LEONIREZ HEREDIA v. JOHN BEACH & ASSOCIATES, INC. AND MICHAEL MELENDES GROSS ( 2019 )


Menu:
  •                NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO FILE REHEARING
    MOTION AND, IF FILED, DETERMINED
    IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL
    OF FLORIDA
    SECOND DISTRICT
    LEONIREZ HEREDIA,                             )
    )
    Appellant,                       )
    v.                                            )       Case No. 2D18-4127
    )
    JOHN BEACH & ASSOCIATES, INC.,                )
    and MICHAEL MELENDES GROSS,                   )
    )
    Appellees.                       )
    )
    Opinion filed July 24, 2019.
    Appeal from the Circuit Court for
    Hillsborough County; Robert A. Foster, Jr.,
    Judge.
    Rolando J. Santiago and Gregory S.
    Grossman of RJS Law Group, Apollo
    Beach, for Appellant.
    Carri S. Leininger of Williams, Leininger &
    Cosby, P.A., North Palm Beach, for
    Appellee John Beach & Associates, Inc.
    No appearance for remaining Appellee.
    LUCAS, Judge.
    Leonirez Heredia appeals the circuit court's entry of a final summary
    judgment in favor of John Beach & Associates, Inc. (JBA) and Michael Gross, the
    defendants below. The circuit court was apparently persuaded that the plaintiff's
    negligence claim was one between two subcontractors in horizontal privity under the
    Workers Compensation Law, §§ 440.01-60, Fla. Stat. (2017), and that, as such, the
    defendants were entitled to workers compensation immunity from the plaintiff's claim.
    Because the record does not support that determination, we reverse the circuit court's
    judgment.
    In 2015, Lennar Homes, LLC (Lennar) was developing a tract of land it
    owned in Riverview into a residential community known as Oaks at Shady Creek.
    Although the record is somewhat sparse as to what were Lennar's precise plans for this
    property, it is undisputed that Lennar was, at all times relevant, the fee simple owner of
    Oaks at Shady Creek. That is, Lennar was developing Lennar's own property, not
    someone else's.
    From the record before us, it appears that Mr. Heredia was an employee
    of QGS Development, Inc. (QGS), a company that Lennar had hired to perform road
    work in the Oaks at Shady Creek subdivision. On April 22, 2015, Mr. Heredia was
    working at the site, cleaning dirt from a road. Mr. Gross, an employee of JBA, was
    working in the same vicinity as Mr. Heredia. JBA had been retained by Lennar to
    provide surveying work for the Oaks at Shady Creek development.1
    Mr. Heredia alleges that Mr. Gross drove his JBA truck negligently by
    backing it into him. He filed a complaint against JBA and Mr. Gross in the Hillsborough
    1JBA was working under a "blanket contract" that covered multiple Lennar
    subdivisions, a document which describes JBA as a "subcontractor." However, John
    Beach, the owner of JBA, testified that he did not know whether Lennar owned any of
    the subdivisions JBA worked on, and that his company had also been referred to as a
    "vendor." QGS' contract with Lennar identifies Lennar as "Owner" and QGS as
    "Contractor."
    -2-
    County Circuit Court. JBA and Mr. Gross generally denied the complaint's allegations
    and, pertinent here, asserted the affirmative defense that Mr. Heredia's negligence
    claims were barred under the Worker's Compensation Law.
    The parties engaged in discovery and eventually filed competing motions
    for summary judgment on the issue of worker's compensation immunity. In the
    defendants' motion, JBA and Mr. Gross argued that QGS and JBA were both
    subcontractors of Lennar for the Oaks at Shady Creek development. Further, JBA and
    Mr. Gross maintained that QGS, JBA, and Lennar had workers compensation insurance
    coverage for this project—QGS' policy provided coverage for its employees; JBA's
    policy covered JBA's employees; and Lennar's policy extended coverage that "would
    have provided coverage to the Plaintiff." As such, the defendants argued, there was
    horizontal privity between the subcontractors, JBA and QGS, so that JBA and Mr. Gross
    were immune from civil liability for QGS' employee's injuries.
    Mr. Heredia's motion for summary judgment argued otherwise. He
    pointed out that the applicable subsection of the Workers Compensation Law, section
    440.10(b), only creates horizontal privity when "a contractor sublets any part or parts of
    his or her contract work to a subcontractor or subcontractors." Because Lennar was
    developing the Oaks at Shady Creek project for itself as the owner, and not under a
    contract Lennar had with any third party, Lennar could not be considered a "contractor"
    that was "subletting" work under this section. Accordingly, he argued, neither JBA nor
    Mr. Gross were immune from civil liability as a matter of law.
    The circuit court agreed with the defendants. In an unelaborated order, it
    granted JBA and Mr. Gross' motion for summary judgment. In a separate and equally
    -3-
    sparse order, the court denied Mr. Heredia's competing motion for summary judgment.
    Those rulings became final in the circuit court's amended final judgment against Mr.
    Heredia, which was entered on September 14, 2018. Like the summary judgment
    orders that preceded it, the circuit court's amended final judgment contained no findings
    or any legal analysis. Mr. Heredia now appeals that judgment.
    We review a circuit court's entry of summary judgment
    under a de novo standard of review. Herendeen v.
    Mandelbaum, 
    232 So. 3d 487
    , 489 (Fla. 2d DCA 2017)
    (citing Volusia County v. Aberdeen at Ormond Beach, L.P.,
    
    760 So. 2d 126
    , 130 (Fla. 2000)). A party is entitled to
    summary judgment only "if the pleadings and summary
    judgment evidence on file show that there is no genuine
    issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is
    entitled to a judgment as a matter of law." Fla. R. Civ. P.
    1.510(c).
    Dyck-O'Neal, Inc. v. Norton, 
    267 So. 3d 478
    , 480 (Fla. 2d DCA 2019).
    In the case at bar, we are called upon to examine the scope and
    application of a type of workers compensation immunity,2 commonly known as
    "horizontal immunity," between two parties working on a construction project. The
    Fourth District succinctly summarized the concept in Ciceron v. Sunbelt Rentals, Inc.,
    
    163 So. 3d 609
    , 612 (Fla. 4th DCA 2015): "Workers' compensation immunity has been
    broadly expanded by the legislature to include subcontractors and sub-subcontractors
    2Subject   to limited exceptions, section 440.11(1) provides that
    [t]he liability of an employer prescribed in s. 440.10 shall be
    exclusive and in place of all other liability, including vicarious
    liability, of such employer to any third-party tortfeasor and to
    the employee, the legal representative thereof, husband or
    wife, parents, dependents, next of kin, and anyone otherwise
    entitled to recover damages from such employer at law or in
    admiralty on account of such injury or death . . . .
    -4-
    working at a construction site, precluding an employee of one contracting entity injured
    on the job from suing another contracting entity working at the same construction site in
    tort."
    Section 440.10(1)(b) provides the contours of horizontal immunity:
    In case a contractor sublets any part or parts of his or her
    contract work to a subcontractor or subcontractors, all of the
    employees of such contractor and subcontractor or
    subcontractors engaged on such contract work shall be
    deemed to be employed in one and the same business or
    establishment, and the contractor shall be liable for, and
    shall secure, the payment of compensation to all such
    employees, except to employees of a subcontractor who has
    secured such payment.
    The issue here is whether Lennar was a "contractor" that "sublet part or parts" of its
    "contract work to a subcontractor or subcontractors" for purposes of section
    440.10(1)(b). If Lennar was a "contractor" and it "sublet" a part of its "contract work" to
    JBA and QGS to work at Oaks at Shady Creek, then JBA and its employee Mr. Gross
    would be immune from tort liability for Mr. Heredia's alleged injuries on the work site. If
    Lennar was not subletting contract work to subcontractors, then they would not have
    horizontal immunity.
    As it happens, we have delved into this definitional issue before. In
    Derogatis v. Fawcett Memorial Hospital, 
    892 So. 2d 1079
    , 1083-84 (Fla. 2d DCA 2004),
    we explained that for a party to be considered a "contractor" pursuant to section
    440.10(1)(b),
    its " 'primary obligation in performing a job or providing a
    service must arise out of a contract.' " Sotomayor v.
    Huntington Broward Assocs. L.P., 
    697 So. 2d 1006
    , 1007
    (Fla. 4th DCA 1997) (quoting Gator Freightways, Inc. v.
    Roberts, 
    550 So. 2d 1117
    , 1119 (Fla. 1989)). This " 'primary
    obligation' . . . is 'an obligation under the prime contract
    -5-
    between the contractor and a third party.' " 
    Sotomayor, 697 So. 2d at 1007
    (citing Miami Herald Publ'g v. Hatch, 
    617 So. 2d
    380, 381 (Fla. 1st DCA 1993)). "Stated another way, the
    rule is that the entity alleged to be the contractor must have
    'incurred a contractual obligation to a third party, a part of
    which obligation the entity has delegated or sublet to a
    subcontractor whose employee is injured.' " Antinarelli v.
    Ocean Suite Hotel, 
    642 So. 2d 661
    , 662 (Fla. 1st DCA 1994)
    (quoting Hatch, 
    617 So. 2d
    at 381).
    Our court has emphasized that "[t]he statutory terms 'contractor' and 'contract work'
    plainly and unambiguously posit a party performing work pursuant to a contract with
    another." Slora v. Sun 'n Fun Fly-In, Inc., 
    173 So. 3d 1099
    , 1102 (Fla. 2d DCA 2015)
    (emphasis added).
    There is no record evidence before us that Lennar was performing any
    work, of any kind, on behalf of any third party with respect to the Oaks at Shady Creek
    development. To the contrary, the evidence thus far tends to show that Lennar was
    acting on its own behalf as the owner of its own property.3 See Cuero v. Ryland Grp.,
    Inc., 
    849 So. 2d 326
    , 329 (Fla. 2d DCA 2003) (reversing summary judgment that
    deemed Ryland a "statutory employer" under section 440.10(1)(b) where "Ryland was
    the fee owner of the property upon which it was developing the Bayshore Townhomes
    to sell for profit" and "Ryland undertook to develop its own property acting as its own
    general contractor"). Therefore, the final summary judgment in favor of JBA and its
    employee Mr. Gross was entered in error and must be reversed.
    Reversed and remanded.
    3It appears from the transcript of the summary judgment hearing that the
    presiding judge simply misapprehended the distinction between an owner hiring parties
    to perform work on the owner's property and an owner hiring a general contractor who,
    in turn, hires parties to perform work on the owner's property.
    -6-
    CASANUEVA and VILLANTI, JJ., Concur.
    -7-