SHELLY D. DICK, District Judge.
Before the Court are Motions to Dismiss, brought pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, by Defendants Chesapeake Energy Corporation and Chesapeake Operating LLC (collectively "Chesapeake")
On February 16, 2015, John Cameron Watson, the driver of a 2001 Dodge Ram pickup truck, and two passengers, Michael Todd Ryder and Herbert Paul Barras, were killed when their vehicle was struck by a Union Pacific train at a private grade crossing in De Soto Parish, Louisiana.
Plaintiffs allege that the decedents were returning from a lunch break in route to a pipeline jobsite when the accident occurred. Decedents were the fourth car in a line of cars traveling east on Private Drive in route to the pipeline jobsite. According to the Complaint, "[t]o access the pipeline job site from Private Drive, a motorist must first turn east on Private Drive from LA Hwy. 5, then travel approximately 70 feet on a gravel road to a railroad-highway at-grade crossing.... After traveling over the Private Crossing the motorist would travel approximately 85 feet to a cattle guard, fence, and interlocked gate. At that point, the interlocked gate would have to be manually unlocked and opened for a motorist to continue onto the pipeline job site. The gate is interlocked with locks from Defendants Kinder Morgan, Chesapeake and Earthstone."
The decedent's vehicle was stopped on the crossing while waiting for the lead motorist to unlock the gate. It was then that the fatal accident occurred.
When deciding a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss, "[t]he `court accepts all wellpleaded facts as true, viewing them in the light most favorable to the plaintiff.'"
Movants urge dismissal arguing that they owed no legal duty to the decedents. Movants contend that no legal duty exists because no ease of association exists between movants the movant's action in locking the gate and the harm encountered by the decedents. Movants ask the Court to determine the element of foreseeability, or scope of the risk, based on the four corners of the Plaintiffs' Complaint. The Court declines movants' invitation to make policy determinations at this early stage in the proceedings. The facts pled, and taken as true at this stage, allege that movants' controlled access along Private Drive by means of a locked gate which was 85 feet from a private grade crossing. The Complaint further alleges that the movants may be parties to a private crossing agreement with the railroad, a fact which, if developed, may be informative of foreseeability and duty. The allegations, and reasonable inferences therefrom, satisfy the plausibility standard.
Movants further argue that the Plaintiffs fail to allege that the decedents were employees, independent contractors, or invitees of Movant's and, thus, assert that no duty was owed to the decedents.
Movants further maintain that Plaintiffs have failed to plead facts which would plausibly demonstrate a duty under Louisiana Civil Code Article 2317.1, which speaks to the liability of the owner or custodian of a thing. Movants contend that the absence of allegations of ownership or custody of Private Drive requires dismissal. As stated, Plaintiffs allege that Chesapeake and Earthstone may have assumed duties in a private crossing agreement with the railroad, giving rise to liability under a theory of shared garde. Equity demands that discovery on this issue be had.
The Court finds that the Plaintiffs' Complaint pleads sufficient facts to state a claim that is plausible on its face. The Court further finds that the "open and obvious hazard" defense would require the Court to find facts, and such is inappropriate for determination on a 12(b)(6) Motion to Dismiss.
Accordingly, the Motions