Jim Walter Homes, Inc. v. Walker

729 So. 2d 432, 1999 Fla. App. LEXIS 2454, 1999 WL 110694
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedMarch 5, 1999
DocketNo. 97-2167
StatusPublished

This text of 729 So. 2d 432 (Jim Walter Homes, Inc. v. Walker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jim Walter Homes, Inc. v. Walker, 729 So. 2d 432, 1999 Fla. App. LEXIS 2454, 1999 WL 110694 (Fla. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinions

GRIFFIN, C.J.

Appellant, Jim Walters Homes, Inc. [“JWH”], appeals a judgment rendered against it and in favor of the Estate of Richard Walker in a wrongful death case after a jury trial. On appeal, JWH asserts three errors were made below: entry of a partial summary judgment that, at the place and time of the incident in question, JWH had a duty to maintain the site of the accident in a safe condition; the refusal of the lower court to allow the assertion of the workers’ compensation immunity defense shortly before trial; and, finally, the submission to the jury of a second, special verdict form on damages after review of the first verdict form indicated there might be an error in the jurors’ reduction to present value. As to the latter, we find no error. As to the second, we conclude that the trial court acted within the scope of its discretion under the circumstances of this case. As to the partial summary judgment, however, we are bound to agree with the appellant that the lower court erred in issuing its partial summary judgment. Accordingly, we reverse and remand for a new trial. •

The facts underlying this case, presented over seven days of trial, are involved and would require a good deal of space to chronicle fully. The following is a summary of the [433]*433facts in order to place the contested ruling of the trial court in perspective.

The business of JWH is to build homes to varying states of completion, depending on the specific requirements of the owner. This enables the owner to perform substantial portions of the work and use his “sweat equity” to offset the cost of construction.

In this case, JWH entered into a home construction contract with Mary Knott on August 20, 1993 [the “contract”]. The contract obligated JWH to build the shell (Phase I) and then turn the project over to Mary Knott for construction of the flooring, insulation and drywall (Phase II). After Mrs. Knott finished her-portion of the work, JWH was to return and finish minor trim work that could not be completed until the Knotts performed their portion of the work (Phase III).

JWH substantially completed its portion of the work in November 1993 and, at that point, released the home to the Knotts. From that point forward, the Knotts were in actual possession of the property and, over the ensuing eighteen months, performed their portion of the work without participation or assistance from JWH. During this time, the Knotts hired their own subcontractors to perform portions of the work and exercised control over the job site. Also during this time, JWH’s original permit expired and Mrs. Knott, without JWH’s aid or participation, renewed the permit at her expense on October 7, 1994 and again on May 26,1995. The provision of temporary electrical power to the site was the obligation, by contract, of the Knotts. Rather than pay for a temporary power pole and line, the Knotts provided temporary electrical power to the home by running extension cords from an old shed they owned on the property to the new home.

In September 1995, at the request of the Knotts, JWH called Walker Plumbing, the original plumbing subcontractor, to return to the site and complete the plumbing “trim-out” work. Richard Walker was the individual who came to the site to perform the trim-out work. The “trim-out” consisted of installing the sinks and hooking up the hot water heater and interior plumbing fixtures to the exterior water sources. This work could be performed in approximately one-half day. Completion of the trim-out work did not require Mr. Walker to go underneath the house.

On the morning of September 21, 1995, JWH’s construction supervisor, Rob Larsen, visited the home and noticed, for the first time, the extension cords which Mr. Knott had placed on the site. Mr. Larsen also noticed that the cord was clipped into the electrical panel box of the new house and he told Mr. Knott that this was a dangerous condition and that he should remove the cord.

During the same visit, Mr. Knott informed Mr. Larsen that he intended to add an ice maker to the house and asked if he would recommend a contractor to perform the work. Mr. Larsen explained that since Mr. Walker would be coming to the project site in the afternoon, Mr. Knott might be able to establish a separate arrangement with him to install the ice maker.

On the afternoon of September 21, 1995, Mr. Walker arrived to complete the plumbing trim-out work on the home. Although JWH required Walker Plumbing to have its own portable generator and to provide its own temporary electricity, Mr. Walker used the Knotts’ extension cord to power his drill while working in the kitchen and one of the bathrooms of the new house that afternoon.

That evening, after completing the trim-out work he was required to perform under the contract, Mr. Walker went underneath the house to install the ice maker as requested by Mr. Knott. While under the house and working on- the ice maker, Mr. Walker was electrocuted.. Mr. Walker was not using any electrical device at the time of his death, and Mr. Knott testified that at the time Mr. Walker was working under the house, the extension cord was lying on the ground some fifteen to twenty feet away from Mr. Walker.

At some point before Mr. Walker began to install the ice maker, Mr. Knott washed his hands at the side of the house. The plaintiffs’ experts testified that a puddle of water formed and rose to a point where it came into contact with the extension cord, the wa[434]*434ter became energized, and an electrical current traveled through the moist ground to Mr. Walker. The defendant’s experts testified that the electricity could not have traveled the entire distance through the ground to Mr. Walker. Instead, they maintained that if the extension cord was still clipped to the electrical panel inside the house — as Mr. Larsen noticed earlier in the day — the entire house would have been energized and metal pipes underneath the house could have acted as conduits which, if touched by Mr. Walker, would have caused his electrocution.

Shortly before the trial, the lower court conducted a hearing on a multi-faceted motion for partial summary judgment filed by the plaintiff. Important for purposes of this appeal was the plaintiffs request for a judgment on the question whether JWH had a duty to exercise reasonable care for the safety of the decedent, Richard Walker, “while at the Knott job site.” During the course of the hearing, the plaintiff urged that because Robert Larsen, the licensed contractor employed by JWH, was the contractor who pulled the permit for the construction of the home, JWH was responsible for the safety of the job site until the certificate of occupancy was issued. According to the plaintiff, because of the lack of a ground fault interrupter device on the temporary power cord used by the Knotts, the job site was indisputably not “safe.”

For its part, JWH urged that, by contract, certain portions of the work were to be undertaken by them, other portions by the owner, and that it should not be held responsible for unsafe conditions on the job site created by the owner. JWH also argued that, with the exception of minor plumbing trim being done by Walker on the date of the accident, it had completed its work in Phase I of the project some eighteen months earlier and had turned the project over to the Knotts for completion of Phase II. The expectation was that the Knotts would complete their work in ninety days, after which JWH would send someone to do the plumbing trim-out.

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Bluebook (online)
729 So. 2d 432, 1999 Fla. App. LEXIS 2454, 1999 WL 110694, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jim-walter-homes-inc-v-walker-fladistctapp-1999.