American Mutual Liability Insurance v. Rockwood Insurance

608 S.W.2d 24, 271 Ark. 167, 1980 Ark. App. LEXIS 1485
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 19, 1980
DocketCA 80-193
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 608 S.W.2d 24 (American Mutual Liability Insurance v. Rockwood Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Mutual Liability Insurance v. Rockwood Insurance, 608 S.W.2d 24, 271 Ark. 167, 1980 Ark. App. LEXIS 1485 (Ark. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

James H. Pilkinton, Judge.

Larry Slaughter, d/b/a Ark-La Wood Company of Junction City, Arkansas, is engaged in the business of procuring and selling pulpwood. He owns three pulpwood yards — one at Stamps in Lafayette County, one at Village in Columbia County, and the third at Junction City in Union County.

Prior to 1975, all three locations were covered under one workers’ compensation insurance policy issued to Mr. Slaughter. Slaughter’s employees included the woodyard employees and drivers, surveyors and clerical workers. Slaughter had only one logging crew, and the persons working on this sole logging crew were also covered under Mr. Slaughter’s workers’ compensation insurance policy.

In addition to the regular wage employees of Slaughter, there were many independent contractors who produced, sold and delivered pulpwood to the three woodyards. The record shows there were twelve to twenty-two such independent contractors bringing pulpwood into the Village yard; approximately the same number at Stamps; and twenty-five to thirty-five such contractors hauling pulpwood into the Junction City yard. It is undisputed that these were independent contractors, or subcontractors, who had their own equipment ran their own operations, hired and fired their own employees, and merely produced, sold and delivered wood to one of the several woodyards. Under Ark. Stat. Ann. § 81-1306 (Repl. 1976), the prime contractor is liable for workers’ compensation benefits to the employees of an independent subcontractor where the subcontractor fails to secure the compensation insurance coverage required by the Arkansas act.

Due to the number of injuries suffered, an insurance “modifier” had been included in Slaughter’s premium rate, making his rate unusually high. The coverage at that time was with Bituminous Insurance Company and, in connection with attempting to work out a safety program to reduce injuries, the safety director at Bituminous suggested to Slaughter and his independent insurance agent, Lawrence H. Derby of Warren, Arkansas, that a separate policy be obtained for each location. Slaughter and Derby were told that if Slaughter would make his manager at each yard prime contractors, and let them be responsible for the insurance, and assume other duties, including the obtaining of the pulpwood at each yard, then the prime contractor at each yard would become a separate risk from Slaughter’s risk on his wage employees, and thus there would be a savings on premiums. Slaughter followed this suggestion, and through Derby four separate policies were applied for and issued by Bituminous in 1976: (1) to Larry Slaughter, d/b/a Ark-La Wood, covering all of Slaughter’s wage employees as had been the cause previously; (2) to Chester Anderson covering only the wood haulers and their employees, delivering wood to the yard at Village; (3) to Jerry Owens covering only the wood haulers and their employees, delivering wood to the yard at Stamps; and (4) to Lennox Norris covering only the wood haulers and their employees who delivered wood to the yard at Junction City.

As Anderson, Owens and Norris were without any experience rating, their premiums were the standard rate, unblemished by claims for previous injuries by employees or contractors. Thus the three latter separate policies were written at a lower rate than Slaughter’s policy.

Bituminous Insurance Company quit writing workers’ compensation insurance in Arkansas after 1975. Derby then obtained four policies from Rockwood Insurance Company for the year November 7,1976 to November 7,1977. After the first policy year, Rockwood renewed the policies issued to Larry Slaughter and Chester Anderson. Jerry Owens and Lennox Norris were rejected as unacceptable risks because of excessive injuries and claims. Consequently Derby applied for coverage of Lennox Norris and Jerry Owens to the Arkansas Compensation Rating Bureau, which makes random assignments of rejected risks to companies in the “pool”. Norris was assigned to American Mutual Liberty Insurance Company. By luck of the draw, Jerry Owens was assigned to Rockwood which had previously rejected him. Because of the regulations, Rockwood had to accept Owens, and American Mutual insured Norris. A routine audit, conducted by Rockwood after the second year, revealed that Larry Slaughter owned all three yards. The extent of his control, if any, over the procurement of wood and over the wood haulers and their employees covered by the Anderson, Owens and Norris policies is a disputed question of fact.

Rockwood filed this suit and sought reformation of its policies to all three — Slaughter, Anderson and Owens — for the periods of its coverage. Rockwood claimed as grounds for relief that there had been a failure to disclose the true nature of the business relationship existing between Slaughter on the one hand, and Anderson, Norris and Owens on the other. The reformation sought was the inclusion of the experience modifier to each policy, and the total added premium dollar claimed to be due to Rockwood from Slaughter was $9,-212.05.

American Mutual Liberty Insurance Company was brought into the case for a declaration of liability under the policy issued by American Mutual to Norris for the period covering November, 1977 to November, 1978. It was alleged that American has liability for workers’ compensation benefits under its policy to independent haulers and their employees delivering pulpwood and logs to the Junction City woodyard operated by Norris. American Mutual Liberty denied liability, and sought cancellation of its policy on the basis of fraud.

Following a trial on the merits, the chancellor found, and a chancery decree was entered, holding:

(1) That each individual defendant, (Slaughter, Anderson, Norris and Owens) had risk exposures and properly had policies of insurance issued to them to cover such exposure;
(2) That AMLIC was not entitled to a rescission of its policy of workers’ compensation insurance issued to Lennox Norris;
(3) That Rockwood was not entitled to a reformation of ■ its workers’ compensation insurance policies to include Slaughter’s experience modifier; and
(4) That Slaughter was entitled to judgment of and from Rockwood in the amount of $35,711.09-

American Mutual Liberty Insurance Company has taken an appeal from the decree; Rockwood has taken a cross-appeal; and Slaughter, Anderson, Norris and Owens have cross-appealed only to insure that if American Liberty was successful, Rockwood would be required to cover any liability of Slaughter as a statutory employer under Ark. Stat. Ann. § 81-1306.

I

American Mutual first contends that the findings of the chancellor that Lennox Norris was a separate risk is against the preponderance of the evidence. American Mutual thus ' argues that in order for Lennox Norris to have risk exposure he must be an employer within the meaning of the Arkansas Workers’ Compensation Act. The evidence shows that Slaughter’s woodyard in Junction City operated pursuant to a contract with Georgia Pacific. For a stipulated price per cord of wood delivered, Slaughter agreed to arrange for the purchasing, cutting and delivering of wood to the premises of Georgia Pacific. The employees of Slaughter, who were paid by the hour, posed no problem relative to entitlement to workers’ compensation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
608 S.W.2d 24, 271 Ark. 167, 1980 Ark. App. LEXIS 1485, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-mutual-liability-insurance-v-rockwood-insurance-arkctapp-1980.