Eaker v. Kansas City Power & Light Co.

473 S.W.3d 153, 2015 Mo. App. LEXIS 822, 2015 WL 4910568
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 18, 2015
DocketWD 77851
StatusPublished

This text of 473 S.W.3d 153 (Eaker v. Kansas City Power & Light Co.) 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
Eaker v. Kansas City Power & Light Co., 473 S.W.3d 153, 2015 Mo. App. LEXIS 822, 2015 WL 4910568 (Mo. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Alok Ahuja, Chief Judge

, James Eaker alleges that he was injured when he stepped through a gap in a walkway while repairing the boiler at a power plant owned and operated by Kansas City Power and Light Company (“KCP & L”).1 At the time of his injury, Eaker was employed by a third-party, boiler-maintenance-and-repair contractor,, not by KCP & L. Eaker sued KCP & L for his bodily injuries, claiming that the company had failed to use'ordinary care to remedy or warn of the gap in the walkway. The circuit court granted summary judgment to KCP & L, finding that it was Eaker’s statutory employer under § 287.040.1,2 and that Eaker’s exclusive remedy for his injuries was therefore through the worker’s compensation system. Eaker appeals. We conclude that KCP & L failed to adequately plead the affirmative defense that it was Eaker’s statutory employer, and therefore that it was entitled to the protections-of workers’ compensation exclusivity. We accordingly reverse, and remand for further proceedings.

Factual Background

Viewed in the light most fávorable tó Eaker, the facts show that he was injured on the morning of July 19, 2008, while repairing the boiler at KCP & L’s Hawthorn 5 power plant. Although he was working on KCP & L’s property, at the time of his injury Eaker was employed by Enerfab, a boiler-maintenance and -repair contractor.

Prior to the incident in question, KCP & L contracted with Enerfab to service and maintain the Hawthorn 5 boiler unit. En-erfab employees were on -KCP & L property at least four times a week to perform boiler unit servicing and maintenance.

Eaker’s injury occurred during the emergency repair of a tube leak in the Hawthorn 5 boiler. • KCP & L contacted Enerfab about the issue, and Enerfab in turn contacted Eaker’s union. The union’s hiring hall dispatched Eaker, a union boilermaker, to the plant. Eaker'worked at the plant overnight from July 17 to July 18, .then again overnight the following evening until he was injured at approximately 7:20 a.m. on .the morning of July 19, 2008. Eaker’s injury occurred while he was pulling a light out of the boiler. Eaker stated that, as he pulled the light out, he stepped back, and his foot fell through a gap in the walkway on which he was standing.

Eaker filed a- workers’ compensation claim against Enerfab in March 2010. He filed this civil action against KCP & L on May 18, 2012. ..

In its Answer to Eaker’s Petition, KCP & L asserted a series of affirmative defenses. KCP & L’s thirteenth affirmative defense alleged that,

[t]o the extent Plaintiff has received compensation from other persons or entities involved in this occurrence, including compensation from his employer in a [156]*156workers’ compensation claim, Plaintiffs monetary damages recoverable herein should be reduced by the amount received from those third parties or by the amount stipulated in those settlements, whichever is greater.

KCP & L’s sixteenth affirmative defense alleged:

Defendant cannot be held liable for Plaintiffs alleged accident or subsequent injuries to the extent Defendant relinquished control of the premises to Plaintiffs employer at the time of the accident. Furthermore, Plaintiff has been fully compensated for the alleged injury through his exclusive remedy, worker’s compensation.

Eaker filed a Motion to Make More Definite and Certain, or In the Alternative^ to Strike, Portions of Defendant’s Answer. The motion challenged, among other things, the particularity with which KCP & L had pleaded its sixteenth affirmative defense. Eaker argued that KCP & L’s affirmative defenses, including its sixteenth defense, were “plead as mere con-clusory allegations unsupported by any facts.”

In its opposition to Eaker’s motion for a more definite statement, KCP & L characterized its sixteenth affirmative defense as follows:

This defense provides the fact that KCP & L relinquished a degree of control to Plaintiffs employer. If KCP & L no longer had control over plaintiff, then KCP & L is no longer liable and Plaintiffs only remedy is through worker’s compensation. Again, this affirmative defense is sufficiently pled for Plaintiff to prepare for trial.

The trial court sustained Eaker’s motion for a more definite statement with respect to KCP & L’s sixteenth affirmative defense. KCP & L filed an amended answer on December 6, 2012, which revised its sixteenth defense in the following respects:

Defendant cannot be held liable for Plaintiffs alleged accident or subsequent injuries to the extent Defendant contracted with Plaintiffs employer, Enerfab, to relinquish relinquished control of the premises and safety of Enerfab’s employees to Enerfab to Plaintiff s employer at the time of the accident. Furthermore, Plaintiff has been fully compensated for the alleged injury through his exclusive remedy, worker’s compensation.

The circuit court issued a scheduling order on October 16, 2012. The scheduling order specified that motions to amend the pleadings be filed no later than April 1, 2013, that dispositive motions be filed no later than June 24, 2013, and that “[a]ll discovery will be completed on or before July 31, 2013.” The order also provided that “[t]he above cause is Specially Set for trial on September 23[,] 2013. This setting is a NO CONTINUANCE setting.”

The circuit court entered an order on July 30, 2013, which granted the parties’ Joint Motion to Amend Scheduling Order and to Continue Trial Setting. The July 2013 order removed the case from the trial docket, and granted KCP & L until September 9, 2013 “to file [a] dispositive motion based upon the statutory employment defense.”

KCP & L filed a motion for summary judgment on September 9, 2013, claiming that Eaker was its “statutory employee” under § 287.040.1, and thus that Eaker’s exclusive remedy against KCP & L was under the Workers’ Compensation Law. Eaker’s opposition argued, among other things, that KCP & L had not properly pled a statutory employment defense in its answer, and that the defense was therefore waived.

[157]*157On July 14, 2014, the circuit court granted summary judgment to KCP & L. With respect to the adequacy of KCP & L’s pleading, the circuit court found that, “[w]hile the affirmative defense contained in paragraph 16 of the Defendant’s Answer could have been drafted with more particularity, at the very least, Plaintiff was put on notice that Defendant intended to use the exclusivity of the Workers’ Compensation [Law] as an affirmative defense.” The court also reasoned that it was unnecessary for KCP & L to expressly refer to “statutory employment,” since the basis of KCP & L’s defense “is the exclusivity of the Workers’ Compensation [Law], not that Plaintiff is a ‘statutory employee.’ ” Finally, the court observed that, after KCP & L filed its amended answer, “not only did Plaintiff not object to the affirmative defenses in Defendant’s Amended Answer, but Plaintiff failed to file a subsequent motion regarding Defendant’s pleadings.” On the merits, the circuit court found that the undisputed facts established that KCP &

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
473 S.W.3d 153, 2015 Mo. App. LEXIS 822, 2015 WL 4910568, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eaker-v-kansas-city-power-light-co-moctapp-2015.