Chauvin v. Gulf Coast Minerals, Inc.

509 So. 2d 622
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 13, 1987
Docket86-438
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 509 So. 2d 622 (Chauvin v. Gulf Coast Minerals, 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
Chauvin v. Gulf Coast Minerals, Inc., 509 So. 2d 622 (La. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinion

509 So.2d 622 (1987)

Jannery Lemaire CHAUVIN, Individually as Surviving Spouse of Lennis J. Chauvin, and as Natural and Duly Appointed Tutrix of the Minor Children, Michelle Reneé Chauvin and Nichole Simone Chauvin, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
GULF COAST MINERALS, INC., Gulf Associates of Louisiana, Inc., Gulf Water Systems, Inc., Highlands Insurance Company, Clarence Eugene Whipp, Jr., Southern Structures, Inc., Liberty Mutual Insurance Company and Ronald Thibodeaux d/b/a Ronald Thibodeaux Electrical Service, Defendants-Appellees.

No. 86-438.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

May 13, 1987.
Writ Denied October 2, 1987.

*623 Donald G. Cave, of Cave and McKay, Baton Rouge, for plaintiff-appellant.

Onebane and Assoc., Keith M. Borne, V. Farley Sonnier and John E. McElligott, Jr., of Davidson, Voorhies and Labbe, James P. Lambert, Lafayette, Joseph Touchet, Erath, Bertrand and Soileau, Ronnie J. Bertrand, Rayne, for defendants-appellees.

Before STOKER, LABORDE and YELVERTON, JJ.

STOKER, Judge.

Lennis J. Chauvin was electrocuted on July 18, 1979 while in the course and scope of his employment with Quality Steel Building Erectors, Inc. Quality's worker's compensation insurer paid benefits to his survivors. Chauvin's widow, Jannery Lemaire Chauvin, brought this wrongful death action individually and on behalf of the couple's two children against several defendants, alleging that their acts or instrumentalities had caused his death. Some of the defendants were dismissed after settling with the plaintiff. At the time of trial, only two defendants remained, Southern Structures, Inc., from which Quality had been formed, and Liberty Mutual Insurance Company, Southern Structures' general liability insurer.

The jury found negligence on the part of Southern Structures, Joseph Villy Touchet, C.E. Whipp and Gulf Water Systems. No percentages of liability were assigned. The jury awarded $515,000 in general damages to Mrs. Chauvin and the two children.

The trial judge found that as a matter of law Southern Structures was the statutory employer of Chauvin, and could not be held liable in tort for his death. He dismissed the claims against Southern Structures and Liberty Mutual. Mrs. Chauvin appeals.

FACTS

Before July 1, 1979 Southern Structures manufactured steel buildings regionally, and offered erection services within a limited radius of Lafayette, Louisiana. Southern Structures was contacted by C.E. Whipp, who was interested in the construction of a building for Gulf Water Systems, of which Whipp owned 51% of the stock. Steven Landry, a Southern Structures salesman, presented a quotation to J.B. Touchet, president of Gulf Water Systems, which contained an initial proposal and an alternative. Touchet signed his name and the company's on November 13, 1978, ostensibly accepting the alternative proposal at $27,234. A space on the quotation providing for acceptance by Southern Structures was left blank. However, the purchase order was entered, and Southern Structures fabricated the building.

The building was manufactured sometime in January of 1979, and Gulf Water Systems was billed for 75% of the contract price on February 28, 1979. Gulf Water Systems experienced difficulty in securing financing for the project, of which this building represented 25% of the total expense. Delivery to the erection site was delayed until after the financing was approved in June.

Meanwhile, Southern Structures had decided to limit its operation to the fabrication of metal buildings. As of July 1, 1979, a new company, Quality Steel Building Erectors, Inc., was formed to perform the erection services formerly offered by Southern Structures. Southern Structures and Quality were to be independent enterprises, though both had the same owner and the same officers. Initially, Southern Structures leased its "rolling stock" (i.e., pickup trucks and cherry pickers) to Quality.

*624 This stock was sold to Quality in December of 1980. No inventory was kept of tools and equipment on the trucks. These items evidently were allowed to remain on the trucks during the period of leasing and were "given" to Quality when the sale took place. The employees in Southern Structures' erection division considered themselves employees of Quality as of July 1, 1979. Southern Structures arranged for Quality to perform erection services on twenty or so contracts it had made prior to the formation of the new company. These arrangements were all verbal, and Southern Structures was to pay Quality the amounts allotted in its quotations for erection services. No new negotiations were to take place. Southern Structures continued to do the payroll and issue the paychecks to the erection employees for an undisclosed time after July 1, as Quality did not have an adequate bookkeeping system. Debits and credits were logged on Southern Structures' books as amounts "Due To" and "Due From" Quality. Once Quality's accounting procedures were established, the accounts were evidently settled.

On July 9, 1979 Southern Structures began shipping the building parts to the jobsite, and Quality began to erect the building. Timesheets show that Lennis Chauvin, a former Southern Structures' employee who had been "transferred" to Quality, worked on the job on July 17. He again worked on July 18, the day of the accident.

On the morning of July 18 Chauvin was driven to work by Alton LeBlanc, a co-employee. Both LeBlanc and Chauvin were foremen, and there is some question as to who was in charge of the job. LeBlanc, Chauvin and Ernest Primeaux, another Quality employee, proceeded to install guttering on the building. Midmorning, Chauvin was standing on a ladder using an electric drill when he screamed and fell to the ground. Apparently, no one witnessed the actual fall. Chauvin was unconscious when the other workers reached him. He was taken by ambulance to Lafayette General Hospital, where he died. The cause of death was listed as ventricular fibrillation secondary to electrocution.

An electrical engineer was called in by Liberty Mutual to determine the cause of the electrocution. He found that the power source for the drill used by Chauvin was located in a trailer about 300 feet from the metal building. Three extension cords were used to span the distance. The first cord was plugged into an outlet in the trailer, and was run out a window. It was connected to a six-receptable junction box. The second cord, also plugged into the junction box, was about two and one-half feet long. The third cord, which was about 74 feet long, had many nicks and cuts. At one point, wires were exposed and protruding around electrical tape. At another point, there was a bulge, which indicated a short. The drill was connected to this cord.

The engineer tested the drill, but found nothing wrong with it. He noted that the circuit in the trailer was not protected by a ground-fault circuit-interrupter (GFCI), the function of which he explained as follows:

"Basically, it senses the current leaving one conductor and it senses the current coming back to that same point, and of course, if there is no short or if the current doesn't leak off anywhere, then those should be equal. So, as long as those currents are equal or within a very close tolerance, it allows the circuit to be continued. If there's a difference in those two currents on the order of ten milliamps or more, the ground fault current interrupter circuit breaker will immediately trip and discontinue any current to that circuit."
He concluded:

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Bluebook (online)
509 So. 2d 622, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chauvin-v-gulf-coast-minerals-inc-lactapp-1987.