Carcaise v. Cemex, Inc.

200 F. App'x 116
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedSeptember 13, 2006
Docket05-3053, 05-3088
StatusUnpublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 200 F. App'x 116 (Carcaise v. Cemex, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carcaise v. Cemex, Inc., 200 F. App'x 116 (3d Cir. 2006).

Opinion

*119 OPINION

SLOVITER, Circuit Judge.

Cemex, Inc. (“Cemex”) appeals the adverse judgment against it following a jury-verdict of approximately $7 million awarded in favor of plaintiffs David Carcaise (“Carcaise”) and his wife Lucy Carcaise as damages from an accident in which Carcaise was grievously injured. The jury also found that Industrial Contracting & Erecting, Inc. (“ICE”), the third-party defendant, which was the company that assembled the machine in which Carcaise was injured, was twenty-percent liable for the accident, and it also appeals. The facts in this case are numerous and complex, but because the parties and the District Court are familiar with them, we choose to discuss only those necessary to our ultimate disposition.

I.

Facts and Procedural Posture

Cemex is one of the largest manufacturers of cement in the United States. It manufactures that cement, in part, from limestone that it extracts from its quarry in Wampum, Pennsylvania. The limestone mined at Wampum Quarry is accessible only by digging through hundreds of feet of earth called “overburden.” Cemex uses large pieces of digging equipment called “draglines” to remove the overburden from the limestone. Carcaise, an employee of Minserco, Inc., an independent contractor selected by Cemex, was injured when the 2100-ton piece of equipment at issue (“Dragline”) tumbled seventy feet over the precipice into a ditch with Carcaise inside. Predecessor companies of Cemex owned Wampum Quarry and the subject Dragline at the time of the accident.

The Dragline sat on a bulldozer-made “bench” which had been leveled into a “pad,” and dug the overburden (called “spoil”) by lowering a “bucket” attached to a crane-like “boom” over the “dig face edge” which it filled and dumped over the “spoil side edge.” Absent deficiencies in dragline design or construction, a dragline is stable so long as its distance from the spoil side edge is no less than its tub’s radius. As a result of the fall, Carcaise suffered, inter alia, a fractured sternum and a burst fracture of his eleventh thoracic vertebra. Surgery on the injury to prevent paralysis was successful in stabilizing his spine, but rendered Carcaise impotent. A morphine pump was surgically inserted into Carcaise’s lower abdomen to alleviate his ongoing pain, and this same surgical insertion procedure will have to be repeated approximately seven times over the course of his anticipated lifespan. 1

Carcaise and his wife filed this diversity action against Cemex alleging that the accident happened due to unstable terrain conditions and inadequate ballasting of the Dragline. In its Answer denying liability, Cemex sought to fix responsibility on others including Carcaise’s co-worker, Robert Ahner, a specialist in dragline operation who was hired by Cemex as an independent contractor to train its employees to use the Dragline. Ahner was recalled by Cemex as an independent consultant in November 1994, and thereafter was hired by Minserco as Stripping Foreman. Cemex filed a Third-Party Complaint against ICE from whom it had purchased the Dragline, in which it alleged that ICE failed to assure the Dragline had sufficient ballast at the time it was disassembled, transported, and reassembled by ICE and that this failure was a proximate cause of the accident.

Following the trial, the jury found in favor of Carcaise in the amount of $6,400,000 and in favor of Mrs. Carcaise in *120 the amount of $500,000. The jury determined that Cemex was 70% causally negligent, that ICE was 20% causally negligent, and that Careaise was 10% causally negligent. The District Court molded the jury verdict by removing the 10% of the verdict attributable to Careaise from the defendants’ liability.

The District Court granted Carcaise’s motion to add delay damages to the jury verdict, denied the post-trial motions filed by Cemex and ICE, denied Cemex’s motion seeking to stay execution of the judgment, and entered a final, Amended Judgment in the amounts of $6,518,183.34 plus costs (i.e., the molded verdict plus delay damages) in favor of Careaise and $450,000 in favor of Mrs. Careaise (the molded verdict alone). Both Cemex and ICE filed timely notices of appeal.

II.

Cemex’s Appeal

Cemex argues that the District Court erred in failing to grant Cemex’s motion for a directed verdict because Cemex owed no duty to Careaise through his independent-contractor employer, Minserco. The Pennsylvania Supreme Court has addressed the extent of control a landowner must exercise over the activities of an independent contractor in order for a trial judge to permit a jury to determine whether the landowner is hable. In Hader v. Coplay Cement Manufacturing Co., 410 Pa. 139, 189 A.2d 271 (1963), the Pennsylvania Supreme Court established that “[a]n owner of land who delivers temporary possession of a portion of the land to an independent contractor owes no duty to the employees of the independent contractor with respect to an obviously dangerous condition on that portion of the land in the possession of the contractor.” Id. at 277. However, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court has recognized two exceptions to this rule. The first exception arises where the landowner “retains and exercises control over work, including construction work, entrusted to an independent contractor.” Crane v. I.T.E. Circuit Breaker Co., 443 Pa. 442, 278 A.2d 362, 363-64 (1971) (citing Restatement (Second) of Torts § 414). The second exception arises where an accident results from work involving a “peculiar risk of physical harm” or a “special danger.” Phila. Elec. Co. v. Julian, 425 Pa. 217, 228 A.2d 669 (1967) (citing Restatement (Second) of Torts §§ 416, 427).

In Hader, the Court amplified the control-of-work issue by enunciating the basic principle that an independent contractor’s “responsibility replaces that of the [land]owner” only so long as the landowner did not “retain control of the ... instrumentality which caused the accident.” Hader, 189 A.2d at 277. It cited its earlier opinion in Cooper v. Heintz Manufacturing Co., 385 Pa. 296, 122 A.2d 699 (1956), where it held a landowner liable for injuries caused to the plaintiff from high-voltage transformers because the landowner retained “control over ... the lethal transformers ... while the independent contractor was working” amidst those transformers. Id. at 702. The Cooper Court found the landowner liable, holding, “It cannot be said ... that [the contractor] remained in sole control of the work location” because, “[a]l-though the transformer tower was geographically within the confines of [the contractor’s] operations, it was still working for [the landowner]: it was still supplying electricity for buildings other than those in which [the plaintiff] was working.” Id. The Court also found it notable that the plaintiff “had not been warned that the transformers had been reactivated.” Id.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Nye v. Ingersoll-Rand Co.
783 F. Supp. 2d 751 (D. New Jersey, 2011)
Coleman v. Commonwealth Land Title Insurance
684 F. Supp. 2d 595 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 2010)
Levine v. First American Title Insurance
682 F. Supp. 2d 442 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 2010)
Schwartz v. Lawyers Title Insurance
680 F. Supp. 2d 690 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 2010)
Lancaster v. Petco Animal Supplies Inc.
8 Pa. D. & C.5th 225 (Lackawanna County Court of Common Pleas, 2009)
Markocki v. Old Republic National Title Insurance
527 F. Supp. 2d 413 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 2007)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
200 F. App'x 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carcaise-v-cemex-inc-ca3-2006.