Holt v. Preload Technology, Inc.

774 S.W.2d 806, 1989 Tex. App. LEXIS 1889, 1989 WL 79563
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 19, 1989
DocketNo. 08-89-00095-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 774 S.W.2d 806 (Holt v. Preload Technology, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holt v. Preload Technology, Inc., 774 S.W.2d 806, 1989 Tex. App. LEXIS 1889, 1989 WL 79563 (Tex. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

OPINION

OSBORN, Chief Justice.

The injured workman who filed this case against his employer in the trial court seeks to recover damages despite the protection from such suits by the Workers’ Compensation Act. We are asked to declare that statute unconstitutional or create a special exception and permit this suit to continue. We decline the invitation and affirm the trial court’s judgment dismissing the suit.

Arnold Holt was injured when the dome of a 10,000,000 gallon storage tank collapsed beneath him and he fell sixty feet onto the floor of the tank. As a result of the fall, he suffered a cervical dislocation which has resulted in him becoming a quadriplegic. Mr. Holt filed this suit against Preload Technology, Inc., an architectural engineering and construction company which was Appellant’s employer and was the architect-engineer of the work Mr. Holt was performing when the accident occurred. The suit claimed that Appellee was grossly negligent in permitting Appellant and other workmen to work under dangerous conditions. It also alleged that Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 8306, secs. 3, 3a and 5 (Vernon 1967), the provisions of the Workers’ Compensation Act which bar Appellant’s recovery, violate Article I, Sec[807]*807tions 3, 13 and 19 of the Texas Constitution. It is further contended that since the Appellee was performing work in a dual capacity as an employer and as the architect-engineer on this job, that the injured workman could recover his damages for ordinary negligence.

The Appellee filed special exceptions to all of these allegations and asserted that all claims were barred by the Texas Workers’ Compensation Act. The trial court sustained these exceptions and when Appellant refused to replead, the suit was dismissed for failure to state a cause of action. This suit was severed from the claims against other parties.

It is initially contended that this suit should not have been dismissed because it was based upon the dual capacity doctrine. That doctrine was first considered, and rejected by the courts in this state in Cohn v. Spinks Industries, Inc., 602 S.W.2d 102 (Tex.Civ.App.—Dallas 1980, writ ref’d n.r. e.). In that wrongful death case, recovery was sought under the doctrine of strict liability against an employer who was the lessor of a defective helicopter. Justice Robertson reviewed those cases from other jurisdictions which had adopted and rejected the dual capacity theory and in finding the arguments against adoption of the doctrine more compelling wrote:

The intent of the legislature in enacting our workers’ compensation law appears to be unequivocal; this law represents the exclusive remedy an employee has against his employer unless other remedies are expressly provided. To adopt the dual capacity doctrine would do considerable violence to the statutory language.

The court concluded that the creation of a new ground of recovery for employees covered by the workers’ compensation law is not a proper judicial function.

In both Gore v. Amoco Production Company, 616 S.W.2d 289 (Tex.Civ.App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 1981, no writ); and Davis v. Sinclair Refining Company, 704 S.W.2d 413 (Tex.App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 1985, writ ref’d n.r.e.), courts of this state rejected the dual capacity doctrine. In the latter case, Chief Justice Brown noted that the Act is clear that once the employee elects to accept benefits from the employer under the Act, he has no further cause of action against the employer. In applying Texas law, the federal courts have reached the same results. Mott v. Mitsubishi International Corporation, 636 F.2d 1073 (5th Cir.1981).

In the leading authority on the subject, A. Larson, The Law of Workmen’s Compensation, Vol. 2A, sec. 72.81(a) (1988), the author gives an analysis of the application of the doctrine as follows:

In a sense, a single legal person may be said to have many “capacities,” since that term has no fixed legal meaning. As a result, a few courts have stretched the doctrine so far as to destroy employer immunity whenever there was, not a separate legal person, but merely a separate relationship or theory of liability. When one considers how many such added relations an employer might have in the course of a day’s work — as landowner, land occupier, products manufacturer, installer, modifier, vendor, bailor, repairman, vehicle owner, shipowner, doctor, hospital, health services provider, self-insurer, safety inspector — it is plain enough that this trend could go a long way toward demolishing the exclusive remedy principle.

Professor Larson noted that the Tennessee Supreme Court, brushing aside all the fictitious sophistry of “dual capacity,” nailed down this point with breathtaking simplicity when it wrote:

The employer is the employer; not some person other than the employer. It is as simple as that.

[See McAlister v. Methodist Hospital of Memphis, 550 S.W.2d 240, 246 (Tenn.1977) ]. The author concludes with the history of the doctrine by saying:

The dual capacity doctrine, in spite of widespread and varied attempts to invoke it as a way to defeat exclusiveness, flourished in only two states, Ohio and California, and even there for only a few years, from 1977 to 1983.

[808]*808Larson, The Law of Workmen’s Compensation, Vol. 2A, sec. 72.81(c) (1988).

The Appellant relies upon the decisions in McKelvy v. Barber, 381 S.W.2d 59 (Tex.1964) and Lotspeich v. Chance Vought Aircraft, 369 S.W.2d 705 (Tex.Civ.App.—Dallas 1963, writ ref’d n.r.e.), to support his contention that an employee may sue an employer where a relationship other than employer-employee exists. Those cases are not applicable in this case. In the McKelvy case, the suit was filed against a doctor who was not the employer of the injured workman, but was “engaged in the general practice of medicine.” In its opinion in Lotspeich, the court makes it clear that the courts of this state have uniformly held that “the remedy given by the Workmen’s Compensation Law is exclusive and that the employee has no right of action against his employer on account of bodily injuries sustained in the course or scope of the employment....”

Having concluded that there is no more valid reason to adopt the dual capacity doctrine today than there was when the Dallas Court of Civil Appeals first rejected the contention, we overrule Point of Error No. One.

The Appellant next asserts the trial court erred in dismissing this case based upon Sections 3, 3a and 5 of Article 8306, because those provisions of the Workers’ Compensation Act violate Article I, Sections 3,17 and 19 of the Texas Constitution and the 5th and 14th Amendments of the United States Constitution.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
774 S.W.2d 806, 1989 Tex. App. LEXIS 1889, 1989 WL 79563, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holt-v-preload-technology-inc-texapp-1989.