Roberts v. Huggins

25 Va. Cir. 48, 1990 Va. Cir. LEXIS 433
CourtRichmond County Circuit Court
DecidedDecember 27, 1990
DocketCase No. LS-731-3
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 25 Va. Cir. 48 (Roberts v. Huggins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Richmond County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roberts v. Huggins, 25 Va. Cir. 48, 1990 Va. Cir. LEXIS 433 (Va. Super. Ct. 1990).

Opinion

By JUDGE T. J. MARKOW

This matter is before the court after taking evidence and hearing argument on defendant's Motion to Dismiss on the ground that the plaintiff’s sole remedy lies under the Worker’s Compensation Act.

Plaintiff, an employee of the Broad Street Thalhimer’s department store, was injured while at work when she slipped on a wet floor. The floor was wet because it was being cleaned by defendant, Huggins, an employee of defendant Abacus which was under a contract with Thalhimer to perform its housekeeping services which included, among other things, the cleaning, sweeping, mopping, stripping and waxing of floors in the Thalhimer’s store.

Thalhimer operates twenty-six retail stores. It contracts out housekeeping services in all but three of its stores. In those three stores, Thalhimer does all of the same work contracted out to defendant at the Broad Street store. Prior to contracting out housekeeping services at the Broad Street store, Thalhimer did all of its own housekeeping. Thalhimer has contracted out housekeeping services because it can be done more cheaply on a contract basis. At the Broad Street store, Thalhimer provides its [49]*49own housekeeping services in the food preparation areas of its three restaurants, as well as around sales and cash register areas, such as glass counter tops which are cleaned by clerks. Most of Abacus’ cleaning work is done outside regular retail hours. Since the contract with Abacus, Thalhimer employees no longer do housekeeping, even where there are spills. Employees of Abacus are always on call for such work.

In its contract with defendant, Thalhimer requires a certain degree of training, retains the right to reject potential employees, and requires adherence to some of its personnel rules.

An owner such as Thalhimer is liable for the payment of worker’s compensation to employees of a subcontractor, such as Abacus, if the subcontractor undertakes to perform or execute any work which is a part of Thalhimer’s trade, business or occupation. Va. Code Ann. § 65.1-29. Because the owner is responsible, the subcontractor's employee’s sole remedy against the owner is under the Worker’s Compensation Act. Va. Code Ann. § 65.1-40. Likewise, employees of the owner are precluded from claims against "fellow employees," such as the subcontractor or its employees. The owner’s employee may make claims for work-related injuries only if the perpetrator of the injury is an "other party." Va. Code Ann. § 65.1-41. In other words, the injured employee's sole remedy is under the Act if caused by the owner or anyone with whom the owner has subcontracted all or a part of its trade, business or occupation.

Plaintiff is free to assert her claim against Abacus or Huggins only if Huggins is found to be "any other party," i.e., a stranger to the "trade, business or occupation" of Thalhimers. If they are found to be undertaking the "trade, business or occupation" of Thalhimers, then Abacus and Huggins are the "statutory employees" of Thalhimer, and they are immune from claims by Thalhimer's employees.

The question then is whether Abacus and its employees were engaged in performing some part of the trade, business or occupation of Thalhimer.

The Supreme Court of Virginia has suggested two tests in answering the question of whether an employee of a subcontractor is undertaking the "trade, business or occupation” of the owner. First, in Floyd v. Mitchell, 203 Va. 269 (1962), and then in Conlin v. Turner's Express, [50]*50229 Va. 557 (1985), the court said that one must ask whether the activity was essential to the trade or business of the owner. Second, in Shell Oil v. Leftwich, 212 Va. 715 (1972), the question to be answered is whether the activity was "normally" performed by the employees of the owner.

While the issue here involves a different question, it must be remembered that the principles relied upon can ultimately lead to a finding or denial of worker’s compensation coverage for an injured employee. For example, should the Abacus employee who was mopping the floor have injured his back while lifting his water bucket and Abacus was without worker’s compensation coverage and in bankruptcy, could the employee collect Worker’s Compensation benefits from Thalhimer (this is a so-called "right side up") case as contrasted with the current matter in which the owner’s employee makes a claim against a subcontractor and its employee (which is referred to as an "upside down case")? If the answer to the question raised by the parties here is that plaintiff is barred because she was injured by a "fellow employee," then the Abacus employee could collect Worker’s Compensation from Thalhimer; otherwise he could not. The point of this is that in construing the Worker’s Compensation Act, it should be construed liberally in favor of coverage. Henderson v. Central Telephone Co., 233 Va. 377 (1987). Even though coverage is not the issue here, the same principle of construing the Act liberally in favor of coverage must be applied in determining whether Abacus and its employees were the statutory employees of Thalhimer.

Plaintiff argues that the Shell Oil v. Leftwich test based on whether the task is "normally" performed by the owner’s employees should be applied. This court’s reading of Shell suggests that too much reliance is placed on the so-called "Shell test.” Shell, a "right side up" case, involved an appeal from an award of Worker’s Compensation benefits from Shell Oil to two employees of a service station operator whose only connection with Shell was that of a lessee and franchisee licensed to sell Shell products. Not only did the court find that Shell employees were not involved in sales to consumers as were the claimants, it found that Shell’s business; i.e., the sale of gasoline, was limited to dealer sales, that the claimant’s [51]*51employer was an independent contractor, and that Shell operated no gas stations through its own employees.

It would seem that the issue in Shell could have been resolved simply by holding that § 65.1-30 of the Code does not apply to landlord/tenant franchisee/franchisor situations. There was no need to go further.

In Shell, the court quoted with approval a quotation from Larson’s Workmen’s Compensation Law, vol. 1A, § 49.12, pp. 872, 873, in which Professor Larson articulated the "normally done” test. But in Larson's updated work, he somewhat changes the concept stated in Shell of determining what is "normally done" by the owner’s employees to what is ordinarily done by this employer in the past and what is done by employers in comparable businesses. A. Larson, Workmen’s Compensation Law, vol. 1C, § 49.12, pp. 872, 873. What is "normally done" by the owner’s employees is no longer suggested by Professor Larson as the proper test.

The "normally done" test can lead to unintended results inconsistent with a liberal application of the Act. As the Supreme Court of Virginia has pointed out, the "normally done” test, if applied uncritically, could result in employers avoiding compensation by subcontracting out all of their work. In that circumstance, the employer’s workers would normally do nothing. Henderson v. Central Telephone Co., 233 Va. 377 (1987).

Parenthetically, Larson also characterizes the case of Wooten v. Youthcraft Manufacturing Co., 321 S.W.2d 1 (Mo.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 Va. Cir. 48, 1990 Va. Cir. LEXIS 433, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-huggins-vaccrichmondcty-1990.