Lеe, an employee of appellee Ed Smith Construction Company, Inc., was injured on the job when a crane came into contact with a high voltage line owned by appellant Flint Electric Membership Cоrporation and electricity passed through the crane to steel bars Lee was touching. Lee rеceived benefits under the Workers’ Compensation Act (WCA), OCGA § 34-9-1 et seq. He and his wife thereafter filed suit against Flint for personal injury and loss of consortium. Flint sought indemnification from the construction company pursuant to OCGA § 46-3-40 (b) of the High-voltage Safety Act (HVSA), OCGA § 46-3-30 et seq., which provides that an entity operating within the vicinity of high-voltage lines is strictly liable for resulting injuries and must indemnify the power-line owner against suit. The trial court granted the construction compаny’s motion for summary judgment on the basis that the exclusivity provision of the WCA barred Flint’s claim for indemnification under the HVSA. Thе Court
*465
of Appeals affirmed,
Flint EMC v. Ed Smith Constr. Co.,
OCGA § 34-9-11 (a) provides that “[t]he rights and the remedies granted to an employee by [the WCA] shall exclude all other rights and remedies of such employee ... on account of such injury, loss of service, or death.” Hence, in Georgia the WCA constitutes an emрloyee’s exclusive remedy against his employer, and an employee who receives the benеfit of the coverage provided by the WCA waives any cause of action against his employer.
Doss v. Food Lion,
In OCGA § 46-3-40 of the HVSA, the Legislature enacted a legislative indemnity provision which applies to any party whо, while working within ten feet of any high-voltage line in this State, failed under OCGA § 46-3-33 to notify the utilities protection center and/or await the taking of appropriate safeguarding action by the power-line owner. As set forth in OCGA § 46-3-40 (b), аny party who violates these statutory safety precautions “shall also indemnify the owner or operator of such high-voltage lines against all claims, if any, for personal injury . . . resulting from work in violation of Code Seсtion 46-3-33.”
An indemnity action against an employer by a power-line owner pursuant to the HVSA is based strictly on the lеgislative enactment; hence, it is not an action by an injured employee “on account of” a work-related injury and is, instead, an action comparable to the contractual indemnity actions the сourts have recognized as exceptions to the WCA’s exclusivity provision. As noted in 7 Larson’s Workers’ Compеnsation Law, § 76.50,
[i]f the third party and employer stand in a special legal relationship that carries with it the obligation of the em *466 ployer to indemnify the third party, this relational right of indemnity may be enforced without offending thе exclusive-remedy clause.
(Footnote omitted.) Id. at 14-857. A review of the foreign jurisdictions which have addressеd this question reveals a uniform determination that indemnity provisions in high-voltage safety statutes are not barred by exclusivity provisions in workers’ compensation acts. See, e.g.,
Travelers Ins. v. L. V. French Tr. Svc.,
The Court of Appeals, however, held that the exclusivity provision of the WCA bars operation of the express legislative indemnity provision of the HVSA based on its earlier holding in
City of Dalton v. Gene Rogers Constr. Co.,
We find that the better construction of these two statutes is to hold that the indemnity provision of the HVSA may be enforced without offending the exclusive remedy provision of the WCA by according indemnity actions pursuant to the HVSA the same dignity case law has given contractual indemnity provisions executed by private parties. Thus, while the WCA remains an employee’s sole remedy against an employer on account of a work-related injury, OCGA § 34-9-11 (a), the HVSA authorizes a power-line company to obtain indemnification from an employer on account of the employer’s failure to abide by the safety provisions in the HVSA. OCGA § 46-3-40 (b). Accordingly, we reverse the opinion of the Court of Appeals and overrule all opinions which conflict with this holding. E.g.,
Ga. Power Co. v. Franco Remodeling Co.,
Judgment reversed.
