Martel v. Connor Contracting, Inc. ( 2017 )


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  • Martel v. Connor Contracting, Inc., 435-7-16 Wncv (Teachout, J., Sept. 1, 2017)
    [The text of this Vermont trial court opinion is unofficial. It has been reformatted from the original. The accuracy of the text and the
    accompanying data included in the Vermont trial court opinion database is not guaranteed.]
    STATE OF VERMONT
    SUPERIOR COURT                                                                                          CIVIL DIVISION
    Washington Unit                                                                                         Docket No. 435-7-16 Wncv
    IRA MARTEL
    Plaintiff
    v.
    CONNOR CONTRACTING, INC., JASON CLARK,
    AND STEPHEN CONNOR
    Defendants
    DECISION
    Defendants’ Motions for Summary Judgment
    Plaintiff Ira Martel was injured when he fell from a roof while working as an employee of
    Connor Contracting, Inc. He claims that Connor Contracting and two of his supervisors, Jason
    Clark and Stephen Connor, are liable to him in tort because adequate safety equipment that
    would have prevented his injury was not available to him when he fell. Mr. Martel received
    worker’s compensation for his injury. In two motions for summary judgment, Defendants argue
    that the worker’s compensation exclusivity rule necessarily bars additional relief.
    The material facts are genuinely disputed. To enable summary judgment analysis, the
    court assumes the truth of the narrative presented by Mr. Martel in opposing summary judgment.
    That version of the facts is as follows. A work crew, including Mr. Martel, had been doing roof
    work at a job site in Montpelier. On the final day of the work, only Mr. Martel and another
    employee were at the site to finish up, as instructed by Mr. Connor and Mr. Clark, neither of
    whom was present at the Montpelier site on the day of the injury. Mr. Martel was on a flat roof
    about 15 feet above the ground when he fell to the ground and was injured.1 He was not using
    safety gear that would have arrested his fall because necessary components of that gear had been
    moved the day before to a different job site by his supervisors. Mr. Martel reasonably perceived
    that if he had objected to going on the roof without safety equipment then Defendants may have
    retaliated against him. He received worker’s compensation benefits for his injury.
    Mr. Martel seeks to avoid the exclusivity rule, 21 V.S.A. § 622, by arguing that his injury
    was substantially certain to occur and, separately, that there is co-employee liability against Mr.
    Connor and Mr. Clark per 21 V.S.A. § 624(a). The court concludes, after considering these
    arguments, that no Defendant can have liability based on this set of facts.
    The exclusivity provision generally applies except in cases of a “specific intent to injure.”
    Kittell v. Vermont Weatherboard, Inc., 
    138 Vt. 439
    , 441 (1980). The parties dispute whether the
    Court has relaxed this standard to encompass situations in which there is a substantial certainty
    of injury but something short of specific intent to injure. See Stamp Tech, Inc. ex rel. Blair v.
    1
    Nothing in the record explains how Mr. Martel came to fall from the roof.
    Ludall/Thermal Acoustical, Inc., 
    2009 VT 91
    , ¶ 32, 
    186 Vt. 369
     (Burgess, J., dissenting) (“With
    a footnote, the majority overturns what was fairly clear since enactment of workers’
    compensation almost a century ago, and what Kittell v. Vermont Weatherboard, Inc., 
    138 Vt. 439
    , 441 (1980) (per curiam), made explicitly clear: ‘[n]othing short of a specific intent to injure
    falls outside of the scope of the Act.’”). It is unnecessary to resolve the debate over Stamp Tech
    here because the facts cannot satisfy the substantial certainty standard regardless whether it is the
    law in Vermont.
    The Court has described the substantial certainty standard in the worker’s compensation
    context as follows:
    On the continuum of tortious conduct, substantial certainty has been described as
    just below the most aggravated conduct where the actor intends to injure the
    victim; it is more than “‘mere knowledge and appreciation of a risk,’” and more
    egregious than even “‘mere recklessness’” in which the actor knows or should
    know that there is a strong probability that harm may result. Thus, the substantial
    certainty standard has been variously described as “tantamount to an intentional
    tort,” a “surrogate state of mind for purposefully harmful conduct,” and “a
    substitute for a subjective desire to injure.”
    Mead v. W. Slate, Inc., 
    2004 VT 11
    , ¶ 13, 
    176 Vt. 274
     (citations omitted).
    Defendants might have been negligent in instructing Mr. Martel to work on a roof 15 feet
    above the ground without safety gear. However, there is no indication in the facts that anyone
    should have known that Mr. Martel would fall from the roof. Nothing in the record explains why
    being on a flat roof presents such an acute risk of injury that it is substantially certain that a fall
    will occur.
    Mr. Martel attempts to refocus the substantial certainty inquiry on whether injury would
    occur if he fell. That, he asserts, was substantially certain. However, under the facts he was
    simply instructed to work on a flat roof. It cannot be concluded that working on a flat roof
    presents a substantial certainty of injury.
    As to the individual Defendants, Mr. Martel has been unable to identify any non-
    employer duty and nonmanagerial prerogative for purposes of establishing any independent
    liability of Mr. Clark or Mr. Connor. The worker’s compensation exclusivity rule does not apply
    to liability for tortfeasors “other than the employer.” 21 V.S.A. § 624(a). “For someone to be
    ‘other than the employer’ and not per se immune from suit, the person must not be acting as the
    employer—that is, he must not be performing a nondelegable duty of the employer and must not
    be exercising ‘managerial prerogatives.’” Garger v. Desroches, 
    2009 VT 37
    , ¶ 4, 
    185 Vt. 634
    .
    The duty at issue in this case was to provide a safe workplace for the employee. That is a
    nondelegable duty of the employer, see 
    id.,
     and there is no allegation that Mr. Clark and Mr.
    Connor were doing anything other than exercising managerial prerogatives insofar as they
    instructed Mr. Martel to work on the roof and determined what safety equipment would be made
    available.
    2
    ORDER
    For the foregoing reasons, Defendants’ motions for summary judgment are granted.
    Dated at Montpelier, Vermont this 1st day of September 2017.
    _____________________________
    Mary Miles Teachout
    Superior Judge
    3
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 435-7-16 Wncv

Filed Date: 9/1/2017

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 7/31/2024