Mining MacHinery, Inc. v. Copley

145 F. App'x 149
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 16, 2005
Docket04-5942
StatusUnpublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 145 F. App'x 149 (Mining MacHinery, Inc. v. Copley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mining MacHinery, Inc. v. Copley, 145 F. App'x 149 (6th Cir. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION

WISEMAN, Senior District Judge.

Defendants-Appellants Clarence Copley, as Administrator of the Estate of Matthew Copley, deceased, and Tonya Crabtree, as Guardian and next friend of Matthew Elam Copley (collectively, “Appellants”), appeal the district court’s order granting summary judgment to Plaintiff-Appellee Mining Machinery, Inc. (“MMI”) in the underlying declaratory judgment action. Appellants contend the district court erred in finding that MMI is immune from tort liability arising from the death of Clarence Matthew Copley by way of the exclusive-remedy provisions of the Kentucky Workers’ Compensation Act, Ky.Rev.Stat. Chapter 342. For the reasons set forth below, we AFFIRM the district court’s judgment.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Plaintiff Appalachian Fuels, LLC (“Appalachian”) 1 owns and operates a surface coal mine in Martin County, Kentucky. At the time of the accident in question, MMI maintained its offices in the same premises as Appalachian and was in the business of leasing and providing maintenance services for various kinds of equipment used by Appalachian in its mining operations. More specifically, during the relevant time frame, Appalachian and MMI were parties to an “Equipment Lease” pursuant to which Appalachian leased from MMI the machinery used in its mining operations. Under the Equipment Lease, Appalachian was responsible for the maintenance of the equipment it leased. (See Lease H 8, Joint Appendix (“JA”) at 290.) However, the parties had also executed a “Service Agreement” pursuant to which MMI rendered maintenance services to Appalachian for the same equipment. (Service Agreement, JA at 241-49.) According to Jeff Suttle, MMI’s vice president of sales, the work performed by MMI under the Service Agreement included daily routine maintenance as well as all major “component exchange” and repair work. As Suttle acknowledged in his deposition, the Service Agreement did not contain any *151 language expressly prohibiting Appalachian from hiring a different contractor to perform maintenance work on the equipment it leased from MMI, but there is no evidence in the record that Appalachian ever exercised that option, if indeed it was an option.

The Service Agreement specifically contemplated that MMI could engage subcontractors to assist it. At the same time, if MMI did engage subcontractors, it alone remained “responsible for the due performance of all services or other obligations” under the Service Agreement. (See Service Agreement § II, JA at 241.)

The parties understood that if MMI billed Appalachian directly for the services of subcontractors, MMI would, under the Service Agreement, add a ten-percent surcharge onto the cost, unless the parties agreed otherwise prior to the engagement of any subcontractors. (Service Agreement §§ II and III, JA at 241-42.) Under the parties’ common practice, however, MMI would engage subcontractors but allow the subcontractors to submit their invoices directly to Appalachian rather than going through MMI, in order to permit Appalachian to avoid the 10% surcharge. MMI’s technical support specialist, Ben Sargent, testified that when a subcontractor submitted a bill under these circumstances, Sargent was personally required to “sign off on it” (12/4/03 Deposition of Grover Benjamin Sargent (“Sargent Dep.”) at 11-12, JA at 347-48), to show that, as he said, “they [did] the work for me.” (Sargent Dep. at 13:14-17, JA at 349.)

During the week prior to December 28, 2002, Appalachian and MMI discussed repairing a Caterpillar 777 rock truck, specifically lining the truck bed with new steel, during the week around Christmas when mining operations would be shut down. This job was consistent with the normal maintenance work performed by MMI pursuant to the Service Agreement. MMI, however, had only one welder available for the job during that time frame. Realizing that one welder by himself could not complete the job by December 30, Ben Sargent received approval from Brent Tackett at Appalachian to get additional help. Sargent then contacted Mark Bryant at T&M Welding, Inc. (“T&M”), a West Virginia corporation with which MMI had previously worked on similar jobs, to see if T&M had welders available to help during the week that Appalachian’s mining operations would be shut down. Bryant said he could provide a couple of welders to help out so, on the morning of December 28, 2002, Clarence Matthew Copley and Henry Hundley, both T&M welders, traveled from the T&M shop in Naugatuck, West Virginia to Appalachian’s mine site in Martin County, Kentucky.

Copley and Hundley were assisted that day by MMI’s one available welder, Jerry Runyon. Ben Sargent oversaw the work. The first order of business was to cut the piece of steel to fit the area needing to be relined. Runyon then lifted the steel plate onto the truck bed using a hydraulic excavator. Copley and Hundley guided the plate into position. Copley was positioned between the suspended bucket of the excavator and the inside wall of the truck bed. After lowering and releasing the plate, Runyon left the bucket of the excavator suspended over the front center of the truck bed. Sargent began calling out instructions to him. Runyon was having difficulty hearing Sargent’s instructions due to the noise of the excavators and other welding equipment. To hear better, Runyon rose from the seat and leaned out of the door of the excavator. Sargent directed him to use the bucket of the excavator to press the steel plate against the bed of the truck so that Copley and *152 Hundley could tack-weld it in place. As Runyon returned to the operator’s seat, he inadvertently bumped the left joystick control, causing the boom and bucket of the excavator to swing to the right, pinning Copley between the bucket and the inside wall of the truck bed. Copley was fatally injured and was pronounced dead at the scene after paramedics arrived.

T&M did not actually issue an invoice or seek payment for any work done on the job at which Copley was killed. In the past, however, when Sargent had contacted T&M to assist with a job, T&M would send the invoice directly to Appalachian or to whomever Sargent directed. It is undisputed that if T&M had submitted an invoice, it would have submitted it directly to Appalachian.

MMI and Appalachian filed the underlying declaratory judgment action after learning that Appellants intended to file suit against them to recover damages related to Copley’s death. In their Complaint, MMI and Appalachian alleged that they had at all relevant times “secured payment” of workers’ compensation benefits as required by Ky Rev. Stat., Chapter 342, and as employers or contractors were immune from tort liability pursuant to the provisions of Ky.Rev.Stat. § 342.690. After both MMI and Appalachian filed motions for summary judgment, Appellants agreed to waive any claims against Appalachian and Appalachian was dismissed from this action with prejudice. The district court entered summary judgment in favor of MMI, and this appeal followed.

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145 F. App'x 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mining-machinery-inc-v-copley-ca6-2005.