Plummer v. Bechtel Construction Co.

489 N.W.2d 66, 440 Mich. 646
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1992
Docket89153, (Calendar No. 18)
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 489 N.W.2d 66 (Plummer v. Bechtel Construction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Plummer v. Bechtel Construction Co., 489 N.W.2d 66, 440 Mich. 646 (Mich. 1992).

Opinions

Levin, J.

Thomas C. Plummer, Jr., a pipe fitter employed by Babcock & Wilcox, a subcontractor, commenced this action against Bechtel Construe[649]*649tion Company, which acted as general contractor for the construction of The Detroit Edison Company’s Belle River Power Plant, and Edison to recover damages for injuries Plummer sustained on the job.

A jury awarded damages of $1,100,000, against Bechtel and Edison, which was reduced to $825,000 because the jury apportioned twenty-five percent fault to Plummer.1 The Court of Appeals reversed, stating that Edison did not retain control of the work, that Bechtel took "reasonable steps within its supervisory and coordinating authority to guard against 'readily observable, avoidable dangers’ ” within the meaning of this Court’s decision in Funk v General Motors Corp, 392 Mich 91, 104; 220 NW2d 641 (1974), and that "it was unobservable or unforeseeable that plaintiff would get drunk and then leave the guardrailed catwalk to work on an unprotected scaffold without requesting safety assistance or tying off as he had been instructed.”2 The Court of Appeals concluded that neither Edison nor Bechtel "owed a duty to plaintiff.'”3

We conclude that there was ample evidence that Edison retained control of the work and, together with Bechtel, owed Plummer the duty of taking reasonable steps to guard against dangers that were readily observable and avoidable.

The Court of Appeals, in concluding that Edison and Bechtel did not owe a duty to Plummer, [650]*650confused the questions of duty and standard of care. "It obscures the separate issues in a negligence case (duty, proximate cause and general and specific standard of care) to combine and state them together in terms of whether there is a duty to refrain from particular conduct,” Moning v Alfono, 400 Mich 425, 432-433; 254 NW2d 759 (1977), or, in the instant case, whether Edison and Bechtel were obliged to take particular steps to guard against readily observable, avoidable dangers in common work areas.

It is a factual issue, for resolution by the jury as trier of fact, whether it was readily observable that the guardrails had been removed from the unprotected scaffold or platform from which Plummer fell, and, similarly, whether there was, as Edison and Bechtel contended and Plummer disputed, a place where Plummer could have "tied off ” by attaching a line from his safety belt. It is a question of the standard of care, and not duty, whether, if the jury found there was not a place where Plummer could have tied off, Edison and Bechtel should have foreseen the danger of a worker leaving the guardrailed catwalk for the unprotected platform and should therefore have caused a wire or other means of tying off to be installed when the guardrails were removed; that, too, on this record, presented an issue for submission to the jury.

It was also for the jury to decide (i) whether Plummer had been instructed not to leave the guardrailed catwalk to work on an unprotected platform without requesting safety assistance for tying off, and, (ii) if so, whether he was one hundred percent at fault or, as the jury found, twenty-five percent at fault, in leaving the guardrailed catwalk to attempt, from the unprotected platform, to free the pipe although he had not been [651]*651able to tie off and had not requested safety assistance for tying off. It was further for the jury to decide (iii) the degree of fault attributable to Plummer’s inebriation, and (iv) whether Edison’s and Bechtel’s failure to take steps the jury found should have been taken to guard against the danger of a worker falling from the unguarded platform was a cause, or whether Plummer’s inebriation was a cause or the sole cause, of the fall.

i

Plummer fell from á work platform at the Belle River construction site, suffering multiple skull fractures.4 At the time of the accident, he was a journeyman pipe fitter and certified welder.

The Belle River construction project involved approximately 2500 workers and a number of subcontractors. Plummer was employed on the construction project by one of the subcontractors, Babcock & Wilcox.

Bechtel acted as the general contractor and one of the working contractors. It had general responsibility for managing the subcontractors.

Edison owned the project. It retained the authority to hire or terminate subcontractors, or to order Bechtel to hire or terminate any subcontractor. Indeed, Edison, rather than Bechtel, hired Babcock & Wilcox.

An Edison "site safety and insurance coordinator,” Gary Western, was at the construction site daily. It was Western’s responsibility to "[o]bserve and report the basic safety operation through out the project” and to assure that the safety provi[652]*652sions of the project contract were performed. Western frequently walked through the project, inspecting for safety compliance. He spoke about safety with employees of subcontractors, including Babcock & Wilcox employees. Western was empowered to require that safeguards be implemented and that unsafe practices be stopped.

Bechtel employed four persons who were at the construction site almost daily to observe and monitor subcontractor safety performance and compliance. They also had the power to require subcontractors to correct an unsafe condition.

The Belle River project was over two hundred feet in height.5 Workers employed by a number of subcontractors were at the site at any given time. To facilitate access to the various parts of the project, a system of catwalks had been installed at different levels. Each level of the catwalk system was connected so that workers could reach the various elevations of the construction project while still remaining inside the catwalk system.

The record is unclear concerning who installed the catwalk system. It is clear, however, that workers employed by different subcontractors regularly used the system to walk to and perform their work at various levels.

The catwalks were constructed of caged wire. The ceiling and floor were completely enclosed with caged wire. One or both sides of the catwalk were enclosed with caged wire or guardrails. At the site of the accident, there was caged wire on one side, and, so that workers could reach and have access to the work to be done, handrails on the other side.

In an apparent effort to provide additional access to the work under construction, platforms [653]*653perpendicular to the catwalk had been constructed at the level where Plummer was working at the time of the accident. When originally installed, there were guardrails on both sides of the platforms.

For at least two weeks before the accident, however, the guardrails had been removed from the platform from which Plummer fell. It does not appear who removed the guardrails. There was testimony that the guardrails had been removed because they would have made it impossible to move into place awkwardly shaped pipes that were then being installed.

The guardrails that had been removed from the platform from which Plummer fell were piled in a large stack on thé ground for the two-week period before the accident. The Edison safety supervisor, Gary Western, acknowledged that he had observed the unguarded platforms before the accident.

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Plummer v. Bechtel Construction Co.
489 N.W.2d 66 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1992)

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Bluebook (online)
489 N.W.2d 66, 440 Mich. 646, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/plummer-v-bechtel-construction-co-mich-1992.