The issue presented is whether the Government adequately demonstrated that it was a “principal contractor,” and therefore immune from ordinary tort liability under Nevada law, to warrant summary judgment. Because we find that there are genuine issues of fact regarding the amount of control the Government had on the job-site in question, we reverse and remand.
FACTS
The district court set forth the facts underlying this case in its opinion. 1 We restate them briefly.
Plaintiff John Lewis was employed by the Ray N. Bertelsen Company (Bertelsen) when he sustained severe injuries while working on the Rye Patch Dam improvement project in Nevada. He was injured when cables that held a raised dam gate tore loose from their shackles, allowing the gate to fall and hit him as he worked below. Bertelsen was under contract with the United States, the owner of the dam, to make improvements to the dam.
Following his injury, Lewis received benefits under the Nevada Industrial Insurance Act (NIIA), Nev.Rev.Stat. §§ 616.010 et seq., by virtue of coverage provided by Ber-telsen. He then sued the United States under the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA), 28 U.S.C. §§ 1346(b), 2671-2680, for its alleged negligence in installing and inspecting the cables and dam gate that caused his injury.
The Government moved for summary judgment. The district court granted the motion, reasoning that the Government was the “principal contractor” on the dam improvement project, that it had a “statutory employer-employee relationship” with Lewis, and that it was therefore immune from ordinary tort liability pursuant to the NIIA’s exclusive remedy provisions.
DISCUSSION
The district court properly concluded that Nevada law governs the determination of the Government’s liability and that both Nevada’s statutory and decisional law must be considered.
For the purposes of the NIIA, Nevada courts recognize that an employee may be deemed to have more than one employer, even while performing a single task.
See Antonini v. Hanna Industries,
In
Simon Service,
the Nevada Supreme Court declared that a property owner does not become an employer for the purposes of the NIIA merely by contracting to have work performed on his property.
In characterizing the relationship between an owner-contractee and a worker engaged in a particular project with respect to that owner’s property, we have placed primary emphasis upon the amount of “control” exercised by the con-tractee over the worker. Under the general term “control” several factors have been accorded substantially equal weight in determining the existence of an employment relationship. These include the degree of supervision exercised over the details of the work, the source of the worker’s wages, the existence of a right to hire and fire the worker, and the extent to which the worker’s activities further the general business concerns of the alleged employer....
[A]n owner-contractee who exercisefs] significant operational control over the details of the construction work for which he ha[s] contracted assume[s] employer status for the purposes of NRS 616.560.
Antonini,
To determine whether the Government had satisfied its burden of demonstrating “employer” status and entitlement to immunity from ordinary tort liability,
2
the district court looked to three Nevada cases for guidance. In
Hosvepian,
the court upheld summary judgment for a property owner who “retained ... general supervisory control over the progress of work and the purchase of materials” and “retained and exercised control of the details of the work.”
We find those cases readily distinguishable from the case at bar. In those cases the property owners had retained and exercised significant control over the work being performed. In the present case the district court relied primarily upon the following facts in awarding summary judgment: (1) the Government designed and planned the improvement project; (2) a Government inspector was on the job site daily to assure compliance with contract specifications; (3) a Government engineer was “on call” for consultation; (4) extraordinary tasks,
e.g.,
blasting, required prior Government approval; and (5) the Government retained the authority to suspend or terminate Bertelsen’s work under certain conditions.
This case closely resembles recent cases in which the Nevada Supreme Court has reversed summary judgments in favor of property owners.
See Daniels v. Las Vegas Transfer & Storage,
Nev.,
Notes
. The opinion is reported at
. The party seeking summary judgment bears the burden of showing the absence of a genuine question of material fact. See generally Fed.R. Civ.P. 56.
. We recently reversed an award of summary judgment for the Government under very similar circumstances.
See Snow v. United States,
. Because the district court did not decide whether the United States, if found to be an “employer,” could nevertheless be held liable under the “dual capacity” doctrine,
i.e.,
that it could be held liable for negligence arising out of obligations independent of those imposed on it as an “employer,” we need not reach that issue. In this regard,
see generally
2A A. Larson, Workmen’s Compensation § 72.80, at 14-112 (1976);
Noland v. Westinghouse Electric Corp.,
Nev.,
