Champion International, Inc. v. Truitt

653 So. 2d 968, 1995 Ala. LEXIS 46, 1995 WL 29837
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 27, 1995
Docket1930002
StatusPublished

This text of 653 So. 2d 968 (Champion International, Inc. v. Truitt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Champion International, Inc. v. Truitt, 653 So. 2d 968, 1995 Ala. LEXIS 46, 1995 WL 29837 (Ala. 1995).

Opinion

MADDOX, Justice.

The sole issue presented in this case is whether the personal representative of a deceased dependentless employee, who was covered by the Workers’ Compensation Act, can maintain a wrongful death action for damages against the employer under Article 2 of the Act.

Maybelle Biggioms was employed by Champion International, Inc., d/b/a Champion Paper Company (“Champion”), in Abbe-ville. On September 25, 1990, Biggioms was injured when she was struck by a piece of industrial equipment. It is undisputed that Biggioms was working in the line and scope of her employment when she was injured and that she later died as a proximate result of her injuries.

On December 10, 1990, Johnny Lee Truitt and Sarah Truitt, as next friends of Maybelle Biggioms, then a non compos mentis, filed a complaint seeking workers’ compensation benefits from Champion.1 Biggioms died on August 29,1991, leaving no dependents. The Truitts were appointed co-administrators of Biggioms’s estate, and they subsequently amended their complaint to assert “a death claim pursuant to Article 2 of the Workmen’s Compensation Act for fault-based remedy for the death of a dependentless employee,” claiming that Biggioms’s injuries and subsequent death proximately resulted from the imputed negligence of Champion.

Champion moved for a summary judgment, arguing that when an employee covered by the Workers’ Compensation Act dies from a job-related accident, without dependents, the exclusive remedy against an employer is the statutory recovery of burial and medical expenses. Champion argued to the trial court, and argues here on appeal, that the courts of Alabama have consistently held that Article 3 of the Workers’ Compensation Act is an employee’s exclusive remedy even in eases where the employee dies leaving no dependents.

The Truitts, relying heavily upon language in a special concurrence filed by Justice Jones in Yarchak v. Munford, Inc., 570 So.2d 648 (Ala.1990),2 and upon an article written by Justice Jones entitled A Proposed Rewrite of the Alabama Worker’s Compensar tion Act, 15:1 Am.J.Trial Advoc. 1 (1991), successfully argued to the trial judge that they were entitled to sue as the personal representatives under §§ 25-5-30 and 25-5-31, Ala.Code 1975, part of Article 2 of the Workers’ Compensation Act, on the ground that Article 3 did not become “operative,” because the decedent had died without any dependents. The basic argument of the Truitts in the trial court and here on appeal is that “[wjhere Article 3 does not provide a no-fault remedy, Article 2 provides a fault-based common law remedy for injury and a fault-based statutory remedy for wrongful death.”

The trial court agreed with the Truitts and denied Champion’s motion for summary judgment. Pursuant to Rule 5, Ala.R.App.P., Champion sought permission to appeal from the order denying its sum[970]*970mary judgment motion. We granted that permission, and after duly considering the issue presented, we reverse and remand.

Article 3 of the Workers’ Compensation Act provides:

“Except as provided in this article [article 3] and article 2, as the case may be, of this chapter, no employer included within the terms of this chapter shall be held civilly liable for any personal injury to or death of any workman who is an employee of the employer and whose injury or death is due to an accident while engaged in the service or business of the employer, the cause of which accident originates in the employment.”

§ 25-5-53, Ala.Code 1975 (as it read before a May 1992 Amendment).3 At the time applicable to this case,-Article 2 of the Act provided:

“This article shall not apply in cases where Article 3 of this chapter becomes operative in accordance with the provisions thereof, but shall apply in all other cases, and in such cases shall be an extension or modification of the common law.”

§ 25-5-30, Ala.Code 1975. Thus, if Article 3 is applicable to a claim, then Article 2 is inapplicable. As stated above, the Truitts contend that Article 3 is inapplicable and that they have a cause of action under Article 2, because, they say, “Article 3 does not provide a no-fault remedy” where the deceased employee dies without dependents. We have carefully reviewed the arguments in this case and have re-examined the holding in Story & Co., Inc. v. King, 628 So.2d 593 (Ala.1993), where this Court addressed the same issue presented on this appeal.4 In Story, this Court held that “the Alabama Workers’ Compensation Act provides the exclusive remedy against employers for the death of an employee when the employee’s death arose out of or in the course of employment and that this is the case even where the employee left no dependents so that there was no recovery of death damages under the Act.” Story, 628 So.2d 593. In view of the action taken by the trial court and the insistence of the Truitts, we have also examined the cases we cited in Story to support the holding in that case, and we conclude that precedents of both this Court and the Court of Civil Appeals support the holding in Story.

This Court, in Story, and the Court of Civil Appeals, in Holliday v. C.T. Thackston Sand & Gravel Co., 361 So.2d 13 (Ala.Civ.App.1978), have addressed the precise issue presented here, and both Courts have rejected the argument made by the Truitts. In Holli-day, the Court of Civil Appeals explained the argument made by the plaintiff, the adminis-tratrix of a dependentless employee’s estate:

“[The estate] argues article 2 should apply which would allow compensation by a civil action instead of under article 3. Put another way, counsel contends that when an employee dies without dependents, the employer is simply not subject to article 3 because that article did not become operative due to its insubstantial benefits accorded the employee. We do not agree.”

361 So.2d at 14.

Here, as in Holliday “[t]here is no contention by the employee that article 2 applies because of the factual situation surrounding the employee’s death.” Holliday, 361 So.2d at 15. The Truitts’ argument that Article 3 is inoperative because it does not provide a remedy where the deceased employee leaves no dependents is the same argument the plaintiff made in Holliday. The Court of Civil Appeals rejected that argument, holding that “the mere fact that the employee had no dependents does not render article 3 ‘inoperative’ so as to allow compensation by a civil action” under Article 2. 361 So.2d at 15. See also, Lackey v. Jefferson Energy Corp., Inc., 439 So.2d 1290, 1291-92 (Ala.Civ.App.1983) (following Holliday and rejecting the same argument).

[971]*971The Truitts attempt to distinguish Holli-day and Lackey, claiming that relief was denied in those cases because, they argue, the “personal representative failed to state a statutory claim under Article 2,” and arguing that “[wjhere Article 3 does not provide a no-fault remedy, Article 2 provides a fault-based common law remedy for injury and a fault-based remedy for death.”

We disagree with the Truitts’ distinction. We have reviewed each of those eases, and we conclude that the Court of Civil Appeals did not use that distinction as a basis for denying relief in those cases.

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Related

Patterson v. Sears-Roebuck & Co.
196 F.2d 947 (Fifth Circuit, 1952)
Slagle v. Reynolds Metals Co.
344 So. 2d 1216 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1977)
Johnson v. Ralls
243 So. 2d 673 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1970)
Lackey v. Jefferson Energy Corp., Inc.
439 So. 2d 1290 (Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama, 1983)
Holliday v. CT Thackston Sand & Gravel Co.
361 So. 2d 13 (Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama, 1978)
Yarchak v. Munford, Inc.
570 So. 2d 648 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1990)
Slagle v. Parker
370 So. 2d 947 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1979)
Hughes v. Decatur General Hosp.
514 So. 2d 935 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1987)
Story Co., Inc. v. King
628 So. 2d 593 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1993)

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653 So. 2d 968, 1995 Ala. LEXIS 46, 1995 WL 29837, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/champion-international-inc-v-truitt-ala-1995.