GLORY STRICKLAND, Special Administrator of the Estate of David Chambers, Sr., Plaintiff/Respondent, v. STEPHENS PRODUCTION COMPANY; and STEPHENS PRODUCTION COMPANY CONTINENTAL PROPERTIES, LLC, Defendants/Petitioners, ERICK FLOWBACK SERVICES, LLC; DMR ON-SITE SERVICES LLC; and DUSTIN ROLLINS, Defendants.
Case Number: 115635
THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF OKLAHOMA
Decided: 01/23/2018
2018 OK 6
CERTIORARI TO THE DISTRICT COURT OF OKLAHOMA COUNTY, STATE OF OKLAHOMA, HONORABLE THOMAS E. PRINCE
¶0 An employee of a trucking company was killed while on the job at an oil-well site. The employee‘s surviving daughter brought a wrongful death action in the District Court of Oklahoma County against the owner and operator of the well site, Stephens Production Company. Stephens Production Company moved to dismiss the case pursuant to
AFFIRMED
Micheal L. Darrah, E. Edd Pritchett, Jr., David L. Kearney, Durbin, Larimore & Bialick, Oklahoma City, OK, for Defendants/Petitioners
T. Luke Abel, Abel Law Firm, Oklahoma City, OK, for Plaintiff/Respondent
Mithun Mansinghani, Michael K. Velchik, Office of the Attorney General, Oklahoma City, OK
GURICH, V.C.J.
Facts & Procedural History
¶1 On October 6, 2014, David Chambers, who was an employee of RDT Trucking, Inc., was dispatched to an oil-well site in Crescent, Oklahoma, to pick up waste water. Stephens Production Company and Stephens Production Company Continental Properties, LLC (SPC) were the owners and operators of the well. Upon arrival at the well, Mr. Chambers worked on or around a device known as a “heater treater.” During this work, Mr. Chambers suffered severe burns, which eventually led to his death.1 Glory Strickland, Mr. Chambers’ surviving daughter and Special Administrator of the Estate, filed a wrongful death lawsuit against SPC and others in the District Court of Oklahoma County,2 alleging negligence for failure to properly operate, maintain, and inspect the well, and failure to properly warn of dangerous conditions at the well site.3
¶2 SPC filed a motion to dismiss, claiming immunity under the exclusive remedy doctrine found in § 5 of the Oklahoma Administrative Workers’ Compensation Act (OAWCA), which provides in part that “any operator or owner of an oil or gas well . . . shall be deemed to be an intermediate or principal employer” for purposes of extending immunity from civil liability. As the owner and operator of the well, SPC argued it was statutorily immune from suit in the district court. Strickland responded to the motion to dismiss and argued that § 5 was an unconstitutional special law. Strickland also argued that the Legislature‘s factual determination that all oil and gas well owners and operators are principal or intermediate employers, for purposes of immunity from civil liability, violated the constitutional principle of separation of powers.4
¶3 The district court denied the motion to dismiss and found that § 5 is an unconstitutional special law prohibited by
Standard of Review
¶4 At issue in this case is the constitutionality of
Analysis
¶5 Section 5(A) of Title 85A provides:
The rights and remedies granted to an employee subject to the provisions of the Administrative Workers’ Compensation Act shall be exclusive of all other rights and remedies of the employee, his legal representative, dependents, next of kin, or anyone else claiming rights to recovery on behalf of the employee against the employer, or any principal, officer, director, employee, stockholder, partner, or prime contractor of the employer on account of injury, illness, or death. Negligent acts of a co-employee may not be imputed to the employer. No role, capacity, or persona of any employer, principal, officer, director, employee, or stockholder other than that existing in the role of employer of the employee shall be relevant for consideration for purposes of this act, and the remedies and rights provided by this act shall be exclusive regardless of the multiple roles, capacities, or personas the employer may be deemed to have. For the purpose of extending the immunity of this section, any operator or owner of an oil or gas well or other operation for exploring for, drilling for, or producing oil or gas shall be deemed to be an intermediate or principal employer for services performed at a drill site or location with respect to injured or deceased workers whose immediate employer was hired by such operator or owner at the time of the injury or death.7
Title 85A does not define the terms “intermediate employer,” “principal employer,” or “immediate employer” as used in § 5(A). However, under previous versions of the workers’ compensation statutes, principal employers, or statutory employers as they were known, were secondarily liable to an injured worker for workers’ compensation benefits and immune from tort liability in the district court if a statutory employment relationship existed between the injured worker, his immediate employer, and the principal employer.8 To determine whether a statutory or vertical employment relationship existed,9 this Court applied a three-tiered test which asked:
[W]hether the work being performed by the independent contractor is specialized or non-specialized. If the work is specialized per se, then the hirer is not the statutory employer of the independent contractor. If the work is not specialized per se, the second tier asks whether the work being performed by the independent contractor is the type of work that, in the particular hirer‘s business, normally gets done by employees or normally gets done by independent contractors. If the work normally gets done by independent contractors, then the hirer is not the statutory employer of the independent contractor. If the work is normally performed by employees, the third tier focuses on the moment in time the worker was injured, and asks whether the hirer was engaged in the type of work being performed by the independent contractor at the time the worker was hurt. If not, then the hirer is not the statutory employer of the independent contractor.10
¶6 This test, commonly referred to as the necessary and integral test, was codified in 2011 when the Legislature enacted the Workers’ Compensation Code.11 In 2011, the Legislature also determined, by statutory enactment, that all oil and gas well owners or operators were principal employers for purposes of immunity from civil liability.12 In 2014, with the enactment of the OAWCA and the repeal of the Workers’ Compensation Code, the Legislature removed the provision found in the 2011 Code that codified the necessary and integral test, but kept the provision from the 2011 Code that determined all oil and gas well owners or operators are intermediate or principal employers for purposes of immunity from civil liability. See
¶7 The term “principal employer” only appears twice in Title 85A—in § 5(A), referred to above, wherein oil and gas owners and operators are deemed principal employers, and § 5(E), which states that immunity does not extend to other employers on the same job site as the injured worker “if such other employer does not stand in the position of intermediate or principal employer to the immediate employer of the injured or deceased worker.” See
¶8 However, Title 85A does not define principal employer, intermediate employer, or immediate employer. Thus, we must assume that when the Legislature enacted Title 85A it was “familiar with the extant judicial construction [of those terms] then in force.”14 “‘Unless a contrary intent clearly appears or is plainly expressed, the terms of amendatory acts retaining the same or substantially similar language as the provisions formerly in force will be accorded the identical construction to that placed upon them by preexisting case law.‘”15 The question then becomes whether the Legislature can statutorily determine that certain employers, namely owners or operators of an oil or gas well, are principal employers for purposes of extending immunity from civil liability regardless of the actual employment relationship between the operator or owner, the immediate employer, and the injured employee.
¶9
¶10 We have said that a statute is a general law if it relates to persons or things as a class rather than relating to particular persons or things, and a statute is a special law where a part of the entire class of similarly affected persons is separated for different treatment. Goodyear Tire, 2000 OK 41, ¶ 5, 5 P.3d at 597; Reynolds, 1988 OK 88, ¶ 14, 760 P.2d at 822. Section 5(A) operates uniformly on all employees and employers, but for the last sentence. The last sentence of § 5(A) carves out a special subclass of employers, specifically oil and gas employers, who are automatically deemed principal employers and given immunity in the district court regardless of whether the employer would be considered a principal employer under the facts of the case. All other employers seeking immunity from civil liability under the principal employer doctrine must present factual proof that a statutory employment relationship exists pursuant to the necessary and integral test.17
¶11 Thus, the question becomes whether the last sentence of § 5(A), an evident special law, is a permissible special law. Under
¶12 SPC argues that oil and gas production involves complex processes including exploration, drilling, and production, and that such processes are routinely performed by different specialists subcontracted by the owner of the well, making the oil and gas industry unique. However, many other industries also engage in complex processes and utilize subcontractors for specialized work. Thus, without more, we cannot conclude that the use of complex processes or the use of subcontractors to perform certain specialized work is distinct to the oil and gas industry so as to warrant differential treatment.
¶13 SPC also argues that oil and gas well owners and operators need “certainty” regarding their exposure to civil liability.18 But employers in other industries would, in all likelihood, also prefer to have certainty regarding their exposure to liability. Thus, certainty regarding immunity from liability is not a distinctive characteristic of the oil and gas industry that warrants special treatment. SPC has not presented any evidence specific to the oil and gas industry that would warrant differential treatment or furnish a practical and reasonable basis for discrimination. The last sentence of § 5(A) is an unconstitutional special law under
Severability
¶14 In determining whether a “non-offending statutory provision[] may survive as valid after the clause[] rejected as invalid [is] separated from the whole,”19 we ask whether the voided provision was “‘so inseparably connected with and so dependent upon‘” the remaining portions of the statute such that “‘the surviving provisions would not have been otherwise enacted.‘”20 Section 5(A) of the OAWCA provides the exclusive remedy doctrine, which is “at the heart of the essential Grand Bargain between employers and employees . . . [and] is workers’ compensation.” Vasquez v. Dillard‘s, Inc., 2016 OK 89, 381 P.3d 768 (Gurich, J., concurring specially ¶ 26). Thus, we must conclude that the Legislature undoubtedly would have enacted the remaining portion of § 5(A) without the invalid, last sentence. Therefore, we sever only the last sentence of § 5(A) and leave the remainder of § 5(A) intact.21
Conclusion
¶15 This case is no different from Goodyear Tire,22 a case decided by this Court more than fifteen years ago, wherein the Legislature singled out one specific industry for special treatment under the workers’ compensation system. This Court disapproved of such special treatment in that case because no valid reason existed for the distinction. We adhere to the teachings of Goodyear Tire today and find no valid reason exists for the special treatment of the oil and gas industry as displayed by the last sentence of § 5(A). The last sentence of § 5(A) of Title 85A is an impermissible and unconstitutional special law under
AFFIRMED
¶16 Combs, C.J., Gurich, V.C.J., Kauger, Winchester, Edmondson, Colbert, Reif, JJ., concur.
¶17 Wyrick, J., recused.
