Jesus GARCIA, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
PITTSYLVANIA COUNTY SERVICE AUTHORITY; William C. Overman
Associates, Defendants-Appellees.
Elfido MORALES, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
PITTSYLVANIA COUNTY SERVICE AUTHORITY; William C. Overman
Associates, Defendants-Appellees.
Nos. 87-2091, 87-2092.
United States Court of Appeals,
Fourth Circuit.
Argued Jan. 4, 1988.
Decided April 26, 1988.
Charles R. Holton (William E. Freeman, Jo Ann Ragazzo Woods, Moore & Van Allen, Durham, N.C., on brief), for plaintiff-appellant.
Philip Browder Morris (Michelle P. Wiltshire, Browder, Russell, Morris & Butcher, Richmond, Va., on brief), John L. Walker, Jr. (Steven D. Hedges, Woods, Rogers & Hazelgrove, Roanoke, Va., H. Victor Millner, Jr., Vansant, Millner & Vines, Chatham, Va., on brief), for defendants-appellees.
Before WIDENER and HALL, Circuit Judges, and BULLOCK, District Judge, Middle District of North Carolina, sitting by designation.
WIDENER, Circuit Judge:
Jesus Garcia and Elfido Morales, plaintiffs, appeal the denial of their claims for damages against Pittsylvania County Service Authority and William C. Overman Associates. For the reasons stated below, we affirm.
Plaintiffs were seriously injured on July 11, 1985 in an explosion while engaged in the construction of a sewer interceptor line. The line was owned by and under construction at the direction of the Authority, which, with financing from the Environmental Protection Agency and Farmers Home Administration, was constructing a portion of a major sanitary sewer system in the county, this section being known as the Sandy River Interceptor. Overman Associates, P.C., was engaged by the Authority by contract to perform engineering services for the entire project.
The Authority awarded the contract for the Sandy River section of the project designated 83-5-S to Roanoke Construction Company. Garcia and Morales were employees of Roanoke. The work performed included digging trenches, laying pipe and blasting rock. The plaintiffs were injured when a jackhammer being operated by Morales came into contact with an unexploded dynamite charge left from earlier blasting.
Roanoke is a North Carolina corporation with its principal place of business in that State. Plaintiffs are North Carolina residents and were employed by Roanoke in that State, they say pursuant to oral contracts of employment. They have received workers' compensation benefits pursuant to the North Carolina Workers' Compensation Act, N.C.Gen.Stat. Sec. 97-1, et seq, on account of Roanoke's workers' compensation coverage. They subsequently filed these actions in the United States District Court for the Western District of Virginia against the Authority and Overman, on June 18, 1986, seeking damages on account of their injuries. Defendants moved to dismiss the complaints on the grounds, inter alia, that plaintiffs' actions were barred by the exclusive remedy provision of the Virginia Workers' Compensation Act, Va. Code Sec. 65.1, et seq. The district court dismissed the complaints for the reason that the claims were so barred, and these appeals followed.
Prior to Carroll v. Lanza,
The Supreme Court, however, in Carroll, held that, in workers' compensation cases involving differing state compensation statutes, the State where the injury occurred was not required to give full faith and credit to the workers' compensation act of the State of employment. The Court relied on Pacific Employers Ins. Co. v. Commission,
Under Virginia law, after Carroll, this court affirmed a summary judgment granted by the district court, on essential facts indistinguishable from those present here, in favor of a Virginia defendant in Home Indemnity Company of New York v. Poladian,
In the case of McCann v. Newport News Shipbuilding and Dry Dock Company,
It is apparent to us, in the development of the law on the question at hand from Solomon to the present, that McCann states the present law of Virginia on the subject, and even if Liberty Mutual was a correct construction of Solomon at the time it was decided, it no longer has validity in view of Carroll and Home Indemnity. We are thus of opinion that the law of Virginia controls for this accident which occurred in Virginia and was occasioned by the negligence of an independent contractor with the Authority who was doing work in Virginia and required by Virginia law to have workers' compensation insurance.
Most of the rest of the questions in the case are answered by Anderson v. Thorington Construction Co.,
The plaintiff argues that the Service Authority in this case is not the statutory employer of the plaintiffs. We reject that argument, however, as did the Virginia court in Anderson. The Authority here is organized to acquire construct, operate and maintain water and sewer systems. See Va.Code Secs. 15.1-1239, et seq; 15.1-1250. The Authority in Anderson was authorized "to construct, maintain, repair and operate the turnpike project."
Finally, the plaintiff argues that in any event the Authority here, as a statutory employer, did not have workers' compensation insurance. The district court accepted as proof of insurance a certificate of insurance offered by Roanoke showing on its face that it had been delivered to the Authority, and so do we.1
The judgment of the district court is accordingly
AFFIRMED.
Notes
We need not rely on the fact that the Authority had its own and a different workers' compensation policy which may well have covered the plaintiff
