Castay v. ADM Growmark River Systems, Inc.

785 So. 2d 47, 0 La.App. 5 Cir. 1489, 2001 La. App. LEXIS 538, 2001 WL 370219
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 14, 2001
DocketNo. 00-CA-1489
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 785 So. 2d 47 (Castay v. ADM Growmark River Systems, Inc.) 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.

Bluebook
Castay v. ADM Growmark River Systems, Inc., 785 So. 2d 47, 0 La.App. 5 Cir. 1489, 2001 La. App. LEXIS 538, 2001 WL 370219 (La. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

I MAMES C. GULOTTA, J., Pro Tern.

On June 3, 1993, Robert Castay was injured while working at the ADM Grow-mark (ADM) facility in St. Charles Parish. Castay was employed as a welder with Quality Fab and Mechanical Co. (Quality Fab), who contracted with ADM, owner of two grain dryers, to demolish the dryers. Bruce Bourgeois, the president of Quality Fab, realized that he did not have the expertise,to handle such a large demolition job, so he subcontracted the work to Superior Scrap. The owner of Superior Scrap, Barry Grundmann, assembled a work crew of four men, including Castay and defendant, Kelly Teel, of Kelly Welding Service, for the purpose of demolishing the dryers. They began the demolition job on June 1, 1993. Castay’s duty was to block off the connections between the dryers and the elevator during the preparation stage of [51]*51work and to remain at the worksite during the remainder of the demolition to act as a liaison between the-Superior Scrap crew and ADM. The remainder of the crew shoveled the grain out of the jabottom of the dryer and used a water hose to wash the grain out of the dryer from the bottom of the dryer. The Superior Scrap crew then began demolishing the dryers using cutting torches. On June 3, the crew had completed removing the bottom portions of the dryers and began removing the tops. It was on this day that Castay’s accident occurred.

Castay was positioned at the top of the north dryer to perform the job of disconnecting the silo from the dryer unit. Bourgeois, plaintiffs employer, arrived at the ADM facility to view another job that Quality Fab was performing for ADM. However, when Bourgeois observed the difficulty the crane operator had in lifting the dryer, he ordered that he terminate the task. Bourgeois then proceeded to the top of the dryer to join Castay. Meanwhile, another member of the crew, Ernest Smith, used a cutting torch in the south dryer.

Suddenly, the dryer that the men were standing on exploded and fire engulfed them. Castay leapt from the north dryer to the south dryer, over an 80-foot void and fell into a ladder. Despite his injuries, Castay managed to move himself to the ■basket of the crane, and after approximately 45 minutes, the men were evacuated. He was taken to St. Charles Parish Hospital and admitted to the Intensive Care Unit. He remained hospitalized for ten days with severe burns and a low back injury.

Plaintiff filed suit against ADM, Kelly Teel, Superior Scrap, and its insurer, Essex Insurance. Castay settled with Kelly Teel and ADM prior to trial. Plaintiffs claims against Superior Scrap, Essex, and Quality Fab, Castay’s employer, proceeded to a jury trial. The jury found Superior Scrap and its insurer, Essex, liable for plaintiffs injuries and apportioned fault as follows:

ADM Growmark/ADNAC 55 percent
Quality Fab 25 percent
Superior Scrap Metals, Inc. 20 percent
Kelly Teel 0 percent
13Robert Castay 0 percent

The jury then awarded damages: the following

Robert Castay (general damages) $ 750,000.00
Past Lost Wages $ 137,138.00
Future Lost Wages $ 183,334.00
Past Medical Expenses $ 41,210.00
Future Medical Expenses $ 84,000.00
Debra Castay (loss of consortium) $ 250,000.00
TOTAL $1,445,682.00

The plaintiff filed a motion for new trial, for re-argument only, to reallot the employer’s percentage of fault to the other defendants found liable. The defendants filed a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, or in the alternative, a motion for new trial on both liability and damages. The trial judge granted the plaintiffs new trial motion on fault quantification, and reallocated the employer’s fault, increasing Superior Scrap’s percentage of fault to 26.7 percent in a September 27, 1999 judgment and then, on January 5, 2000, increased the percentage to 50 percent against Superior Scrap and its insurer. The trial judge denied the defendant’s new trial motion and granted the defendants’ JNOV motion only to decrease Deborah Castay’s loss of consortium award from $250,000.00 to $75,000.00.

The court’s final judgment was as follows:

General Damages: $750,000.00
Past Lost Wages: $137,138.00
Future Lost Wages: $183,334.00
Past Medical Expenses: $ 41,210.00
Future Medical Expenses: $ 84,000.00
Loss of Consortium (Deborah Castay): $ 75,000.00

|4The trial court then reduced the above amounts to 50 percent, the reallocated fault of Superior Scrap and Essex.

Defendants-appellants; Superior Scrap, and its insurer, Essex, appeal the trial [52]*52court’s judgment on five separate grounds: (1) the reallocation of the employer’s fault to increase Superior Scrap’s liability from 26.7 percent of the total judgment to 50 percent; (2) causation, specifically related to the owner’s alleged failure to hose the dryer from the top; (8) excessiveness of damages awarded to the plaintiff for pain and suffering and to his wife for loss of consortium; (4) plaintiffs recovery of medical expenses paid by the compensation carrier since the employer/compensation carrier and Superior Scrap were solidarily liable, and further, allowing the jury to hear the amount of the medical bills paid by the compensation carrier, and (5) failure of the trial judge to find the plaintiff comparatively at fault. For the following reasons, we amend in part, and, as amended, affirm.

In their first assignment of error, Superior Scrap and Essex contend the trial judge erred in reallocating the fault of the statutorily immune employer (Quality Fab) to increase their liability from 26.7 percent to 50 percent. They contend that the Louisiana Supreme Court’s reversal of the Third Circuit case upon which the trial judge relied in granting the new trial on that issue requires us to reinstate their fault at 26.7 percent.1 They argue that the supreme court held in Farbe that a plaintiff cannot recover the share of the settling tortfeasor from a non-settling tortfeasor, and thus, here, plaintiff cannot recover the employer’s amount of fault from Superior and Essex.

While we agree that the trial court’s final re-allocation of fault to the extent of 50 percent is incorrect, the defendant’s argument is misdirected. As we appreciate the Court’s decision in Farbe, a non-settling tortfeasor is entitled to a credit of the percentage of fault allocated to a settling tortfeasor. In Farbe, one of |athe two parties liable settled prior to trial. The trial court determined that the settling defendant was 80 percent at fault, while the non-settling defendant was 20 percent at fault. The appellate court affirmed the trial court’s findings of fault but amended the judgment to provide that the non-settling defendant remained solidarily liable for 50 percent of the judgment, under La. Civ.Code art. 2324, prior to the 1996 prospective amendment, although it had only been allocated with 20 percent of the fault.

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Bluebook (online)
785 So. 2d 47, 0 La.App. 5 Cir. 1489, 2001 La. App. LEXIS 538, 2001 WL 370219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/castay-v-adm-growmark-river-systems-inc-lactapp-2001.