LONG v. MARVIN M. BLACK COMPANY et al.
39256
Supreme Court of Georgia
February 18, 1983
Rehearing Denied March 9, 1983
250 Ga. 621 | 300 S.E.2d 150
I am authorized to state that Justice Smith joins in this dissent.
HILL, Chief Justice.
Certiorari was granted in this case to determine whether an employee of an independent subcontractor can maintain a personal injury action against an employee of the principal contractor (the injured employee‘s statutory employer), where the injured employee has received workers’ compensation payments for the injury from the subcontractor. Relying on Wright Assoc. v. Rieder, 247 Ga. 496 (277 SE2d 41) (1981); and Haygood v. Home Transp. Co., 244 Ga. 165 (259 SE2d 429) (1979), the Court of Appeals held that the action is barred, Long v. Marvin M. Black Co., 163 Ga. App. 633 (2) (294 SE2d 641) (1982), and we granted certiorari. Rieder, Haygood, and the case before us involve a construction of two provisions of the Workers’ Compensation Act,
Under
Under
The first exception to the third-party tortfeasor provision was added by amendment in 1974.
Haygood v. Home Transp. Co., supra, involved a situation in which a principal contractor, Home Transportation Co., had paid workers’ compensation benefits to Haygood, who was an employee of an independent subcontractor. We held that the employee of the subcontractor was a “statutory employee” of the principal contractor under
Rieder, supra, involved a situation in which Rieder, an employee of an independent subcontractor, was injured and received workers’ compensation benefits from the subcontractor. He then sued Wright Associates, Inc., the principal contractor, alleging that his injury was caused by the negligence of an employee of the principal contractor. We held that even though the principal contractor had not actually paid workers’ compensation benefits, it was still a statutory employer of the subcontractor‘s employee under
The present case involves a situation in which Westinghouse Electric Company, an independent subcontractor, paid workers’ compensation benefits to its injured employee, Long. Long then sued Marvin M. Black Company, the principal contractor, and Bruner, an employee of the principal contractor, alleging that Bruner‘s negligence in discharging a .22 caliber nail gun caused the plaintiff‘s leg injury.
In Division 1 of its opinion, the Court of Appeals held that the
In our view, the words “employee of the same employer” do not apply when, as here, the injured employee is an employee of a subcontractor which paid compensation benefits and the alleged tortfeasor is an employee of the principal contractor. The General Assembly used the words “the same employer,” not the words “the immediate, intermediate or principal employer.” While this result follows from the words of the statute, it also follows from the rationale underlying our decision in Rieder. There we explained that “The quid pro quo for the statutory employer‘s potential liability is immunity from tort liability.” Wright Assoc. v. Rieder, 247 Ga. at 500. An employee of a statutory employer does not have any potential liability for workers’ compensation payments. Thus there is no quid pro quo, no reason to relieve him of liability for his negligence, and ample reason to hold him accountable for his negligence. We recognize that this argument not only could be made but historically was made in relation to employees of the same employer. Floyd v. McFolley, 131 Ga. App. 4 (205 SE2d 29) (1974). The General Assembly, however, chose to provide immunity to “an employee of the same employer.”
Judgment reversed. All the Justices concur, except Marshall, P. J., Weltner and Bell, JJ., who dissent.
Wallace C. Clayton, Melodie H. Clayton, for appellant.
James K. Lange, amicus curiae.
Henry D. Green, Jr., Robert G. Tanner, for appellees.
For reasons unnecessary to go into at length, the logic employed in the majority opinion is fundamentally inconsistent with the logic which serves as the basis for the decision in Wright Assoc. v. Rieder, 247 Ga. 496 (277 SE2d 41) (1981).
It can be said that Rieder creates an “expansion” of statutory workers’ compensation tort immunity, in that it holds that there is immunity in a situation in which the Workers’ Compensation Act does not expressly say that there shall be immunity. If there is immunity on the part of the principal contractor in Rieder, in my opinion there is no logical basis on which to say there is no immunity on the part of the employee of the principal contractor here. For this reason, I respectfully dissent.
I am authorized to state that Justice Bell joins in this dissent.
