The L.E. Myers Company v. Young

165 So. 3d 1, 2015 WL 848200
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedFebruary 27, 2015
Docket2D13-6203
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 165 So. 3d 1 (The L.E. Myers Company v. Young) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The L.E. Myers Company v. Young, 165 So. 3d 1, 2015 WL 848200 (Fla. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

VILLANTI, Judge.

The L.E. Myers Company (Myers) appeals the final judgment entered against it in this personal injury case arising out of an auto accident. Because the trial court improperly granted a partial summary judgment in favor of Timothy Young, as Personal Representative of the Estate of Allen Young, Deceased (the Estate), and also improperly permitted the jury to consider the issue of punitive damages, we reverse and remand for a new trial.

Facts

Myers contracted with Florida Power & Light (FPL) on a project that involved replacing a number of power poles in Manatee County. The contract between Myers and FPL required Myers to install four concrete poles, each approximately eighty-five feet long and each weighing approximately 21,000 pounds, along the shoulder of 15th Street East in Bradenton. The contract specified that Myers was an independent contractor responsible for ensuring that the work was completed to FPL’s specifications, including. providing the necessary traffic control while the work was in progress.

The scope of the contract between Myers and FPL required Myers to dig a hole for each new pole in a location specifically identified by FPL; transport the pole to the work site on a flatbed trailer; provide a crane at the work site to lift the pole from the flatbed trailer, raise it over the existing transmission and distribution wires, and lower it into the newly dug hole; finalize the setting of the pole; and then, in coordination with FPL, move the transmission and distribution wires from the old pole to the new pole. Myers subcontracted the transportation of the pole to Roun-tree Transport & Rigging (Rountree), and it subcontracted the crane work to Palm Beach Trucking, LLC, d/b/a Merchant Transport, Inc. (Merchant).

On the day of the accident, while Myers’ personnel were digging the hole for the new pole, Merchant’s crane operator set *3 up his rig based on his assessment of the site characteristics. Soon thereafter, Ronald Baker, the tractor-trailer driver for Rountree, arrived with the new pole strapped onto the flatbed trailer. The length of the pole was such that it extended off the back of the flatbed trailer by several feet. Myers’ personnel directed Baker to park a short distance away from the site while they finished digging the hole.

Once the hole was completed, Myers’ personnel directed Baker to bring the pole to the site. To offload the pole, Baker had to park the tractor-trailer in a .location dictated strictly by the location of the hole and the location of the crane relative to that hole. Baker backed the tractor-trailer onto the shoulder of 15th Street East and parked where he was directed by Myers’ personnel. Baker was able to maneuver the cab of the tractor and the majority of the flatbed trailer fully onto the shoulder of the road, but the outermost left rear tire of the flatbed trailer rested on and slightly over the white line painted on the edge of the road. The concrete pole itself was fully on the shoulder of the road and did not impinge on the roadway in any manner. Baker parked the tractor-trailer, got out, and began helping Myers’ personnel unstrap the concrete pole from the flatbed trailer. The crane operator also began to adjust the boom in anticipation of lifting the pole into place.

Myers’ safety supervisor, Tommy Byrd, testified that he had placed traffic cones and warning signs on the side of the road on the approach to the work site and that his intent was to stop traffic in both directions on 15th Street East while the crane actually lifted the pole from the flatbed trailer and lowered it into the hole. However, he testified that he did not believe that he needed to divert or stop traffic before that time because although the outermost left rear trailer tire was slightly on the roadway, neither the trailer nor its tires were impeding the flow of traffic.

While the tractor-trailer was parked on the side of the road, Allen Young was driving his Buick southbound on 15th Street East. He stopped approximately seventy-five feet before the Myers’ work site, waiting for traffic to clear so that he could turn left into a pawn shop parking lot. Behind him, Roger Nyberg was driving in the same direction, traveling at 91 miles per hour in a 40-mile-per-hour zone and weaving in and out of oncoming traffic. Without braking, Mr. Nyberg slammed into the back of Mr. Young’s stopped car. This horrific impact propelled Mr. Young’s car forward and spun it around, slamming it by unfortunate happenstance into the end of the concrete pole, which was still atop the flatbed trailer on the shoulder of the road. Mr. Young’s car came to rest under the pole with Mr. Young trapped inside. Mr. Young was severely injured, dying from his injuries two years later.

The Estate sued Mr. Nyberg, FPL, Myers, Rountree, Baker, Merchant, and others 1 for their alleged negligence in causing the accident. In its answer to the Estate’s second amended complaint, Myers raised a number of affirmative defenses, including its alleged entitlement to set-offs for comparative fault, set-offs for the contributory negligence of third parties not under the control or supervision of Myers, and set-offs for the contributory negligence of the codefendants to the action. *4 The Estate subsequently filed a motion for partial summary judgment as to these three affirmative defenses, arguing that because Myers was engaged in an inherently dangerous activity it was legally responsible for any negligence of its subcontractors and therefore was not entitled to any set-offs for their negligence. Despite finding that there were disputed issues of fact, the trial court granted this partial summary judgment, finding as a matter of law that Myers was engaged in an inherently dangerous activity and so was fully liable for any negligence of its subcontractors.

In addition to this partial summary judgment motion, the Estate also filed a motion seeking leave to assert a claim for punitive damages against Myers. In support of this motion, the Estate argued that Myers’ negligence was of a gross and flagrant nature as evidenced by its alleged failure to have a traffic plan in place at the time of the . accident, its alleged willful blindness to the allegedly binding Department of Transportation rules concerning traffic regulation at roadside construction sites, and its alleged attempts to cover up its negligence after the accident. The trial court granted the motion and permitted the Estate to file an amended complaint seeking punitive damages.

At trial, the Estate presented one witness who testified that Myers did not have traffic cones or warning signs in place before the accident. The Estate also presented expert testimony that Myers should have implemented a traffic plan that complied with Florida Department of Transportation Index 603, which dictated the placement of warning signs and traffic cones in specific locations, as well as the complete closure of the southbound lane of 15th Street East for approximately 300 feet before the start of the work site, because Myers was working within two feet of the edge of the road. The Estate also introduced a diagram of the accident scene prepared by Myers’ safety supervisor Mr. Byrd which depicted warning signs and traffic cones in locations allegedly different from those shown in photographs taken of the accident scene itself.

In contradiction to the Estate’s evidence, Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
165 So. 3d 1, 2015 WL 848200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-le-myers-company-v-young-fladistctapp-2015.