Innisfree Corp. v. Estate of Jourdan ex rel. Jourdan

867 So. 2d 348, 2003 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 208, 2003 WL 1588025
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedMarch 28, 2003
Docket2020095
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 867 So. 2d 348 (Innisfree Corp. v. Estate of Jourdan ex rel. Jourdan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Innisfree Corp. v. Estate of Jourdan ex rel. Jourdan, 867 So. 2d 348, 2003 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 208, 2003 WL 1588025 (Ala. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinions

THOMPSON, Judge.

The estate of Paul A. Jourdan, Jr., deceased, by and through its administrator, Paul A. Jourdan, Sr. (hereinafter “the estate”), sued Innisfree Corporation; Innis-free Hotels, Inc.; Redmont Hospitality, Ltd. (“Redmont”); Total Assurance Security and Patrol (“TASP”); and several fictitiously named defendants, seeking workers’ compensation benefits for the dependent of Paul A. Jourdan, Jr. (“Jour-dan”), who was murdered during the course of his employment. The estate later amended its complaint to identify two of the fictitiously named defendants as Talmadge A. Worchester, individually and d/b/a TASP, and Geri Tanner, individually and d/b/a Dixie K-9.1

Innisfree Corporation (hereinafter “In-nisfree”) and Redmont moved for a summary judgment. On March 14, 2002, the trial court entered an order denying that motion and dismissing the estate’s claims against Tanner both in her individual capacity and doing business as Dixie K-9.

On June 26, 2002, the trial court conducted an ore tenus hearing. On September 12, 2002, the trial court entered a judgment in which it found Jourdan had been an employee of Innisfree; that Jour-dan’s brother, Raymond Jourdan (“Raymond”), was Jourdan’s dependent; and that Raymond was entitled to the statutory maximum of 500 weeks of workers’ compensation benefits pursuant to § 25-5-60, Ala.Code 1975. In that judgment and in a later order entered pursuant to Rule 60(a), Ala. R. Civ. P., the trial court dismissed the estate’s claims against all of the other remaining defendants. Innisfree timely appealed; the estate did not appeal the dismissal of its claims against the other defendants.

In February 1997, Innisfree managed the Holiday Inn-Redmont hotel (“the hotel”) on behalf of its owner, Redmont. Harlan Butler, the executive vice president of Innisfree, testified that Innisfree had entered into an agreement with TASP pursuant to which TASP was to provide security services for the hotel between the hours of 11:00 p.m. and 7:00 a.m.

Butler testified that the duties of the security personnel provided by TASP were established in an agreement the hotel reached with TASP before Jourdan began working at the hotel. Butler listed the duties the security personnel provided by TASP as follows: to stand inside the hotel [350]*350lobby; to be a visible security presence in the hotel; to escort employees and customers to the parking garage; to deal with unruly customers; to drive the hotel van to transfer airline employees between the airport and the hotel; and to drive the hotel van to pick up the hotel’s breakfast cook each morning and take her to work at the hotel. Butler testified that a person working at the hotel’s front desk generally instructed the security person on duty when a customer or employee needed an escort to the parking garage, when the hotel needed the security person to deal with an unruly customer, and what time to go to the airport. Butler stated that before 11:00 p.m., a hotel bellman usually performed some of those services, such as escorting patrons or employees to the parking garage, that were performed by the security personnel after 11:00 p.m.

Butler testified that Innisfree did not have the authority to discipline the security-service personnel sent to the hotel by TASP, nor could it terminate the security-service personnel. Butler also stated that Innisfree had no control over the scheduling of which nights a particular security-service person would work. Butler testified that if one of the security-service personnel could not work, that person telephoned TASP and not the hotel. Butler explained that it was TASP’s responsibility to provide a replacement security person to provide security services at the hotel in that event. Butler testified that the security personnel did not wear uniforms issued by the hotel, and that they wore either a security uniform or a blue police-officer-type uniform. Butler also testified that Innisfree did not maintain any personnel records, schedules, or payroll information for the security personnel and that the officers were paid by TASP.

Talmadge Worchester testified that he began doing business as Dixie K-9, providing security dogs for various businesses, but that by 1997, he was doing business as TASP; Worchester operated TASP as a security-service business. Worchester explained that TASP had contracts or agreements to provide security for several businesses, and that one of those businesses was the hotel. Other than Worchester, TASP had one full-time employee — a man named Walter who was called “Terry.” TASP assigned Terry to work at the hotel. Worchester testified that Terry hired his friend, Jourdan, to work for TASP so that Terry could have some evenings off. The record does not clearly indicate when Jourdan began working for TASP, but Worchester’s testimony indicates that Jourdan had been working for TASP for only a few months before he was killed.

Worchester testified that Jourdan had a full-time job as a security guard at a local greyhound racetrack, and that Jourdan worked one night per week for TASP; TASP assigned Jourdan to work at the hotel. Worchester explained the duties the hotel had informed TASP it wanted its security personnel to perform between the hours of 11:00 p.m. and 7:00 a.m., as follows:

“From my understanding, all that they were supposed to do down there was to check the floors, make sure all rooms were closed and [that] there were no vagrants in the hallways or in the restrooms .... [t]hen, they were supposed to make coffee. And then, they were to take the airline [employees] to them terminal.... And on [the] return trip, [they] were to stop and pick up the cook and come back to the hotel.”

Worchester testified that the hotel did not issue Jourdan a uniform, but that the uniform Jourdan wore was the one he wore to his job at the racetrack. Wor-chester stated that Innisfree did not take part in hiring either Terry or Jourdan, and [351]*351that it did not have the authority to fire the security personnel. Worchester stated that at one time, the hotel had considered hiring its own in-house security staff, but that it ultimately decided not to do so. Worchester also testified that he was concerned about TASP’s liability if there was an accident while Terry or Jourdan was driving the hotel’s van, so the hotel manager agreed to “put a waiver in there that their insurance would cover” any liability in the event the security personnel were involved in an accident while driving the hotel’s van. It appears, but is not clear from the record, that the insurance policy Worchester referred to was provided by the hotel, i.e., Redmont.2

It is undisputed that the hotel paid TASP $6.10 per hour for the security services Jourdan provided, and that TASP paid Jourdan minimum wage and in cash. The record indicates that TASP has had some difficulties with the Internal Revenue Service, apparently because of its failure to pay corporate taxes, its failure to pay taxes on behalf of its employees, and its failure to provide the appropriate income-tax forms to its employees.

On February 7, 1997, Jourdan, who was providing security services for the hotel, was murdered after leaving the airport in the hotel van purportedly on the way to pick up the hotel’s breakfast cook. However, Jourdan was found dead in his home, and the hotel’s van was recovered a few days after the murder.

Raymond, Jourdan’s brother, testified that he had visited Jourdan seven to eight times while Jourdan worked at the hotel.

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Bluebook (online)
867 So. 2d 348, 2003 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 208, 2003 WL 1588025, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/innisfree-corp-v-estate-of-jourdan-ex-rel-jourdan-alacivapp-2003.