OPINION ON MOTION FOR REHEARING
The motion for rehearing filed herein by appellant, Archem Company (“Archem”) is granted. Our prior opinion dated August 31, 1990, is withdrawn and the following is substituted.
This is an appeal from a summary judgment.
Appellee, Austin Industrial, Inc. (“Austin”), suрplies temporary labor. Pursuant to a contract for temporary labor, Austin provided Archem with Ray Vallejo, a contract laborer. Vallejo was injurеd at Ar-chem while steam-cleaning transfusion hoses; he sued Archem for common-law negligence.
Archem moved for summary judgment, alleging that it subscribed to workers’ comрensation, that Vallejo was its borrowed employee for workers’ compensation purposes, and thus Vallejo’s negligence suit was barred by the workers’ сompensation act, Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 8306, § 3a 1 (“the Act”). After the trial court overruled Archem’s first motion for summary judgment, Vallejo added Austin as an additional defendant. Archеm then filed a cross-action seeking indemnity and/or contribution from Austin; Austin responded and filed a motion for summary judgment against Vallejo and Archem. Both Archem and Austin claimеd the Act shielded them from liability for common-law negligence.
Austin claimed to be Vallejo’s employer under the Act because its contract with Archem provided: (1) Austin would buy workers’ compensation insurance; (2) Austin would provide benefits pursuant to the Act; and (3) Austin would provide workers’ compensation benefits to Vallejo. Archem responded that the contract did not address the “right of control” of employees, and thus Vallejo was its borrowed employee because the facts indicated that Archem had the right to control Vallejo’s work. The trial court rejected Archem’s argument and granted Austin’s motion for summary judgment against Vallejo; it also dеnied Archem’s motion for summary judgment against Vallejo and severed all claims against Austin.
In its sole point of error, Archem claims that the trial court erred in granting Austin’s motion for summary judgment.
Under Texas Workers’ Compensation Law, the entity with the “right to control” the employee at the time of the accident is the “employer” for workers’ сompensation purposes.
Smith v. Otis Eng’g Corp.,
If a contract between a general and special employer expressly provides that one party has thе “right to control” the employee, then that employer is liable for workers’ compensation benefits and is entitled to the Act’s' protection from liability for negligence.
Sanchez v. Leggett,
Here, the Austin-Archem contract does not address the “right to control” employees’ activities. The only language in the Austin-Archem contract mentioning workers’ compensation is:
[Austin’s] Invoice rates [to Archem] include the following:
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B. Clerical services and administrative expenses of Austin Industrial’s home office required to process payrolls, prepare checks, invoices, recruitment and job related suppоrt activities, perform the necessary accounting services such as payroll taxes, liability insurance, worker’s compensation and on-job cost analysis.
Although the Austin-Archem contract addresses invoice rates for employees’ work, it does not address the “right to control” employees’ work.
See, e.g., Sanchez,
Austin argues that the evidence uncontrovertedly proves that it supplied workers’ compensation bеnefits, thus making it Vallejo’s employer. Mere subscription to, or the “gratuitous” providing of, workers’ compensation benefits is irrelevant to the question of control.
Denison v. Haeber Roofing Co.,
Austin asserts that neither Archem nor its workers’ compensation carrier ever attempted to assume responsibility for Vallejo following his injury. An employer’s post-accident conduct is irrelevant to the issue of the right of control. The fact that Austin’s workers’ compensation carrier filed a statement of controversion is also irrelevant; this conduct, like that of Ar-chem, was the act of a third party, and has
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no bearing on who had the right of control at the time of the accident.
Denison,
In its motion for summary judgment, Archem offered the deposition testimony of Donn Fanning, Austin’s Vice President of Marketing and Contract Administrator, who testified that Archem had the right to control Vallejo in the manner of performance of his job; that Austin sent Archem only laborers under the temporаry labor contract, as opposed to foremen or other supervisory personnel; that Archem determined Vallejo’s work hours at its discretion and prоvided his tools; and that Archem’s supervisors told Vallejo what to do and how to perform assigned tasks, with no one from Austin on Archem’s premises supervising him. Fanning’s testimony raised a fact issue as to who controlled Vallejo’s work.
See Sanchez,
The judgment of the trial court is reversed, and the cause is remanded to the trial court fоr further proceedings.
Notes
. Act of March 28, 1917, 33rd Leg., R.S., ch. 103, 1917 Tex.Gen.Laws 269, repealed by Act of Dec. 13, 1989, 71st Leg., 2d C.S., ch. 1, § 3.08, 1989 Tex.Gen.Laws 1, 20, effective Jan. 1, 1991.
. The following language in Magnolia Petroleum was found sufficient to determine the right of control:
Contractor hereby agrees to furnish the labor, equipment, implements, teams, trucks and all things necessary for and to do and perform the work and services hereinafter set out as an independent contractor, free of control or supervision of company as to means and method of performing the same; that all persons engaged in the performance of said work or service shall be solely the servants or employees of contractor; that Contractor shall carry Employers' Liability or Workmen’s Compensation insurance liability or Workmen’s Compensation insurance covering all persons performing such work or service, and carry Public Liability insurance covеring the classes of work done and all motor equipment used hereunder, all in amounts and under policies examined, approved and accepted by Company.
