Berkel & Company Contractors, Inc. v. Tyler Lee

CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 20, 2020
Docket18-0309
StatusPublished

This text of Berkel & Company Contractors, Inc. v. Tyler Lee (Berkel & Company Contractors, Inc. v. Tyler Lee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Berkel & Company Contractors, Inc. v. Tyler Lee, (Tex. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS ══════════ No. 18-0309 ══════════

BERKEL & COMPANY CONTRACTORS, INC., PETITIONER,

v.

TYLER LEE, ET AL., RESPONDENTS

══════════════════════════════════════════ ON PETITION FOR REVIEW FROM THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS ══════════════════════════════════════════

Argued September 15, 2020

JUSTICE BLAND delivered the opinion of the Court.

JUSTICE LEHRMANN and JUSTICE BUSBY did not participate in the decision.

The Texas Workers’ Compensation Act is the exclusive remedy for employees who sustain

nonfatal work-related injuries. 1 A narrow common-law exception exists, but the exception

requires that the defendant have a specific intent to injure the plaintiff. 2 Last term, we reaffirmed

this principle: to satisfy the intentional-tort exception, “the employer must believe that its actions

are substantially certain to result in a particular injury to a particular employee.” 3 This degree of

1 TEX. LAB. CODE § 408.001(a). 2 Reed Tool Co. v. Copelin, 689 S.W.2d 404, 406 (Tex. 1985). 3 Mo-Vac Serv. Co. v. Escobedo, 603 S.W.3d 119, 130 (Tex. 2020). specificity is required, we said, to prevent a claim for intentional injury “from devolving into a

standard of exceptionally egregious gross negligence,” which the Act precludes. 4

In this suit arising under the exception to the Act, we again confirm that the substantial-

certainty test established in Reed Tool Co. v. Copelin, 689 S.W.2d 404 (Tex. 1985), and reaffirmed

last term in Mo-Vac Service Co. v. Escobedo, 603 S.W.3d 119 (Tex. 2020), requires that the

defendant intend or know that its actions are substantially certain to injure a particular employee.

The court of appeals held that the evidence in this case does not meet that level, and we agree with

its conclusion. But on rehearing, it remanded the case for a new trial in the interest of justice

because it adopted a new definition for intent in the workers’ compensation context.

Adhering to existing precedent, we rejected that new definition in Mo-Vac. Because Texas

law remained unchanged during the pendency of this case, and the defendant in this case objected

to the improper definition of intent in the court’s charge to the jury, we reverse that part of the

court of appeals’ judgment remanding in the interest of justice.

I

Skanska USA Building, Inc. was the general contractor for a commercial construction

project in Houston. Respondent Tyler Lee was Skanska’s lead superintendent for the project.

Skanska subcontracted with petitioner Berkel & Company Contractors, Inc. to drill foundation

pilings for a large office tower. Skanska required Berkel to participate in Skanska’s contractor-

controlled insurance program, which provided uniform workers’ compensation benefits to workers

on its worksite.

4 Id.

2 To construct the pilings, Berkel used a crane to drill a 130-foot auger into the ground,

supported by 150-foot steel rods called “leads” that kept the auger straight. The auger had a hollow

shaft, through which the Berkel crew pumped concrete grout as they slowly removed the auger

from the ground.

On the day of the accident, the Berkel crew began a new piling without sufficient grout to

finish it, in contravention of company policy. The grout hardened while the crew waited for more

grout to arrive, and the auger stuck in the ground. Berkel’s foreman, Mark Stacy, instructed the

crane operator, Andrew Bennett, to “bump” the auger: essentially, to rock the auger back and forth

to try to free it from the hardening grout. After ten minutes of unsuccessful bumping, Stacy

recommended that the operation be scuttled and restarted.

Berkel’s superintendent, Chris Miller, overrode Stacy. Spewing invectives, Miller

positioned himself next to the auger. He ordered Bennett to continue bumping the auger while

pressuring the crane’s hoist cable to further try to loosen it. Witnesses testified that some of the

crane’s rollers came off the ground, and the crane’s hydraulic lines began to spray fluid. Though

Bennett testified that none of the crane’s alarms sounded, other crew members testified that they

thought the situation was “a death trap,” were worried that “[s]omething [was] going to break and

hurt somebody,” and prepared to protect themselves from injury. After fifteen to thirty minutes,

the crane collapsed, knocking over the steel leads. Lee stood beyond the construction barrier at

grade level, and one of the leads hit Lee as it fell. The lead crushed Lee’s leg, ultimately requiring

that it be amputated.

Lee applied for and received workers’ compensation medical and disability benefits for his

injuries under the contractor-controlled insurance program. As a participant in the workers’

3 compensation program, medical and disability benefits are available without any determination of

fault. 5 They are the exclusive remedy against an employer as defined under the Act for a covered

worker who is injured on the job. 6

Lee and his family sued Berkel for negligence and gross negligence, claiming that Berkel

had waived its exclusive-remedy defense. The Lees later amended their petition to assert that

Berkel, through Miller, had intentionally injured Lee. The Lees invoked the common-law

intentional-injury exception to the Act this Court identified in Middleton v. Texas Power & Light

Co., 185 S.W. 556 (Tex. 1916). The arguments in this Court are limited to the intentional-injury

exception. 7

In the trial court, the parties disputed the definition of an “intentional” injury. Relying on

established precedent, at the court’s charge conference Berkel requested that the trial court define

“intent” to require that a Berkel employee intended to cause, or was substantially certain that he

would cause, the injury to Lee. 8 The Lees countered that for an injury to be “intentional” in the

workers’ compensation context, the defendant need not have a specific intent to injure, nor direct

the conduct at the plaintiff, but instead need merely believe that an injury is “substantially certain

to result.” The Lees prevailed; the jury charge asked whether “a Berkel employee . . . believe[d]

that injury was substantially certain to result from his conduct on the date in question?” The jury

5 Id. at 128. 6 TEX. LAB. CODE § 408.001(a). 7 The court of appeals held that the exclusive-remedy provision of the Workers’ Compensation Act barred the Lees’ negligence claims. Berkel & Co. Contractors, Inc. v. Lee, 543 S.W.3d 288, 296 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2018). 8 Berkel further contends in this Court that the Lees also cannot prevail because the evidence does not demonstrate that Miller or any member of the Berkel crew that day was a vice-principal of the company. Because we hold that Berkel otherwise prevails, we need not address this argument.

4 answered “yes,” and awarded damages to the Lees. The trial court entered judgment on the jury’s

verdict.

The court of appeals reversed, holding that the trial court’s charge erred in asking whether

a Berkel employee knew that an unspecified injury—unattached to any particular victim or any

particular location—was substantially certain to result. 9 This was error, the court of appeals held,

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Berkel & Company Contractors, Inc. v. Tyler Lee, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berkel-company-contractors-inc-v-tyler-lee-tex-2020.