Frazier v. Core Industries, Inc.

39 So. 3d 140, 2009 Ala. LEXIS 287, 2009 WL 4506594
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 4, 2009
Docket1060016
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 39 So. 3d 140 (Frazier v. Core Industries, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frazier v. Core Industries, Inc., 39 So. 3d 140, 2009 Ala. LEXIS 287, 2009 WL 4506594 (Ala. 2009).

Opinion

MURDOCK, Justice.

This case involves claims by Wilson Lamar Frazier against Core Industries, Inc. (“Core”), under the Jones Act, 46 U.S.C. § 688, 1 and also entails consideration of the Longshore and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act (“LHWCA”), 33 U.S.C. § 901 et seq. 2 Frazier appeals from a summary judgment entered by the Mobile Circuit Court in favor of Core. We affirm,

I. Facts and Procedural History

The trial court made the following factual findings, which Frazier does not dispute:

“1. Core is in the business of offloading or unloading materials and equipment from barges and ships to land. [Frazier] began working for Core in late-2003, early-2004. [Frazier] testified that he was hired directly by Morgan Myles and John Watson, employees of Core. [Frazier] also claims that he was an employee of Pinnacle Management Services (‘Pinnacle’). The records on file indicate that Core leased the services of [Frazier] from Pinnacle and that [Frazier] received his paycheck from Pinnacle. Core hired [Frazier] to work as a welder and paid him skilled welder’s pay, which was considerably higher than what Core paid the crews that regularly worked in its offloading operation.
“2. [Frazier’s] first job for Core was ‘[p]utting a tail on a barge’ by welding two sections of a barge together. The barge that [Frazier] was working on was ‘docked up to the side of the dock’ in the Theodore Industrial Canal. The barge was anchored so it would not shift or *143 move in the water. [Frazier] worked on this project for six to eight weeks.
“3. During the barge construction project, [Frazier] would go home every night after work and would come back in the morning. [Frazier] did not eat or sleep on the barge. The barge did not have a bathroom or living quarters, it was ‘just a plain barge.’ [Frazier] could get on and off the barge simply by using a walkway that connected the barge to the dock. The barge did not have an engine, navigational equipment, or any means of propulsion.
“4. [Frazier] claims that while he was working on this barge, he slipped while carrying a piece of steel onto the barge. [Frazier] alleges that he hurt his back when he slipped and fell on the barge. [Frazier] did not seek medical treatment following the accident and continued to work for Core.
“5. After the barge construction project, [Frazier’s] next project for Core was to repair a crane that had ‘rusted out.’ This repair job was done on land. During this same time frame, [Frazier] also helped Core install certain equipment, including a conveyor, on the barge that he had helped build. When he was installing the conveyor, the barge was ‘spudded down and tied [to the dock].’[ 3 ] During this time, [Frazier] was still working during the day and returning to his house every night.
“6. [Frazier’s] next job for Core was building á hopper.[ 4 ] [Frazier] helped build the hopper on Core’s dock in Theodore, which is ‘on land.’ This project took approximately a month and a half. [Frazier] then built a new set of spuds for the barge that he had worked on when he first started with Core. This project was also done on land. It took [Frazier] approximately three weeks to complete the spuds.
“7. [Frazier’s] next job for Core was welding new legs on a hopper, which was also done on land. [Frazier] claims that he suffered a second accident while he was welding the legs on the hopper. [Frazier] claims that he had finished with his weld and was looking for a chipping hammer when he accidentally stepped off the end of a scaffold board and fell to the ground. [Frazier] continued working that day and did not seek medical attention as a result of the accident. [Frazier] claims that he injured his back and leg in this accident.
“8. [Frazier’s] next job for Core was changing pipes, hoses, and hydraulic lines on a crane that was on a barge. The barge was anchored at Core’s Sara-land facility. This job took four or five days.
“9. After working on the crane, [Frazier] -next built ramps that would allow dump trucks to pull up to the barges for ease of loading. [Frazier] built the ramps in Core’s mechanic shop in Sara-land. [Frazier] spent three weeks building the ramps.
“10. [Frazier] claims that while he was building the ramps, he had to help shift, one barge down the bank at Core’s facility in Saraland. [Frazier] testified that Core employees used a crane to move the barge and he helped secure the barge when' it was moved to the proper position. The barge that was moved did not have an engine or any form of propulsion, did not have rudders *144 or keels, and did not have navigational lights.
“11. [Frazier] ordinarily worked from 6:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. for Core, with an hour for lunch. [Frazier] did not ordinarily take his meals on a boat and would return to his home every night after work.
“12. While [Frazier] spent some time on barges for Core doing welding tasks such as repairing ramps or fixing hoppers, he was never on a barge when it was being pushed by a towboat and was only occasionally on barges when they were moved with cranes. The farthest distance [Frazier] ever traveled when a barge was being moved by a crane was around 500 yards, which took approximately an hour to move.[ 5 ]
“13. While [Frazier] testified that he did some ‘deckhand’ work for Core, he defined a deckhand as a ‘laborer.’ As a laborer, [Frazier] said he would ‘run a shovel,’ grease a crane, or ‘whatever needs to be done.’ Even when [Frazier] was performing ‘deckhand’ duties (as he described them), he was arriving at the job site in the morning and returning to his home at night. [Frazier] never rode on a barge out of town and testified that the barges he worked on were not designed for navigation, they were work platforms.
“14. On one occasion, [Frazier] had to repair the conveyor on a barge that was in Destín. To do this, he loaded his own truck with equipment and drove to Destín. He did not spend the night on the barge. When [Frazier] was working on equipment on a barge that was in an offloading operation, the barge would ordinarily be anchored down with the spuds in the down position, and the barge would also be moored or tied to the dock.
“15. [Frazier] does not hold any maritime licenses. [Frazier] has never worked as a captain or a pilot, and has never worked as a deckhand on a boat in navigation. [Frazier] has never received any navigational training or man-overboard training. [Frazier] has never worked on barge that has been operated by some kind of propulsion, other than a crane moving a barge down the shoreline.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 So. 3d 140, 2009 Ala. LEXIS 287, 2009 WL 4506594, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frazier-v-core-industries-inc-ala-2009.