Archie v. Kirk

CourtNorth Carolina Industrial Commission
DecidedDecember 15, 2010
DocketI.C. NO. 786543.
StatusPublished

This text of Archie v. Kirk (Archie v. Kirk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Carolina Industrial Commission primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Archie v. Kirk, (N.C. Super. Ct. 2010).

Opinion

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The undersigned have reviewed the prior Opinion and Award based upon the record of the proceedings before the Deputy Commissioner and the briefs and arguments of the parties. The appealing party has not shown good grounds to reconsider the evidence, receive further evidence, or rehear the parties or their representatives. Accordingly, the Full Commission affirms with minor modifications the Opinion and Award of former Deputy Commissioner Rideout. *Page 2

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The Full Commission finds as fact and concludes as matters of law the following stipulations of the parties:

STIPULATIONS
1. The date of the alleged injury which is the subject of this claim is October 10, 2006.

2. Edward Kirk d/b/a Kirk Contracting is insured by Liberty Mutual Insurance Company.

3. Plaintiff's medical records as outlined in the Medical Index, which is attached to the Pre-Trial Agreement, are stipulated into evidence, subject to the parties' right to depose the physicians.

4. All Industrial Commission Forms are stipulated into evidence.

5. In addition, the parties also submitted the following exhibits:

a. Stipulated Exhibit 2 — Plaintiff's medical records

b. Stipulated Exhibit 3 — North Carolina Industrial Commission Forms

c. Stipulated Exhibit 4 — Certificate of Insurance

d. Stipulated Exhibit 5 — Legal Memorandum submitted by counsel for Plaintiff

e. Plaintiff's Exhibit 1 — Plaintiff's 2006 tax return

f. Plaintiff's Exhibit 2 — Evelyn Duncan's Affidavit of December 15, 2008

g. Plaintiff's Exhibit 3 — Steven Barfield's Affidavit of January 16, 2009

h. Plaintiff's Exhibit 4 — Invoice from Ed Kirk, dated September 19, 2006

*Page 3

i. Plaintiff's Exhibit 5 — Check from Cap Care Group, Inc. to Ed Kirk, dated September 25, 2006

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Based upon all of the competent credible evidence of record, the Full Commission makes the following:

FINDINGS OF FACT
1. At the time of the hearing of this matter before the Deputy Commissioner, plaintiff was 43 years of age. He lives in Winston-Salem, North Carolina with two of his children and two grand children. He finished high school in 1985. He was discharged from the Navy after 30 days of basic training because of his low test scores in reading comprehension and math.

2. Plaintiff started working for the Defendant-Employer Edward Kirk, d/b/a Kirk Contracting, in approximately 2004. He worked for Kirk as a sign installer. This job involved climbing ladders and installing and removing vinyl signs on billboards. The billboards could be up to 100 feet high. The vinyl signs required lifting up to 50-60 pounds.

3. Plaintiff worked eight to ten hours per day, four to five days per week and some weekends for Kirk Contracting. Plaintiff was paid $10.00 per hour in cash by Kirk Contracting, with no taxes withheld from his wages. Kirk Contracting did not issue Plaintiff a W-2 wage statement or a 1099 Form.

4. Edward Kirk, the owner of Kirk Contracting, drove Plaintiff to and from work. Edward Kirk was most often at each job site with the Plaintiff. Kirk Contracting supplied all the equipment, tools, and supplies needed for the work on the billboards. These tools and supplies included, but were not limited to, ropes, harnesses, hard hats, ladders, and vests. *Page 4

5. Plaintiff did not supply tools or supplies. He never personally paid for supplies, but he would on occasion go with Edward Kirk when he went to purchase supplies.

6. Edward Kirk supervised Plaintiff and other workers at the job sites, and he directed the work on the job. Plaintiff did not have the right to hire, to fire, or to bring help. Edward Kirk made the decisions in regards to hiring and firing. Edward Kirk employed up to five workers at a given time.

7. The Plaintiff did not operate his own business and specifically worked for Edward Kirk d/b/a Kirk Contracting as an employee on a regular basis. He was not an independent contractor.

8. Plaintiff suffered an injury by accident on October 10, 2006, when he was electrocuted with 7200 V.A.C. electricity while installing a billboard for Kirk Contracting directly adjacent to a Duke Energy power pole. On the date of the injury, Plaintiff was working for Edward Kirk in Madison, North Carolina on a billboard that was approximately 30-50 feet high. Edward Kirk was at the job site supervising the job. In addition to Plaintiff, there were two other employees at the job.

9. The billboard in question was a two-sided wooden sign with wooden support poles and no catwalk. There was an electrical power pole adjacent to the billboard with wires or cables over the top of the billboard. The Plaintiff did not know whether there was electricity running through the wires when they started the job.

10. Edward Kirk gave Plaintiff a hard hat and tools at the job site, and Plaintiff climbed the employer's ladder. The billboard was within arm length of the power pole, which had a box or transformer attached to it. The workers had to remove the old vinyl sign on the *Page 5 billboard before the new sign could be installed. Edward Kirk instructed Plaintiff to begin removing the old vinyl sign.

11. Plaintiff began to remove the steel pole from the end of the vinyl sign, which was at the end of the billboard next to the power pole. He was sitting in a straddle position on the ledge of the billboard with his legs free since there was no catwalk. Plaintiff began removing the steel pole in an upward motion, and he was careful to avoid the power line over head. When he had pushed the pole up about eight to ten feet high and while he was looking down, the steel pole hit the live electrical wire, and Plaintiff was immediately electrocuted.

12. Plaintiff heard a popping noise, and he fell backwards. His right leg was trapped between the two sides of the billboard. Plaintiff saw his abdominal area on fire, and he began to scream. Plaintiff's body was on fire located just below his chest area down to his groin area. One of Plaintiff's co-workers put a coat over Plaintiff's body to put out the fire.

13. Emergency medical services were called to the accident scene, and a helicopter from Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center arrived. Plaintiff lost consciousness about the time he was placed in the helicopter to go to the hospital. Edward Kirk was a witness to the accident along with the two co-workers.

14. Plaintiff was transported by helicopter to Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center where he was treated for a combination of both electrical injury and burn injury. He received the great majority of his treatment by Dr. Joseph Molnar and Dr. James Holmes at Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center. His chief complaints on the date of his injury were considered to be burns and electrical shock. He sustained burns to the abdomen, genitalia, right lower extremity, right hip, right thigh, right knee, left upper extremity, and left hand. *Page 6

15. Plaintiff was initially diagnosed as having twenty percent total body surface area flame and electrical burns. Dr. Holmes indicated that the injury was due to direct contact with high voltage electricity. Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
Archie v. Kirk, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/archie-v-kirk-ncworkcompcom-2010.