NIJEL YOUNG VERSUS HARD ROCK CONSTRUCTION, L.L.C., HARD ROCK CONSTRUCTION OF LOUISIANA, L.L.C., AND ALL SOUTH CONSULTING ENGINEERS, L.L.C.
NO. 19-CA-484
FIFTH CIRCUIT COURT OF APPEAL STATE OF LOUISIANA
March 17, 2020
JUDE G. GRAVOIS, JUDGE
ON APPEAL FROM THE FORTIETH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST, STATE OF LOUISIANA NO. 68,583, DIVISION “C” HONORABLE J. STERLING SNOWDY, JUDGE PRESIDING. Pаnel composed of Judges Susan M. Chehardy, Jude G. Gravois, and Stephen J. Windhorst.
COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE, ALL SOUTH CONSULTING ENGINEERS, L.L.C. David K. Persons
This case arises out of an accident at a construction site at East St. John High School, in LaPlace, Louisiana, owned by the St. John the Baptist Parish School Board. Plaintiff, Nijel Young, was injured when the walls of a trench in which he was laying drainage pipe collapsed. He sued both his employer, Hard Rock Construction LLC/Hard Rock Construction of Louisiana, LLC (“Hard Rock“), and All South Consulting Engineers, LLC, the engineering and construction management firm hired by the School Board to provide engineering and construction management services to the project.1 Ultimately, the trial court granted summary judgmеnt in favor of All South, finding that no genuine issues of material fact existed as to All South‘s non-liability to plaintiff under the explicit provisions of All South‘s contract with the School Board, and that All South was entitled to judgment as a matter of law. This appeal followed. For the following reasons, we affirm.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
On the date of the accident, October 20, 2014, plaintiff was employed as a laborer by Hard Rock, the contractor, who had entered into a contract with the School Board to install sections of 48-inch underground drainage pipes at East St. John High School. The School Board also contracted with All South to provide engineering and construction management services at the construction site.2
All South‘s construction manager for this job, Scott Greig, testified in his deposition that his job was observing the work of the contractor, and to make sure that the work proceeded according to the plans and specifications of the contract between Hard Rock and the School Board, as well as to monitor the construction‘s
The accident which injured plaintiff occurred on the first or second day of work at thе site at around 3:00 p.m. (witness testimony varied as to the exact time, but all agreed it was in the afternoon), where Hard Rock was installing 8-foot-long sections of 48-inch underground cement drainage pipes in a trench. Installation of the pipe sections involved digging a trench and preparing the bedding soil according to contract specifications on which the pipe would lay, and laying the pipe. Mr. Young was injured when the trench in which he was working caved in or collapsed.4
Plaintiff and his father, Morris Young, who was also working on the same crew, testified in depositions that the trench had experienced other cave-ins that day, though none causing injury, which had prompted Mr. Gautreaux to call Carl. Plaintiff also testified in his deposition that an All South “engineer,” whom he did not name, had come over prior to the cave-in that injured plaintiff to inspect the trench and measure the distance between the boards. However, it is unclear who this person actually was.6 Mr. Greig, who testified in his deposition he was not the project engineer, said that while he did look at the boards in the trench, he did not
Mr. Young alleged in his petition for damages that various acts of negligence committed at the jobsite by an unnamed All South “supervisor,” such as failing to check the trench after being informed of previous cave-ins, and allowing heavy construction trucks to travel in the immediate area of the trench, created an unreasonable risk of injury to him, breaching vаrious provisions in All South‘s contract with the School Board, and thus making All South liable for his injuries. In due course, All South moved for summary judgment, contending that the contract between it and the School Board clearly and unequivocally stated that Hard Rock, the contractor and plaintiff‘s employer, and not All South, had exclusive responsibility for the safety of its crews, as well as exclusive control over the means and methods of the construction work, and that as construction manager and inspector, All South had no contractual responsibility for safety and no contractual authority to interfere in or direct Hard Rock‘s means and methods to perform the work. The rеlevant contracts between the School Board and Hard Rock and between the School Board and All South were attached to the pleadings and thus admitted at the hearing on the motion for summary judgment.7
Mr. Young opposed the motion for summary judgment, arguing that All South clearly had both the right and a duty under its contract with the School Board for his safety, and breached those duties by failing to stop the work prior to the trench collapse when the evidence showed that its employees observed the dangerous conditions. He attached the affidavit of his expert witness, Neil B. Hall, an architect, to his opposition, who opined that All South, the owner‘s agent under
Following a hearing on the summary judgment motion on December 6, 2018, the trial court took the matter under advisement, and on February 19, 2019, rendered judgment in favor of All South. In its written reasons for judgment, the trial court stated:
Here, the American Institute of Architects contract utilized in determining the roles of the parties and the duties between them used clear and explicit terms. Section 4.2.2 states that the engineer will not have “control over, charge of, or responsibility for ... safety precautions and programs in connection with the Work, since these are solely the Contractor‘s rights and responsibilities[.]” All South Ex. C, §4.2.2 at 21. It is apparent that the parties intended to hold only one party, Hard Rock Construction, liable for safety precautions. Indeed, the same contract provides that the contractor is “solely responsible” for all instrumentalities of the construction job. All South Ex. C., §3.3.1 at 14-15. The contract intends for thе engineer to be in charge of determining the date of substantial compliance, preparing change orders, reviewing contractor submissions, and keeping the owner informed on the progress of the work. All South Ex. C. at 21-22.
Further, citing Yocum v. City of Minden, 26,424 (La. App. 2 Cir. 1/25/95), 649 So.2d 129, in its reasons for judgment, the trial court specifically found that All South had no contractual duty for plaintiff‘s safety, and dismissed plaintiff‘s case against All South with prejudice. Plaintiff‘s timely appeal followed.
On appeal, plaintiff argues that the trial court erred in finding that All South had no duty towards plaintiff for his safety and cited to specific contractual
LAW AND ANALYSIS
“A motion for summary judgment shall be granted if the motion, memorandum, and supporting documents show that there is no genuine issue as to material fact and that the mover is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”
Appellate courts review summary judgments de novo using the same criteria applied by trial courts to determine whether summary judgment is appropriate. Pizani v. Progressive Ins. Co., 98-225 (La. App. 5 Cir. 9/16/98), 719 So.2d 1086, 1087. A de novo review or an appeal de novo is an appeal in which the appellate court uses the trial court‘s record, but reviews the evidence and law without deference to the trial court‘s rulings. Wooley v. Lucksinger, 06-1140 (La. App. 1 Cir. 12/30/08), 14 So.3d 311, 352; Sarasino v. State Through Department of Public Safety and Corrections, 16-408 (La. App. 5 Cir. 3/15/17), 215 So.3d 923, 928. The decision as to the propriety of a grant of a motion for summary judgment must be made with reference to the substantive law applicable to the case. Muller v. Carrier Corp., 07-770 (La. App. 5 Cir. 4/15/08), 984 So.2d 883, 885.
Duty is a question of law. Harris v. Pizza Hut, 455 So.2d 1364 (La. 1984); Crane v. Exxon Corp., U.S.A., 613 So.2d 214 (La. App. 1 Cir. 1992). The particular facts and circumstances of each individual case determine the extent of the duty and the resulting degree of care necessary to fulfill that duty. Socorro v. City of New Orleans, 579 So.2d 931 (La. 1991); Crane v. Exxon Corp., U.S.A., supra. In determining the duty owed to an employee of a contractor by an engineering firm also involved in the project, the court must consider the express provisions of the contract between the parties. Day v. National U.S. Radiator Corp., 128 So.2d 660, 241 La. 288 (La. 1961).
The interpretation of a contract is the determination of the common intent of the parties.
ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR NUMBER ONE
“Contractual duty” for safety to plaintiff
In his first assignment of error, plaintiff argues that the trial court erred when it failed to consider the express provisions of the contract between the parties in its determination that All South owed no contractual duty for safety to plaintiff, the
All South‘s contract with the School Board contains the following explicit provisions regarding responsibility for construction means and methods and safety at the work site. First, Section 3.3.1, found under the heading “Supervision and Construction Procedures,” provides:
The Contractor shall supervise and direct the Work using the Contractor‘s best skill and attention. The Contractor shall be solely responsible for, and have control over, construction means, methods, techniques, sequences and procedurеs and for coordinating all portions of the Work under the Contract, unless the Contract Documents give other specific instructions concerning these matters. If the Contract Documents give specific instructions concerning construction means, methods, techniques, sequences or procedures, the Contractor shall evaluate the jobsite safety thereof and, except as stated below, shall be fully and solely responsible for the jobsite safety of such means, methods, techniques, sequences or procedures. If the Contractor determines that such means, methods, techniques, sequences or procedures may not be safe, the Contraсtor shall give timely written notice to the Owner and Engineer and shall not proceed with that portion of the Work without further written instructions from the Engineer. If the Contractor is then instructed to proceed with the required means, methods, techniques, sequences or procedures without acceptance of changes proposed by the Contractor, the Owner shall be solely responsible for any loss or damage arising solely from those Owner-required means, methods, techniques, sequences or procedures. (Emphasis added.)
Next, in Section 4.2.2, the contract provides, in pertinent part:
... The Engineer [All South] will not have control over, charge of, or responsibility for, the construction means, methods, techniques, sequences or procedures, or for the safety precautions and programs in connection with the Work, since these are solely the Contractor‘s [Hard Rock‘s] rights and responsibilities under the Contract Documents, except as provided in Section 3.3.1. (Emphasis added.)
The other “exceptions” to the contract language plaintiff relies on are as follows. First, plaintiff cites Section 1.1.9, which provides:
The Owner has retained the services of All South Consulting Engineers, LLC as its Program Manager. The Program Manager is the Owner‘s Representative and Agent for all matters except for adjustments in the Contract Sum or Contract Time. The Owner designatеs its Superintendent to act on its behalf involving matters of the Contract Sum or the Contract Time.
Plaintiff argues that this provision makes All South the owner‘s agent who can act for the owner to exercise all other contractual provisions. Plaintiff next cites Section 14.3.1, which provides:
The Owner may, without cause, order the Contractor in writing to suspend, delay or interrupt the Work in whole or in part for such period of time was the Owner may determine.
Section 2.3, also cited by plaintiff, provides, in pertinent part:
If the Contractor fails to correct work that is not in strict accordance with the requirements of the Contract Documents as required by Section 12.2, repeatedly fails to carry out Work in strict accordance with the Contract Documents, or fails or refuses to provide a sufficient amount of properly supervised and coordinated labor, materials, or equipment so as to complete the Work within the Contract time, the Owner may issue a written order to the Contractor to stop the Work, or any portion thereof, until the cause for such order has been eliminated; however, the right of the Owner to stop the Work shall not give rise to a duty on the part of the Owner to exercise this right for the benefit of the Contractor or any other person or entity, except to the extent required by Section 6.1.3. ... (Emphasis added.)
Contractor shall do all cutting, fitting and patching of the Work required to make its several parts come together properly in a manner that will not endanger any Work of others by cutting, excavating or otherwise altering their work without the written consent of the Owner.
Finally, Section 2.5 cited by plaintiff provides:
The Owner has retained a Program Manager. The Engineer retained by the Owner to design the Project has the responsibility to administer the Contract for Construction, including observation of the Work. Contractor stipulates and agrees that the Owner and Program Manager shall have no responsibility for the performance or failure to perform of the Engineer, and Contractor stipulates and agrees that the Contractor shall have no claim or cause of action of any kind whatsoever directly or indirectly against the Owner or Program manager arising out of or in any way connected with the performance or failure to perform of the Engineer.
Plaintiff contends that reading these provisions in conjunction with one another leads to the legal conclusion that the defendant, All South, had a duty to stop the work upon observing a dangerous condition.
As did the trial court, we disagree with plaintiff‘s position that the sections of the contract he cites override the aforementioned explicit provisions that place the responsibility for means and methods, as well as responsibility for its workers’ safety, squarely under the control of Hard Rock. Besides the requirement that the work stop notice must be in writing, a condition that would not have timely served plaintiff in this case, the provision cited by plaintiff, Section 14.3.1, is entitled “Suspension by the Owner for Convenience” and plaintiff has simply not borne his burden of proving that it was intended, as he claims, to give All South full authority to stop the progress of any work they felt was unsafe.
The contractual provisions relied upon by plaintiff do not pertain to safety, but rather pertain to the pace of the work and provide the Owner with remedies in the event the work does not proceed timely, as well as provide specific direction to the Contractor regarding safeguarding the work of “others” on the jobsite. There is no testimony or evidence in the record that these cited provisions pertain to safety
Accordingly, upon de novo reviеw, we find that no genuine issues of material fact exist as to All South‘s non-liability to plaintiff under the explicit provisions of All South‘s contract with the School Board, and that All South is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. This assignment of error is without merit.
ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR NUMBER TWO
“Moral duty” to plaintiff
Plaintiff also asserts in brief that All South owed him a “moral duty,” i.e., a duty not arising out of the contract provisions, to stop the work if it observed a dangerous working condition. He argues that deposition testimony shows that All South was aware of the dangerous condition of the trench. He contends that the trial court erred in failing to consider the issue of the moral duty, as per Yocum.
Upon review, we disagree with plaintiff that the trial court should have considered thе issue of whether a “moral duty” was owed to plaintiff by All South. Both plaintiff‘s petition and his opposition to the motion for summary judgment argue that All South breached contractual duties to him for his safety, a position that the trial court rejected and we have affirmed. While plaintiff did briefly mention, in his opposition to the motion for summary judgment, Yocum‘s discussion of whether the engineer owed Mr. Yocum a “moral duty” for his safety, plaintiff‘s opposition neither argued nor established that Louisiana law recognizes
However, because plaintiff raises this issue in his appellate brief, this Court will anаlyze Yocum and address the merits of this issue. The Yocum case arose out of a construction site accident where Mr. Yocum, an employee of the contractor, was injured in an excavation ditch. Mr. Yocum filed suit against the engineering firm, Owen & White, who was engaged by the owner to provide engineering services and construction oversight, similar to the case at bar. Yocum, 649 So.2d at 130. Mr. Yocum alleged that Owen & White was liable to plaintiff because it “failed to correct or report the unsafe slope of the ditch,” and that its employee was negligent for “failing to observe, warn of, report, or correct an unsafe condition.” Id. After a bench trial, the trial court held that Owen & White owed no contractual duty to warn of the conditions of the ditch and that there was no connеction between Mr. Yocum‘s injury and the work performed by Owen & White. Id. at 131. The court of appeal scrutinized the contract documents, finding that the contract clearly defined and limited Mr. Hardin‘s (Owen & White‘s engineer) duties, and that Mr. Hardin had limited authority and was expressly prohibited from guiding the contractor or its employees in its methods. The court therefore concluded that Mr. Hardin did not breach any legal duty bestowed upon him via the contract. Id. at 132.
The court next briefly considered, however, whether Owen & White owed any “moral duty” to Mr. Yocum by not warning of the dangerous condition posed by the slope of the ditch at the time of the accident. Yocum, 649 So.2d at 132. The court noted that both parties’ expert witnesses testified that Mr. Hardin would have had a “moral duty tо warn” the contractor if he knew a condition to be
Upon review, we find that Yocum‘s brief discussion about the possibility of a moral or tort duty to Mr. Yocum was merely dicta and was likely the Yocum court‘s attempt to be thorough by addressing an argument apparently made by the parties. Tellingly, a thorough search of Louisiana jurisprudence fails to uncover any Louisiana court citing Yocum as creating or recognizing a moral or tort duty to a contractor‘s employee on behalf of an engineering firm contrary to the established body of case law holding that specific contractual provisions govern the duties and responsibilities of the parties.11 Furthermore, we find no other line of cases supporting this theory of recovery. Such dicta does not jurisprudentially
Also in the instant case, unlike in Yocum, each side did not testify that a moral duty exists from the engineer to the contractor‘s worker. Plaintiff‘s expert Neil B. Hall did not opine that All South had a moral or tort duty to plaintiff, but rather confined his analysis to the terms of the contract. Only defendant‘s project manager, Scott Greig, who was a fact witness, testified that if he “saw something that was imminently a threat to life, limb, or eyesight, absolutely, we have a moral obligation to stop it.”12 He testified that he did not observe any condition that he believe reached that threshold. Gerard Kelly, who testified that he told Mr. Greig he did not believe that the shoring system Hard Rock was using in the trench was “kosher,” nonetheless also said that in his experience, he had no right to tell the contractor anything regarding safety, and he did not expect Mr. Greig tо act on Mr. Kelly‘s opinion about the trench.13 He acknowledged that he did not know the specific provisions of the contracts, nor did he know the status of the law on this issue.
An assumption of duty arises when the defendant (1) undertakes to render services, (2) to another, (3) which the defendant should recognize as necessary for the protection of a third person. Hebert v. Rapides Par. Police Jury, 06-2001 (La. 4/11/07), 974 So.2d 635, 643, on reh‘g (Jan. 16, 2008), quoting Bujol v. Entergy Services, Inc., 03-0492 (La. 5/25/04), 922 So.2d 1113, 1129. The Hebert Court continued:
The Bujol court described the action required by the defendant in such instances as an affirmative undertaking and further explained that the determination of whether such an action was taken involves an examination of the scope of the defendant‘s involvement, the extent of the defendant‘s authority, and the underlying intent of the defendant. 03-0492 at p. 18, 922 So.2d at 1131. As in other civil cases, the burden is on the plaintiff to prove by a preponderance of the evidence facts sufficient to establish the action undertaken by the defendant. See e.g., Bujol, 03-0492 at p. 16, 922 So.2d at 1130.
However, neither a defendant‘s concern with safety conditions and its general communications regarding safety matters, nor its superior knowledge and expertise regarding safety issues, will create a duty to guarantee safety. Bujol, 03-0492 at p. 21, 922 So.2d at 1133. Likewise, inspections and mere safety recommendations, which recommendations are not mandatory and are not within the authority of the defendant to remediate, cannot create such a duty. Id. at 20-22, 1133-34.
Bearing this threshold in mind, we find that plaintiff‘s deposition testimony regarding the identity of the “engineer” falls critically short of meeting his
The depositions of plaintiff, his father, Mr. Greig, and Mr. Kelly establish that many personnel from various construction-related companies were onsite on the day of the accident. Taken as a whole, plaintiff offered insufficient evidence that this person was first, an engineer, or who was, second, employed by All South. Without any other facts tending to establish this person‘s identity, plaintiff fails to show the existence of a genuine issue of material fact showing that All South assumed any duty towards plaintiff. Accordingly, this assignment of error is without merit.
CONCLUSION
Upon de novo review, for the foregoing reasons, we find that no genuine issues of material fact exist and that All State Consulting Engineers, LLC is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Accordingly, we affirm the trial court‘s grant of summary judgment in favor of All South Consulting Engineers, LLC, dismissing plaintiff‘s suit against it with рrejudice.
AFFIRMED
CURTIS B. PURSELL
CLERK OF COURT
NOTICE OF JUDGMENT AND CERTIFICATE OF DELIVERY
I CERTIFY THAT A COPY OF THE OPINION IN THE BELOW-NUMBERED MATTER HAS BEEN DELIVERED IN ACCORDANCE WITH UNIFORM RULES - COURT OF APPEAL, RULE 2-16.4 AND 2-16.5 THIS DAY MARCH 17, 2020 TO THE TRIAL JUDGE, CLERK OF COURT, COUNSEL OF RECORD AND ALL PARTIES NOT REPRESENTED BY COUNSEL, AS LISTED BELOW:
19-CA-484
E-NOTIFIED 40TH DISTRICT COURT (CLERK) HONORABLE J. STERLING SNOWDY (DISTRICT JUDGE) HARRY E. FORST (APPELLANT) DAVID K. PERSONS (APPELLEE)
MAILED ANGELICA P. DUBINSKY (ATTORNEY) ONE GALLERIA BOULEVARD SUITE 1400 METAIRIE, LA 70001
