Mary Ellen Little, Becky Little Anthony, Tricia Rose Jackson, Eric John Little, James Shannon Little, Widow and Children of Johnny James Little, and Debra Dee Keefer, as Independent of the Estate of Johnny James Little v. Delta Steel, Inc. and Reliance Steel & Aluminum Co.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 11, 2013
Docket02-12-00201-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Mary Ellen Little, Becky Little Anthony, Tricia Rose Jackson, Eric John Little, James Shannon Little, Widow and Children of Johnny James Little, and Debra Dee Keefer, as Independent of the Estate of Johnny James Little v. Delta Steel, Inc. and Reliance Steel & Aluminum Co. (Mary Ellen Little, Becky Little Anthony, Tricia Rose Jackson, Eric John Little, James Shannon Little, Widow and Children of Johnny James Little, and Debra Dee Keefer, as Independent of the Estate of Johnny James Little v. Delta Steel, Inc. and Reliance Steel & Aluminum Co.) 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.

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Mary Ellen Little, Becky Little Anthony, Tricia Rose Jackson, Eric John Little, James Shannon Little, Widow and Children of Johnny James Little, and Debra Dee Keefer, as Independent of the Estate of Johnny James Little v. Delta Steel, Inc. and Reliance Steel & Aluminum Co., (Tex. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS FORT WORTH

NO. 02-12-00201-CV

MARY ELLEN LITTLE, BECKY APPELLANTS LITTLE ANTHONY, TRICIA ROSE JACKSON, ERIC JOHN LITTLE, JAMES SHANNON LITTLE, WIDOW AND CHILDREN OF JOHNNY JAMES LITTLE, DECEASED, AND DEBRA DEE KEEFER, AS INDEPENDENT EXECUTRIX OF THE ESTATE OF JOHNNY JAMES LITTLE, DECEASED

V.

DELTA STEEL, INC. AND APPELLEES RELIANCE STEEL & ALUMINUM CO.

----------

FROM THE 48TH DISTRICT COURT OF TARRANT COUNTY

---------- OPINION

In two issues, appellants, whom we have listed above, appeal the final

judgment that the trial court rendered in favor of appellees Delta Steel, Inc. (Delta

Steel) and its parent company, Reliance Steel & Aluminum Co. (Reliance).

Appellants contend that the trial court erred by denying their motions for

summary judgment, granting appellees’ motions for summary judgment, and

making allegedly incorrect rulings on appellants’ objections to appellees’

summary judgment evidence. We affirm in part and reverse and remand in part.

Background Facts

Johnny Little began working for Delta Steel, a steel fabrication company, in

January 1997. During Little’s employment, in which he operated cranes at Delta

Steel’s Fort Worth plant, 1 he designated his spouse, Mary, to receive benefits if

he died.

In March 2009, Delta Steel’s Fort Worth plant had four overhead cranes

that used electromagnets to lift steel. On March 11, 2009, a thunderstorm,

containing driving rain and lighting, moved near Delta Steel’s Fort Worth plant.

At a little after 6 a.m. that day, Little was using an electromagnetic crane to move

a steel plate when the plate dislodged from the magnet, fell, crushed him, and

killed him.

1 Delta Steel’s corporate office is in Houston.

2 On the date of Little’s death, three of the cranes at Delta Steel’s Fort Worth

plant had battery backup units, but the crane that Little was operating when he

died did not have such a unit. Battery backup units allow a crane’s

electromagnetic system to hold a steel load for a temporary period of time even if

the crane’s normal electromagnetic system is not functioning properly. According

to Jackie Walters, who maintains equipment for Delta Steel at its Fort Worth

location and who previously worked for a company that inspected Delta Steel’s

cranes, if an electromagnetic crane that does not have a battery backup unit

loses power, it will “drop whatever it has on it.” Before and after Walters began

working for Delta Steel, he notified one of Delta Steel’s officials about the lack of

a battery backup unit on the crane that Little was using when he died.

Appellants initially sued only Delta Steel for the events related to Little’s

death. In their May 2009 original petition, appellants pled for wrongful death and

survival damages, including punitive damages, contending that Little’s death had

been proximately caused by Delta Steel’s negligence and gross negligence.

Particularly, appellants alleged that Delta Steel had failed to provide a reasonably

safe place to work, had failed to provide safe equipment for employees to work

with, and had failed to properly train and supervise employees.

Appellants later amended their petition to add Reliance as a defendant,

asserting that Reliance owned Delta Steel, had undertaken a responsibility to

ensure safety for Delta Steel’s employees, and had negligently and grossly

negligently failed to perform that responsibility. In their second amended petition,

3 appellants alleged, among other facts, that Little’s death was caused by a failure

of a crane’s electromagnetic lifting system, that Delta Steel had made a

“conscious decision to remove the battery backup unit from the . . . crane,” and

that Delta Steel had ignored warnings about the danger of employees operating

a crane that did not have a battery backup unit. 2

Appellees answered appellants’ claims by asserting a general denial and

by pleading several affirmative defenses, including that they were “subscribers to

[workers’] compensation insurance at the time of the injuries, and therefore,

[appellants were] barred from any recovery.” In a later pleading, appellees also

contended that appellants were estopped from claiming damages outside of

workers’ compensation because they had elected to receive workers’

compensation benefits.

All parties sought summary judgment, at least in part. Reliance argued,

through a traditional summary judgment motion (and an amended motion), that it

could not be liable for negligence or gross negligence because as Delta Steel’s

parent company at the time of Little’s death, it was a distinct legal entity from

Delta Steel, it did not have a duty to control Delta Steel’s day-to-day operations

and did not in fact do so, it did not owe any duty of care to Little, and only Delta

2 In the trial court, appellees contended that Little’s death could have been caused by the steel plate dislodging from the magnet after hitting an object, which was an “event that would not have been avoided through the use of a battery backup unit.” The issues raised by the parties in this appeal do not require us to express an opinion concerning the cause of the dislodging of the steel plate from the crane that Little was operating when he died.

4 Steel could have owed such a duty. Reliance asserted that it had not hired,

supervised, or trained Little and had not exercised sufficient control of Delta

Steel’s safety policies to create a duty toward Little. Reliance also argued,

through a no-evidence motion for summary judgment, that even if appellants

could produce evidence establishing a duty by Reliance to Little, appellants could

not produce evidence that raised a genuine issue of material fact that Reliance

was grossly negligent in breaching any duty.

In its October 2011 motion for partial summary judgment, Delta Steel

contended that it was covered by workers’ compensation insurance when Little

died and that it therefore could not be liable under appellants’ ordinary

negligence claim because section 408.001(a) of the labor code 3 precluded the

claim. In an effort to prove this assertion, Delta Steel attached, among other

documents, a lengthy insurance policy issued by the Zurich-American Insurance

Group (Zurich). The Zurich policy, which was effective for one year beginning

September 1, 2008, designated Reliance as the “Named Insured,” and although

the policy contained a schedule of insureds and locations that named several

other companies, the schedule did not name Delta Steel. 4 However, the policy

listed an entity described as “Delta” in a workers’ compensation classification

schedule, and the policy appeared to calculate premiums for various groups of

3 See Tex. Labor Code Ann. § 408.001(a) (West 2006). 4 The schedule listed companies bearing Reliance’s name and companies not containing “Reliance.”

5 employees for “Delta.” The documents attached by Delta to its motion for partial

summary judgment also included an endorsement to the Zurich policy issued in

May 2010 (after Little’s death), which stated that it was agreed that Delta Steel

had been “added to th[e] policy effective at its inception” on September 1, 2008. 5

Delta Steel later filed an amended and supplemented motion for partial

summary judgment. In that motion, Delta Steel expressly incorporated the

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Mary Ellen Little, Becky Little Anthony, Tricia Rose Jackson, Eric John Little, James Shannon Little, Widow and Children of Johnny James Little, and Debra Dee Keefer, as Independent of the Estate of Johnny James Little v. Delta Steel, Inc. and Reliance Steel & Aluminum Co., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mary-ellen-little-becky-little-anthony-tricia-rose-jackson-eric-john-texapp-2013.