Case Information
*1
[This opinion has been published in
Ohio Official Reports
at
T HE TATE EX REL . Q UALITY T OWER S ERVICE , I NC ., A PPELLANT , v . I NDUSTRIAL OMMISSION OF HIO ET AL ., A PPELLEES .
[Cite as
State ex rel. Quality Tower Serv., Inc. v. Indus. Comm
.,
Workers’ compensation—Alleged violation of specific safety requirement
concerning suspension straps—Ohio Adm.Code 4121:1-3-08(G)—Writ of mandamus vacating Industrial Commission’s award of violation of a specific safety requirement granted, when.
(No. 98-1117—Submitted January 11, 2000—Decided March 15, 2000.) A PPEAL from the Court of Appeals for Franklin County, No. 97APD04-523. Quality Tower Service, Inc. (“QTS”), appellant, sought a writ of mandamus requiring appellee Industrial Commission of Ohio to vacate its order granting an award of additional workers’ compensation to appellees Theresa Garaux, widow of John D. Garaux, and Richard D. Reed for QTS’s violation of a specific safety requirement (“VSSR”). The Court of Appeals for Franklin County denied the writ, finding that the commission did not abuse its discretion in granting the VSSR award. QTS appeals as of right. Decedent Garaux was killed and Reed was severely injured while
dismantling a two-to-three-hundred-foot communications tower for QTS. They were belted to a “gin pole,” an antenna-like structure used to support tower technicians during the dismantling process, when the synthetic straps suspending the structure failed and caused the gin pole, Garaux, and Reed to fall thirty or forty feet to the ground. The straps failed because, contrary to the direct order of QTS president and general manager Mark A. Pyron, Garaux rigged the gin pole with “ultralight straps” rather than the stronger straps that Pyron had provided for this purpose. After their workers’ compensation claims were allowed, Reed and
Garaux’s widow alleged that QTS had violated, among other safety regulations, Ohio Adm.Code 4121:1-3-08(G). Reed claimed a violation of division (G)(2), which prohibits employers from exceeding the rated capacity of synthetic webbing. Garaux’s widow claimed a violation of division (G)(2) and also of division (G)(1)(b), which requires certain employers to label synthetic web slings with the “[r]ated capabilities for the type of hitch.” QTS conceded that inadequate suspension straps had caused Reed’s
injury and Garaux’s death and that the straps were not properly labeled. But QTS also established that Garaux had used his own ultralight straps to rig the gin pole, that Pyron had expressly directed him to use the company’s stronger straps and not the ultralight straps, and that QTS’s straps were properly labeled. Thus, QTS argued that Garaux was unilaterally negligent, that his conduct had caused the accident and, therefore, that QTS had neither committed a VSSR nor caused the claimants’ injuries. The commission found that QTS had violated Ohio Adm.Code
4121:1-3-08(G)(2) with respect to Reed because inadequate suspension straps had been used to rig the gin pole from which he fell. With respect to Garaux, the commission found a violation of Ohio Adm.Code 4121:1-3-08(G)(2) and (G)(1)(b) and that he was not unilaterally negligent. The commission reasoned that these provisions did not distinguish between whether equipment belonged to the company or an employee. Moreover, the commission inferred that if Garaux’s ultralight straps had been properly labeled, he likely would not have used them, opting instead for the heavier-duty rigging provided by QTS.
January Term, 2000
{¶ 6} The court of appeals agreed with the commission, finding that QTS’s failure to label Garaux’s ultralight straps violated Ohio Adm.Code 4121:1-3- 08(G)(1)(b) and (2) and caused the death and injuries at issue.
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Gibson & Robbins-Penniman, J. Miles Gibson and Kelly A. Willis , for appellant.
Betty D. Montgomery , Attorney General, and Gerald H. Waterman , Assistant Attorney General, for appellee Industrial Commission of Ohio.
Kegler, Brown, Hill & Ritter and Timothy T. Tullis , for appellee Theresa Garaux.
W. Michael Shay , for appellee Richard D. Reed.
Per Curiam . The dispositive issue in this case is: Did QTS comply with Ohio Adm.Code 4121:1-3-08(G) so that it is not responsible for the alleged VSSRs? For the following reasons, we hold that QTS did comply with this specific safety regulation and that Garaux unilaterally violated the rule. Accordingly, we reverse the court of appeals’ judgment and grant the requested writ of mandamus. QTS contends that it complied with Ohio Adm.Code 4121:1-03- 08(G) because it provided Garaux and Reed “properly marked equipment more than suitable for the job,” Pyron told Garaux on site to use the company’s equipment and not his own, and Garaux ignored the instruction. We agree. This case is an example of what has become known as “unilateral
negligence,” a defense to VSSR liability that has been described as applying “only
where the claimant
deliberately
renders an otherwise complying device
noncompliant [
sic
, nonconforming].” (Emphasis added.)
State ex rel. R.E.H. Co.
v. Indus. Comm.
(1997),
mainly on
State ex rel. Cotterman v. St. Marys Foundry
(1989),
boundaries of the unilateral negligence defense,
Pressware
at 288, 707 N.E.2d at
939;
Martin Painting
at 339, 678 N.E.2d at 211;
State ex rel. Northern
Petrochemical Co., Nortech Div. v. Indus. Comm.
(1991),
January Term, 2000
requirement. at 164,
synthetic web straps adequate to hoist Garaux, Reed, and the gin pole. This is all that Ohio Adm.Code 4121:1-3-08(G) required. [1] Thus, QTS complied with this rule and did not commit a VSSR. Moreover, while appellees offer Cotterman as authority for holding
QTS responsible for this tragic accident, the absolute duty of compliance recognized in Cotterman is too strict and has not been enforced for this reason. For example, in Northern Petrochemical Co., we found no VSSR liability when an employee died after falling out of an unsecured lift cage. Since the operating employees had been trained and warned to check that the cage was securely attached to a forklift mechanism, and the accident resulted purely from employee carelessness in failing to adequately inspect, we did not penalize the employer for the employee’s conduct. Similarly, in State ex rel. Mayle v. Indus. Comm . (1999), 86 Ohio
St.3d 74,
“Synthetic webbing (nylon, polyester and polypropylene) “(1) The employer shall have each synthetic web sling marked or coded to show “(a) Name or trademark of manufacturer.
“(b) Rated capacities for the type of hitch.
“(c) Type of material. “(2) Rated capacity shall not be exceeded.”
S C safety requirement by supplying safety belts for the employee’s use; the employee just never wore them. Thus again, we refused to penalize the complying employer for the employee’s mistake. QTS did everything that could reasonably be expected to comply
with Ohio Adm.Code 4121:1-3-08(G). Pyron provided sufficient equipment and directly ordered Garaux to use it. Pyron did not have to rig the gin pole himself or check Garaux’s work to make sure that Garaux had followed his instructions. . In view of this compliance, QTS’s actions did not constitute a VSSR or cause Garaux’s death and Reed’s injury. The court of appeals’ judgment, therefore, is reversed, and a writ of
mandamus is granted to vacate the commission’s VSSR award.
Judgment reversed and writ granted.
M OYER , C.J., P FEIFER , OOK and L UNDBERG S TRATTON , JJ., concur. D OUGLAS , R ESNICK and F.E. S WEENEY , JJ., dissent.
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A LICE R OBIE R ESNICK , J., dissenting . I would affirm the judgment of the court of appeals.
D OUGLAS and F.E. WEENEY , JJ., concur in the foregoing dissenting opinion.
