delivered the opinion of the Court.
Rafael Casados suffered a fatal, work-related injury while working for two employers that both had workers’ compensation coverage. Casados’s parents sued one of the employers. The principal issue in this case is whether workers’ compensation was the exclusive remedy to Casados’s parents, which would bar their suit against Port Elevator. The court of аppeals held that the policy at issue did not cover Casa-dos because he was a temporary worker and affirmed the judgment Casados’s parents obtained against Port Elevator.
Rafael Casados worked for Staff Force, Inc. (Staff Force), a temporary staffing agency. Staff Force provided Casados to perform general labor for Pоrt Elevator-Brownsville, LLC (Port Elevator) at its grain storage facility in April 2005. Casa-dos suffered a fatal, work-related injury his third day on the job. Staff Force and Port Elevator both carried workers’ compensation insurance. Staff Force’s carrier was Dallas Fire Insurance Company (Dallas Fire) and Port Elevator’s carrier was Texas Mutual Insurance Company (Texas Mutual). The TWCA requires workers’ compensation insurers to reimburse burial expenses for employees such as Casados who had no spouse, children, or dependents, and to pay a certain sum into the subsequent injury fund. Tex. Lab.Code §§ 403.007, 408.186.
Port Elevator’s workers’ compensation policy with Texas Mutual covered all of Port Elevator’s places of employment. The policy requires Texas Mutual to “pay promptly when due the benefits required ... by workers compensation law.” The policy also estimates the premiums due by classifying employees and assessing the risk fоr each classification. The policy has classification codes for “clerical office employees” and “grain elevator operation & local managers, drivers.” The policy has no exclusion for temporary workers such as Casados.
Port Elevator raised the affirmative defense that workers’ compensation was the plaintiffs’ exclusive remedy. Both sides moved for summary judgment on the exclusive-remedy defense. Port Elevator argued it was a workers’ compensation subscriber, Casados was covered, and workers’ compensation was the exclusive remedy. Casados’s parents argued the policy did not cover Casados because: (1) Port Elevator did not pay premiums for temporary emрloyees; (2) Casados was not covered by any code classification; and (3) Texas Mutual denied coverage. The trial court granted the plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment and denied Port Elevator’s — allowing a trial on the negligence and gross negligence claims.
The jury found Port Elevator negligent but not grossly negligent. After factoring in a settlement credit, the trial court entered judgmеnt on the jury’s award on the negligence claim. The court awarded $515,167.09 to Casados’s estate for pain, mental anguish, and pre-judgment interest and $2,189,967.76 to Casados’s parents for mental anguish, loss of companionship and society, and pre-judgment interest. The court of appeals affirmed.
Because we conclude that Port Elevator conclusively established it subscribed to workers’ compensation insurance, that Ca-sados was an employee, and that he suffered a work-related injury, we reverse the court of appeals’ judgment and render judgment in favor of Port Elevator.
Unlike workers’ compensation laws in every other state, the TWCA allows private Texas employers to choose whether to subscribe to workers’ compensation insurance. Tex. Lab.Code § 406.002(a); Lawrence v. CDB Servs., Inc.,
The Legislature intended the TWCA to benefit both employees and employers. For employees, the TWCA allows them to recover workers’ compensation benefits for injuries in the course and scope of employment without proving fault by the employer and without regard to their negligence or that of their coworkers. Tex. Lab.Code § 406.031; HCBeck, Ltd. v. Rice,
Although the TWCA specifies an employer may subscribe to workers’ compensation insurance by generally obtaining or declining coverage,
Statutes and the common law provide certain limited exceptions that allow an employer to split its workforce — but no exception applies here. First, an employer may operate more than one distinct kind of business and elect workers’ compensation insurance for only one of its businesses. Sullivan,
An employee may have more than one employer within thе meaning of the TWCA, and each employer who subscribes to workers’ compensation insurance may raise the exclusive-remedy provision as a bar to claims about the injury. See Garza v. Exel Logistics, Inc.,
Here, the parties agree that Casados was an employee of both Staff Force and Port Elevator and that Port Elevator was a workers’ compensation subscriber at the
III.
Casados’s parents would have us adopt an additional, intent-based exception to the rule against splitting workforces. Specifically, Casadоs’s parents claim that Port Elevator intended to and did exclude Casa-dos from coverage under its workers’ compensation policy because: (1) Port Elevator did not pay premiums for temporary workers like Casados; (2) Casados was a temporary employee whose job classification was not listed in Port Elevator’s policy; and (3) Texas Mutual denied сoverage. We disagree that an employer can contract around the rule against split workforces or that the above three factors mean that Casados was not covered by Port Elevator’s policy.
The exception that Casados’s parents urge us to adopt would undermine the very purpose of our long-standing rule that an employer may not (intentionally or unintentionally) split its workforce. An employer may not choose to exclude certain employees from coverage unless a statutory or common-law exception to the rule against split workforces applies. A key purpose of the rule against split workforces is that employees know whether they have the protections of workers’ compensation coverage.
Casados’s parents’ three specific assertions are also unavailing. Their first assertion is that Casados was not covered because Port Elevator excluded him by failing to pay premiums for temporary workers. This assertion fails for two reasons. First, premiums are an issue between the employer and the insurer; they do not affect the employee’s coverage.
Casados’s parents’ second assertion is that Casados was not covered by any job classification in Port Elevator’s workers’ compensation policy. As addressed in Part II, the rulе against split workforces requires that all employees be covered— absent a limited statutory or common-law exception. Because no exception applies, it does not matter whether Casados was covered by a code classification.
Third, Casados’s parents assert that Texas Mutual’s denial of coverage means that Casadоs was not covered. Ca-sados was covered by Staff Force’s policy with Dallas Fire as well as Port Elevator’s policy with Texas Mutual. Casados had the right to pursue workers’ compensation benefits from Dallas Fire, Texas Mutual, or both. See Wingfoot,
In conclusion, because Port Elevator subscribed to workers’ compensation insurance, Casados was an employee of Port Elevator, and he suffered a work-related injury, the TWCA-provided remedy against Texas Mutual was the exclusive remedy for his injury. Casados’s parents’ negligence claim against Port Elevator is barred. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the court of appeals and render judgment for Port Elevator.
Notes
. In 2007, the Legislature amended the TWCA to also provide 104 weeks of death benefit payments to non-dependent parents in this situation. Tex. Lab.Code § 408.182(d — I).
. Tex. Lab.Code §§ 406.002-.003. Other provisions of the TWCA confirm that an employer’s election is generally for its workforce as a whole. See id. § 406.004 (requiring employer to notify divisiоn if it elects not to obtain coverage); id. § 401.011(18) (defining "employer” as "a person who makes a contract of hire, employs one or more employees, and has workers’ compensation insurance coverage”); id. § 401.012(a) (defining "employee” as "each person in the service of another under a contract for hire”); id. § 406.031(a) ("An insurance carrier is liable for compensation for an employee’s injury without regard to fault or negligence if; (1) at the time of injury, the employee is subject to this subtitle; and (2) the injury arises out of and in the course and scope of employment.”); id. § 406.005(c) ("Each employer shall post a notice of whether the employer has workers’ compensation insurance coverage at conspicuous locations at the employer's place of business as necessary to provide reasonable notice to the employees.”).
. See also Wingfoot Enters. v. Alvarado,
. See Wingfoot,
