Cooley v. Slocum

313 So. 2d 606
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 21, 1975
DocketNo. 4868
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 313 So. 2d 606 (Cooley v. Slocum) 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
Cooley v. Slocum, 313 So. 2d 606 (La. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinions

HOOD, Judge.

Lloyd L. Cooley claims damages for personal injuries sustained by him when he fell or jumped off a railroad car while working for Central Plumbing and Heating Company. Defendants are: J. W. Slocum, d/b/a J. W. Slocum Construction Company; Jimmy B, Guinn, a partner in the partnership doing business as Central Plumbing and Heating Company; Maryland Casualty Company; and Aubrey Edwards. Slocum,- Guinn and Maryland filed motions for summary judgment dismissing the suit as to them. The first two named defendants also filed exceptions of no right and no cause of action. The trial judge rendered a summary judgment dismissing the suit as to Slocum, Guinn and Maryland, and he also rendered judgment overruling the exceptions of no right or cause of action. Plaintiff appealed.

The issues are: (1) Was Slocum’s regularly employed dragline operator a borrowed employee, or an employee pro hac vice, of Central at the time the accident occurred? (2) Is defendant Guinn, a partner in the employing partnership, immune from tort liability for injuries sustained by plaintiff during the course of his employment by that partnership? (3) Is plaintiff entitled to recover from the liability insurer of defendant Guinn, even if Guinn should be held to be immune from 'tort liability?

The pleadings and the receivable evidence show that an accident occurred on April 24, 1972, while Cooley was working as a pipefitter for Central Plumbing and Heating Company, a partnership composed of defendant Jimmy Guinn and his brother, Leroy Guinn. Plaintiff at that time was helping to unload some pipe from a railroad gondola car for his employer. Defendant Edwards also was an employee of Central, and he was serving as foreman on the job. Central had rented a dragline, with an operator and an oiler, from defendant Slocum, and the dragline was being used in unloading the pipe. A piece of pipe slipped or rolled over while being moved by the dragline, and that caused plaintiff to jump or to fall from the railroad car. He sustained injuries as a result of that accident.

Maryland Casualty Company was the liability insurer of defendant Slocum. It also was the workmen’s compensation and liability insurer of Central.

Plaintiff alleges that Slocum was negligent in having failed to furnish adequate equipment and personnel for unloading the car, and in failing to warn plaintiff and others of the danger. He alleges also that defendants Guinn and Edwards were negligent in having failed to utilize safe equipment and to supervise properly. He demands judgment against defendant Maryland, as the liability insurer of both Slocum and Guinn, and he argues that he is entitled to recover from Maryland as the insurer of defendant Guinn, even if Guinn should be decreed to be immune from tort liability.

The trial judge concluded that the operator of Slocum’s dragline was a borrowed employee, or an employee pro hac vice, of Central at the time the accident occurred, and that for that reason Slocum and its insurer were not liable for the damages sustained by plaintiff. He held that Cooley’s remedy against defendant Guinn, a partner in the employing partnership, is exclusively under the workmen’s compensation act, and that plaintiff thus is not entitled to recover damages from that defendant. The trial judge held, finally, that the liability policy issued by Maryland to Central excluded coverage for damages for the injuries sustained by plaintiff, since plaintiff was entitled to compensation for that injury under the workmen’s compensation act. For [608]*608those reasons, a summary judgment was rendered dismissing the suit as to those three defendants. Judgment also was rendered overruling the exception of no right or cause of action filed by Slocum and Guinn, the parties having stipulated that such a judgment should be rendered since the rights of those parties would be determined on the motions for summary judgment. No determination was made of plaintiff’s claim against Edwards, and the suit is still pending against that defendant.

Liability of Slocum

The evidence produced at the hearing on the motions for summary judgment included affidavits of J. W. Slocum, Richard Hathorn (the operator of Slocum’s drag-line) and Jimmy B. Guinn. It also included depositions of those parties and the deposition of defendant Edwards, as well as the insurance policies which Maryland had issued to Slocum and Central.

The evidence shows that Central was engaged in the business of plumbing, heating, air conditioning ventilation and industrial piping. It entered into a sub-contract with Mclnnis Brothers Construction Company to lay some insulated pipe in connection with a construction job being performed by Mclnnis, as general contractor, at the City of Alexandria power plant. Some of the pipe was delivered by railroad, and the railroad gondola cars containing the pipe were parked on a siding at the construction site. Central entered into an agreement with Slocum under the terms of which Slocum furnished Central with a dragline or crane, which was to be used in unloading the pipe. The dragline was rented for $30.00 per 'hour, and Slocum furnished with that machine his regularly employed dragline operator, Richard Hathorn, and his regularly ' employed oiler, Herbert Peart.

Central did not own any heavy equipment such as draglines, cranes, bulldozers or cherry pickers. When it needed to have some heavy lifting done it customarily rented a machine which could do the job. Ordinarily it rented a dragline or crane by the hour, with the operator and the oiler. Central also employed some pipefitters from a local union to work in connection with laying the pipe, and some of those employees assisted in unloading the pipe from the gondola cars. Plaintiff Cooley and defendant Edwards were pipefitters employed by Central in that manner for this job.

The trial judge found that “Slocum had no control or supervision over how the crane or its operator unloaded the pipe from the railroad car,” that “Slocum did not furnish or control the chain or other devices being used to unload the pipe,” and that “the complete supervision of the crane operator, Richard Hathorn, as well as the other workers on the job were under the control of Central Plumbing Company and its pipefitters.” The trial court concluded that the dragline operator was a “borrowed servant,” or employee pro hac vice, of Central at the time of this accident, and that Slocum thus was not liable for the alleged negligent acts of Hathorn. He rendered a summary judgment, therefore, dismissing the suit against Slocum and his liability insurer, Maryland Casualty Company. The cases of Benoit v. Hunt Tool Company, 219 La. 380, 53 So.2d 137 (1951), and Kirkland v. Western Electric Company, Inc., 296 So.2d 350 (La.App. 4 Cir. 1974), were relied on as authority for that judgment.

We have concluded that there is a genuine issue of material fact as to whether Slocum’s regularly employed dragline operator, Hathorn, was under the “control” of Central or its employees to the extent that Hathorn became a borrowed employee or an employee pro hac vice of Central. The judgment appealed from, therefore, must be reversed insofar as it dismissed the suit against Slocum and its insurer, Maryland, and the case must be remanded for trial as to those defendants.

[609]*609There is a presumption that the general employer retains control and remains liable for the negligent acts of his employee. If the general employer seeks to establish that his employee has become the “borrowed servant," or an employee

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

Related

Cooley v. Slocum
318 So. 2d 45 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1975)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
313 So. 2d 606, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooley-v-slocum-lactapp-1975.