574 A.2d 1324 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1989
On December 18, 1987, the plaintiff's decedent, Helder Ferreira, a New Haven resident, was working as a laborer for the ADL Contracting Corporation (ADL) at a sewer construction site on Route 1 in Orange. The defendant, Louis Pisaturo, was also working for ADL at the same location.
Route 1 is a four lane highway. On the date referred to, two of the four lanes at the construction site were closed to allow the digging and refilling of a trench across Route 1. Ferreira was working in the trench. The defendant was operating a Clark Michigan 55 B, described by the defendant as a bucket loader and by the plaintiff as a payloader. The defendant was using this equipment to prepare the refilled portion of the trench for repaving. The weight of the machine was used to compact the fill by rolling over it with the rubber tires of the machine. The bucket of the machine was not being used at the time. The machine had a license plate, four wheels, lights, reflectors, blinkers, directional signals, brake lights, a gear shift, a hand brake, a parking brake, a reverse gear, a steering wheel, windshield wipers, a heater, a horn and rearview mirrors.
The accident in question here occurred when the machine operated by the defendant rolled into the portion of the trench where Ferreira was working, striking him and causing him to sustain serious personal injuries, which led to his death later that same day. In accordance with the Connecticut Workers' Compensation Act, ADL has been paying death benefits to the widow and executrix of the decedent.
In the present case, the plaintiff, Ferreira's executrix, seeks damages from the defendant for Ferreira's death, *328 which resulted from the injuries he sustained. The plaintiff alleges in her complaint that the defendant negligently operated his machine, which the plaintiff characterizes as a motor vehicle, causing Ferreira's death. She further alleges that the defendant is, therefore, liable to the estate.
The defendant has filed a motion for summary judgment pursuant to Practice Book § 378 et seq. The defendant claims that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that he is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. The defendant claims that the action is barred by the so-called "fellow employee bar" rule of General Statutes §
On the other hand, the plaintiff claims that the motion should be denied pursuant to a statutory exception in §
Also prior to 1983, "motor vehicle" was defined in relevant part in General Statutes §
The purpose of the motor vehicle exception to §
Prior to 1983, a number of cases permitted claims under this so-called motor vehicle exception for the *330
negligent operation of such vehicles as forklifts; Evans
v. Lopes,
The cases drew some very fine distinctions. In Davey
v. Pepperidge Farms, Inc.,
The Supreme Court decision in Dias v. Adams, supra,
Against this confusing background the legislature sought to clarify the intended application of the motor vehicle exception of §
The legislative history is not extensive. The plaintiff refers to a portion of the remarks by Maura Melley made at a public hearing concerning the amendment to §
In any event, the views of Melley, vice president of the Connecticut Insurance Industry Association, were in large measure reflected in the remarks of Senator *332
Joseph H. Harper, Jr., regarding the amendment to §
Perhaps to put the matter more simply, §
What might be taken to add to the complexity of the problem before the court, however, is that in 1983, as part of an apparently separate legislative venture, the basic definition of "motor vehicle" was changed by means of Public Acts 1983, No. 83-4311 which, in its *333
first section, created the present General Statutes §
An examination of this public act in its entirety shows that increasing the regulatory powers of the motor vehicles commissioner was the motivation for its passage. *334
Any change in the definition of "motor vehicle" under §
Is there a difference between "special mobile equipment" and "contractors' mobile equipment?" The definition of "special mobile equipment" in §
Asselin's previously noted comment then becomes relevant. "Contractors' mobile equipment" is only not
a motor vehicle as long as it is being used at a "worksite." Such equipment may still be "special mobile equipment," but suit would lie perhaps under the motor vehicle exception to §
The court has read and reread the excellent briefs filed in this case, yet it cannot find any issue of fact that is disputed by the parties. Certain facts are stressed by one side, certain by the other. The plaintiff *336 points to various features of the equipment in question that, she argues, make this vehicle "suitable for operation on a highway," she emphasizes the physical location where the fatal accident occurred and she talks about how the equipment was being used at the time of the accident. These facts and the others referred to in the briefs of both parties, however, are not in dispute.
Each side refers to undisputed facts as a basis for the court, as a matter of law, to rule that the equipment involved here was or was not a "motor vehicle" under General Statutes §§
By other photographs and affidavits, the plaintiff argues that the facts establish that the equipment here was being operated on a highway as a matter of course; in fact, the highway was the area being worked on at the time of the accident. The defendant does not dispute any of these facts, which, the plaintiff also argues, support her position regarding how the court should define the vehicle in question as a matter of law under the statutes. Rather, the defendant draws different definitional conclusions from the facts that are not in dispute and, in effect, argues that many of the facts cited by the plaintiff are irrelevant to the definitional task that both sides ask the court to perform. *337
The plaintiff also argues that the "key to the resolution" of this case involves an examination of how the vehicle was being used at the time of the accident. The plaintiff again refers to various undisputed facts in arguing that, at the time of the accident, the vehicle was on a highway and was not being used for the purposes for which it was designed. The plaintiff wants the court to draw certain legal conclusions from these facts relative to the applicability of the motor vehicle exception to § 31-193a. Again, the defendant does not contest any of the facts cited by the plaintiff but argues that the particular use of the vehicle at the time of the accident and the highway location of the worksite are not relevant to the issue before the court — whether the Clark Michigan 55 B is a "motor vehicle" under §
The dispute between the parties does not arise out of contested versions of the facts, but out of the legal significance of undisputed facts as they bear on relevant statutory definitions.
There have been several summary judgment cases where the trial courts have ruled, as a matter of law, on whether a certain piece of equipment involved in an accident was a "motor vehicle" for purposes of §
Section
The plaintiff nowhere disputes these definitional assertions by the defendant. In fact at several points in her brief, she refers to the Clark Michigan 55 B as a "payloader" and merely makes the claim that a payloader has been held to be a "motor vehicle," citingDupuis v. Brown, supra. No doubt, prior to the 1983 amendments to §§
What the plaintiff does argue in her brief is that this "payloader was not being used at the time of the accident for any of the other purposes for which it was *340 designed. In fact the bucket was not used at all." At the time of the accident the equipment was used for its "wheels," "tires" and "weight."
In essence, the plaintiff does not suggest that the Clark Michigan 55 B is not a "bucket loader" or at least that it was not designed by its manufacturer to be such. The plaintiff rather argues that the Clark Michigan 55 B is not a "bucket loader" for §
In defining "special mobile equipment" in §
Several of the cases relied on by the plaintiff involve situations where courts were defining the term "motor vehicle" in a variety of contexts for several different purposes. In Lemon v. Federal Ins. Co.,
All of those cases involved statutes written in very broad terms, basically defining motor vehicles as any self-propelled vehicle used or capable of being used on a highway. That is not Connecticut's statutory scheme. *342 Before 1983, this court would have agreed with the previously cited cases of Dupuis v. Brown, supra, andTruiolo v. Wilby, supra, and held that this payloader or bucket loader was a motor vehicle. In 1983, however, the statute defining "motor vehicle" was changed in the manner previously described; "special mobile equipment" was excluded from the definition of "motor vehicles" by legislative fiat, and bucket loaders were specifically mentioned as a type of special mobile equipment.
In oral argument, the plaintiff's counsel maintained that there are so many different types of construction equipment that the Clark Michigan 55 B cannot be made to fit any particular definition. Funk submitted his affidavit, however, and even the plaintiff's brief characterized this vehicle as a "payloader" with all the inevitable consequences of that characterization that Judge Blumenfeld's opinion in Truiolo suggests. Simple denials or contrary assertions do not raise issues of fact.
If the general definition of "special mobile equipment" in §
In fact, the plaintiff does not concentrate her argument on claiming that this vehicle was "designed for the transportation of . . . property upon a highway." (Emphasis added.) Rather, the plaintiff maintains that the "payloader involved in the present accident was not only designed for the transportation of persons on the roads but was also used extensively on the highway by the defendant."
It is not quite clear to the court what the plaintiff means by asserting that the Clark Michigan 55 B was "designed" for the transportation of persons. There is room for only one person in the cab and there is nothing in §
The main thrust of the plaintiff's argument is that the Clark Michigan 55 B is not a piece of "special mobile equipment" because it cannot meet the second part of the definition of such equipment: it cannot be said that this vehicle was "only incidentally operated or moved over a highway." The plaintiff merges this argument *344
into the further assertion that this vehicle is a motor vehicle under the general definition of that term in §
The plaintiff points out that the "payloader" had numerous characteristics of a motor vehicle; it was registered in New York, it had four tires, "headlights, brake lights, reflectors, blinkers, directional signals, gear shift, foot brakes, hand brakes, parking brakes, reverse gear, steering wheel, windshield wipers, heater, and rearview mirrors. Obviously the payloader was equipped with all of these motor vehicle necessities so that it could be operated on the highway." "Indeed," the plaintiff goes on to argue, "the payloaders used at the Orange Sewer Project were driven on Route 1." The plaintiff introduced affidavits and photographs to show payloaders being operated on Route 1, equipment and material of the defendant's employer located on Route 1, and to show that "these vehicles [payloaders] were driven on the Post Road for the purpose of transporting materials. In fact the entire phase of the project which was being worked on at the time of the accident was located on the highway . . . . Since this entire phase of the project was located on Route 1, the use of the payloaders thereon was of a regular not incidental nature as contemplated in §
In fact, however, the plaintiff's arguments seem to be rebutted by §
Section
The statutory scheme thus assumes that "special mobile equipment" will, under some circumstances, operate on the highway. Thus, the fact that "special mobile equipment" may have some features and equipment, such as safety features, similar to those of "motor vehicles" that also travel on highways does not permit the rather circular argument that any vehicle with those features (directional signals, brake lights, etc.) cannot be "special mobile equipment."
Similarly the statutory scheme permits "special mobile equipment" to carry passengers or material on a highway when the construction site is a highway or the project requires the crossing of a highway. By its very language §
Thus, the fact that the accident here occurred at a location that was a highway (at least when opened to traffic) or that the defendant's employer used its payloaders on Route 1, as claimed by the defendant, is entirely irrelevant in determining whether the Clark Michigan 55 B is a type of "special mobile equipment" and thus not a "motor vehicle" under §
It is against this background that the plaintiff's additional or alternative argument should be examined. That is the assertion that the Clark Michigan 55 B is a "motor vehicle" under §
Thus, under the statutory scheme, the mere fact that a vehicle operates on the highway at various times and is therefore capable of so doing does not mean that such a vehicle cannot be defined as "special mobile equipment."
The plaintiff's brief directs very few remarks to this particular statutory language. From the briefs and affidavits *348 and photographs submitted there is no doubt that the Clark Michigan 55 B was "designed for use principally off public roads." See id. The plaintiff never takes issue with this characterization of the Clark Michigan 55 B involved in this accident. In fact, it is difficult to imagine what else these payloaders could have been designed for except for construction sites off public roads.
Furthermore, nothing in the statutory language would permit the court to construe "worksite" so as to exclude areas of construction activity on or near highways. The type of equipment referred to in the 1983 amendment to §
The result can be no different as regards a vehicle such as the Clark Michigan 55 B, which, although not explicitly mentioned in the amendment to §
The plaintiff's previously mentioned argument that irrespective of what purposes the Clark Michigan 55 B was designed for, it was not being used for those purposes, has even less obvious relevance as regards the interpretation of the amendment to §
Finally, the plaintiff advances an argument alluded to throughout her brief that is rooted in an appeal to general policy considerations. Basically, the plaintiff claims that at the time of the accident the payloader was being used for its weight and tires to compact earth just like any run-of-the-mill motor vehicle — a car or truck, for example. The plaintiff concludes her argument by saying that "it would contort proper reasoning to hold that no matter how a vehicle was used or no matter what the circumstances or location of a particular accident a payloader vehicle must be considered `special mobile equipment' as the defendant urges. This indeed would be dangerous public policy in derogation of the public interest in motor vehicle safety and appropriate usage of the public highways." *350
As the defendant notes in his brief, this argument does not "appreciate the statutory structure" that the court has tried to analyze. Perhaps there are circumstances where a vehicle that might be characterized as "special mobile equipment" should in the circumstances of a particular accident be defined as a "motor vehicle" — thus where such a vehicle, no matter what it was designed for, is used more than incidentally on a highway and an accident occurs on a highway while it is being so used. The "contractors' mobile equipment" definition in the body of §
What the plaintiff's argument really fails to appreciate is the basic reason for the motor vehicle exception in §
The plaintiff has not disputed any of the factual assertions in the defendant's brief as to how this accident happened. On December 18, 1987, the plaintiff's decedent and the defendant were working on a sewer project; they were involved in digging and refilling a trench across to Route 1 in Orange. The two northbound lanes were closed and traffic was diverted to the southbound lanes. Plates put over a trench to allow traffic to pass were removed, a portion of the trench was filled with dirt and gravel and the defendant was directed to use the Clark Michigan 55 B to compact the refilled portion of the trench preparatory to repaving. The accident occurred when the defendant reached the end of the refilled portion of the trench adjacent to the open portion. The machine rolled forward into the hole where the plaintiff's decedent was working and caused the fatal injuries.
The plaintiff's decedent, on the day in question, where he was working, subjected himself to the "special hazards of the workplace." The risk of injury he faced was not that risk of a motor vehicle accident faced by the general public as a "common danger." Clearly, the accident here had a "distinct relationship to the hazards of the employment." Id., 359-60. The general public is not exposed to the risk entailed by working in an open trench in close proximity to a piece of heavy construction equipment compacting earth in a portion of that trench. The plaintiff's decedent was not facing the hazards encountered by the general public as *352 motorists or even pedestrians walking on or alongside a highway open to the public.3
Thus, arguments framed in terms of general policy considerations really favor the defendant's position and lead the court to conclude that under the statutory scheme the Clark Michigan 55 B involved in this accident was not a "motor vehicle" as defined in §
The court is mindful of the impact its decision will have on the widow of the decedent but feels constrained by its reading of the statutes to grant the defendant's motion for summary judgment.