
213
(Lee Dep. 10:25-11:16, 15:6-16, 47:15-48:4, 50:12-51:15, 55:15-18.)
206
30
nerve root impingement or compression, while the protrusion at C3-4 was pushing the spinal
fluid away from his spinal cord.214 According to Dr. Lee, the helicopter accident on March 24,
2011 more likely than not caused the herniation at C3-4.215 While Dr. Lee described the
collapsing at C4-5 and C5-6 as “arthritic,” “degenerative,” and pre-existing, he opined that the
fall in the helicopter had aggravated the condition.216
PHI disputes Dr. Lee’s opinion that the helicopter accident caused or even contributed to
any condition observed in Plaintiff’s cervical spine, relying on the testimony of its
biomechanical engineer and physician, Dr. Robert Banks.217 Dr. Banks opined that Plaintiff’s
injuries could not have been caused by the incident given the forces applied during the fall and
the absence of traumatic injury to Plaintiff’s lower or lumbar spine.218
The Court was not impressed with Dr. Banks’s testimony. His previous study of
autorotations is not relevant given the flawed nature of the autorotation at issue in this case.219
The helicopter came down much harder than it was supposed to.220 Dr. Banks had no reliable,
scientific basis for his estimate of the forces applied during the landing.221 As the Court indicated
at trial, Dr. Banks’s opinion that Plaintiff could not have injured his cervical spine at all without
“disrupting” or fracturing a vertebrae in his lumbar spine was “junk science.”222 He had never
214
(Id. at 20:7-21:1.)
(Id. at 66:24-67:4.)
216
(Id.)
217
(Rec. Doc. 148 at 19.)
218
(Id. at 310:21-311:3, 316:25-317:3.)
219
(Id. at 293:24-294:2.)
220
(Id. at 346:3-9.)
221
(Id. at 318:5-319:3.)
222
(Id. at 296:6-7.)
215
31
actually tested the impact of “vertical loading” on the cervical spine.223 He was extrapolating
generously from basic laws of physics.224
Although Plaintiff fell from his porch fracturing his ankle a month after this accident, the
evidence does not support that this contributed to Plaintiff’s pain or injury.225 Plaintiff’s
complaints of neck pain have been consistent and followed immediately after this accident.226
The Court further accepts Dr. Lee’s opinion that the rib fractures observed on Plaintiff’s X-rays
predate this accident and were visible in his West Jefferson Hospital X-ray.227 Plaintiff did not
fracture his ribs falling from his front porch. Based on this evidence, the Court finds that the
helicopter accident legally caused Plaintiff’s cervical injuries and pain.
Considering the facts of this case, the Court will award general damages in the amount of
$200,000, with $175,000 allocated toward past damages and $25,000 allocated toward future
damages. Plaintiff has described his neck pain as more of an ache than a shooting pain.228 While
it is still bad enough to impact his quality of life, it is no longer as bad as in the immediate
aftermath of the accident.229 Additional treatment should remedy any residual pain.
b. Treatment/Expenses
In the event that causation is satisfied, the parties have stipulated to an amount of past
223
(Id. at 325:20-22.)
(Id. at 295:22-296:1.)
225
(Trial Tr. vol. 1, 200:2-25.)
226
(See, e.g., id. at 195:10-24; Ex. 42.)
227
(Lee Dep. 56:18-57:8.)
228
(Ex. 42.1.)
229
(See Lee Dep. 69:6-11, 71:3-11.)
224
32
medical expenses that incorporates Plaintiff’s cervical spine medication and treatments.230
Regarding future expenses, there is great dispute.
Based on Plaintiff’s age, the nature of his condition, and his professed inability to find
relief from therapy, exercise, and epidural injections, Dr. Lee recommends that Plaintiff undergo
three-level discectomy at C3-4, C4-5 and C5-6 and neck fusion surgery.231 PHI contests the
necessity of this procedure to alleviate Plaintiff’s pain. It cites Dr. Nutik’s observation that
Plaintiff’s descriptions of pain are general and his inability to detect nerve root compression.232
However, Dr. Lee testified that herniation and disc collapsing could cause pain without nerve
root compression.233 Further, he did detect nerve root compression at C5-6 that he believed was
contributing to Plaintiff’s pain.234 The surgery was primarily intended to alleviate that pain.235
Moreover, Dr. Lee’s surgery recommendation was only partially related to pain relief and
nerve root decompression. It was also based on the need to relieve pressure from the anterior
surface of the spinal cord at C3-4.236 He expressed concern that if Plaintiff’s herniation at C3-4
were to worsen at all, it could lead to serious health problems like chronic pneumonia, partial
paralysis, and bladder incontinence.237 Dr. Nutik did not grapple with this part of Dr. Lee’s
opinion. Accordingly, the Court finds the surgery recommended by Dr. Lee to be both necessary
230
(See Ex. 40.)
(Id. at 34:3-20, 35:4-17, 67:22-68:1.)
232
(Trial Tr. vol. 1, 260:4-61:14.)
233
(Lee Dep. 49:4-24.)
234
(Lee Dep. 20:7-21:1, 61:18-62:9.)
235
(Id. at 68:18-24.)
236
(Lee Dep. 68:6-13.)
237
(See id. at 20:11-21:1, 22:15-23:3.)
231
33
and causally related to the accident in this case.238 The Court will award the $55,000 estimated
by Dr. Lee to be necessary for surgery, along with any associated expenses conveyed to PHI’s
vocational expert.239
3. Physical Damages: Carpal Tunnel
Plaintiff has shown injuries to his hand and wrist as a result of this accident. Days after
the accident, Plaintiff felt numbness in his right hand.240 At his early visits with Dr. Lee, he noted
these symptoms.241 After conducting a nerve induction test, Dr. Lee diagnosed Plaintiff with
carpal tunnel syndrome and referred him to a specialist, Dr. Paul Talbot.242 In October 2011, Dr.
Talbot performed carpal tunnel decompression surgery on Plaintiff.243
After the surgery, Plaintiff’s hand became worse; Plaintiff could not zip his pants, button
his collar, or text on his mobile phone.244 This led Dr. Lee to refer Plaintiff to another specialist,
Dr. Harold Stokes.245 In his evaluation, Dr. Stokes noted “atrophic changes” in Plaintiff’s right
hand, meaning that Plaintiff was losing muscle in his hand in a process that might have become
irreversible.246 This led Dr. Stokes to diagnose severe carpal tunnel syndrome and perform a
second surgery on April 2, 2012.247 This second surgery has succeeded in reversing the atrophic
238
(See id. 47:21-48:4) (“I think the helicopter crash is why he’s going to have the
surgery.”).
239
(See Lee Dep. 39:2-14; Ex. 77.)
240
(Ex. 42.3.)
241
(Trial Tr. 201:8-13; Lee Dep. 9:16-20.)
242
(Id. at 201:8-16; see also Lee Dep. 28:14-20.)
243
(Ex. 33; Dr. Harold Stokes Dep. 10, Oct. 21, 2013.)
244
(Trial Tr. vol. 1, 201:17-19.)
245
(Id. at 201:20-25.)
246
(Stokes Dep. 11:16-12:22, 13:1-3.)
247
(Id. at 12:23-25, 17:16-21.)
34
changes in Plaintiff’s hand. Since the surgery, Plaintiff has had no trouble with the hand.248
Dr. Stokes has testified that trauma, such as the impact of the helicopter accident on
March 24, 2011, can result in carpal tunnel syndrome.249 He believes that Plaintiff’s carpal tunnel
syndrome was more likely than not caused by the March 24th accident.250 Plaintiff testified that
he never had hand and wrist issues before this incident.251 Against this backdrop, the Court finds
that Plaintiff has established causation.
As with Plaintiff’s other injuries, the parties have stipulated to the amount of past
medical bills incurred as a result of carpal tunnel syndrome.252 No future medical expenses are
anticipated.253 The Court will award an additional $15,000 in general damages to compensate
Plaintiff for the inconvenience of temporary losing the use of his right hand and the stress of not
knowing whether that loss was permanent.
4. Economic Damages
Finally, Plaintiff has proven economic injury as a result of this accident. At the time of
his accident, Plaintiff was an A Operator with Wood Group, earning $73,165 per year after taxes
and unreimbursed business expenses.254
As a result of this accident, Plaintiff will be psychologically unable to return to offshore
248
(Trial Tr. vol. 1, 202:3-4, 231:10-14; Stokes Dep. 19:8-20.)
(Id. at 19:21-23.)
250
(Id. at 19:24-20:4.)
251
(Id. at 184:2-5.)
252
(See Ex. 40. )
253
(See Stokes Dep. 19:12-16) (describing discharge of Plaintiff from care).
254
(Ex. 78 at 7); see Culver v. Slater Boat Co., 722 F.2d 114, 117 (5th Cir. 1983) (“a
fact-finder should subtract amounts the wage earner would have been required to pay, such as
income tax and work expenses” from a calculation of lost income).
249
35
work for the rest of his life.255 Plaintiff was temporarily unable to work anywhere as a result of
his post-traumatic stress disorder.256 Dr. Webb cleared Plaintiff to return to non-offshore work in
August of 2013.257 Immediately after the accident, Plaintiff’s family doctor concluded that he
was physically unable to work.258 As of trial in this matter, Plaintiff had not been released by his
treating orthopedist to return to work.259 In light of these findings, the Court accepts Dr. J. Stuart
Wood’s calculation of Plaintiff’s past lost earnings and will award Plaintiff damages in the
amount of $131,935.22.260
Dr. Lee believes that Plaintiff will reach maximum medical recovery 90 days after his
surgery.261 At that time, he will release Plaintiff to return to work.262 Dr. Webb noted that there
may be some side-effects to Plaintiff’s psychiatric medication which prevent him from holding
certain kinds of jobs in the near future.263 Nevertheless, and notwithstanding Plaintiff’s own
opinions about his ability to return to work,264 the Court finds that Plaintiff will be both
psychologically and physically capable of obtaining gainful employment 90 days after his
surgery is completed. Whether he chooses to do so is his decision.
When Plaintiff does return to work, he will, more likely than not, be making minimum
255
(Trial Tr. vol. 1, 19:25-20:22.)
(Id. at 35:18-23.)
257
(Id. at 45:1-11.)
258
(Ex. 42.4.)
259
(Lee Dep. 41:6-12.)
260
(Ex. 78 at 8.)
261
(Id. at 41:22-42:1.)
262
(Id. at 42:12-22.)
263
(Id. at 43:16-25.)
264
(Trial Tr. vol. 1, 208:18-19.)
256
36
wage. As Mr. Meunier noted in his report, the higher paying work that Plaintiff could do given
his skills and education is mostly farming, repair, maintenance, construction, and installation
work.265 Plaintiff will be permanently restricted from stooping, climbing ladders, and bending
even after he has his surgery, which will likely prevent him from working in those fields.266
Plaintiff’s chances of earning above minimum wage are therefore unfavorable.
Neither of the economic experts has offered an estimate of Plaintiff’s lost future earnings
in light of his inability to return to work until 90 days after his back surgery.267 However, it is
Plaintiff’s burden to prove the amount by which his lost wages exceed Dr. Wood’s estimates,
which are based on Plaintiff returning to work on January 1, 2014. In the absence of such proof,
the Court will adopt Dr. Wood’s estimate and award $450,916.90 in lost future earnings.268
VI. Conclusion
PHI is solely liable for the psychological, physical, and economic injuries that Plaintiff
sustained on March 24, 2011. Those injuries included depression, anxiety, post-traumatic stress
disorder, cervical spine injury and aggravation of pre-existing degenerative condition, medical
expenses, and finally lost wages and earning potential. As such, Plaintiff is entitled to recover
$1,324,656.24 from PHI, as explained above and specifically itemized below. Judgment shall
enter accordingly.
265
(Ex. 71 at 4-5; see also Ex. 77 at 7-8.) This is not to say that there are no higher
paying jobs that Plaintiff could do. However, given the rarity of these jobs, it appears more likely
than not that Plaintiff will actually have an entry level job paying at or near the minimum wage.
266
(Lee Dep. 44:9-45:17.)
267
(See Exs. 72, 78.)
268
(Ex. 78 at 13.)
37
General Damages
A. Past Mental Pain and Suffering:
$350,000.00
B. Future Mental Pain and Suffering:
$50,000.00
C. Past Physical Pain and Suffering (Neck,
hand, and wrist):
$190,000.00
D. Future Physical Pain and Suffering
(Neck):
$25,000.00
Medical Expenses
E. Past Medical Expenses:
$50,113.48
F. Future Medical Expenses:
$76,690.64
Economic Damages
G. Past Lost Earnings:
$131,935.22
H. Future Lost Earnings:
$450,916.90
TOTAL:
$1,324,656.24
New Orleans, Louisiana, this 16th day of July, 2014.
___________________________________
HELEN G. BERRIGAN
UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
38
Disclaimer: Justia Dockets & Filings provides public litigation records from the federal appellate and district courts. These filings and docket sheets should not be considered findings of fact or liability, nor do they necessarily reflect the view of Justia.
Why Is My Information Online?