Richards v. Republic Silver State Disposal, Inc.

148 P.3d 684, 122 Nev. 1213, 122 Nev. Adv. Rep. 103, 2006 Nev. LEXIS 135
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 21, 2006
Docket44131
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 148 P.3d 684 (Richards v. Republic Silver State Disposal, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richards v. Republic Silver State Disposal, Inc., 148 P.3d 684, 122 Nev. 1213, 122 Nev. Adv. Rep. 103, 2006 Nev. LEXIS 135 (Neb. 2006).

Opinions

OPINION

By the Court,

Hardesty, J.:

The underlying case arose when a refrigeration and air conditioning company employee sued a property owner over injuries sustained when the employee was installing evaporative, or “swamp,” coolers on the owner’s property. The employee’s suit, however, was found by the district court to be barred under the Nevada Industrial Insurance Act (NIIA), based in part on a 2001 opinion, Harris v. Rio Hotel & Casino.2 In that opinion, this court determined that the NIIA’s employer immunity protections extend to property owners who hire certain employers — Nevada-licensed principal contractors — to complete construction projects, even when the property owners themselves technically are not considered “employers” under the NIIA. As the district court found that the property owner in this case had hired a licensed principal contractor to complete a construction project, the court determined that the property owner was entitled to immunity from suit by the principal contractor’s injured employee under Harris and, consequently, granted the property owner’s motion for summary judgment.

Thus, in this appeal from the district court’s summary judgment, we consider the property owner’s NBA immunity status, in light of its assertion that it hired a licensed principal contractor, the refrigeration and air conditioning company, to complete construction work. Because Harris addresses property owner NBA immunity status in construction cases only, in which instances immunity generally attaches, we first explore decisions in which we distinguished construction cases from nonconstruction cases. We conclude that our prior decisions directing district courts to differentiate between construction and nonconstruction have, instead of simplifying the NBA immunity determination as intended, led to [1215]*1215increased confusion and incongruity in the law. Accordingly, we retreat from the “construction versus nonconstruction” analysis, and we emphasize that NIIA immunity questions must be resolved under the applicable statutory law. Thus, in making NIIA immunity determinations in these types of matters, courts must generally look, initially, at whether the injured employee and other parties were, when the injury occurred, carrying out work under some principal contractor’s NRS Chapter 624 license.

This conclusion, however, does not impact our determination in Harris that, because the NIIA encourages property owners to hire Nevada-licensed principal contractors, thereby ensuring that workers’ compensation coverage is provided, NIIA immunity should apply to those property owners in return. Nevertheless, we clarify that property owner immunity under Harris extends to bar only those claims that arise out of risks associated with the work for which the property owner hired the licensed contractor.

As the swamp cooler installation in this case was performed by a company that held a Nevada contractor’s license, and because the employee alleged that his injury resulted from a risk directly associated with working on the installation project, the property owner is entitled to immunity, and the district court correctly granted it summary judgment.

FACTS

Respondent Republic Silver State Disposal offers waste collection and disposal services. For several years, Silver State Disposal had contracted with Commercial Consulting, which carried a refrigeration and air conditioning specialty license issued under NRS Chapter 624,3 to perform service and maintenance on Silver State Disposal buildings’ air conditioners and swamp coolers. In 2000, Commercial Consulting proposed, in writing, to remove ten existing swamp coolers from the roof of Silver State Disposal’s recycling plant, and to then install new swamp coolers in their places. According to the proposal, Commercial Consulting provided its employees with workers’ compensation insurance. Silver State Disposal accepted the proposal, and the swamp coolers’ replacement was completed the next month.

While working on part of the contracted job, a Commercial Consulting employee, appellant Lawrence Richards, finished connecting the newly installed swamp coolers and was descending [1216]*1216from the roof when he slipped off a permanent ladder on the side of the recycling plant, injuring his right foot and ankle. He received workers’ compensation benefits for his injuries from Commercial Consulting. Thereafter, Richards sued Silver State Disposal for negligence, essentially alleging that the ladder was unsafely placed, installed, and maintained.

During the ensuing litigation, Silver State Disposal moved for summary judgment, arguing in part that it was immune from suit under NIIA principles, as those principles were explained by this court in Harris,4 The district court granted Silver State Disposal’s motion, concluding that Richards’ claim was barred by the NIIA’s exclusive remedy provision. In elaborating on its reasons for granting summary judgment, the court noted that, under Nevada deci-sional law,5 it was first required to decide whether this matter was a construction case or a nonconstruction case. The court then determined that this matter most resembled a construction case, since it involved the installation of swamp coolers as “permanent” fixtures and was less akin to cases in which frequently assembling and dissembling convention exhibits did not constitute construction.6 The court also pointed out that Commercial Consulting is a Nevada-licensed contractor. Since the case involved construction by a licensed contractor, the court determined that NIIA immunity attached to bar Richards’ claims.

The court further recognized that, if this were a nonconstruction case, then Silver State Disposal technically would not be entitled to immunity as Richards’ statutory employer because it was in a different line of work than Commercial Consulting.7 Nevertheless, the court concluded, the theory articulated by this court in Harris— that NIIA immunity should protect property owners who indirectly pay for workers’ compensation coverage because that coverage is calculated into the contract price — would force the court to conclude that Silver State Disposal was entitled to immunity anyway.

Richards appeals, arguing that (1) this is not a construction case, and (2) even if this is a construction case, Silver State Disposal is not a Nevada-licensed principal contractor and thus it [1217]*1217is still not entitled to statutory immunity. Silver State Disposal counters that this is a construction case, and because it is a property owner that contracted with a licensed principal contractor to complete construction work, it is entitled to property owner immunity status under Harris, regardless of its own licensing status.

Because Commercial Consulting was a Nevada-licensed principal contractor and carrying out work under the scope of that license, we agree that this is a case in which the Harris analysis may be applied to determine whether Silver State Disposal is entitled to property owner immunity. Under Harris, however, Silver State Disposal’s property owner immunity status depends on whether Richards’ claims arose out of a risk associated with the work that it hired Commercial Consulting to complete.

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Richards v. Republic Silver State Disposal, Inc.
148 P.3d 684 (Nevada Supreme Court, 2006)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
148 P.3d 684, 122 Nev. 1213, 122 Nev. Adv. Rep. 103, 2006 Nev. LEXIS 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richards-v-republic-silver-state-disposal-inc-nev-2006.