Carolyn Erwin v. Methodist Medical Center of Oak Ridge ( 1999 )


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  •                  IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT KNOXVILLE
    FILED
    October 18, 1999
    Cecil Crowson, Jr.
    Appellate Court Clerk
    CAROLYN B. ERWIN,                              )       NO. 03A1-9811-CV-00379
    )
    Plaintiff/Appellant,                    )
    v.                                             )       Appeal As Of Right From The
    )       ANDERSON COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
    METHODIST MEDICAL CENTER                       )
    OF OAK RIDGE,                                  )
    Defendant/Appellee.                       )       HONORABLE JAMES B. SCOTT, JR.
    For the Appellant:                                     For the Appellee:
    J. Anthony Farmer                                      Robert W. Knolton
    Knoxville                                              Knoxville
    AFFIRMED AND REMANDED                                                                 Swiney, J.
    OPINION
    This is an appeal from the Trial Court’s dismissal of a negligence action brought against
    Page 1
    Methodist Medical Center of Oak Ridge, Defendant/Appellee, arising from a workplace injury to
    Plaintiff/Appellant, an employee of a contract service provider. In addition to filing suit against her direct
    employer under the Tennessee Workers’ Compensation Act, Plaintiff sued Defendant in tort, alleging
    negligence related to her workplace injury. Defendant moved for dismissal under Tenn. R. Civ. P. Rule
    12.02(6), asserting immunity from tort suit under the exclusive remedy provision of the Tennessee
    Workers’ Compensation Act. The Trial Court dismissed the cause of action, finding that Defendant was
    a principal contractor under Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-113. For the reasons herein stated, we affirm the
    Trial Court’s dismissal of Plaintiff’s tort action.
    BACKGROUND
    Plaintiff was an employee of Owen Healthcare on January 9, 1997 when she tripped on
    electrical wiring and fell at work. At the time of Plaintiff’s fall, Owen Healthcare maintained business
    operations on the premises of Defendant Methodist Medical Center of Oak Ridge under contract to
    provide pharmacy services for the hospital. Several departments of Defendant operate under similar
    contracts, where Defendant is the principal to the contract and the workers are employed by the
    contractor.
    On September 10, 1997 Plaintiff filed suit against CNA Insurance Company in the
    Circuit Court for Knox County under the Tennessee Workers’ Compensation Act. At the time, CNA
    provided Workers’ Compensation insurance for Plaintiff’s employer, Owen Healthcare. Temporary
    indemnity and medical benefits under the Workers’ Compensation Act had been provided to Plaintiff by
    CNA.
    On January 6, 1998 Plaintiff filed suit in the Circuit Court for Anderson County against
    Methodist Medical Center of Oak Ridge and Anthony Thornton d/b/a Tennessee Associates. The
    Complaint alleged that electrical work was being done at the hospital, and wiring lying on the floor was
    the cause of Plaintiff’s fall. On March 4, 1998 Defendant filed a motion to dismiss, attaching as exhibits
    copies of the Worker’s Compensation Complaint filed by Plaintiff and the Answer of CNA Insurance
    Page 2
    Company. On July 21, 1998 Plaintiff filed a response to Defendant’s motion to dismiss, citing as exhibit
    an attached copy of portions of the contract between Defendant and Owen Healthcare. On September
    21, 1998 an Order of Voluntary Dismissal with full prejudice was filed as to defendants Anthony
    Thornton d/b/a Tennessee Associates and Tennessee Associated Electric, Inc.
    On October 20, 1998 an “Opinion, Exclusive Remedy” was filed by the Trial Court,
    granting Defendant’s Tenn. R. Civ. P. Rule 12 motion to dismiss filed March 4, 1998. The Opinion
    stated that Defendant is not subject to a common law negligence claim by Plaintiff, referencing the
    exclusive remedy provision of the Tennessee Workers’ Compensation Act. On November 13, 1998 an
    Order captioned “Judgment Dismissing Action” was filed incorporating by reference the October 20
    Opinion, with all accrued costs adjudged against Plaintiff. Notice of this appeal was filed November 18,
    1998, with attestation of proper service and appeal bond for costs.
    DISCUSSION
    Under Tenn. R. Civ. P Rule 12.02 Defendant’s motion to dismiss was converted into a
    motion for summary judgment when the Trial Court considered matters outside the pleadings. The
    standard of review for a summary judgment under Tenn. R. Civ. P. Rule 56 is de novo, with no
    presumption of correctness as to the trial court’s legal conclusions. Summary judgment is appropriate
    when, considering the evidence in the light most favorable to the non-moving party, there are no issues of
    material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Gardner v. Insura
    Property & Cas. Ins. Co., 
    956 S.W.2d 1
    , 2 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1997). There is no dispute concerning the
    facts material to the Trial Court’s holding.
    The Trial Court found Defendant to be a principal contractor under Tenn. Code Ann. §
    50-6-113, thus privileged to invoke the exclusive remedy provision of Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-108 and
    entitled to dismissal of the tort action by Plaintiff. Plaintiff argues that Defendant does not meet the
    statutory requirements as interpreted by the Tennessee courts, and thus remains a proper party to tort
    action by Plaintiff.
    Page 3
    The primary cases cited as supporting Plaintiff’s position are Stratton v. United
    Inter-Mountain Telephone, 
    695 S.W.2d 947
     (Tenn. 1985) and Barber v. Ralston Purina, 
    825 S.W.2d 96
     (Tenn. Ct. App. 1991). Stratton sets forth six factors used to apply Tenn. Code Ann. §
    50-6-113 to determine whether an injured worker is an employee or independent contractor.                   “In
    analyzing whether the relationship is that of employer-employee or that of independent contractor, this
    Court has said that the following are factors to be considered and that no one factor is necessarily
    dispositive: (1) right to control the conduct of work; (2) right of termination; (3) method of payment; (4)
    whether alleged employee furnishes his own helpers; (5) whether alleged employee furnishes his own
    tools; and (6) whether one is doing ‘work for another.’” Stratton, 695 S.W.2d at 950.
    Barber examines the application of the principal contractor statute when the injured
    worker is employed by a subcontractor, and asserting a claim against the principal to the contract.
    Plaintiff asserts that the two factors analyzed in Barber support a finding that Defendant is not a principal
    contractor under the facts at bar: “. . . (1) whether the work being performed by the contractor in
    question [ ] is the same type of work usually performed by the company (defendant) or is part of the
    regular business of the company and (2) whether the company (defendant) has the right to control
    employees of the contractor [ ].” Barber, 825 S.W.2d at 99. The Barber Court found no dispute that
    the plaintiff was not doing work usually done by employees of the defendant, and emphasized that the
    key to analyzing similar cases is the right of the principal to the contract to control the employee. “In
    Stratton, the Court notes that no single test is dispositive of this issue, but the right to control the conduct
    of the work has been repeatedly stressed. The Court further explains that the test is not whether the right
    to control the conduct of the work was exercised, but simply whether the right exists.” Id.
    Plaintiff cites Byrd v. Mahle, Inc., No. 03A01-9301-CV-00006, 
    1993 WL 305807
    (Tenn. App. 1993)(perm. app. denied), to support her argument. Plaintiff uses this Court’s analysis in
    Byrd to assert that the principal contractor statute does not apply to Defendant under the facts of this
    case, claiming that Defendant only contracted for an end result, and did not exercise control over the
    employees of Owen Healthcare. Byrd relied upon the six factors set forth in Stratton in reversing the
    Page 4
    trial court’s finding that defendant Mahle was not a principal under Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-113. The
    Court in Mahle found that five of the six factors supported a finding of no coverage under the Act, and
    cited as further support that Defendant’s right to control the work of the subcontractor “extended only to
    insuring that the end result conformed to Mahle’s plans and specifications.”
    It is important to note that a very different relationship existed in Mahle, as the defendant
    hired a general contractor to manage a construction project at defendant’s plant, the general contractor
    hired a subcontractor to perform plumbing and mechanical work, and the subcontractor hired plaintiff
    Byrd as an employee. Here, Defendant hired Owen Healthcare, and Owen Healthcare hired Plaintiff as
    an employee. Defendant stands in the position of the general contractor in Mahle, not in the same
    position as Mahle. It is this extra removal from the work performed that took Mahle out of the Workers’
    Compensation coverage as a principal under Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-113, thus barring application of
    the exclusive remedy provision of Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-108 to plaintiff Byrd’s negligence claims in
    tort.
    Plaintiff claims that Owen Healthcare was not providing a service performed by
    Defendant and thus fails the first of the two standards in Barber, citing the agreement between Owen and
    Defendant. Plaintiff’s argument turns on the point that Owen is the exclusive provider of pharmacy
    services for Defendant, and had no right to control the employees of Owen. Plaintiff also asserts that
    Defendant was not performing work for another, thus fitting into the facts under Byrd.
    Defendant avers that hospitals routinely enter into exclusive contracts with independent
    contractors to provide particular healthcare services within the hospital, and this routine business practice
    of hospitals makes this a case of first impression. Defendant overstates this circumstance of fact, as there
    is no need to make such a broad finding in order to resolve the issue on appeal.
    Defendant’s argument for tort immunity centers upon the contractual relationship with
    Owen Healthcare, and the application of the Stratton employee control analysis. Defendant asserts that
    application of Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-113 is based upon work that is the subject of the contract being
    performed on the premises of the principal, and whether the contracted work is part of the regular
    Page 5
    business of the principal. It is undisputed that Defendant owned the premises where the injury occurred.
    Defendant counters Plaintiff’s argument that the pharmacy was an insular operation by stating that “the
    operation of a hospital pharmacy for the benefit of the patients at its hospital facility” is integral to the
    overall provision of healthcare to the patients of Defendant.
    The determinative issues are whether Defendant is a Principal, Intermediate Contractor
    or Subcontractor under Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-113(a), and whether the injury occurred on, in, or
    about the statutory “premises” under Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-113(d) so as to bar recovery under the
    exclusive remedy provision of the Workers’ Compensation Act.
    Taking the second issue first, it is undisputed that the injury at issue occurred on the
    premises of Defendant, and that Defendant had the right to control the premises. Resolution of the
    remaining issue depends on whether the relationship between Plaintiff and Defendant creates applicability
    of coverage under the Tennessee Workers’ Compensation Act. The parties both cited the Agreement
    between Owen Healthcare, Inc. and Defendant, a portion of which was made exhibit to Plaintiff’s brief
    on appeal, as establishing the bounds of this relationship.
    All that remains is to apply the factors under Stratton/Barber to the Agreement at issue.
    The first factor in the Barber analysis is whether the work being performed by the contractor in question
    is the same type of work usually performed by the defendant, or part of the regular business of
    defendant. A key to the analysis of this issue is whether the pharmacy operation on Defendant’s
    premises is an insular operation and not the same type of work usually performed by Defendant, as
    asserted by Plaintiff. Although Stratton cites several cases in support of this point, the most instructive
    for the issue on appeal is Hendrix v. Ray-Ser Dyeing Co., 
    224 Tenn. 690
    , 
    462 S.W.2d 483
     (Tenn.
    1979). In Hendrix defendant contracted with the injured worker’s employer to paint a smokestack at
    defendant’s plant. The Court looked to the fact that not only was defendant “not engaged in the business
    of painting,” but also not engaged in “other maintenance work” in finding that the injury at issue did not
    arise out of the same type of work usually performed by, or part of the regular business of, the defendant.
    Analogizing the reasoning in Hendrix to the issue on appeal would require a finding that pharmacy
    Page 6
    service is so removed from the usual business of Defendant that it would not be part of the other
    healthcare work that would be considered part of the “regular business” of Defendant. In short, it would
    require this Court to find that pharmacy service in a hospital setting is not the same type of work
    Defendant usually performs. The record does not support such a finding.
    The facts in the record do not support a finding that the pharmacy service in the
    Agreement is not part of the regular business of Defendant. The contract specifies that Owen Healthcare
    “. . . will, as a service, own the inventory and operate a pharmacy service (“PHARMACY”) on the
    premises of HOSPITAL for the purpose of supplying hospital pharmacy items . . . to HOSPITAL to be
    administered to HOSPITAL’S patients upon proper order of lawfully authorized persons.” It is apparent
    from the wording of this preamble that the “service” is not an insular one as asserted by Plaintiff, but is
    only brought into operation by “proper order of lawfully authorized persons,” and that the object of the
    services is the patients of the hospital, not the hospital itself.
    In order for Plaintiff’s argument to stand, Defendant itself must be the object of the
    contract at issue. In Byrd v. Mahle, supra, the Court found that the object of the contract was certain
    improvements to defendant’s physical plant, making defendant only interested in the end result of the
    contract between plaintiff’s employer and the general contractor. Here, the Stratton factor of “work for
    another” is inseparable from the contract at issue, in that the hospital does not use or consume the
    pharmacy services and/or pharmaceuticals for its own use or for improvement of its physical plant, but
    rather as part of the overall healthcare treatment provided to the patients. It is the patients of Defendant
    who are set out in the preamble as the object of the services contemplated in the contract. Although
    Owen Healthcare was the exclusive provider for the scope of the contract with Defendant, it is apparent
    that pharmacy service is not an insular operation, but part of a process of the regular business of
    Defendant in providing healthcare services.
    The second Barber factor is whether the defendant has the right to control the employees
    of the contractor, applying the six Stratton factors to the facts of the individual case.
    (1) Right to control the conduct of the work.
    Page 7
    Under the Agreement, as previously discussed, the pharmacy operation is only
    authorized to provide service “upon proper order of lawfully authorized persons.” Therefore, the
    conduct of an employee of the pharmacy is not only under the right of control of Defendant, such
    employee is not allowed to conduct any independent activity under the contract. Also, control by
    Defendant of the conduct of the work is shown by the requirement that Owen Healthcare is to provide a
    continuing education program, to work with Defendant in cost control efforts and establish a committee “
    with HOSPITAL’S approval” and support, provide performance reports documenting specific
    operational functions, including “interdepartmental communication,” “[d]rug order turn-around time,” “
    [i]nservice education,” and record keeping assistance to other departments of Defendant. Thus, under
    the terms of the Agreement, Defendant retained significant right to control the conduct of the work of the
    employees of Owen Healthcare.
    (2) Right of termination.
    The right of a principal to terminate employees of the employer under the contract at
    issue has been addressed in the cases previously cited. The contract reads in pertinent part, “OWEN
    agrees to replace such employee upon reasonable demand of HOSPITAL.” This clause sets forth the
    right of Defendant to have Owen Healthcare employees terminated.
    (3) Method of payment.
    The Agreement specifies that employees of Owen Healthcare are to be paid by Owen
    Healthcare.
    (4) Whether alleged employee furnishes his own helpers.
    As for “helpers,” while the term does not appear in the portions of the Agreement
    exhibited by Plaintiff, the burden is upon Defendant to provide to Owen Healthcare janitorial services,
    receiving and storage services, in-hospital telephone service, and maintenance services. It would appear
    that any “helpers” would fall under the category of “other personnel as needed to operate PHARMACY.
    ” However, as discussed above, employees of Owen Healthcare under the preamble to the Agreement
    Page 8
    are to supply “pharmacy items” “to HOSPITAL” to be administered to HOSPITAL’S patients . . ..” It
    would appear that the administration to patients of such pharmacy items would be carried out by others,
    presumably employees of Defendant or another contracting entity. Therefore, as the Agreement sets out
    that Owen Healthcare employees are participating in a work process rather than providing a complete
    end result themselves, this analysis is more on point with the holding of Carpenter v. Hooker Chemical
    & Plastics Corp., 
    553 S.W.2d 356
     (Tenn. Ct. App. 1977), where this Court found that work partly
    done by employees of a subcontractor and partly done by employees of the defendant fell under Tenn.
    Code Ann. § 50-6-113, barring tort claims under the exclusive remedy provision of Tenn. Code Ann. §
    50-6-108.
    (5) Whether alleged employee furnishes his own tools.
    Although this element most often arises in cases determining whether the injured worker
    is an employee or independent contractor, under the Agreement at issue Owen Healthcare is to provide,
    as Plaintiff points out, “operational support for current pharmacy computer service,” and “additional
    pharmacy equipment and fixtures.” However, by the plain wording of the Agreement the computer
    equipment to be supported was already in place, and thus “tools” provided by Defendant. Also, the
    addition of equipment and fixtures is to be done “with HOSPITAL’S approval,” indicating Defendant’s
    right to control the conduct of the work performed.
    (6) Whether one is doing ‘work for another.’
    Plaintiff argues that Defendant was not doing work for another under the Agreement at
    issue. However, as discussed above, the preamble to the Agreement clearly identifies “HOSPITAL’S
    patients” as the object of the activities under the contract. Also as previously discussed, the pharmacy
    service is not an insular activity, but part of a work process, directed by others (“lawfully authorized
    persons”), incorporating the efforts of others (“Pharmacy/Nursing interdepartmental communications,” “
    Pharmacy, Nursing, and Business Office medication administration record keeping”), “for the purpose of
    supplying hospital pharmacy items . . . to HOSPITAL to be administered to HOSPITAL’s patients.”
    Under this analysis, not only is the object of the work by employees of Owen Healthcare “work for
    Page 9
    another” other than Defendant, but also it appears that only the support activities described in the
    Agreement, such as accounting and record keeping, are directed to the benefit of Defendant rather than
    to another.
    “When the facts are essentially undisputed, the issue of whether one is an employee or an
    independent contractor is one of law.” Barber, 825 S.W.2d at 100, citing Stratton, 695 S.W.2d at 953.
    It is undisputed that the injury at issue occurred on the premises of Defendant. Applying the guidance of
    the cases cited above, we hold that Defendant is a Principal or Intermediate Contractor under Tenn.
    Code Ann. § 50-6-113(a), thus a statutory employer for purposes of the Tennessee Workers’
    Compensation Act, and Plaintiff’s exclusive remedy under Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-108 bars her tort
    claims against Defendant.
    CONCLUSION
    The Trial Court did not err in granting Defendant’s motion to dismiss. Defendant is a
    principal contractor under the relevant statutes and case law, barring Plaintiff’s tort action under the
    exclusive remedy provision of the Tennessee Workers’ Compensation Act. The Judgment of the Trial
    Court is affirmed, and the cause remanded for collection of costs below. Costs on appeal are adjudged
    against the appellant.
    ______________________________
    D. MICHAEL SWINEY, J.
    CONCUR:
    ______________________________
    HERSCHEL P. FRANKS, J.
    Page 10
    ______________________________
    CHARLES D. SUSANO, J.
    Page 11
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 03A01-9811-CV-00379

Filed Date: 10/18/1999

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/30/2014