Rock v. Delaware Electric Cooperative, Inc.

328 A.2d 449, 1974 Del. Super. LEXIS 170
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedOctober 31, 1974
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 328 A.2d 449 (Rock v. Delaware Electric Cooperative, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rock v. Delaware Electric Cooperative, Inc., 328 A.2d 449, 1974 Del. Super. LEXIS 170 (Del. Ct. App. 1974).

Opinion

OPINION

O’HARA, Judge.

The Court has four motions under consideration. Two third party defendants have filed motions to dismiss third party *451 complaints for failure to state claims upon which relief can be granted. One third party defendant has moved for summary judgment. One third party plaintiff has filed a cross motion for summary judgment in its favor with regard to its third party complaint. In their complaints, the third party plaintiffs seek indemnity of any amount recovered against them in actions brought by injured employees of the third party defendants. The third party plaintiffs base their claims for indemnification on an express or implied obligation arising out of contractual relations with the respective third party defendant. Each third party defendant was required to pay its employee compensation benefits.

The third party actions arise from the following factual situations:

Leon G. Powell, plaintiff, an employee of Chrysler Corporation (“Chrysler”), was injured while working for Chrysler when a truck operated on Chrysler’s property by an employee of Interstate Vendaway, Inc. (“Vendaway”) struck a stack of cartons pinning plaintiff between other cartons and a work table. Powell sued Vendaway for damages resulting from the injury, claiming negligence on the part of Vendaway’s employee in the operation of the truck. Vendaway filed a third party complaint against Chrysler claiming breach of an implied covenant to provide a safe working place for Vendaway and an implied promise of indemnification for breach of the covenant. Chrysler answered the third party complaint asserting that an express indemnification provision in a contract precludes an implied right of indemnification.

This is Chrysler’s third motion for summary judgment. The background and ruling on Chrysler’s first motion appeared in Powell v. Interstate Vendaway, Inc., Del. Super., 300 A.2d 241 (1972). In that action, Vendaway’s third party complaint alleged that the duty which Chrysler violated was to provide a safe working place for Chrysler’s employee. The Court held that the allegation was not supportable since the duty alleged was a common law duty of an employer to its employee to provide a safe working place. Vendaway had cited Diamond State Tel. Co. v. University of Delaware, Del.Supr., 269 A.2d 52 (1970) as authority. In distinguishing Diamond, the Court made the following observations:

“It [third party complaint] rested on the implied contractual obligation of the contractor to perform its contracted work in a workmanlike manner. By contrast Chrysler has no contractual work; its only express contractual duty was to provide certain space, utilities and facilities. Chrysler’s activities are not contractually related to Vendaway. It is not asserted that plaintiff was performing services related in any way to the express contractual obligation of either Vendaway or Chrysler. * * * * If Chrysler is liable to indemnify Venda-way, it must rest upon an implied obligation which Chrysler (owner) owed to Vendaway (contractor). . . . ”

Following the decision against it, Venda-way filed an amended complaint. Chrysler based its second motion for summary judgment upon the proposition that the instant case did not fall within the holding in Diamond. This Court, by opinion dated June 27, 1973, denied Chrysler’s motion stating that even though the damages for which Vendaway seeks indemnification reflect a tort recovery by Chrysler’s employee, the third party complaint states a valid cause of action springing from a separate contractual relationship. Chrysler filed a third motion for summary judgment and it is this motion which is presently before the Court.

Gerald C. Rock, plaintiff, an employee of W. B. Mitten & Sons, Inc. (“Mitten”), was injured while working for Mitten when the cable of a crane owned by Mitten came into contact with an uninsulated high-tension electric wire of Delaware Electric Cooperative, Inc. during the course of Mitten’s rehabilitation of the *452 Mill Creek Bridge under contract with the State of Delaware (“State”). Rock sued State and Delaware Electric Cooperative for damages resulting from the injury alleging that State was negligent in drafting blueprints which failed to show that certain electric lines were uninsulated and to show their proper location, and in failing to halt construction when it knew or should have known of the dangerous condition created by a live high voltage wire within the proximity of the construction. State filed a third party complaint against Mitten claiming that express provisions protect State from any liability to third parties which is incurred under the construction contract. State also claims breach of an implied agreement to perform workmanlike service and an implied contractual promise of indemnification. Mitten answered the third party complaint asserting that express indemnification provisions do not entitle State to indemnity for a claim based upon its own negligence.

James B. Harvey, plaintiff, an employee of Facciolo Paving and Construction Company (“Facciolo”), was injured while working for Facciolo when he cut into an underground power line owned by the Delmarva Power & Light Company during the course of repairs to a sewer main of the City of Wilmington (“City”). Harvey sued City and Delmarva Power & Light Company. The plaintiff’s complaint against City alleges liability on the part of City by reason of its negligence in failing to provide plaintiff with a safe place to work, failing to de-energize the high voltage electric line, and failing to mark the location of said electric line. City filed a third party complaint against Facciolo for indemnification on the express provisions in City’s contract with Facciolo. Facciolo answered the third party complaint contending that the express indemnification provisions of the written contract between City and Facciolo do not indemnify City for the consequences of its own negligence. City filed a cross motion for summary judgment in its favor with regard to the third party complaint.

The questions to be decided by the Court are 1) whether the principals are entitled to indemnification either under the express indemnification provisions in the contracts or under separate implied obligations of indemnity from implied covenants by the contractors to perform their work in a workmanlike manner and, 2) whether a contractor is entitled to indemnification under an implied covenant by the owner to provide a safe working place for the contractor when there is an express indemnification provision in the contract.

There is no statutory basis for permitting recovery of damages from the employer of an injured employee by a third person tortfeasor. The Workmen’s Compensation Act makes the liability of an employer to his employee absolute but limits it in amount. The employee is prohibited from suing his employer for injuries resulting from negligence of the employer or his employees. 19 Del.C. § 2304. However, § 2363 of the Act permits common law actions in tort against a third person whose negligence injures the employee. Pursuant to this authority the plaintiffs have brought actions against the defendants third party plaintiffs in the instant case.

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Bluebook (online)
328 A.2d 449, 1974 Del. Super. LEXIS 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rock-v-delaware-electric-cooperative-inc-delsuperct-1974.