OPINION
Aрpellant, Jose Garza, (“Garza”) sued Interim Services Pacific, L.L.C. (“Interim”) and Excel Logistics, Inc. (“Excel”) for damages resulting from on-the-job injuries. Interim and Excel filed a joint motion for summary judgment contending they were Garza’s joint employers and that Garza’s exclusive remedy against either co-employer was limited to worker’s compensation benefits. The trial court granted *283 the defendants’ joint motion for summary judgment. Garza appeals from the grant of summary judgment on two grounds. First, Garza contends that a material issue of fact exists as to whether Interim and Excel were joint employers, thus precluding summary judgment. Second, appellant argues that the appellees have not proven that Garza is a covered employee for purposes of thе Texas Worker’s Compensation Act. We affirm.
Factual and Procedural Background
Appellant was employed by Interim, a temporary employment agency, and contracted out to perform manual labor for Excel. On September 3, 1997, Garza was told by an Excel supervisor, Roberto Luna, to cross over a moving conveyor belt to turn off a machine “quickly.” In doing so, Garza fell and injured himself. Appellant filed suit against Excel on July 31, 1998 for personal injuries. Garza then joined Interim as a party to the suit, but later non-suited them.
Garza concedes his exclusive remedy 1 against Interim is the recovery of worker’s compensation benefits, and that he is, in fact, receiving such benefits from Interim. However, he argues that Excel is not his employer, and thus, he can maintain a common law negligence action against Excel for his injuries. Interim and Excеl argued they were co-employers, and urged that the exclusive remedy provision in the Worker’s Compensation statute applied to both of them. The trial court granted the joint motion for summary judgment.
Law and Analysis
A. Standard of Review
With a traditional summary judgment motion, the movants, Excel and Interim, must prove there is no genuine issue as to any material fact.
See Randall’s Food Mkts., Inc. v. Johnson,
B. Borrowed-Servant Doctrine Contrasted with Dual-Employer Doctrine
The entity with the “right to control” the employee at the time of the accident is the “employer” for worker’s compensation purposes.
2
See Archem v.
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Austin Indus., Inc.,
In a borrowed-servant situation, an employee of a general employer temporarily works for another, special employer.
See Rodriguez v. Martin Landscape Mgmt., Inc.,
In a dual-employer situation, the general employer and the special employer both share the right to control the employee. Section 226 of the Restatement of Agency provides:
A person may be the servant of two masters, [who are] not joint employers, at one time as to one act, if the service to one does not involve abandonment of the service to the other.
Restatement (Second) Of Agency § 226 (1958).
When two entities have joint control over an employee’s work, they are co-employers.
See White v. Liberty Eylau Sch. Dist.,
The key difference in the two doctrines is that under the borrowed servant doctrine, the general employer relinquishes the right to control the employee to the special employer. In contrast, under the dual-employer doctrine, both the general and the special employer share the right to control the employee. The parties agree that in this case, the issue is whether Interim and Excel are dual employers, not whether Garza is a borrowed servant. Therefore, whether Interim ever relinquished control of Garza to Excel is irrelevant. The issue is whether Excel, along with Interim, shared the right to control Garza.
*285 C. Fact Issue Concerning Dual-Employer Issue?
Interim and Excel argue that they are dual еmployers and contend the exclusive remedy protection of the Worker’s Compensation Act should apply to both of them. Garza, citing
Hoffman v. Trinity Indus., Inc.,
In
Hoffman,
the plaintiff, an injured employee, worked for a temporary employment agency that assignеd him to work for one of its clients.
As stated earlier, the sole issue presented in this case is whether Excel had the right to control Garza. If it did, Excel was also Garza’s “employer” and cannot be sued for common law causes of action. Thus, we must look at the summary judgment evidence presented by Excel to show that it had the right to control Garza’s work.
2. The Contract
The Interim/Excel contract does not directly address the right to control an employee or the co-employer issue. The relevant contractual provisions provide that, in exchange for an hourly rate per employee, Interim shall be responsible for: (1) assigning “necessary personnel (collectively, the ‘Employees’)” and equipment to Excel; (2) determining that the employees were able to perform their job functions; (3) maintaining satisfactory standards of competency, conduct, integrity, safety regulations, and Excel’s work rules; (4) using Interim personnel to supervise the workers on the Excel premises; (5) handling all personnel actions including performance, disсipline, recruitment, hiring, and supervision; (6) paying the employees their wages and overtime; (6) carrying worker’s compensation insurance for the employees with a minimum of the statutory limits. Interim was to do all of these things “as approved and supervised by Excel.” (Emphasis added). Interim acknowledged in the contract that the assigned personnel would not be eligible for any Excel employee benefits. The contract gave Excel the right to request Interim to replace any employees who were not performing in a satisfactory manner. Excel retained the right to hire any employee as a regular employee of Excel without cost or penalty.
The contract in Hoffman raised a fact issue on the dual-employer issue because it stated that the client had no right to control the employee, i.e., it negated the *286 client’s right to control the employee. Id. at 90. Although the contract in this case clearly contemplates that Interim will exercise control over the leased employees, it does not negate Excel’s right to also control the employees. To the contrary, the contract provides that Interim’s functions will be “approved and supervised by Excel.” Because the contract does not negate Excel’s right to control the leаsed employees, it does not raise a fact question on the issue of dual employment.
2. Other Summary Judgment Evidence
a. Interim’s right to control
Interim provided worker’s compensation benefits to Garza, and Garza received paychecks from Interim while he was assigned to the Excel job site. However, “mere subscription to, or the ‘gratuitous’ providing of, workers’ compensation benefits is irrelevant to the question of сontrol.”
See Archem,
Ms. Kathleen Collier was an Interim manager on the Excel premises. She was responsible for supervising the employees and enforcing safety regulations. Collier testified by deposition that Garza was an Interim employee.
Thus, there is substantial еvidence that Interim had the right to control Garza’s work. However, as we stated earlier, Interim’s right to control Garza is uncontested. The issue is whether Excel also had the right to control Garza.
b. Excel’s right to control
Excel does not dispute that Interim provided Garza with paychecks, human resource benefits, training, assignments, and other services. Rather, Excel contends that, once assigned to them, Excel provided specific instructions to Garza regarding how, when, and where he was to perform his job, and, thus, the dual-employer doctrine applies.
For example, Castenada was asked in his deposition if “Excel supervisors dictated the day-to-day detail of the Interim workers that were on Excel’s property.” He answered, “That’s correct.” Castenada also testified that any instructions he gave the workers would be subject to Excel’s approval. Most importantly, it was actually an Excel supervisor, Roberto Luna, who ordered Garza to jump onto a moving conveyor belt to turn it off “quickly” when Garza was injured. 3 Garza responded to his request, indicating that Garza acknowledged Mr. Luna also had the right to control his work. Furthermore, Garza’s *287 deрosition testimony suggests that he felt both Mr. Castenada and Mr. Luna controlled his daily activity, lending support to the dual-employer theory. Garza’s deposition testimony includes the following exchange, with objections omitted:
Q: Who is the person that instructed you on exactly what you were supposed to do at Excel and how to do it?
A: Joe Castenada.
[[Image here]]
Q: Did Joe ever tell you “go over to Excel and dо whatever they tell you to do?”
A: Yes. He would tell me. He would send me.
Q: And he would tell you to do whatever the people at Excel told you to do, correct?
A: Well, Roberto Luna would talk to him; and he would tell us.
Q: Roberto Luna would tell you what to do?
A: Every once in a while. But Joe Castenada would also tell us what to do because he was my supervisor at Interim.
Q: Joe Castenada, would he instruct you to go do what the people at Excel told you to do?
A: Yes. Every once in a while.
[[Image here]]
Q: Generally, on a day-to-day basis, who was the person that told you exactly what to do and how to do it?
A. As I said, sometimes it would be Roberto; and sometimes it would be Joe Castenada.
Q: Half and half?
A: My supervisor was Joe Castenada. He would be the one who would tell me what time I had to arrive, that I had to work fíne, and some things to do inside.
[[Image here]]
Q: Most of time, who gave you instruction on the detail of your day-to-day work at Excel?
A. Sometimes it would be him [Joe Castenada]. Sometimes it would be Roberto Luna.
Q: And you can’t say which is more?
A: Well, more, I guess, would be Joe Castenada because Roberto Luna would sometimes be absent from work a lot; and he wouldn’t come to work. And whenever he was not there, then Joe Castenada would come down to see how the work was going.
Q: So it was an equal split betwеen Joe Castenada, approximately, and Robert Luna in who supervised the detail of your day-to-day job activities?
A: I don’t know.
D. Conclusion Regarding Excel’s Right to Control Plaintiff
An analysis of the contractual provisions and other summary judgment evidence shows that Interim clearly had the right to control Garza and the other temporary workers. However, Excel brought forth evidence that it also exercised control over Garza’s work. Thus, the burden shifted to Garza to raise a fact issue by bringing summary judgment evidence to show that Excel had no right to control the details of his work. This, Garza has failed to do. Even assuming all of Garza’s testimony regarding Interim’s right to control him is true, the deposition testimony establishes Excel controlled him as well. Neither the contract, nor any of the deposition testimony negates Excel’s right to сontrol Garza’s work. As such, no issue of fact is raised on the dual-employer theory.
Co-employers are both entitled to protection from common-law liability because the exclusive remedy provision of the Worker’s Compensation Act applies to
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both coemployers.
See Brown,
E. “Covered Employee” Status
Worker’s compensation payments are the exclusive remedy for an injured employee if the employee is “covered by workers’ compensation insurance coverage ...”. Tex. LaboR Code § 408.001 (Vernon’s 1996). In point of error two, Garza contends that there is a fact issue about whether he is a “covered employee” as to Excel. Excel responds that it procured coverage for Garza through its contract with Interim, which provided:
In consideration for [Interim’s] performance of the Services, [Interim] shall receive as sole payment, the hourly rates negotiated with Exel [sic] Logistics Operations in the respective market plus the markups reflected for the appropriate classification of temporary labor for the respectivе market as set forth in Exhibit A1 (Rate Schedule). The markups in Exhibit A1 include all costs, overhead and burden associated with providing temporary labor to Exel [sic] Logistics, including but not limited to costs associated with testing, background investigations, training, worker’s compensation, insurance, etc. (Emphasis added).
Robert “Whipple, Excel’s Corporate Claims Manager, testified that pursuant to this contract term, Excel made payments to Interim to cover the costs of the worker’s compensation insurance that Interim carried for its workers. It is undisputed that Garza received wоrker’s compensation payments from coverage provided by Interim.
In
Pederson v. Apple Corrugated Packaging, Inc.,
The sаme is true in this case. The record conclusively establishes that Garza was receiving worker’s compensation benefits from Interim, and that Excel, under the terms of the contract, was required to pay Interim for the costs associated with maintaining such worker’s compensation insurance. As such, Excel provided worker’s compensation insurance for Garza, albeit through Interim.
See also Williams v. Brown & Root, Inc.,
We overrule point of error two.
We affirm the judgment.
The Honorable Davie L. Wilson, retired justice, Court of Appeals, First District of Texas at Houston, participating by assignment.
Notes
. “Recovery of workers' compensation benefits is the exclusive remedy of an employee covered by workers’ compensation insurance coverage ... for the death of or a work-related injury sustained by the employee.” Tex. Labor Code Ann. § 408.001(Vemon’s 1996) (emphasis added).
. We are aware that the Texas Supreme Court recently concluded that the Staff Leasing Services Act “statutorily supersedes the common law “right of control” test in determining employer status of leased employees” for workers’ compensation insurance purposes.
Texas Workers' Compensation Ins. Fund v. Del Indus., Inc.,
. Garza was asked, in his deposition, "Why didn’t you just walk around the machine, instead of stepping on top of the conveyer belt?" He responded, "I was going to turn around, but Roberto Luna told me to cross over down there in order to turn off the machine quickly.”
