Nelson v. Municipality of Anchorage

267 P.3d 636, 2011 Alas. LEXIS 140, 2011 WL 6450910
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 23, 2011
DocketS-13775
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 267 P.3d 636 (Nelson v. Municipality of Anchorage) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nelson v. Municipality of Anchorage, 267 P.3d 636, 2011 Alas. LEXIS 140, 2011 WL 6450910 (Ala. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

CHRISTEN, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

A worker agreed to perform an errand for his employer, a subcontractor, on the worker's day off, While engaged in the errand, the worker was injured at the job site. His employer filed a notice of controversion on the basis that the worker was intoxicated at the time of the injury and his injuries were proximately caused by his intoxication. The worker then sued the general contractor and the Municipality of Anchorage (the owner of the job site) for negligence. The defendants asked the superior court to dismiss the action under the exclusive remedy provision of the Alaska Workers' Compensation Act. The superior court granted summary judgment to the general contractor and the Municipality. The worker appeals, arguing that lack of a workers' compensation remedy permits him to bring a common law negligence action or, alternatively, that the exclusivity provision of the Alaska Workers' Compensation Act denies him due process. He also argues, as a matter of statutory construction, that the Municipality cannot be a project owner. Because the worker has not shown that the employer's controversion of benefits left him to his common law remedies, his statutory construction and constitutional claims are not ripe. We also hold that the Municipality can be a project owner.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Ryan Nelson worked for Alaska Concrete & Sawing, Inc. in February 2006. Nelson's regular day off was Saturday, but on Saturday, February 4, 2006, Nelson's employer called him at home and asked him to deliver drill bits to a job site at the Municipality of Anchorage's Solid Waste Services Transfer Building.

The job site was the building where solid waste is received from both residential and commercial customers and transferred to dump trucks bound for the municipal landfill. The building has two levels: solid waste is dumped onto the "tipping floor" on the upper level and then pushed by front-end loaders through openings in the floor. Dump trucks are filled when they are driven through the lower level. Two hydraulic cranes, called cherry pickers, are located on opposite sides of the tipping floor.

In late January 2006, the Municipality began repairs on the north cherry picker after its foundation failed. The Municipality contracted with an engineering firm, MACTEC Engineering and Consulting, Inc., to design a new foundation and oversee the repairs. The Municipality also contracted with Western Power & Equipment Corporation to work on remounting the cherry picker; that work included removing the bolts that held the cherry picker in place. 1 Western Power subcontracted with Alaska Concrete, Nelson's employer, to drill the bolts out of the concrete platform on which the cherry picker sat.

When Nelson arrived at the waste transfer facility to deliver the drill bits, he asked where to take them and a municipal employee gave him directions. Nelson evidently did not find his coworkers and he returned to the municipal employee's station for instructions. The municipal employee radioed someone, who told her to send Nelson to the south (or "A") side door. She relayed the information to Nelson, who went to the "A" door.

Inside the "A" door was a pony wall, about three feet high and covered by opaque Vis-queen. The Visqueen was placed there in order to retain heat in the truck tunnel; it concealed the hole in the floor through which waste was pushed into dump trucks. There were evidently no signs or other indication of hazards in the area except some orange cones, which "had been placed along the open edge/perimeter of [the] floor opening on top of the [Vlisqueen sheeting." In an apparent *639 attempt to cross the building, Nelson jumped over the pony wall and landed on the Vis-queen. He fell about 20 feet through the hole in the floor to the lower level and suffered head trauma.

Alaska Concrete reported the injury to the Alaska Workers' Compensation Board and began to pay workers' compensation benefits to Nelson. About six weeks after the accident, Alaska Concrete controverted further benefits, claiming that Nelson was intoxicated at the time of the accident and that his intoxication proximately caused the accident. Nelson did nothing further in his workers' compensation case.

Instead, Nelson sued the Municipality, Western Power, and Yukon Equipment, Inc. for negligence. The defendants all answered. Initially, only Western Power raised the exclusive remedy provision of the Alaska Workers' Compensation Act as a defense. The Municipality filed a third-party complaint against MACTEC because MAC-TEC planned and monitored the repairs. MACTEC answered and raised additional affirmative defenses.

On October 24, 2008, Western Power moved to dismiss Nelson's lawsuit because of the exclusive remedy provision of the Alaska Workers' Compensation Act. The other defendants joined the motion to dismiss. Nelson opposed the motion. He argued that extending the exelusive liability protection to general contractors and project owners violated his equal protection rights and that, as applied to the facts of his case, it violated his due process rights because he did not receive "a quid pro quo" after his employer stopped paying benefits. He also argued that the exclusive remedy provision did not apply to the Municipality as a matter of law; and that, on the facts of his case, Western Power was not an "employer."

At oral argument before the superior court, the parties agreed that the motion to dismiss should be treated as a motion for summary judgment. The superior court granted summary judgment to all defendants. It concluded that; (1) the legislature's extension of the exclusive remedy protection to "project owners" and "general contractors" was not unconstitutional; (2) the Municipality and Western Power were protected by the exclusive remedy provision; and (8) the claims against Yukon Equipment should be dismissed. Nelson moved for reconsideration, asserting that the court failed to address several of his legal arguments. The superior court took no action on the motion for reconsideration and it was deemed denied. 2 Nelson appeals.

IIL DISCUSSION

A. Standard Of Review

We review a grant of summary judgment de novo. 3 Summary judgment is proper if there is no genuine factual dispute and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. 4 In reviewing a grant of summary judgment, we draw all reasonable inferences in favor of the nonmoving party. 5 The interpretation of a statute is a question of law to which we apply our independent judgment; we interpret the statute according to reason, practicality, and common sense, considering the meaning of the statute's language, its legislative history, and its purpose. 6 Whether a case is ripe is a legal question. 7

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
267 P.3d 636, 2011 Alas. LEXIS 140, 2011 WL 6450910, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nelson-v-municipality-of-anchorage-alaska-2011.