Affirmed by published opinion. Judge ERVIN wrote the opinion, in which Judge WIDENER and Chief Judge BULLOCK joined.
OPINION
Charles H. Bowling appeals from a decision of the United States District Court for the Western District of Virginia granting summary judgment in favor of Wellmore Coal Corporation in an action for the recovery of damages for personal injuries. For the reasons hereinafter explored, we affirm.
I.
This apрeal arises from a tort action commenced by Charles H. Bowling (“Bowling”) against the Wellmore Coal Corporation (“Wellmore”) for injuries sustained when a Wellmore employee negligently operated a company coal preparation facility to which Bowling delivered coal. Bowling filed his civil suit against Wellmore on December 12, 1991.
Wellmore moved fоr summary judgment arguing that it was the “statutory employer” of Bowling and, as such, could not be subject to a negligence action filed by Bowling. Negligence actions against statutory employers are barred under Virginia’s workers’ compensation law. Va.Code § 65.2-302. Bowling moved for partial summary judgment, claiming that Wellmore was not his statutory employer but rather an “other party” under the wоrkers’ compensation law, Va.Code § 65.2-309, and thus subject to a negligence claim. 1
After determining that Wellmore was Bowling’s statutory employer, the district court granted summary judgment for Well-more and barred Bowling from bringing an action in negligence against the company. We agree with the reasoning and conclusions of the court below.
II.
Wellmore is a Virginia corporation with its principal place of business in Buchanan County, Virginia. Wellmore’s immediate employees are primarily involved in the business of processing coal as it is brought from the mines. At the time Bowling was injured, Wellmore operated four active processing plants — three in Virginia and another in Kentucky. In addition to its processing business, Wellmore either owned or leased coаl mines from which the company received its raw materials. When the accident in question occurred, Wellmore owned or leased approximately thirty coal mines. The production of coal from each mine was contracted out to various mining companies, which in *460 turn contracted with trucking companies to haul the coal from the mine site to Well-more’s processing plants.
In 1990, Bowling was employed as a truck driver for Trivette Trucking Company (“Trivette”). Trivette had contracted with Kodiak Coal Incorporated (“Kodiak”) to haul coal from Kodiak’s Mine No. 2 in Floyd County, Kentucky, to the Wellmore processing plants. Kodiak was the mine contractor for Well-more, and the mine itself had been leased to Wellmore by its owner, the Elk Horn Coal Corporation. On March 14, 1990, pursuant to the Trivette-Kodiak contract, Bowling picked up a load of coal from the Kodiak mine and delivered it to the Wellmore No. 7 loading and preparation facility in Big Rock, Virginia. While on the Wellmore premises, Bowling backed his truck onto a stockpile of coal in order to unload. A trap door in the stockpile had been left open, however, causing Bowling’s truck to fall through the hole and turn over on its side. Bowling was pinned between the steering wheel and the door of the truck and suffered severe injuries as a result of the accident.
Most of the coal received at Wellmore’s processing plants was delivered by independent trucking companies thаt worked directly with the mine operators, although Wellmore did maintain a few trucks that were occasionally used for hauling during faceups 2 and in emergencies. Approximately one-third of Wellmore’s employees were capable of hauling coal, but hauling accounted for less than ten percent of their job duties. Wellmore never hauled coal frоm the Kodiak mine to its processing plants.
Wellmore retained little control over the selection, training and supervision of the truckers used to deliver coal to its preparation plants. Those responsibilities, in addition to the day-to-day mining operations, were left to the contract mining companies. Further, under the contract between Well-more and Kodiak, Kodiak was required to obtain workers’ compensation and employers’ liability insurance. If Kodiak failed to provide this insurance, Wellmore agreed to do so and to hold Kodiak hable for the cost.
Wellmore had only indirect contact with the trucking companies until the trucks actually arrived at a preparation plant. Once on the plant prеmises, Wellmore’s loader operator would direct the truckers as to where to dump their loads. If the loader operator knew of a safety risk to the truck drivers, he was expected to warn the drivers of it when they arrived at the site.
III.
We review grants of summary judgment
de novo. Shealy v. Winston,
In reviewing a grant of summary judgment, we apply the same standards as the district court, and summary judgment is appropriate where there is no genuine issue of material fact. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c);
Miller v. FDIC,
The facts of the instant case are not in dispute, but interpreting the facts to determine whether or not hauling coal was part of Wellmore’s regular business is essential to a proper application of the law. Thus, because we are faced with issues of law raised on appeal, we engage in a
de novo
review of the district court’s conclusions.
Bose Corp. v. Consumers Union of the United States, Inc.,
IV.
Wellmore is not liable in a negligence action if it is the “statutory employer” of *461 Bowling. Virginia’s workers’ compensation law explains that an employer is a statutory employer when the work in which an injured worker was engaged is the еmployer’s “trade, business or occupation”:
Statutory Employer.
A. When any person (referred to in this section as “owner”) undertakes to perform or execute any work which is a part of his trade, business or occupation and contracts with any other person (referred to in this section as “subcontractor”) for the execution or performance by or under such subcontrаctor of the whole or any part of the work undertaken by such owner, the owner shall be liable to pay to any worker employed in the work any compensation under this title which he would have been liable to pay if the worker had been immediately employed by him.
B. When any person (referred to in this section as “contractor”) contracts to perform оr execute any work for another person which work or undertaking is not a part of the trade, business or occupation of such other person and contracts with any other person (referred to in this section as “subcontractor”) for the execution or performance by or under the subcontractor of the whole or any part of the work undertaken by such contractor, then the contractor shall be liable to pay to any worker employed in the work any compensation under this title which he would have been liable to pay if that worker had been immediately employed by him.
Va.Code § 65.2-302.
The Virginia Supreme Court has fashioned criteria to aid in determining whether an activity is within an owner’s trade, business or occupation. That court has adopted a useful test set out in Arthur Larsen’s treatise, The Law of Workmen’s Compensation:
[T]he test is not one of whether the subcontractor’s activity is useful, necessary, or even absolutely indispensable to the statutory employer’s business____ The test (except in cases where the work is obviously a subcontracted fraction of a main contract) is whether this indispensable activity is, in that business, normally carried on through employees rather than independent contractors.
Shell Oil Co. v. Leftwich,
In its application of the Shell test, Well-more does not contend that the mining and hauling of coal are activities which it normally carries on through employees; rather, the company argues that mining and hauling constitute a “subcontracted fraction” of its main business.
We agree with the district court’s conclusion that “[i]n spite of [Wellmore’s] decision to use independent contractors in its mining and hauling functions, those functions are an essential and integral part of its business purpose.” Bowling v. Wellmore Coal Corp., No. 91-20196-A, slip op. at 5 (W.D.Va. Feb. 16, 1996). 4 Thus, on the undisputed facts of this case, we conclude that hauling coal from Kodiak mine No. 2 to the Wellmore processing facility was a subcontracted fraction of Wellmore’s main business concern and, therefore, that Wellmore is Bowling’s statutory employer for purposes of filing a negligence action.
V.
The seminal case applying the subcontracted fraction exception of the
Shell
test is
Smith v. Horn,
Bowling contests the application of the subcontracted fraction exception on three grounds: (1) the exception only applies to contractors, not owners; (2) the rationale employed by the Smith court has been superseded; and (3) the facts of the instant case do not show that hauling coal is part of Wellmore’s trade, business оr occupation. We address each in turn.
A.
First, Bowling argues that the exception does not apply because Wellmore is not a contractor within the meaning of the Virginia workers’ compensation law. Wellmore does not contend that it wears any label but that of “owner” pursuant to Virginia Code § 65.2-302(A).
Virginia case law does not indicate, as Bowling suggests, that the subcontracted fraction exception applies only to “contractors” who contract to perform work for other entities. In Smith, the owner of the mining company was found to be the statutory employer of the plaintiff under the exception and the court did not limit the exception to contractors. Smith at 15. 5
Four years after the Shell court crafted the test and the exception, the Virginia Suprеme Court reiterated the purpose of the statutes governing eligibility under the Workmen’s (now Workers’) Compensation Act:
It clearly appears to be the purpose ... to bring within the operation of the Compensation Act all persons engaged in any work that is a part of the trade, business or occupation of the original party who undertakes as owner, or contracts as contractor, to perform that work, and to make liable to employe[e] engaged in that work every such owner, or contractor, and subcontractor, above such employe[e].
Bassett Furniture Indus., Inc. v. McReynolds,
Bowling points out that the current Virginia workers’ compensation law distinguishes between owners and contractors. Va.Code § 65.2-302(A) and (B). However, Bowling is not aided by this distinction. First, § 65.2-302(A) defines owners as statutory employеrs when they “undertake to perform or execute any work which is part of [their] trade, business or occupation and contract with any other person ... for the execution or performance ... of the whole or any part of the work____” Subsection (B) only establishes contractors as statutory employers when an accident arises out of a subcontracted fraction of a contract which is “not a part of the trade, business or occupation of’ the owner. Id. at § 65.2-302(B) (emphasis added).
Further, the Smith court interpreted the workers’ compensation statute as follows:
Code § 65.1-29 [currently § 65.2-302] contemplates that an owner may perform or execute work that is part of his trade, business, or occupation through contractors and subcontractors, directly employing no workers for the purpose; if the work performed by an employee of the contractor or subcontractor is part of the owner’s trade, business, or occupation, the worker is deemed the statutory employee of the owner, and the owner is liable for compensation as though the worker were his own employee.
Smith,
B.
In Bowling’s second main argument, he contends that the holding in Smith is “completely inconsistent with subsequent Virginia case law” and, therefore, wrongly relied upon by the court below. Br. of Appellant at 17. We disagree.
To support his claim that
Smith
is no longer good law, Bowling points to the Virginia Supreme Court’s language where it simply expressed that it would not use the same criteria to evaluate whether a claimant was engaged in the business of a private owner as it used with regard to an owner which was a public entity.
Johnson v. Jefferson National Bank,
The fact that the owner in
Anderson
was a public entity was not material to the
Smith
court’s reliance on that case. Because the owner in
Anderson
was a public entity, that court looked to the enabling language of the Virginia Genеral Assembly for guidance in determining those duties with which the transit authority was charged.
Anderson,
Bоwling also contends that the subcontracted fraction exception is no longer viable because of the Virginia Supreme Court’s decision not to apply it in
Salih v. Lane,
Shell’s progeny reveal that the test and the exception are still binding law.
C.
Bowling аrgues finally that, even if the subcontracted fraction exception is still good law, the facts of this case do not reveal that his hauling of coal was part of Wellmore’s trade, business or occupation under Virginia’s workers’ compensation law. Again, we disagree.
Bowling points out that, while Wellmore owned or leased the numerous mines from which its coal was takеn, Wellmore neither controlled nor supported the activities of its miners or haulers. In fact, Wellmore’s con
*464
tract with Kodiak directed Kodiak to mine the coal “according to its own manner ... [and] without direction by [Wellmore] except as may be necessary for Company to protect its property or insure conformity with its mining plans and projections.” J.A. at 88. By сontrast, the owner/coal company in
Smith
exerted considerable control over the operations of its subcontracted miners and haulers, and the company also maintained workers’ compensation coverage for these workers.
Smith,
The record before the district court in the instant case provided the court less support for finding that the subсontracted fraction exception applied than did the facts before the Smith court. The record in the instant case does, however, indicate that Wellmore operated roughly 30 mines during the period surrounding the accident, that it faced up most of these mines, that it received coal for processing from the Kodiak mine, and that Wellmore kept аpproximately 20 trucks which were occasionally used to assist subcontractors when mining production exceeded a subcontractor’s hauling capabilities. Even though Kodiak did not request Well-more’s assistance with hauling, the district court was not without evidentiary bases for determining that mining and hauling were an “essential and integral part of its business purpose.” Bowling v. Wellmore Coal Corp., No. 91-20196-A, slip op. аt 5 (W.D.Va. Feb. 16, 1996). Based on our de novo review, we agree with this assessment.
VI.
Because the facts in the instant case are not at issue, and because the district court applied the proper law, we follow the reasoning of
Smith v. Horn,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Bowling has already recovered workers’ compensation benefits from his immediate employer, Trivette Trucking Company.
. Facing up a mine entails making the necessary surface preparations for deep mining by excavating and hauling surface materials.
. We refer to this rule as the Shell test and to the language in parentheses as the “subcontracted fraction exception” to the test.
. The determination of law that an act is part of a company’s "trade, business or occupation" is highly fact dependent.
See Bassett Furniture Indus., Inc. v. McReynolds,
. The
Smith
court spoke of the exception to the
Shell
test as applying when work was a subcontracted fraction of a "main business concern” rather than a "main contract” as originally stated in
Shell. Smith,
. The Johnson court did not announce a new rule. The Virginia Supreme Court had previously made it clear that different methods would be used to evaluate whether an owner was a statutory employer depending on the private versus public status of the owner:
The Shell Oil Co. test has never been applied by this Court in a case involving either a public utility or a governmental concern____ It is not simply what they do that defines their trade, business, or occupation. What they are supposed to do is also a determinant.
Ford v. City of Richmond,
