McCutcheon v. Philadelphia Elec. Co.

788 A.2d 345
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 22, 2002
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 788 A.2d 345 (McCutcheon v. Philadelphia Elec. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCutcheon v. Philadelphia Elec. Co., 788 A.2d 345 (Pa. 2002).

Opinion

788 A.2d 345 (2002)

James McCUTCHEON and Geraldine McCutcheon, Appellants,
v.
PHILADELPHIA ELECTRIC COMPANY, Robert E. Lamb, Inc., DNB Mechanical Systems, Inc. and Sutch Construction Co., Inc., Appellees.
Appeal of Robert E. Lamb, Inc.
Appeal of DNB Mechanical Systems, Inc.

Supreme Court of Pennsylvania.

Argued October 15, 2001.
Decided January 22, 2002.

Jonathan F. Ball, Philadelphia, for D.N.B. Mechanical Systems, Inc., 34 EAP 2000.

Henry Clinton, Eugene Hamill, Philadelphia, Thomas Finorelli, for Philadelphia Electric Company, 34 EAP 2000.

Mary Beth Bogan, Philadelphia, for Robert E. Lamb, Inc., 34 EAP 2000.

Frank D. Branella, Philadelphia, for Geraldine McCutcheon, 34 EAP 2000.

Frank D. Branella, Philadelphia, for James McCutcheon, 34 EAP 2000.

Mary Elizabeth Bogan, Philadelphia, for Robert E. Lamb, Inc., 35 EAP 2000.

J.L. Sutch Inc., for J.L. Sutch Construction Company, Inc., 35 EAP 2000.

Jonathan F. Ball, Philadelphia, for D.N.B. Mechanical Systems, Inc., 35 EAP 2000.

Henry Clinton, Philadelphia, for Philadelphia Electric Company, 35 EAP 2000.

Frank D. Branella, Philadelphia, for Geraldine McCutcheon, 35 EAP 2000.

Frank D. Branella, Philadelphia, for James McCutcheon, 35 EAP 2000.

Frank D. Branella, Philadelphia, for Geraldine McCutcheon, 36 EAP 2000.

*346 Frank D. Branella, Philadelphia, for James McCutcheon, 36 EAP 2000.

J.L. Sutch Inc., for J.L. Sutch Construction Company, Inc., 36 EAP 2000.

Jonathan F. Ball, Philadelphia, for D.N.B. Mechanical Systems, Inc., 36 EAP 2000.

Henry Clinton, Philadelphia, for Philadelphia Electric Company, 36 EAP 2000.

Mary Elizabeth Bogan, Philadelphia, for Robert E. Lamb, Inc., 36 EAP 2000.

Mary Elizabeth Bogan, Philadelphia, for Robert E. Lamb, Inc., 37 EAP 2000.

J.L. Sutch Inc., for J.L. Sutch Construction Company, Inc., 37 EAP 2000.

Jonathan F. Ball, Philadelphia, for D.N.B. Mechanical Systems, Inc., 37 EAP 2000.

Henry Clinton, Philadelphia, for Philadelphia Electric Company, 37 EAP 2000.

Frank D. Branella, Philadelphia, for Geraldine McCutcheon, 37 EAP 2000.

Frank D. Branella, Philadelphia, for James McCutcheon, 37 EAP 2000.

Frank D. Branella, Philadelphia, for James McCutcheon, 38 EAP 2000.

J.L. Sutch Inc., for J.L. Sutch Construction Company, Inc., 38 EAP 2000.

Jonathan F. Ball, Philadelphia, for D.N.B. Mechanical Systems, Inc., 38 EAP 2000.

Henry Clinton, Philadelphia, for Philadelphia Electric Company, 38 EAP 2000.

Mary Elizabeth Bogan, Philadelphia, for Robert E. Lamb, Inc., 38 EAP 2000.

Mary Elizabeth Bogan, Philadelphia, for Robert E. Lamb, Inc., 39 EAP 2000.

J.L. Sutch Inc., for J.L. Sutch Construction Company, Inc., 39 EAP 2000.

Jonathan F. Ball, Philadelphia, for D.N.B. Mechanical Systems, Inc., 39 EAP 2000.

Henry Clinton, Philadelphia, for Philadelphia Electric Company, 39 EAP 2000.

Frank D. Branella, Philadelphia, for James McCutcheon, 39 EAP 2000.

Frank D. Branella, Philadelphia, for James McCutcheon, 40 EAP 2000.

Jonathan F. Ball, Philadelphia, for D.N.B. Mechanical Systems, Inc., 40 EAP 2000.

Henry Clinton, Philadelphia, for Philadelphia Electric Company, 40 EAP 2000.

Mary Elizabeth Bogan, Philadelphia, for Robert E. Lamb, Inc., 40 EAP 2000.

Before FLAHERTY, C.J., and ZAPPALA, CAPPY, CASTILLE, NIGRO, NEWMAN AND SAYLOR, JJ.

OPINION

CAPPY, Justice.

We granted allocatur in this case to review the Superior Court's failure to address two issues that the Appellants/Cross Appellees, Robert E. Lamb, Inc. ("Lamb") and D.N.B. Mechanical Systems, Inc. ("DNB"), raised on appeal, and the Superior Court's decision to overturn the award of delay damages made to the Cross Appellant, Geraldine McCutcheon. We have determined, however, that the trial court's order which the parties appealed to the Superior Court is not a final order within the meaning of Pa.R.A.P. 341. Therefore, the Superior Court did not have appellate jurisdiction pursuant to 42 Pa.C.S. § 742, and the order it issued is void. As a consequence, this court is also without jurisdiction, there being no final order from the Superior Court, as 42 Pa.C.S. § 724 requires. Accordingly, the Superior Court's order must be vacated and this appeal must be quashed.

*347 The relevant facts and procedural history are as follows. The Appellee, Philadelphia Electric Co. ("PECO"), hired Lamb as a general contractor to build an addition to the Training Center at the Limerick Nuclear Power Plant. PECO and Lamb entered into a contract in which Lamb agreed, inter alia, to indemnify PECO against all claims and liability arising out of Lamb's acts or omissions and those of its subcontractors, in connection with the addition, irrespective of whether PECO was concurrently negligent. Under the contract's indemnity provision, Lamb was not obligated to cover claims caused by PECO's sole negligence or willful misconduct.

A forced main sewer line connecting the addition to the power plant's existing sewer lines was needed. Lamb subcontracted with DNB to construct needed plumbing and DNB subcontracted with Sutch Construction Co. ("Sutch") for excavation. On May 21, 1992, James McCutcheon, a heavy equipment operator employed by United Engineers and Catalytic, an independent contractor on a separate project at the power plant, fell on a concrete slab that covered a sewer pipe and suffered bodily injuries.

On July 26, 1993, James McCutcheon and his wife, Geraldine McCutcheon, (collectively, the "McCutcheons"), filed a complaint in negligence against PECO. Later, on July 19, 1995, they filed an amended complaint to include Lamb, DNB and Sutch as defendants. In their amended complaint, the McCutcheons alleged that the defendants were negligent in permitting a dangerous and defective condition to exist on the power plant property.

Lamb, DNB and Sutch raised the statute of limitations as a defense. In an Answer With New Matter To Plaintiffs' Complaint And Crossclaims Pursuant To Pa.R.Civ.P. 2252(d), PECO asserted cross-claims against its co-defendants, alleging that Lamb, DNB and/or Sutch "are solely liable to the plaintiffs, and/or are jointly or severally liable to the plaintiffs and/or liable to answering defendant [PECO] by way of indemnification and/or contribution." (R. 1635a).

The parties proceeded to trial before the Honorable Paul J. Ribner.[1] At the outset, PECO informed the trial court of its cross-claims for contribution and indemnification, specifically referring to the cross-claim for indemnity it had alleged against Lamb based on the parties' contract. Viewing PECO's contractual indemnity cross-claim as a matter of law which raised a question of contract interpretation for the court to decide, the trial court determined that the cross-claim would be argued orally following the jury's verdict and that the verdict would be molded appropriately.

The jury returned a verdict in favor of James McCutcheon for the injuries he sustained and in favor of Geraldine McCutcheon for loss of consortium, and against all of the defendants severally and jointly. The jury found PECO 48% negligent, Lamb, 42% negligent, DNB 9% negligent, and Sutch, 1% negligent. The jury also found that James McCutcheon was negligent, but declined to find that his negligence was a contributing cause of his injuries.

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788 A.2d 345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccutcheon-v-philadelphia-elec-co-pa-2002.