Delanna Miller, Individually And as Administrator of the Estate of Justin Miller As Legal Guardian of Kyndell Elaine Miller, a Minor And as Legal Guardian of Justin Wayne Miller, a Minor v. Kentucky Power Company D/B/A Kentucky Power

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 2, 2023
Docket2022 CA 001200
StatusUnknown

This text of Delanna Miller, Individually And as Administrator of the Estate of Justin Miller As Legal Guardian of Kyndell Elaine Miller, a Minor And as Legal Guardian of Justin Wayne Miller, a Minor v. Kentucky Power Company D/B/A Kentucky Power (Delanna Miller, Individually And as Administrator of the Estate of Justin Miller As Legal Guardian of Kyndell Elaine Miller, a Minor And as Legal Guardian of Justin Wayne Miller, a Minor v. Kentucky Power Company D/B/A Kentucky Power) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Delanna Miller, Individually And as Administrator of the Estate of Justin Miller As Legal Guardian of Kyndell Elaine Miller, a Minor And as Legal Guardian of Justin Wayne Miller, a Minor v. Kentucky Power Company D/B/A Kentucky Power, (Ky. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

RENDERED: NOVEMBER 3, 2023; 10:00 A.M. TO BE PUBLISHED

Commonwealth of Kentucky Court of Appeals NO. 2022-CA-1200-MR

DELANNA MILLER, INDIVIDUALLY; AND AS ADMINISTRATOR OF THE ESTATE OF JUSTIN MILLER; AS LEGAL GUARDIAN OF KYNDELL ELAINE MILLER, A MINOR; AND AS LEGAL GUARDIAN OF JUSTIN WAYNE MILLER, A MINOR APPELLANT

APPEAL FROM BREATHITT CIRCUIT COURT v. HONORABLE LISA HAYDEN WHISMAN, JUDGE ACTION NO. 17-CI-00087

KENTUCKY POWER COMPANY D/B/A KENTUCKY POWER; AEP KENTUCKY POWER, ASSUMED NAME CORPORATION OF KENTUCKY POWER COMPANY; AMERICAN ELECTRIC POWER, AN ASSUMED NAME CORPORATION OF KENTUCKY POWER COMPANY; ASPLUNDH TREE EXPERT CO.; AND KENTUCKY POWER, ASSUMED NAME CORPORATION OF KENTUCKY POWER COMPANY APPELLEES OPINION AFFIRMING

** ** ** ** **

BEFORE: CALDWELL, COMBS, AND KAREM, JUDGES.

CALDWELL, JUDGE: Delanna Miller appeals from the Breathitt Circuit Court’s

grant of summary judgment in favor of Kentucky Power Company based on up-

the-ladder immunity. We affirm.

FACTS

Justin Miller was tragically electrocuted and killed while trimming a

tree away from an electric utility’s right of way. He was working as an employee

of Asplundh Tree Expert Company (“Asplundh”). Asplundh performed tree

trimming right of way maintenance work pursuant to a contract with Kentucky

Power Company (“Kentucky Power”).

Delanna Miller (“Miller”) is the widow of Justin Miller. As the

administrator of her husband’s estate, Miller filed and settled a workers’

compensation claim with Asplundh. Miller also filed suit against Kentucky Power,

in her individual capacity and as administrator of the estate and the guardian of

minor children, asserting claims for wrongful death and for loss of consortium.

Kentucky Power filed a motion for summary judgment, arguing it was

entitled to up-the-ladder immunity. It cited undisputed evidence of its own and

Asplundh’s workers’ compensation coverage and of its contract with Asplundh –

-2- for Asplundh to perform tree trimming right of way maintenance work (also called

line clearance) for Kentucky Power. Kentucky Power further argued that the tree

trimming right of way maintenance work performed by Asplundh was a regular or

recurrent part of its business. It asserted that vegetation management to further

safety and prevent outages was required by law and cited evidence that the tree

trimming right of way maintenance work was generally performed several times

per week year-round barring inclement weather.

In response, Miller asserted that Kentucky Power could not prove that

it would normally perform or be expected to perform the tree trimming work with

its own employees. Miller pointed to testimony that Kentucky Power’s own

employees did not perform this type of tree trimming work and that other electric

utilities also did not perform this kind of work with their own employees. She

argued Kentucky Power could not show the work was a regular or recurrent part of

its business as defined by General Electrical Company v. Cain, 236 S.W.3d 579

(Ky. 2007):

Work of a kind that is a “regular or recurrent part of the work of the trade, business, occupation, or profession” of an owner does not mean work that is beneficial or incidental to the owner’s business or that is necessary to enable the owner to continue in business, improve or expand its business, or remain or become more competitive in the market. It is work that is customary, usual, or normal to the particular business (including work assumed by contract or required by law) or work that the business repeats with some degree of

-3- regularity, and it is of a kind that the business or similar businesses would normally perform or be expected to perform with employees.

Id. at 588 (emphasis added) (citation omitted).

Despite Miller’s arguments, the trial court granted Kentucky Power’s

motion for summary judgment. It cited another portion of Cain in which our

Supreme Court defined regular as meaning a “customary, usual or normal part” of

the business “including work assumed by contract or required by law” and

recurrent as meaning “repeated though not with the preciseness of a clock.”

The trial court recognized that it was undisputed that Kentucky Power

never performed the tree-trimming right of way maintenance work with its own

employees. But the trial court viewed the question of whether a business ever

performed the work at issue with its own employees as only one factor to consider

in determining whether up-the-ladder immunity applied.

The trial court further noted precedent stating that the fact that a

business may never use its own employees to perform the work at issue does not

necessarily preclude up-the-ladder immunity. Specifically, it quoted Cabrera v.

JBS USA, LLC, 568 S.W.3d 865 (Ky. App. 2019):

whether JBS employees ever performed this type of work with its own employees or had employees skilled enough or trained to do it is not dispositive of this issue. Persons or entities who engage another to perform a part of the work which is a recurrent part of their business, trade, or occupation are considered “contractors” under the Act

-4- even if they never perform that type of work with their own employees.

Id. at 869-70 (citing Fireman’s Fund Ins. Co. v. Sherman & Fletcher, 705 S.W.2d

459, 462 (Ky. 1986)).

The trial court determined that the tree trimming line clearance work

at issue was recurrent because it was performed frequently1 and that it was regular

because it was required by law.2 So, it concluded that this work was a regular or

recurrent part of the work of Kentucky Power’s business and that Kentucky Power

was therefore entitled to up-the-ladder immunity.

Miller then filed the appeal before us now3 in a timely manner. She

contends that Fireman’s Fund was modified by Cain and that Cabrera (decided by

this Court) is inconsistent with Kentucky Supreme Court precedent including Cain.

1 The trial court characterized the tree-trimming right of way maintenance work as being performed daily. Based on our review of the record, testimony indicated that such tree trimming right of way maintenance work was performed several times per week year-round barring inclement weather – if not technically daily, nearly so. Miller does not dispute that this type of work was performed on a frequent basis. 2 In concluding the work at issue was required by law, the trial court cited Section 3 of 807 Kentucky Administrative Regulations (“KAR”) 5:041 as requiring electric utilities to comply with the National Electric Safety Code (“NESC”). And it quoted Section 218 of the NESC: “vegetation that may damage ungrounded supply conductors should be pruned or removed.” (Record (“R.”), p. 617). Miller does not appear to dispute that Kentucky Power was required by law to manage vegetation around its distribution lines. 3 Miller had filed an earlier appeal (No. 2022-CA-0325-MR). The trial court’s initial order granting summary judgment in Kentucky Power’s favor stated the order was “final and appealable”; however, this initial order granting summary judgment did not adjudicate Kentucky Power’s third-party claim against Asplundh nor did it state there was no just cause for delay. Thus, we determined that the order initially granting summary judgment was an interlocutory,

-5- She further contends that Kentucky Power cannot show that it would normally

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