Ball v. Kaiser Aluminum & Chemical Corporation
This text of 112 So. 2d 741 (Ball v. Kaiser Aluminum & Chemical Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
William Olen BALL
v.
KAISER ALUMINUM & CHEMICAL CORPORATION and Firemen's Fund Indemnity Company.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Orleans.
*742 Cassibry, Jackson & Hess, Ralph N. Jackson, New Orleans, for plaintiff and appellant.
Porteous & Johnson, Parnell J. Hyland, New Orleans, for defendants and appellees.
REGAN, Judge.
Plaintiff, William Olen Ball, an electrician, instituted this suit against the defendants, Kaiser Aluminum & Chemical Corporation and its liability insurer, The Firemen's Fund Indemnity Company, endeavoring to recover the sum of $370,775.20, representing injuries, loss of wages, medical expenses, and pain and suffering incurred as the result of an accident which occurred when plaintiff, an employee of Foothill Electric Corporation,[1] was working on an electric transformer in defendant's plant in Chalmette, Louisiana.
The defendants pleaded exceptions of no cause and no right of action, which were maintained for the reason that plaintiff's rights are covered exclusively by the Louisiana Workmen's Compensation Act.[2]
From that judgment in favor of defendants, maintaining their exceptions of no right or cause of action and dismissing plaintiff's suit, he has prosecuted this appeal.
On the trial of the exceptions of no cause or right of action, defendants were permitted, over the objection of plaintiff, to introduce evidence into the record in the form of testimony by Claude Ford, Jr., a foreman in charge of rectifier operations for the defendant, tending to show that it employed electricians who on occasion performed the same kind of work that plaintiff was engaged in when the accident occurred. Plaintiff on appeal insists that the admission by the lower court of such evidence was erroneous.
We pretermit a determination of whether the trial court was in error in permitting the introduction of this evidence in connection with the exception of no cause or right of action pleaded by the defendant since no useful purpose would be served thereby in view of the result we have agreed should be reached herein.
The facts revealed by the petition and by the evidence adduced in connection with the exceptions of no cause or right of action disclose that the defendant's Kaiser Aluminum & Chemical Corporation's, principal business at its plant in Chalmette, Louisiana, is the production of aluminum; that in the course of producing aluminum, it manufactures and uses large amounts of electrical power but that it does not sell or furnish electricity to others; that the defendant has no subsidiary; and that Kaiser Engineers, the principal contractor employed to build the plant, is engaged in the construction of dams and plants and the performance of large construction contracts all over the world. The work in which the plaintiff was engaged at the time of the accident was *743 a part of the new plant construction being carried out by the Kaiser Engineers, which as we have said was an independent general contractor.
The electrical work in connection with the new construction of the plant had been subcontracted by Kaiser Engineers to plaintiff's employer, the Foothill Electrical Corporation. The particular work that plaintiff was engaged in when the accident occurred was changing the connections and lighting on certain transformers that Foothill Electrical Corporation was installing in the plant.
Defendant at the time that the accident occurred employed about 14 electricians, many, or all of whom, were capable of performing and sometimes did perform work of this type, that is, changing the connections and lighting installations on transformers that had already been installed and were in use in the plant. The defendant does not erect or construct aluminum plants itself.
The defendants contend that their exceptions of no cause or right of action were properly maintained by the lower court since the electrical work which was being done by the plaintiff, an electrician, when injured was part of the business, trade, or occupation of the defendant, Kaiser Aluminum, which cannot operate without electricity and which manufactures it for its own use. Therefore the exclusive remedy of the plaintiff against the defendant is in conformity with the applicable spection of the Louisiana Workmen's Compensation Act.[3]
Plaintiff, on the other hand, insists that if the work plaintiff was performing was for the defendant then compensation coverage could be urged, but the work plaintiff was performing was not maintenance work, but involved installing new electrical equipment for his employer, the Foothill Electrical Corporation, and therefore plaintiff is permitted by virtue of the statute and the jurisprudence interpretative thereof to maintain an action in tort against the defendant.
The only question posed for our consideration by this appeal from the judgment maintaining the exceptions of no cause or right of action is whether plaintiff, as an employee of the subcontractor, Foothill Electrical Corporation, has an action in tort against the defendant and its insurer.
In the case of Horrell v. Gulf & Valley Cotton Oil Co.,[4] we, inter alia, answered the question which is now posed for our consideration when we reasoned thus:
"In considering the question raised by this contention, we at once notice that it is not all work which the principal may require that the act prevents his contracting away without retention of compensation liability, but only such as is a part of his trade, business, or occupation, or which he may have contracted to perform for some one else.
*744 "It is, we believe, quite plain that a manufacturing concern upon organization, may contract with an independent contractor for the erection of its factory building without retaining liability under the Compensation Act to employees of the independent contractor who undertakes the construction. It is no part of the trade, business, or occupation of the manufacturing concern to erect its factory building. Its business is to operate it after its erection.
"On the other hand, it is clear that, after the factory is completed and is in operation, the principal may not employ an independent contractor to undertake any part of the business of operating the factory and thus escape liability in compensation to the employees actually engaged in carrying out the work undertaken by the independent contractor. For instance, if defendant here had employed Horrell to furnish the necessary labor to operate the boilers, it is quite evident that Horrell's employees would, under the provisions of section 6 of the act, be entitled to look to defendant for compensation in the event of injury. We thus see that, if the original construction work is not a part of the business of the principal, that work may be contracted away, whereas the operation of the factory after construction is completed, being a part of the business of the principal, may not be so contracted away without the retention of the compensation liability.
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112 So. 2d 741, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ball-v-kaiser-aluminum-chemical-corporation-lactapp-1959.