Cornelius v. Powder River Energy Corp.

2007 WY 30, 152 P.3d 387, 2007 Wyo. LEXIS 30, 2007 WL 520963
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 21, 2007
Docket06-186
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2007 WY 30 (Cornelius v. Powder River Energy Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cornelius v. Powder River Energy Corp., 2007 WY 30, 152 P.3d 387, 2007 Wyo. LEXIS 30, 2007 WL 520963 (Wyo. 2007).

Opinion

VOIGT, Chief Justice.

[T1] Cornelius sued his employer (Baldwin) and the company for which Baldwin did contract work (PRECorp) for injuries Corne-lus suffered when he contacted a live electrical line. The district court granted summary judgment to PRECorp on two grounds: first, as the employer of an independent contractor, PRECorp was not vicariously liable for injuries to that contractor's employee; and second, PRECorp was not independently negligent. We affirm.

ISSUES

[12] 1. Whether the district court erred in failing to determine whether the contract between Baldwin and PRECorp was written or oral?

2. Whether the district court erred in applying the wrong standard to determine whether Baldwin was an independent contractor?

3. Whether genuine issues of material fact exist as to whether Baldwin was an independent contractor?

4. Whether genuine issues of material fact exist as to PRECorp's liability for its own negligence?

FACTS

[13] PRECorp is a rural electric cooperative serving the northeastern part of Wyoming. PRECorp was formed in 1997 by the merger of Tri-County Electric Association, Inc., and Sheridan-Johnson Rural Electrification Association. Baldwin, d/b/a Live Line Maintenance, provides construction and maintenance services to rural electric cooperatives in South Dakota, Nebraska, and Wyoming.

[T4] In 1990, Tri-County decided that its workload was such that it could no longer perform systematic inspections or routine line maintenance. Beginning the following year, Tri-County (and later PRECorp) entered into a series of contracts with Baldwin, whereunder Baldwin provided a variety of services, including routine inspection and maintenance of power poles and live electrical lines. Baldwin's crews inspected power poles, tightening hardware, replacing broken insulators and lightning arrestors, and retying loose conductors where necessary.

[T5] Baldwin's bids under the contracts were for work to be done on energized lines. The prices charged were set out in attachments to a series of contracts signed by the parties. The documents, themselves, were standard forms originally provided by the United States Department of Agriculture Rural Electrification Administration-later known as the Rural Utilities Services-and were designated as RUS Form 792, "Distribution Line Extension Construction Contract (Labor Only)."

[T6] Cornelius began working for Baldwin as a lineman in 1996. He had done similar routine maintenance work for eleven or twelve years in Montana. From 1996 through 1999, Cornelius performed maintenance work on various rural electric cooperatives' power lines in Nebraska and South Dakota. Beginning in late 1999, he began working on PRECorp's power lines, doing the same type of work. Baldwin provided Cornelius a bucket truck, a pneumatic wrench, and insulated gloves and liners. Cornelius provided his own hand tools.

[T7] During the last year or two of the period in which Baldwin's crews did work for PRECorp, Baldwin began to experience health problems and he stopped personally supervising his field crews. Subsequently, PRECorp began to notice deficiencies in the work done by those crews, some of which deficiencies raised safety questions, including crew training, the wearing of hard hats and safety glasses, and whether protective gear and bucket trucks had been tested. As a result of these concerns, PRECorp scheduled a meeting with Baldwin for February 21, 2002. At that meeting, Baldwin was given 30 days in which to correct the noted deficiencies and to provide to PRECorp written evidence that his equipment had been properly tested. When that evidence was not produced, Baldwin's contract was terminated.

[T8] Unfortunately, Cornelius was injured during the hiatus between the meeting *390 and Baldwin's contract termination. - On March 11, 2002, Cornelius was in the bucket of his truck tightening hardware on a PRE-Corp power pole with three energized lines. He had just removed his insulated gloves to tighten the hardware on the neutral connector when his head apparently contacted one of the live lines. The electric current entered his body near his left ear, followed pathways down both arms to the bucket, and then to the ground through the boom of the truck or through an uninsulated pneumatic hose. Cornelius sustained serious injuries.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

[19] Summary judgments are governed by W.R.C.P. 56, with particular attention paid to the following language from subsection (c) thereof:

The judgment sought shall be rendered forthwith if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.

[¥10] When summary judgment has been granted below,

[this Court reviews a grant of summary judgment de novo without giving any deference to the district court's determinations. In reviewing a district court's grant of summary judgment, this Court has before it the same materials as the district court and it employs the same standards as used by the district court. We examine the record from the vantage point most favorable to the party who opposed the motion, and we give that party the benefit of all favorable inferences that may fairly be drawn from the record.

Habco v. L & B Oilfield Serv., 2006 WY 91, ¶ 7, 138 P.3d 1162, 1164 (Wyo.2006). The movant has the initial burden of establishing a prima facie case by admissible evidence. If that is done, the burden then shifts to the opposing party to present specific facts showing that there remain genuine issues of material fact. Markstein v. Countryside I, L.L.C., 2008 WY 122, ¶ 11, 77 P.3d 389, 393 (Wyo.2003). A summary judgment granted in a negligence action is subject to more exacting scrutiny upon appeal because negligence actions "by their nature are factually dependent[.]" Foote v. Simek, 2006 WY 96, ¶ 9, 139 P.3d 455, 458 (Wyo.2006) (quoting Franks v. Indep. Prod. Co., 2004 WY 97, ¶ 9, 96 P.3d 484, 489 (Wyo.2004)).

DISCUSSION

Whether the district court erred in failing to determine whether the contract between Baldwin and PRECorp was written or oral?

[111] In its decision letter, the district court included the following footnote: "Plaintiff and PRECorp dispute whether a written contract or an oral contract actually controlled the work of [Baldwin], but this dispute is not material to the court's decision." On its face, this footnote does make it appear that the district court never made a decision as to what contract created the relationship between the parties. When the decision letter is read in its entirety, however, it is clear that the district court found that the parties had entered into written contracts. For instance, in considering whether PRECorp asserted a controlling and pervasive role over Baldwin's operations, the district court declared that "[the written contract between [Baldwin] and PRECorp contains a provision stating that the contractor ([Baldwin]) will perform work in compliance with all applicable safety laws."

[112] A review of the record makes the opposite conelusion-that the parties operated under an oral contract-an evidentiary absurdity.

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

Related

Timpano v. Central MT HRDC
2022 MT 169 (Montana Supreme Court, 2022)
Cornelius v. National Casualty Co.
2012 S.D. 29 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 2012)
Sierra Club v. Wyoming Department of Environmental Quality
2011 WY 42 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 2011)
Braunstein v. Robinson Family Ltd. Partnership LLP
2010 WY 26 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 2010)
ST. PAUL REINSURANCE CO., LTD. v. Baldwin
503 F. Supp. 2d 1255 (D. South Dakota, 2007)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2007 WY 30, 152 P.3d 387, 2007 Wyo. LEXIS 30, 2007 WL 520963, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cornelius-v-powder-river-energy-corp-wyo-2007.