Stolz v. J & B Steel Erectors, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedFebruary 13, 2020
Docket1:14-cv-00044
StatusUnknown

This text of Stolz v. J & B Steel Erectors, Inc. (Stolz v. J & B Steel Erectors, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stolz v. J & B Steel Erectors, Inc., (S.D. Ohio 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO WESTERN DIVISION

DANIEL STOLZ,

Plaintiff, Case No. 1:14-cv-44 v. JUDGE DOUGLAS R. COLE

J & B STEEL ERECTORS, INC., et al.,

Defendants.

OPINION AND ORDER This cause comes before the Court on the Motion to Dismiss (Doc. 111) filed by Defendants J & B Steel Erectors, Inc.; D.A.G. Construction, Inc.; Pendleton Construc- tion Group, LLC; and TriVersity Construction Co., LLC (collectively the “Enrolled Subcontractor Parties”), which addresses issues that relate solely to Plaintiff Daniel Stolz’s challenges under the United States Constitution to an Ohio Workers’ Com- pensation statute, Ohio Rev. Code § 4123.35(O) (the “Self-Insuring Employer Stat- ute”). The federal constitutional issues are all that remain in this case after not one, but two, trips to the Supreme Court of Ohio on certified questions, both of which re- solved, in a manner contrary to Stolz’s desired position, certain other issues that Stolz had pressed in this action. On the first trip, Stolz argued that as a matter of statutory interpretation the Self-Insuring Employer Statute, which grants immunity from suit to various entities for certain work-related injuries that occur at construction sites (and instead provides that recovery for such injuries solely will be through the Workers’ Compensation System), did not apply to the Enrolled Subcontractor Parties in this case, as they were not his employers. The Ohio Supreme Court disagreed, finding that the statute bars Stolz from suing the Enrolled Subcontractor Parties,

who, while not his employer, were other “enrolled subcontractors,” a term that refers to those subcontractors included in the self-insured group under the statute (more on that below) working on the same project as the subcontractor that employed Stolz. Stolz v. J & B Steel Erectors, Inc., 146 Ohio St. 3d 281, 2016-Ohio-1567 (“Stolz I”). On his second trip, Stolz argued that the Self-Insuring Employer Statute, if interpreted to immunize non-employer enrolled subcontractors, violated the Ohio Constitution. The Ohio Supreme Court rejected that argument as well. Stolz v. J & B

Steel Erectors, Inc., 155 Ohio St. 3d 567, 2018-Ohio-5088 (“Stolz II”). As the Ohio Supreme Court’s interpretations of Ohio statutes and the Ohio Constitution are binding on this Court, the sole question remaining here relates to Stolz’s claims that the Ohio statute, as interpreted by the Ohio Supreme Court, vio- lates the United States Constitution. The Enrolled Subcontractor Parties now seek dismissal, claiming that Stolz’s arguments under the federal Constitution fail as a

matter of law. (There are also two non-moving subcontractor defendants in this ac- tion, which were not “enrolled subcontractors” on the project. This Order does not apply to them.) More specifically, Stolz advances three constitutional arguments: (1) that the Self-Insuring Employer Statute violates the Seventh Amendment’s jury trial guarantee; (2) that the statute violates the Due Process Clause under the Four- teenth Amendment; and (3) that the statute violates the Fourteenth Amendment’s Equal Protection Clause. The Court finds, however, that Stolz has not pled a viable legal theory as to any of the three, and thus the Court DISMISSES this action against the Enrolled Subcontractor Parties WITH PREJUDICE.

I. BACKGROUND A. The Relevant Facts. This Court has previously summarized the relevant facts in certifying the first question of law to the Ohio Supreme Court in Stolz I. The plaintiff, Daniel Stolz, worked as a concrete finisher for Jostin Construction, Inc., a subcontractor on a con- struction project at the Horseshoe Casino in Cincinnati (the “Casino Project”). Stolz was injured during the course of his work on that project. As a result, he brought

claims for negligence in this Court against the general contractor, Defendant Messer Construction Company (“Messer”), and various other subcontractors, including, as relevant here, J & B Steel Erectors (“J & B Steel”), D.A.G. Construction Co., Inc. (“D.A.G.”), and TriVersity Construction Co., L.L.C. (“TriVersity”) (collectively the “Enrolled Subcontractor Parties”). (Stolz also sued two other subcontractors in this action. As noted above, his claims against those subcontractors are not at issue here.)

Before the accident that injured Stolz occurred, Messer had applied for and obtained authority from the Ohio Bureau of Workers’ Compensation (“BWC”) to act as the self-insuring employer under Section 4123.35(O). Stolz II, 155 Ohio St. 3d at 568. Under that statute, Messer was thus responsible for providing workers’ compen- sation coverage for its own employees, as well as for the employees of any enrolled subcontractors on the Casino Project, i.e., those subcontractors who are listed on the contractor’s application to self-insure, see id., a group that in this case included the Enrolled Subcontractor Parties who have collectively filed the present motion to dis- miss. (The other two subcontractors were not part of the group of enrolled subcon-

tractors on the project.) The Enrolled Subcontractor Parties sought judgment as a matter of law, claim- ing that they were immune from suit on Stolz’s negligence claims due to the Self- Insuring Employer Statute, and that Stolz’s sole mechanism for recovery was his workers’ compensation claim. This Court granted summary judgment to the general contractor, Messer, but found that claims could proceed against the Enrolled Subcon- tractor Parties, other than the subcontractor that employed Stolz, as the workers’

compensation statutes immunized subcontractors from suits by their own employees, but not from suits by employees of other subcontractors. The Enrolled Subcontractor Parties then asked this Court to certify that ques- tion of Ohio law—whether Stolz could proceed against enrolled subcontractors other than his employer—to the Ohio Supreme Court, which this Court did. In Stolz I, the Ohio Supreme Court rejected this Court’s analysis, holding that the Ohio’s workers’

compensation statute at issue, Section 4123.35(O), immunizes all enrolled subcon- tractors on a self-insured project against not only claims by their own employees, but also claims by employees of other enrolled subcontractors. Stolz I, 155 Ohio St. 3d at 287. On return to this Court from the Ohio Supreme Court, Stolz amended his Com- plaint to assert that, as interpreted, Section 4123.35(O) violates the Ohio Constitution and the United States Constitution by infringing “upon the right to trial by jury [and] . . . the constitutional right to remedy, and violat[ing] due process and equal protection.” (Doc. 90, at ¶ 27, #918). Specifically, Stolz asserted that Section

4123.35 “unconstitutionally interferes with the judiciary’s authority over the courts by unconstitutionally purporting to permit the legislature to dictate non-liability as a matter of law . . . [and] unconstitutionally denies certain injured employee tort vic- tims, including Plaintiff, equal protection of the law by arbitrarily permitting some injured employees to receive full compensation for their injuries from third party tort- feasors while denying the same to injured employees employed on self-insured con- struction projects.” (Id. at ¶¶ 28, 29).

This Court then certified to the Ohio Supreme Court another question: “Whether Ohio Rev. Code 4123.35(O) is unconstitutional [under the Ohio Constitu- tion] as applied to the tort claims of an enrolled subcontractor’s employee who is in- jured while working on a self-insured construction project and whose injury is com- pensable under Ohio workers’ compensation laws.” (Cert. Order, Doc. 107, #1054). The Ohio Supreme Court also accepted this second certification, Stolz v. J & B Steel

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