Jerry T. Troup, Jr. v. Fischer Steel Corporation

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 10, 2006
DocketW2005-00913-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Jerry T. Troup, Jr. v. Fischer Steel Corporation (Jerry T. Troup, Jr. v. Fischer Steel Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jerry T. Troup, Jr. v. Fischer Steel Corporation, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON February 2006 Session

JERRY T. TROUP, JR. v. FISCHER STEEL CORPORATION

An Appeal from the Circuit Court for Shelby County No. CT-001249-01 D'Army Bailey, Circuit Judge

No. W2005-00913-COA-R3-CV - Filed August 10, 2006

This is a personal injury action involving comparative fault. At a warehouse construction site, the defendant steel subcontractor cut a hole in the roof of the partially constructed warehouse. A temporary cover was put over the hole. A week later, the plaintiff employee of a roofing subcontractor fell through the hole and sustained serious injuries. The plaintiff received full workers’ compensation benefits from his immediate employer, the roofing subcontractor. Subsequently, the plaintiff filed a personal injury lawsuit against the defendant steel subcontractor. The steel subcontractor then sought to assert fault against the general contractor in charge of the entire warehouse construction project. The steel subcontractor filed a motion in limine to assert fault against the nonparty general contractor. The motion was denied and the case proceeded to a jury trial. At the conclusion of the trial, the jury awarded the plaintiff $546,000. The defendant steel subcontractor now appeals, asserting numerous errors by the trial court, including error in precluding the steel subcontractor from asserting fault against the general contractor. We reverse the trial court’s denial of the motion in limine, vacate the judgment, and remand, finding that the steel subcontractor should have been permitted to assert fault against the general contractor.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3; Judgment of the Circuit Court is Reversed, Vacated and Remanded

HOLLY M. KIRBY , J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which W. FRANK CRAWFORD , P.J., W.S., and DAVID R. FARMER , J., joined.

Stephen C. Barton and Kevin Baskette, Memphis, Tennessee, for Appellant/Defendant Fischer Steel Corporation.

David G. Mills, Cordova, Tennessee, for Appellee/Plaintiff Jerry T. Troup, Jr.

OPINION

This appeal arises out of a personal injury action brought by Plaintiff/Appellee Jerry T. Troup, Jr. (“Troup”) against Defendant/Appellant Fischer Steel Corporation (“Fischer Steel”), a Tennessee corporation, for injuries Troup suffered in a dire fall at a warehouse construction work site in Memphis, Tennessee. The incident occurred on April 2, 1997. Troup was employed by John H. Jolly Roofing Supply, Incorporated (“Jolly Roofing”), the roofing subcontractor at the construction site. At the time of the accident, Troup had been working for Jolly Roofing for about a month. Troup began working at the construction site as a roofer’s helper a couple of days prior to his accident.

Belz Enterprises (“Belz”) was the general contractor for the warehouse construction, and Fischer Steel was retained as a steel subcontractor at the job site. On March 26, 1997, Fischer Steel cut holes in the roof of the partially-constructed warehouse for the installation of heating and air conditioning units. After Fischer Steel cut the holes in the roof, it put unsecured temporary covers over the openings in anticipation that the heating and air conditioning units would be delivered the next day and installed into the holes. Fischer Steel then left the construction site. However, contrary to Fischer Steel’s expectations, the heating and air conditioning units were not installed into the holes in the roof at that time. At some point between March 26, 1997, and the accident on April 2, 1997, the temporary covers placed over the holes by Fischer Steel were removed and wooden pallets were placed over the holes. These wooden pallets held Jolly Roofing’s roofing materials.

On the afternoon of April 2, 1997, Troup and a co-worker were instructed to go up on the roof of the warehouse and pick up the pallets with roofing materials on them and connect them to a crane. As Troup and the co-worker lifted one of the pallets with roofing materials on it, Troup noticed the hole underneath the pallet and, while attempting to set the pallet back down, fell through the hole. Troup fell between thirty and forty feet to the concrete floor below, and suffered serious injuries to his wrist, ankle, and back. He was evacuated from the work site by helicopter, and spent approximately seven days in the hospital, undergoing multiple surgeries.

Troup initially filed this personal injury lawsuit in 1997, but voluntarily dismissed it in August 2000. Subsequently, on February 28, 2001, Troup re-filed the lawsuit against, inter alia, Fischer Steel1 in the Shelby County Circuit Court in Memphis, Tennessee. The complaint asserted that Fischer Steel negligently maintained and constructed the roof of the warehouse in such a manner as to create an unreasonably dangerous condition which was not open or obvious to Troup. The complaint alleged four negligent acts or omissions: (1) failure to properly inspect the holes in the roof; (2) failure to install curbs or caps on the holes; (3) failure to adequately cover the holes so that they would not later become hazardous; and (4) failure to warn others of the holes. Based on these allegations, Troup sought $750,000 in damages, including punitive damages.

On March 20, 2001, Fischer Steel filed its answer. While admitting many of the general factual allegations in the complaint, Fischer Steel denied that it had acted negligently, denied that its actions had directly and proximately caused Troup’s injuries, and denied that it acted recklessly or in conscious disregard of an unjustifiable risk. Fischer Steel averred that the duty to cover the holes in the roof had been delegated to, and assumed by, Belz, Jolly Roofing, and/or co-defendant

1 Troup also named Stephens Brothers, Incorporated, the HVAC contractor on the project, as a defendant in the lawsuit. Stephens Brothers, Inc. was dismissed from this lawsuit on summary judgment in October 2001.

-2- Stephens Brothers, Inc.2 Consequently, Fischer Steel maintained, it had no continuing duty to cover the hole through which Troup fell. Fischer Steel argued that the removal of the temporary covers that Fischer Steel placed over the holes and the placement of the wooden pallets over the holes constituted an intervening cause of the accident, barring any recovery against Fischer Steel. Fischer Steel also asserted that Troup was negligent and that his negligence should reduce any potential recovery. Fischer Steel relied on the doctrine of comparative fault, asking that the negligence of Belz, Jolly Roofing, and Stephens Brothers be assessed in determining liability.

In April 2001, Jolly Roofing’s workers’ compensation insurance carrier, Granite State Insurance Company (“Granite State Insurance”), filed a motion to intervene in the litigation, pursuant to Tennessee’s Workers’ Compensation Act, Tennessee Code Annotated section 50-6-112(c)(1), in order to protect its statutory subrogation rights in the event Troup recovered damages. In the motion, Granite State Insurance stated that Troup had previously made a claim against Jolly Roofing and Granite State Insurance for worker’s compensation benefits for the injuries he sustained in April 1997. As a result, Granite State Insurance paid worker’s compensation benefits for Troup’s medical expenses, temporary total disability benefits, and permanent partial benefits. On May 1, 2001, the trial court entered an order granting Granite State Insurance’s motion to intervene.

Discovery ensued. Both Stephens Brothers and Fischer Steel filed motions for summary judgment, seeking dismissal of Troup’s claims against them. Stephens Brothers’ motion was granted; Fischer Steel’s was not. Eventually, the jury trial was set for January 24, 2005.

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