Londell Marina, Jr. v. Bama Reinforcing, LLC (Appeal from Madison Circuit Court: CV-22-901025).

CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 8, 2024
DocketSC-2024-0106
StatusPublished

This text of Londell Marina, Jr. v. Bama Reinforcing, LLC (Appeal from Madison Circuit Court: CV-22-901025). (Londell Marina, Jr. v. Bama Reinforcing, LLC (Appeal from Madison Circuit Court: CV-22-901025).) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Londell Marina, Jr. v. Bama Reinforcing, LLC (Appeal from Madison Circuit Court: CV-22-901025)., (Ala. 2024).

Opinion

Rel: November 8, 2024

Notice: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the advance sheets of Southern Reporter. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions, Alabama Appellate Courts, 300 Dexter Avenue, Montgomery, Alabama 36104-3741 ((334) 229-0650), of any typographical or other errors, in order that corrections may be made before the opinion is printed in Southern Reporter.

SUPREME COURT OF ALABAMA OCTOBER TERM, 2024-2025

_________________________

SC-2024-0106 _________________________

Londell Marina, Jr.

v.

Bama Reinforcing, LLC

Appeal from Madison Circuit Court (CV-22-901025)

PER CURIAM.

Londell Marina, Jr., appeals from a judgment as a matter of law

entered by the Madison Circuit Court in favor of Bama Reinforcing, LLC,

in this negligence action commenced by Marina against Bama SC-2024-0106

Reinforcing, which arises from a workplace accident in which Marina was

injured. We reverse and remand.

I. Facts

At the time of trial, Marina had been a concrete finisher for 22 years

and he lived in Marietta, Georgia. A concrete finisher levels out, smooths,

finishes, and cures concrete that has been poured at locations on a

construction site. To do that job, Marina uses tools such as bull floats,

trowel machines, screed board, chipping hammers, and cure paper.

To strengthen concrete and to keep it from cracking under weight

and pressure, reinforced steel rods or wire mesh is placed inside the form

where concrete is to be poured. Such reinforced steel is called rebar, and

the placement of rebar is performed by rodbusters. When concrete is

poured for a foundation, rodbusters often use concrete blocks to support

the placement of rebar in the form. For elevated areas where concrete is

poured, rodbusters use metal bar "chairs" to hold the rebar or wire mesh

in place.

At the time of the accident, Marina was a concrete finisher for

Fessler & Bowman, a general contractor that had been hired to perform

all the concrete work involved in the construction of a new Federal

2 SC-2024-0106

Bureau of Investigation ("FBI") building at Red Stone Arsenal in

Huntsville, Alabama. Fessler & Bowman, in turn, had hired Bama

Reinforcing as a subcontractor to perform the rebar installation for the

project. Rodney Pate is the vice president of operations for Bama

Reinforcing, and his younger brother, Daniel Pate, was Bama

Reinforcing's foreman at the FBI building job site.

Bama Reinforcing's contract with Fessler & Bowman contained a

specific provision that required Bama Reinforcing to clean up its work

area after it had performed its duties.

"8. Cleanup and Removal. [Bama Reinforcing] shall maintain the area in which it performs the Work in a clean, neat and safe condition and shall comply promptly with instructions from [Fessler & Bowman] with respect thereto, upon completion of each stage, or when requested by [Fessler & Bowman]. [Bama Reinforcing] shall remove from the areas in which it performs the Work, to the satisfaction of [Fessler & Bowman], all of [Bama Reinforcing's] rubbish, debris, materials, tools and equipment; and if [Bama Reinforcing] fails to do so promptly, [Fessler & Bowman] may, after twenty-four (24) hours' notice to [Bama Reinforcing], remove the same to any place of storage or dumping ground at [Bama Reinforcing's] risk and expense and without responsibility for loss, damage or theft. All storage or removal costs incurred by [Fessler & Bowman] shall be deductible from any payment or balance due [Bama Reinforcing] hereunder."

(Bold typeface in original; other emphasis added.)

3 SC-2024-0106

On November 9, 2021, Marina was working on a concrete slab that

had been poured on ground level in a form. Initially, Marina was

operating the water truck used to moisten the concrete slab. Marina's

supervisor relieved him of that duty and told him to roll out the cure

paper that would be placed on top of the concrete. Marina proceeded to

walk from the water truck over to the location where the cure-paper rolls

were located. 1 However, when he got there, Marina realized that he

needed a knife to pull out the cure paper. Marina asked if anyone had a

knife, and one of his coworkers, who was over by the water truck,

responded that he had a safety knife. Marina walked back over to the

truck and retrieved the knife from his coworker. Marina testified:

"A. Once I got the knife, I turned around and went back, and I was probably not -- maybe a quarter of the way back to the UltraCure [the cure paper], and that's when I felt something in my foot. Immediately, I screamed and jumped up, and that's what happened."

Marina sat down and discovered that he had stepped on a piece of metal

"chair." The metal piece of chair had penetrated Marina's work boot and

1Marina testified that the cure-paper rolls were "maybe six or seven

[feet] long and maybe two [feet] wide. It's almost like a long piece of carpet."

4 SC-2024-0106

punctured Marina's right foot. Marina testified that the reason he had

not seen the piece of chair when he was walking was that "[i]t was almost

like it was camouflaged. … [T]he dirt kind of camouflaged this small

piece."

Because Marina was experiencing intense pain from the accident,

he was taken to Huntsville Hospital where the piece of chair was removed

from his foot, the wound was treated, and Marina was given medication.

Marina was placed on light duty and had to use a wheel crutch to

ambulate until around June 2022. Marina testified that he still

experiences pain from the injury, that he is not able to perform the

kicking and stomping his job requires as well as he could before the

accident, and that he tires more easily on jobs because of the pain.

On September 14, 2022, Marina commenced this action against

Bama Reinforcing, asserting claims of negligence and wantonness. On

September 23, 2022, Bama Reinforcing answered Marina's complaint,

and it asserted, among other defenses, contributory negligence.

On November 7, 2023, Bama Reinforcing filed a summary-

judgment motion and a brief in support thereof in which it argued that

Marina had not presented sufficient evidence to establish that Bama

5 SC-2024-0106

Reinforcing "was responsible for cutting a chair or leaving the subject

piece of chair on the ground." In the alternative, Bama Reinforcing

contended that Marina "was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter

of law for failing to watch where he was walking."

On January 2, 2024, Marina filed a response in opposition to Bama

Reinforcing's summary-judgment motion. In his response, Marina

asserted that rodbusters for Bama Reinforcing were the only workers on

the job site who used chairs. He also noted that Bama Reinforcing had a

contractual obligation to clean up its work area after the completion of

its work.

On January 26, 2024, the trial court denied Bama Reinforcing's

summary-judgment motion. The order did not provide a specific reason

for the denial, but it stated that the decision had been reached after

"[h]aving considered the arguments and representations of counsel, and

after careful review of all relevant and applicable law."

On February 6, 2024, the case proceeded to trial.2 During Marina's

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