William L. Judy, Cross-Appellee, Joyce Judy v. Tri-State Motor Transit Company, a Delaware Corporation, Cross-Appellant

844 F.2d 1496, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 6357, 1988 WL 39120
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedMay 16, 1988
Docket86-3816
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 844 F.2d 1496 (William L. Judy, Cross-Appellee, Joyce Judy v. Tri-State Motor Transit Company, a Delaware Corporation, Cross-Appellant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
William L. Judy, Cross-Appellee, Joyce Judy v. Tri-State Motor Transit Company, a Delaware Corporation, Cross-Appellant, 844 F.2d 1496, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 6357, 1988 WL 39120 (11th Cir. 1988).

Opinion

KRAYITCH, Circuit Judge:

Following a jury verdict for plaintiff William L. Judy, the district court granted defendant Tri-State Motor Transit Company’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. Judy appeals, alleging that the jury’s verdict should be reinstated. Tri-State Motor Transit Company (“TriState”) cross-appeals, contending that if the grant of judgment notwithstanding the verdict was erroneous, the district court should have granted defendant’s alternative motion for a new trial. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the judgment of the district court.

I.

Judy, a Florida resident, visited TriState’s terminal in Altamonte Springs, Florida, in response to a newspaper advertisement for truck drivers. After Judy completed an application for employment, Tri-State directed him to attend its four-day driver’s school, undergo a physical examination, and take a written examination and a driving test. Several days later Judy was told that he had qualified to drive for Tri-State and that he should report to TriState’s main terminal in Missouri. Upon arrival there Judy was informed that he would be working as a “contractor’s driver,” meaning that he would sign an agreement to drive for a lessor of tractors to Tri-State, rather than as a “company driver,” which is a driver under a standard employment contract with Tri-State. 1

Tri-State directed Judy to meet with Leroy Vanzandt, who leased tractors to TriState. 2 The two men met in a restaurant across from the Tri-State terminal, where Judy signed a contract with Vanzandt to the effect that he would be an “independent contractor” driving Vanzandt’s tractors under the terms of the lease agree *1498 ment between Vanzandt and Tri-State. Under the contract, Judy was to be paid a percentage of what Vanzandt received from Tri-State. He would receive no employee benefits, and he would be responsible for paying his own self-employment and other taxes. The restaurant meeting was the only instance on which Judy actually met with Vanzandt; Tri-State gave him all of his dispatches, informed him of the times to pick up and drop off loads and the appropriate routes to take, inspected his rig, provided the necessary permits, and authorized cash advances. All of the tractors driven by Judy were marked with TriState’s name or logo, as were the trailers that he pulled. Judy himself did not have an ICC permit, nor did he own a tractor, trailer, or any incidental equipment.

The lease agreement between Tri-State and Vanzandt provided that Tri-State would procure workers’ compensation coverage and other insurance for Vanzandt’s drivers, including Judy. Vanzandt in turn reimbursed Tri-State for the insurance coverage. Although Florida law prohibits an employer from charging an employee for the costs of the insurance coverage, 3 Judy’s contract with Vanzandt provided that workers’ compensation insurance would be withheld from Judy’s compensation, possibly on the theory that the Florida statute would not apply to their relationship. When TriState became aware that Vanzandt was charging his “contractors” for their workers’ compensation coverage, it advised Van-zandt to stop making the deduction, and he discontinued the practice.

In November of 1988, about two weeks after Judy left Missouri on his first job, he was seriously injured at a truck stop in Tuscon, Arizona, while assisting another driver, Doris Ann Valdez, who, like Judy, was pulling a Tri-State trailer with a tractor belonging to an independent owner. Valdez had just dropped off a load of structural steel. Because of the length of the steel, she had used a stretch trailer, which could be lengthened by removing pins on the sides of the trailer, locking the trailer’s back wheels, pulling the front of the trailer forward, and then replacing the pins. After unloading the steel, Valdez attempted to shorten the trailer to its original length, but she was unable to retract one of the pins. She then drove to the Triple T truck stop in Tuscon, where she met Judy and Jim Williams, another truck driver. The two men offered to assist Valdez in shortening her trailer. After unsuccessfully trying several different methods to release the jammed pin, Judy crawled under the trailer in an attempt to force the pin out by striking it with a hammer. Meanwhile, Valdez had climbed into the cab and started the engine. While Judy was still underneath the trailer, the pin came free and the trailer closed, trapping Judy’s head between the closing crossbeams under the trailer, and causing massive injury to his head, neck and spine.

Since the accident, Tri-State and its workers’ compensation insurance carrier have been paying benefits to and on behalf of Judy; at the time of this appeal, these totaled over $180,000. On the date of Judy’s accident, however, Tri-State had not yet learned that Vanzandt had been deducting the costs of Judy’s workers’ compensation coverage from his pay. Accordingly, this “mistake,” as Tri-State characterizes it, had not yet been corrected. Because the deductions were made for the two to three week period he drove for Tri-State, Judy contends that he paid for his own workers’ compensation coverage.

Judy filed suit against Tri-State and against Gary and Bonnie Burgess, the owners of the tractor driven by Valdez, on August 6,1984. After the initial complaint was dismissed, Judy filed an amended complaint alleging that Tri-State had negli *1499 gently maintained the stretch trailer pulled by Valdez, allowing the securing pin to become rusty and unlubricated. The amended complaint further alleged that Gary and Bonnie Burgess, as owners of the tractor driven by Valdez, were vicariously liable for Valdez’ negligent operation of the tractor while Judy was underneath the stretch trailer. Because the Burgesses were never served with process, the trial court dismissed the case against them without prejudice.

In the months prior to trial, Judy filed three motions seeking leave to amend his complaint to add allegations that Tri-State was vicariously liable for Valdez’ negligence and that Tri-State had negligently allowed the securing pin mechanism to become misaligned. The motions were denied, 4 but pending at trial was Judy’s motion for rehearing on the third motion to amend. Also pending was Tri-State’s motion in limine, seeking to limit the evidence at trial to the issues of rust and lack of lubrication on the trailer locking pin, as alleged in the amended complaint. On the first day of trial, the district court ruled that Judy would be able to try the issues of vicarious liability and misalignment, despite the previous denials of leave to amend on these issues. 5

Although one of Tri-State’s defenses was that Judy was its statutory employee and was therefore barred from a tort recovery because of the workers’ compensation benefits he had received, the trial court refused to allow Tri-State to present evidence indicating the nature of its workers’ compensation program, the benefits it had paid on behalf of Judy, or its lack of involvement in Vanzandt’s decision to charge Judy for workers’ compensation coverage.

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Bluebook (online)
844 F.2d 1496, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 6357, 1988 WL 39120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/william-l-judy-cross-appellee-joyce-judy-v-tri-state-motor-transit-ca11-1988.