Childress v. Short
This text of 691 P.2d 109 (Childress v. Short) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Plaintiff appeals a summary judgment for defendants Dean Wilson (“Wilson”), a contract logger and road builder, and Short, one of his employes. Plaintiff was injured when he was struck by a log loader that Short operated in Wilson’s employ. Plaintiff sued defendants for negligence. See ORS 656.154.1 Defendants assert that they are immune from suit under ORS 656.018.2 We reverse.
Plaintiff was a log truck driver employed by Richard Wilson Logging, a log hauler, which paid him at an hourly rate. Wilson subcontracted with Richard Wilson Logging for it to haul logs from a site at which defendants were working. Richard Wilson Logging told plaintiff to drive a log truck to the site to pick up logs. All that the record discloses about the [153]*153subcontract between Wilson and Richard Wilson Logging is that the latter was a “subcontractor” of Wilson and that, when plaintiff was injured, he was hauling logs for Richard Wilson Logging “in conformity with the log hauling subcontract.” The record does not disclose the extent to which Wilson actually exercised supervisory control over the log loading operation.
ORS 656.018(1) provides that workers’ compensation shall be an employer’s only liability for a compensable injury to a “subject worker.” ORS 656.018(2) provides, generally, that workers’ compensation is an injured subject worker’s exclusive remedy against “the worker’s employer” for a compensable injury. ORS 656.018(3) extends the immunity to other employes of the employer. Defendants assert that plaintiff was a “subject worker” of Wilson, that Short was, therefore, plaintiffs coemploye and that both defendants are immune from suit because of ORS 656.018.
The two elements required to establish that plaintiff was a “subject worker” of Wilson’s for purposes of a defendant’s immunity under ORS 656.018 are whether Wilson (1) had contracted to pay a “remuneration for * * * [plaintiffs] services” and (2) had the “right to direct and control the services.” See ORS 656.005(14) and (28);3 see also Spore v. Camac Veneer, 62 Or App 495, 661 P2d 582 (1983); Robinson v. Omark Industries, 46 Or App 263, 611 P2d 665, rev allowed 289 Or 741 (1980), rev dismissed 291 Or 5 (1981). The issue, therefore, is whether defendants carried their burden to establish that there was no genuine issue of material fact on both these points. ORCP 47C; Seeborg v. General Motors Corporation, 284 Or 695, 699, 588 P2d 1100 (1978). They did not.
Defendants here assert:
“[P]laintiff was compensated by defendant Dean Wilson through the conduit of a subcontractor, Richard Wilson, plaintiffs general employer. Dean Wilson paid Richard [154]*154Wilson for the hours worked by plaintiff, and Richard Wilson in turn paid plaintiff.”
The record, however, does not show if “Dean Wilson paid Richard Wilson for the hours worked by plaintiff,” or even if Wilson paid Richard Wilson Logging. The record also does not support the conclusion that Wilson paid plaintiff through the “conduit” of Richard Wilson Logging.4 Simply because Richard Wilson Logging subcontracted with Wilson and paid plaintiff at an hourly wage to haul logs “in conformity with the log hauling subcontract” does not establish either that Wilson had “contracted] to pay a remuneration for * * * the services” of plaintiff or that defendants have carried their burden to establish that there is here no genuine issue of material fact. Accordingly, the court erred in granting summary judgment for defendants.5
Reversed and remanded.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
691 P.2d 109, 71 Or. App. 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/childress-v-short-orctapp-1984.