Curt Peters, and Cheri Peters v. Wady Industries, Inc., and Patrick Terrio

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 9, 2014
DocketED100699
StatusPublished

This text of Curt Peters, and Cheri Peters v. Wady Industries, Inc., and Patrick Terrio (Curt Peters, and Cheri Peters v. Wady Industries, Inc., and Patrick Terrio) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Curt Peters, and Cheri Peters v. Wady Industries, Inc., and Patrick Terrio, (Mo. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

In the Missouri Court of Appeals Eastern District DIVISION ONE

CURT PETERS, ) No. ED100699 ) and ) Appeal from the Circuit Court ) of St. Charles County CHERI PETERS, ) 1211-CC00675 ) Appellants, ) Honorable Jon A. Cunningham ) vs. ) ) WADY INDUSTRIES, INC., ) ) Defendant, ) ) and ) ) PATRICK TERRIO, ) ) Respondent. ) FILED: September 9, 2014

Curt and Cheri Peters appeal the trial court's judgment dismissing their negligence action

against Patrick Terrio. We affirm.

Background

Mr. Peters and Mr. Terrio were employed by Tramar Contracting. Terrio was Peters’s

supervisor. Tramar provides various services to general contractors in the construction industry.

Among its services, Tramar delivers dowel baskets 1 manufactured by Wady Industries. On

September 24, 2008, Peters was injured when a stack of dowel baskets fell on him as he was

1 unloading them at a construction site. Peters and his wife, Cheri, filed this negligence action

against Terrio and Wady, seeking recovery for injuries sustained as a result of the accident. 2

In his petition, Peters alleges that the dowel baskets arrived at Tramar stacked in an

unsafe manner and remained as such until they were unloaded at the construction site. Peters

further alleged that, before the accident leading to his injuries, Terrio received multiple warnings

from Tramar employees concerning the safety hazards posed by the stacked dowel baskets.

Despite these warnings, Terrio ordered that the baskets be sent to the site stacked in an unsafe

manner where they fell from the truck onto Peters, causing him permanent and catastrophic

injuries. Specifically, Peters alleged that Terrio breached his duty to exercise reasonable care for

Peters’s safety in the following ways:

a. [Terrio] allowed the baskets to be transported on a flatbed truck while stacked at a level that exceeded a safe height;

b. [Terrio] failed to insure that the baskets were properly braced or secured for transportation and unloading;

c. [Terrio] failed to provide sufficient help;

d. [Terrio] failed to provide adequately trained help;

e. [Terrio] failed to provide a proper area for the unloading of the baskets;

f. [Terrio] failed to heed the warnings of employees about the stacked baskets;

g. [Terrio] allowed the unsafe course to become standard operating procedure; [and]

h. [Terrio] ordered and directed plaintiff Curt Peters to load, stack, transport, and unload the baskets in the aforementioned unsafe manner.

Terrio filed a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be

granted on the basis that Peters’s exclusive remedy lies in Missouri Workers' Compensation Law

1 Dowel baskets are 200-pound rebar paver baskets used in concrete construction.

2 (Chapter 287 RSMo). More specifically, Terrio maintained that the petition failed to allege any

conduct by Terrio outside the scope of Tramar’s non-delegable duty to provide a safe workplace.

The trial court agreed and granted Terrio’s motion to dismiss. Peters appeals, asserting that

Terrio engaged in affirmative negligent conduct in breach of a duty independent of Tramar’s

non-delegable duty to provide a safe workplace

Standard of Review

Dismissal of a petition for a failure to state a claim upon which relief may be granted is

reviewed de novo. 3 Amesquita v. Gilster-Mary Lee Corp., 408 S.W.3d 293, 298 (Mo. App. E.D.

2013). All factual allegations asserted in the petition are accepted as true, and the petition will

state a claim if the alleged facts meet the elements of a recognized cause of action. Id.

Dismissal for failure to state a claim is proper where the petition fails to allege facts essential to

recovery. Id.

Applicable Law

Workers’ Compensation Law provides the exclusive remedy for employees in claims

against their employers. At the time of Peters’s injury, its exclusivity clause stated as follows:

The rights and remedies herein granted to an employee shall exclude all other rights and remedies of the employee, his wife, her husband, parents, personal representatives, dependents, heirs or next kin, at common law or otherwise, on account of such accidental injury or death, except such rights and remedies as are not provided for by this chapter.

§287.120.2 RSMo 2006. (emphasis added)

2 Cheri also brought a claim for loss of consortium. For the reader’s ease, we refer to Curt as the primary plaintiff. 3 Though the parties characterize the issue as one of subject matter jurisdiction, the trial court clearly had subject matter jurisdiction over Peters's claims. In Missouri, subject matter jurisdiction is governed by the Missouri Constitution, and circuit courts have subject matter jurisdiction over all civil and criminal matters. J.C.W. ex rel. Webb v. Wyciskalla, 275 S.W.3d 249, 253 (Mo. banc 2009) (citing Mo. Const. art. V, §14). The trial court didn’t dismiss the petition for lack of jurisdiction but rather for failure to state a claim.

3 Before 2005, this exclusive remedy provision was interpreted to shield employees from

liability to co-workers except for affirmative acts beyond normal job duties, i.e. the “something

more” standard. See e.g., Burns v. Smith, 214 S.W.3d 355 (Mo. 2007). Then in 2005, a

statutory amendment mandating strict construction of Chapter 287 led appellate courts to hold

that the statutory definition of “employer” did not include a claimant’s co-workers. Robinson v.

Hooker, 323 S.W.3d 418 (Mo. App. W.D. 2010). As a result, suits against co-workers “at

common law or otherwise” were “not provided for by” Chapter 287, so employees were left

exposed to liability to co-workers for common law negligence. 4 The legislature passed a

corrective amendment in 2012 that essentially codified the “something more” doctrine. For

injuries occurring in the interim, appellate courts interpreted the standard for co-employee

liability with varying results. This court applied the “something more” doctrine and concluded

that, in order for an employee to be personally liable for a co-worker’s injury, the employee must

have engaged in some affirmative, purposeful, and dangerous act outside the scope of the

employer’s non-delegable duty. 5 Amesquita, 480 S.W.3d at 304-305. By contrast, the Western

District recently rejected the “something more” doctrine and held that, for the period in question,

an employee’s simple negligence - whether by act or omission - is actionable so long as it falls

outside the employer’s non-delegable duty. Leeper v. Asmus, No. WD76772, 2014 WL 2190966

(Mo. App. W.D. 2014). We need not resolve the conflict, as Missouri courts have never wavered

on the critical threshold issue that we find determinative here, namely whether the defendant

employee’s conduct was independent of his employer’s non-delegable duties.

When a plaintiff brings a common law negligence action against a co-employee, he must

establish the same elements applicable to any negligence action: (1) that a duty existed on the

4 For a thorough tutorial on the subject, see Hansen v. Ritter, 375 S.W.3d 201 (Mo. App. W.D. 2012).

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Related

J.C.W. Ex Rel. Webb v. Wyciskalla
275 S.W.3d 249 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 2009)
Gunnett v. Girardier Building & Realty Co.
70 S.W.3d 632 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2002)
Logsdon v. Duncan
293 S.W.2d 944 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1956)
Quinn v. Clayton Const. Co., Inc.
111 S.W.3d 428 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2003)
State Ex Rel. Badami v. Gaertner
630 S.W.2d 175 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1982)
Robinson v. Hooker
323 S.W.3d 418 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2010)
Stabler v. Stabler
326 S.W.3d 561 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2010)
Kelso v. W. A. Ross Construction Co.
85 S.W.2d 527 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1935)
Petersen v. Petersen
214 S.W.3d 355 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2007)
Hansen v. Ritter
375 S.W.3d 201 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2012)
Carman v. Wieland
406 S.W.3d 70 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2013)
Amesquita v. Gilster-Mary Lee Corp.
408 S.W.3d 293 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2013)
Leeper v. Asmus
440 S.W.3d 478 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2014)

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Curt Peters, and Cheri Peters v. Wady Industries, Inc., and Patrick Terrio, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/curt-peters-and-cheri-peters-v-wady-industries-inc-moctapp-2014.