Fate of $3 million fracking damage award for the Parrs of Texas in judge’s hands

Fate of $3 million fracking damage award for Texas couple in judge’s hands by David Hasemyer, June 18, 2014, InsideClimate News
A Texas judge will soon decide whether to accept a jury’s $2.9 million award to a Wise County family who claims to have been sickened by emissions from the gas and oil wells surrounding their home. In April, a Dallas County jury found that Aruba Petroleum, a Plano, Texas, company, “intentionally created a private nuisance” that affected the health of Jim and Lisa Parr and their daughter. … More than 100 wells have been drilled within 2 miles of the Parrs’ Decatur, Texas ranch, 60 miles northwest of Dallas. One of Aruba’s arguments is that it owns only 22 of those wells, so the emissions could have come from one of its competitors’ wells.

If County Judge Mark Greenberg decides in the Parrs’ favor, legal experts say the case could establish new legal standards that would benefit people who are fighting the industry. But another Texas case, decided nearly two decades ago, is cause for caution. In 1996, eight families, also from Wise County, contended their water wells were contaminated by natural gas and hydrogen sulfide, and they sued Mitchell Energy, a major natural gas producer. The families alleged Mitchell had allowed the hydrogen sulfide to seep into the groundwater that fed their wells. A jury awarded them $200 million in damages, but the verdict was later overturned by the Texas Supreme Court. Among other things, the court said there wasn’t enough evidence to prove the water pollution in the wells came from Mitchell’s operation.

“I see that as harbinger of what will happen in this current case,” said William Anaya, a Chicago attorney who often represents the oil and gas industry and says oil and gas production is safe. “Somehow something was allowed to scare the jury. They got mad and returned the award.”

The appellate process is intended to allow a dispassionate and analytical review of the facts of a case, Anaya said, and he expects the Texas appellate courts won’t allow the trial’s emotional testimony to become a factor in deciding the case.

The possibility that her family’s legal victory may be fleeting doesn’t bother Lisa Parr. “It doesn’t matter what happens, because in my heart I know that a jury of my peers heard the case and decided we were subjected to the negligence and nuisance of this company,” she said. “You can’t take that away from us.” [Emphasis added]

This entry was posted in Global Frac News, Other Legal. Bookmark the permalink.