OPINION OF THE COURT
Thе issue on this appeal in a summary judgment setting is whether plaintiff Thompson, a general employee of Applied Transportation Service (ATS), was properly determined to be a special employee of Grummаn Aerospace Corp. (Grumman) as a matter of law. If so, Thompson’s instant common-law action against Grumman is barred because of the exclusive workers’ compensation benefits Thompson received from ATS. The unсontroverted record supports Grumman’s assertion that from the time Thompson was assigned to work exclusively at its plant until his accident one year later, Grumman exerted comprehensive control over every facet of his work. The Appellate Division correctly determined that Thompson was a special employee of Grumman. We therefore affirm the order granting summary judgment to defendant Grumman on its affirmative defense of workеrs’ compensation.
Thompson, an experienced sheet metal mechanic, was recruited and hired by ATS in January 1986 to work at defendant Grumman pursuant to a "Purchase Order” agreement between ATS and Grumman. Under that agreement, ATS recruited and provided trained, experienced candidates for employment at Grumman’s Bethpage Operations Center to meet the job descriptions and specifications furnished in advance by Grumman. ATS submitted resumes of qualified applicants to Grumman representatives for consideration; Grumman had the right to interview the candidates and to make the "final selection”. Grumman fixed the hourly wages and benefits; ATS provided Thompson’s paycheck, carried workers’ compensation, liability and unemployment insurance, and withheld Social Security. ATS billed Grumman for labor at a base rate multiplied by a factor which included all ATS costs for "labor, overhead and profit”. Only Grumman could terminate Thompson’s assignment to its facility. ATS was precluded from substituting, reassigning or removing person
It is uncontroverted that Thompson performed work exclusively for Grumman at its Bethpage facility from the time he was recruited and hired by ATS for Grumman until his injury apрroximately one year later. He reported daily to a Grumman supervisor, Dan Schmidt, who assigned, supervised, instructed, oversaw, monitored and directed his work duties on a daily basis. Thompson acknowledged Schmidt as his "supervisor”. While the ATS Director of Personnel delivered Thompson’s paycheck each week and "commented” on his job performance, there were no ATS supervisory personnel assigned to or present at the Grumman jobsitе.
After he was injured, Thompson filed for and received workers’ compensation benefits based on his employment with ATS. He then commenced this negligence action against Grumman. Grumman asserted as an affirmative defense in its answer and, after discovery, in its motion for summary judgment, that Thompson was its special employee and that his acceptance of workers’ compensation benefits barred this action. Plaintiff cross-moved to dismiss that workers’ compensation affirmative defense.
Supreme Court denied Grumman’s motion and granted Thompson’s cross motion, finding as a matter of law that Thompson was an employee of ATS only and was not a special employee of Grumman. That decision was based on language in the ATS-Grumman contract which provided that "[a]ll persons employed by [ATS] and assigned to work under any Purchase Order shall at all times be employees of [ATS] and not of Grumman.”
Thе Appellate Division unanimously reversed, concluding as a matter of law that Thompson was in the special employ of Grumman when he was injured (
Thompson claims that the ATS-Grumman contract makes him an employee of ATS only. Alternatively, he urges that, at
We have consistently found as a general proposition that a general employee of one employer may also be in the special employ of another, notwithstanding the general еmployer’s responsibility for payment of wages and for maintaining workers’ compensation and other employee benefits (Stone v Bigley Bros.,
We recognize that a person’s categorization as a special employee is usually a question of fact (Stone v Bigley Bros., supra; Irwin v Klein, supra, at 486-487; Wawrzonek v Central Hudson Gas & Elec. Corp.,
Indeed, though recognized as an exception to the general approach and analysis, we have hеld that the determination of
Many factors are weighed in deciding whether a special employment relationship exists, and generally no one is decisive (Braxton v Mendelson,
The record in this case is uncontroverted in that respect and supports the conclusion that Thompson was Grumman’s special employee. Although ATS was responsible for Thompson’s paychecks and employee benefits, all essential, locational and commonly recognizable components of the work relationship were between Thompson and Grumman. As soon as ATS hired Thompsоn, it permanently assigned him exclusively to Grumman’s plant on a full-time basis for the entire year prior to the work-related accident at Grumman’s facility. Thompson considered a Grumman supervisor to be his boss and he knowingly accеpted the terms of his exclusive work at Grumman; thus, he was aware of and consented to his special employee status (1C Larson, Workers’] Compensation Law
Plaintiffs motion papers fail tо raise any material, disputable fact. The only conclusion that may reasonably be reached on this record is that Grumman was, at the operative time, the special employer of Thompson. The indicia of special employment in this particular case convincingly and as a matter of law support the Appellate Division analysis and order.
While the ATS-Grumman contract provides that ATS is to be considered Thompson’s emрloyer, that provision alone is insufficient to establish as a matter of law that Thompson was not also a special employee of Grumman. Moreover, in the context of this record, it fails to raise a question of faсt as to his special employment status, as Thompson contends and the trial court concluded. First, we note that while this issue may in some cases turn on the terms of a written contract (see, Braxton v Mendelson,
Therefore, Thompson’s receipt of workers’ compensation benefits as an employee of ATS is his exclusive remedy and he is barred from bringing this negligence action against Grumman (Workers’ Compensation Law §§ 11, 29 [6]; Burlew v American Mut. Ins. Co.,
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed, with costs.
Chief Judge Wachtler and Judges Simons, Kaye, Alexander, Titone and Hancock, Jr., concur.
Order affirmed, with costs.
