Orlando Salinas v. Octave Samuel and Meaux Surface Protection, Inc

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 3, 2012
Docket01-11-00096-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Orlando Salinas v. Octave Samuel and Meaux Surface Protection, Inc (Orlando Salinas v. Octave Samuel and Meaux Surface Protection, Inc) 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.

Bluebook
Orlando Salinas v. Octave Samuel and Meaux Surface Protection, Inc, (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

Opinion issued May 3, 2012

In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas

————————————

NO. 01-11-00096-CV

———————————

Orlando Salinas, Appellant

V.

Meaux Surface Protection, Inc., Appellee

On Appeal from the 11th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Case No. 2007-74589

MEMORANDUM OPINION

This is a personal-injury suit stemming from a one-car accident that occurred when plaintiff-appellant Orlando Salinas was a passenger in his supervisor’s vehicle travelling home to Texas from a worksite in Louisiana.  Salinas challenges the trial court’s granting summary judgment in his employer’s favor.  We affirm.     

Background

Salinas and his supervisor, defendant Octave Samuel, were both employed by defendant Meaux Surface Protection, Inc. during the 2006 timeframe that is relevant to this suit.  On September 23, 2006, Salinas was a passenger in a vehicle driven by Samuel on Interstate-10 travelling from Louisiana to Texas after they came in from working offshore.  Samuel was drinking during this trip and crashed into a wall in Orange, Texas.  Salinas was thrown from the vehicle and suffered serious injuries. 

The parties disagree about whether Samuel and Salinas were within the course and scope of their employment at the time of the accident.  Although it usually provides its employees transportation from its site in Louisiana to drop-off points at or near its employees’ homes, Meaux claims that Salinas opted not to take the company-provided transportation between his home in Houston and worksite in Louisiana.  Instead, he rode with Samuel whenever they worked together.

In contrast, Salinas contends that Meaux’s Safety Coordinator, Kevin Star, ordered him to ride with Samuel from a Louisiana heliport to Houston.  Salinas further claims that they were all on the payroll during this drive, and that Meaux paid for Samuel’s gasoline for the trip. 

A.   The LHWCA proceeding

In August 2007, Salinas filed a claim for compensation with the U.S. Department of Labor under the Longshore Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act (LHWCA).  Meaux argued in response that (1) Salinas “was not within the course and scope of his employment with the employer” at the time of the accident, and (2) Salinas’s claim “does not meet the requirements for LHWCA jurisdiction.”  After an informal conference, the Department denied Salinas’s claim, finding that

Salinas does not have the required situs for the occurrence of the 9-23-06 MVA necessary to establish jurisdiction pursuant to the LHWCA.  The public Interstate highway where the MVA occurred does not have a maritime nexus to invoke LHWCA jurisdiction. . . . . Whether or not Mr. Salinas has a claim for the 9-23-06 injury in another jurisdiction is for the parties to determine.

B.   The Underlying Lawsuit

Salinas sued Meaux and Samuel in Harris County, allegingamong other thingsthat Samuel was liable under theories of negligence and negligence per se.  Salinas further contended that Samuel was acting within the course and scope of his employment with Meaux, rendering Meaux vicariously liable for Salinas’s injuries that were proximately caused by Samuel’s negligence and negligence per se.  Salinas also claimed that Meaux was directly liable through failure to properly train and supervise Samuel, and because it negligently entrusted Samuel to drive Salinas.  

Salinas also pleaded equitable estoppel, asserting that Meaux should be barred from asserting workers’ compensation as an exclusive remedy because Meaux has previously taken the position that Salinas was not within the course and scope of his employment at the time of the automobile accident.

1.     Meaux’s Motions for Summary Judgment

Meaux filed both a no-evidence and a traditional motion for summary judgment.  In the no-evidence motion, it argued that Salinas’s arguments necessarily failed because there was “no evidence that Octave Samuel and Orlando Salinas were within the course and scope of employment at the time of the accident.”  Accordingly, Meaux asserted, there is no evidence that it owed a duty to Salinas.  Meaux also asserted that there was no evidence of at least one element of each of Salinas’s claims. 

In its traditional motion for summary judgment, Meaux asserted that, assuming that all Salinas’s assertions were true, Salinas’s claims were all precluded by the workers’ compensation bar.  Attached as summary-judgment evidence were Meaux’s workers’ compensation policies in Louisiana and Texas in force in September 2006 and employment records demonstrating that Salinas was a Meaux employee on the day of the accident.  Meaux

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Orlando Salinas v. Octave Samuel and Meaux Surface Protection, Inc, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orlando-salinas-v-octave-samuel-and-meaux-surface--texapp-2012.