Gigliotti v. United Illuminating Co.

193 A.2d 718, 151 Conn. 114, 1963 Conn. LEXIS 316
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 11, 1963
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 193 A.2d 718 (Gigliotti v. United Illuminating Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gigliotti v. United Illuminating Co., 193 A.2d 718, 151 Conn. 114, 1963 Conn. LEXIS 316 (Colo. 1963).

Opinion

Kiug, J.

The named plaintiffs in these two cases, which were tried together, were electricians in the employ of the M. B. Foster Electric Company, hereinafter referred to as Foster. Foster was one of several independent contractors having contracts with the defendant to perform different phases of the defendant’s project of constructing, in Bridgeport, a new substation for the distribution of electricity, to be known as the Pequonnock substation. The defendant is a public utility engaged in the business of generating electricity and transmitting and selling it to the public.

*117 At the time of their injuries, on January 3, 1957, the named plaintiffs, hereinafter referred to as the plaintiffs, were dusting and cleaning a cubicle of the partially completed substation in order to get it ready to be put into service. A cubicle, which houses a circuit breaker, is a component of a completed substation. This work should not have been attempted if the cubicle was energized. In fact, the cubicle was energized and in consequence the plaintiffs received very severe electrical burns. There was abundant evidence from which the jury could conclude that the defendant was negligent in not de-energizing the cubicle and in not warning the plaintiffs, who were working together in it, that it had not been de-energized, and that this negligence constituted a proximate cause of the plaintiffs’ injuries.

The defendant’s assignments of error are principally directed to the charge and to certain rulings on evidence. We first take up the assignments relating to the charge. One of them, so far as it has been pursued in the defendant’s brief, is largely concerned with the third special defense, on which the defendant lays great stress. The defense alleged, in substance, that the plaintiffs’ only remedy, if any, was under the Workmen’s Compensation Act. This defense was a wholly statutory one, based on General Statutes § 31-154, included in chapter 566, the Workmen’s Compensation Act. 1 As such, it fell within the rule of Practice Book § 153. Capone *118 v. Sloan, 149 Conn. 538, 541, 182 A.2d 414; Domenick v. Wilbert Burial Vault Co., 149 Conn. 381, 385, 180 A.2d 290; Lowell v. Daly, 148 Conn. 266, 270, 169 A.2d 888.

Where the employee of an independent contractor is injured as a result of the negligence of the contractee, the contractee is not liable to a suit at common law if the employee has a remedy against the contractee under the section of the Workmen’s Compensation Act quoted in the footnote. Crisanti v. Cremo Brewing Co., 136 Conn. 529, 531, 72 A.2d 655; Farrell v. L. G. DeFelice & Son, Inc., 132 Conn. 81, 89, 42 A.2d 697, and cases cited.

The three conditions which must coexist if the work of the plaintiffs is to come within the terms of the statute, so as to render the special defense efficacious, have been well summarized as follows: “(1) the relation of principal employer and contractor must exist in work wholly or in part for the former; (2) the work must be on or about premises controlled by the principal employer; [and] (3) the work must be a part or process in the trade or business of the principal employer.” Battistelli v. Connohio, Inc., 138 Conn. 646, 649, 88 A.2d 372. Of the three conditions enumerated, the existence of the first two was open to no real dispute, and the court in effect properly so instructed the jury.

Thus, there was left for consideration only the question whether, within the meaning of the statute, the work was a part or process in the trade or busi *119 ness of the defendant. It is clear that the construction of a new substation, a project in which some fifteen independent contractors were from time to time engaged, is not, nor was it claimed to be, an undertaking of a character which “. . . ordinarily or appropriately would be performed by the . . . [defendant’s] own employees in the prosecution of . . . [its] business, or as an essential part in the maintenance thereof . . . Ibid.; Grenier v. Grenier, 138 Conn. 569, 571, 87 A.2d 148. Rarely could the construction of a new plant be found to be an undertaking falling within the terms of the statute as a part or process of the trade or business in the prosecution of which the plant was intended, upon completion, to be used. Grenier v. Grenier, supra (questioning the application of the statute made in the ease of Bello v. Notkins, 101 Conn. 34, 37, 124 A. 831).

The question is whether work such as the plaintiffs were doing, at the time when they were doing it in furtherance of Foster’s contract obligations, was of a character which would appropriately be performed by the defendant’s own employees. The defendant, in this connection, makes a claim which is ingenious rather than persuasive. This claim seems to be that since the plaintiffs were engaged at the moment of injury in the work of dusting and cleaning, which would normally be done by the defendant’s own employees as a matter of routine maintenance, the work constituted a part or process in the defendant’s trade or business within the meaning of the statute. The main flaw in this reasoning is that the plaintiffs were dusting and cleaning the cubicle, not in the routine maintenance of a substation in commercial operation, but as a step in furtherance of the performance of Foster’s con *120 tract obligation to install the electrical equipment required in the new substation. See cases such as Grenier v. Grenier, supra; King v. Palmer, 129 Conn. 636, 640, 30 A.2d 549; Bogoratt v. Pratt & Whitney Aircraft Co., 114 Conn. 126, 136, 157 A. 860. The evidence that the dusting and cleaning were routine maintenance, if indeed there was any, was slight indeed. In its charge, however, the court left the issue to the jury as a question of fact, and of this method of treatment the defendant has no ground for complaint. The court gave the applicable test on the meaning of § 31-154, as outlined in our cases, and especially in Grenier v. Grenier, supra, and explained that if the work was of such a character that it would be a part or process in the work of the defendant under that test, the defendant would have sustained its burden of proof on its third special defense.

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Bluebook (online)
193 A.2d 718, 151 Conn. 114, 1963 Conn. LEXIS 316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gigliotti-v-united-illuminating-co-conn-1963.