Wilson v. C.C. Southern, Inc.

140 S.W.3d 115, 2004 Mo. App. LEXIS 740, 2004 WL 1098974
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 18, 2004
DocketWD 62805
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 140 S.W.3d 115 (Wilson v. C.C. Southern, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilson v. C.C. Southern, Inc., 140 S.W.3d 115, 2004 Mo. App. LEXIS 740, 2004 WL 1098974 (Mo. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

PAUL M. SPINDEN, Judge.

The central issue in this workers’ compensation case is who was John Wilson’s employer. Wilson was driving a tractor leased by C.C. Southern, Inc., from Robert Kerr pulling a C.C. Southern trailer when the rig crashed and killed him. Although C.C. Southern contracted with Kerr for Wilson’s services as a driver, the Labor and Industrial Relations Commission decided that C.C. Southern was Wilson’s “special employer” and hable exclusively for paying workers’ compensation benefits to his survivors.

Wilson died on March 11,1998, when the tractor-trailer rig he was driving crashed enroute from Springfield to Kansas City. Kerr owned the tractor that Wilson was driving. C.C. Southern had leased it under a contract with Kerr. Kerr and Kerr Cartage did not participate in this case, and the record does not establish what Kerr’s relationships to Kerr Cartage and to Wilson were. C.C. Southern was affiliated with a freight broker, Central Transport International, Inc., which had arranged the shipment. C.C. Southern and Central Transport were wholly-owned subsidiaries of Centra, Inc.

The commission’s administrative law judge awarded benefits to Wilson’s widow and son, John Wilson, on the ground that Wilson was a “special employee” of C.C. Southern and was acting in the course and scope of that employment when the crash occurred. The administrative law judge also found that C.C. Southern had a reasonable basis for defending the claim and denied Wilson’s dependents’ request that the costs of the proceedings be assessed against it. C.C. Southern appealed to the commission, which affirmed the award without modifying it. C.C. Southern and Wilson’s dependents cross-appealed. C.C. Southern asserts that the commission erred in deciding that it was hable because Wilson’s general employer retained sufficient control over the details of Wilson’s work to protect it from liability. Because neither Kerr nor Kerr Cartage earned workers’ compensation insurance, any liability on their parts would fall to the Second Injury Fund. Wilson’s survivors argue that C.C. Southern’s control of Wilson’s work was sufficient for it to be deemed to have assumed liability as a special employer, but, they assert, the commission miscalculated the amount of benefits. 1

*118 We need not resolve the issue of whether or not C.C. Southern was Wilson’s employer because C.C. Southern asserts that Wilson was an employee of its independent contractor. Assuming, arguendo, that C.C. Southern is correct, the result is the same because of the provisions of § 287.040.1, RSMo 2000, which says:

Any person who has work done under contract on or about his premises which is an operation of the usual business which he there carries on shall be deemed an employer and shall be hable under this chapter to such contractor, his subcontractors, and their employees, when injured or killed on or about the premises of the employer while doing work which is in the usual course of his business.

In this statute, the General Assembly has created a constructive employment relationship in contravention of common law. Montgomery v. Mine La Matte Corporation, 304 S.W.2d 885, 888 (Mo.1957). It enacted § 287.040.1 to prevent employers from circumventing workers’ compensation law by hiring independent contractors. Bass v. National Super Markets, Inc., 911 S.W.2d 617, 619 (Mo. banc 1995), cert. denied, 517 U.S. 1208, 116 S.Ct. 1825, 134 L.Ed.2d 930 (1996).

Liability under § 287.040.1 requires coexistence of three elements: (1) that the work be performed pursuant to contract, (2) that the injury occur on or about the premises of the employer contracting for the work, and (3) that the work be performed in the usual course of business of that employer. State ex rel. MSX International, Inc. v. Dolan, 38 S.W.3d 427, 429 (Mo. banc 2001). All three elements are satisfied in this case.

As C.C. Southern maintains, Wilson drove the tractor pulling C.C. Southern’s trailer pursuant to a contract with Kerr, satisfying the first element. C.C. Southern describes itself as “an interstate carrier ... and a common carrier of commodities in interstate traffic[.]” We, therefore, do not doubt that Wilson was performing work that was in C.C. Southern’s usual course of business when the crash occurred, satisfying the third element.

Although not as straightforward, we are confident that the second element — that the injury occurred on the premises of the employer contracting for the work — was also satisfied. Wilson died in a highway crash — not at C.C. Southern’s facilities— and, of course, a public highway is not the contracting employer’s premises. See, e.g., Rutherford v. Tobin Quarries, Inc., 336 Mo. 1171, 82 S.W.2d 918, 924 (1935); Cole v. Town and Country Exteriors, 837 S.W.2d 580, 585 (Mo.App.1992), overruled in part on other grounds, Hampton v. Big Boy Steel Erection, 121 S.W.3d 220 (Mo. banc 2003). Premises, however, “should not be given a narrow or refined construction, but rather, in keeping with both the spirit and specific direction ... of the [workers’ compensation law,] should be liberally construed and applied.... ‘[P]remises’ as there used contemplates any place, under the exclusive control of the employer, where the employer’s usual business is being carried on or eonducted[.]” Sargent v. Clements, 337 Mo. 1127, 88 S.W.2d 174, 178 (1935); see also, Cates v. Williamson, 117 S.W.2d 655, 658 (Mo.App.1938) (“premises of the employer is any place where, in the usual operation of his business, it is necessary for those whom he has employed to do the work to be while doing it.”) (quoting Simpson v. New Madrid Stave Company, 227 Mo.App. 331, 52 S.W.2d 615, 616 (1932)). An employer certainly has exclusive control of a place if the general public does not have a right to use it. State ex rel. J.E. Jones Construction Company v. Sanders, 875 S.W.2d 154, 158 (Mo.App.1994).

*119 Under the required broad interpretation, C.C. Southern’s premises can be mobile. Seeley v. Anchor Fence Company, 96 S.W.3d 809, 817-19 (Mo.App.2002), overruled in part on other grounds, Hampton v. Big Boy Steel Erection, 121 S.W.3d 220 (Mo. banc 2003) (a trailer involved in a highway crash is employer’s premises, under employer’s exclusive control, albeit at a temporary location away from employer’s primary place of business). The tractor-trailer rig in which Wilson was killed was the means by which C.C.

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140 S.W.3d 115, 2004 Mo. App. LEXIS 740, 2004 WL 1098974, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-cc-southern-inc-moctapp-2004.