Pendley v. United States

856 F.2d 699, 1988 WL 95441
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 19, 1988
DocketNo. 87-3148
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 856 F.2d 699 (Pendley v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pendley v. United States, 856 F.2d 699, 1988 WL 95441 (4th Cir. 1988).

Opinion

WIDENER, Circuit Judge:

William Perry Pendley, the administrator of the estate of Leon H. Cassutt, brought this wrongful death action under the Federal Tort Claims Act against the United States. The district court dismissed the case on the ground that the United States was Cassutt’s statutory employer under the Virginia Worker’s Compensation statute which is an exclusive remedy and deprives the court of jurisdiction for an action in tort. We agree that the United States was the statutory employer and affirm the judgment of the district court.

On September 19, 1985, Leon Cassutt was killed as a result of a solid rocket propellant fire at the Atlantic Research Facility’s Pine Ridge Plant in Gainesville, Virginia. Cassutt was an employee of the Aerospace Corporation. Specifically, Aerospace was operating under a contract with the United States Air Force Space Division to provide engineering consulting and analysis with respect to work being done by Atlantic Research for the Air Force. Cassutt was at the Pine Ridge plant pursuant to the contract (the 0084 contract) between Aerospace and the Air Force and was acting within the scope of his employment at the time he was killed.

The activities which Cassutt was to observe were being conducted by Atlantic Research pursuant to a separate contract between the Air Force and Vought Corporation (the 0041 contract). Atlantic Research was a subcontractor for Vought under the 0041 contract.

The Air Force also contracted directly with Atlantic Research for research and development in rocket propellant bonding systems (the 0055 contract). It was work done pursuant to the 0055 contract that specifically lead to the fire which killed Cassutt.

The three contracts at issue were similar in many respects. The Air Force did not have the right to hire or fire employees or supervise the day-to-day operations, but did retain a right of oversight and inspection of the final product. Each contract contained a clause that held the contractors responsible for safety irrespective of any government oversight. All the contracts required the contractors to obtain and maintain workers compensation insurance, the premiums to be reimbursed by the government.

The plaintiff brought this suit under the Federal Tort Claims Act.1 After extensive discovery and various rulings on motions [701]*701for summary judgment, which need not concern us here, the court dismissed the case, as we have noted.

As an initial matter, we must decide which law should be applied in the case. The plaintiff argues that since Cassutt was a California resident, working for a California Corporation pursuant to contracts entered into by the Air Force in California, that the law of California2 should apply despite the occurrence of the accident in Virginia. We disagree. We have only recently held that the law of Virginia controlled in a case in which an injured employee, a resident of North Carolina, of an independent North Carolina contractor, employed under a North Carolina contract of employment, who had received North Carolina worker’s compensation, sued the Service Authority, owner, and another independent contractor on the job, on account of an accident which occurred in Virginia. Garcia v. Pittsylvania County Service Authority, 845 F.2d 465 (4th Cir.1988). The fact situation in Garcia is indistinguishable from that existing here, and we see no need to discuss this conflicts question at greater length.3

Having decided that Virginia law applies, the question becomes whether the Air Force was an employer within the statutory meaning of Va.Code Ann. § 65.1-29 (1987) so as to qualify for bar of tort recovery under the exclusive remedy provisions of § 65.1-40. The parties agree, as the statute requires, that a determination that the Air Force was a statutory employer requires a finding that Cassutt was executing work which was part of trade, business or occupation of the Air Force. Floyd v. Mitchell, 203 Va. 269, 123 S.E.2d 369 (1962). The parties differ, however, in the test that they would apply to make that determination.

The usual situation in worker s compensation cases in determining whether the defendant is a statutory employer is not complex. However, in cases such as this, which involve independent contractors and their employees, the analysis is complicated by the fact that such a case is of the variety which has been referred to in Virginia as an upside down worker’s compensation case. See Henderson v. Central Tel. Co. of Virginia, 233 Va. 377, 382, 355 S.E.2d 596, 599 (1987). Normally, the plaintiff would seek a broad interpretation of the statutory definition of employer so as to bring the defendant within its scope and collect worker’s compensation. But when, as here, the plaintiff seeks a recovery in tort law, the aim is to narrowly construe the definition so as to avoid the exclusive remedy bar of § 65.1-40.

The Virginia court in Shell Oil Co. v. Leftwich, 212 Va. 715, 187 S.E.2d 162 (1972), announced that the test for an employee of a subcontractor in that case was whether an indispensable action of the statutory employer was “... normally carried on through employees rather than independent contractors.” Id. at 167 (quoting Larson, The Law of Workmen’s Compensation, Vol. IA § 49.12. (Emphasis in treatise) Under this test, which plaintiff depends upon, the Air Force might well not be a statutory employer since Air Force personnel did not normally perform the type of work that Cassutt did. But the Shell Oil rule is not utilized by the Virginia court in each instance. In Henderson v. Central Tel., supra, the Court decided that the Shell test would not apply to an employee of a contractor installing telephone switching equipment for Centel although Centel could have performed the work itself. The Court reasoned that if Shell were carried to its logical conclusion, a business which operated entirely through subcontractors would totally escape work[702]*702er’s compensation liability. Henderson, 355 S.E.2d at 599. Since the fundamental purpose of the Worker’s Compensation Act is remedial, this is best accomplished by a liberal construction to advance that end, “... for the beneficent purpose of providing compensation, in the nature of insurance, to a workman or his dependents, in the event of his injury or death_” Fauver v. Bell, 192 Va. 518, 522, 65 S.E.2d 575, 577 (1951). In applying the approach of Henderson, the test is what the statutory employer, in this case the Air Force, is required to do, what it is mandated to do by statute or regulation. Id. at 600.

It is argued, however, that to apply the Henderson test in a case of a public employer conflicts with the requirement under the FTCA that the government be treated as a private individual in like circumstances. 28 U.S.C. § 1346(b). That approach reads Henderson too narrowly. The analysis in Henderson

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Pendley v. United States
856 F.2d 699 (Fourth Circuit, 1988)

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Bluebook (online)
856 F.2d 699, 1988 WL 95441, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pendley-v-united-states-ca4-1988.