RENDERED: OCTOBER 29, 2015
TO BE PUBLISHED
oSuprrittr (Conti of lArtrturitu
2014-SC-000589-CL
IN RE:
NANCY J. MCCARTY; NANCY J. MCCARTY,
AS PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE OF THE
ESTATE OF DAVID W. MCCARTY,
DECEASED; AND LIBERTY MUTUAL
AGENCY MARKETS
THE UNITED STATES
V. COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
NO. 13-6484/6499
COVOL FUELS NO. 2, LLC (A UTAH
CORPORATION)
OPINION OF THE COURT BY JUSTICE VENTERS
CERTIFYING THE LAW
The United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit certified to this
Court pursuant to CR 76.37(1) a question of Kentucky law. The certified
question is:
Whether a subcontractor injured while installing a garage door
on an unfinished building at a mine site may maintain a
wrongful death action against a mine operator under a
negligence per se theory for alleged violations of Kentucky
mining [statutes and] regulations, codified in KRS §§ 351-352
and KAR §§ 805-825.[ 1 1
1 While the certified question refers to "KAR §§ 805-825," which could be
interpreted as referring to KAR Sections 805 through 825, the intervening regulatory
titles (e.g., Department of Insurance (KAR § 806) and Department of Charitable
Gaming (KAR § 820)) bear no relationship at all to the issues we address. We construe
the certified question as referring only to KAR Sections 805 (ENERGY AND
ENVIRONMENT CABINET) and 825 (ENERGY AND ENVIRONMENT CABINET -
KENTUCKY MINE SAFETY REVIEW COMMISSION).
Based upon our review of the applicable Kentucky law and the facts relevant to
this inquiry, and for the reasons set forth below, we conclude that KRS
Chapters 350 2 , 351 and 352 and Kentucky Administrative Regulations (KAR)
Sections 805 and 825 do not support a wrongful death action predicated upon
a theory of negligence per se in the factual context presented here. 3
I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
Covol Fuels (Covol) operates a coal mine in Muhlenberg County,
Kentucky. Covol contracted with H 8s B Builders for the construction of a post-
frame structure at Covol's mine site. H 86 B subcontracted with Evansville
.Garage Doors for the installation of an 1,800-pound overhead, commercial-
grade garage door for the building. David McCarty and Jeremy Means,
employees of Evansville Garage Doors, were dispatched to the Covol mine site
to install the heavy door. McCarty was highly skilled in this specialized aspect
of the construction industry, having installed approximately 1,000 garage
doors.
McCarty was killed during the installation of the door at the Covol site.
At the time of the accident, he was standing on an unsecured stepladder
checking the tension spring mechanism on the door, which was suspended
directly over his head in the open position. Suddenly, the door descended and
2 Although the certified question does not refer to KRS Chapter 350, the Estate
argues for its application and so we include it in our consideration of the issue.
3 We note at this point that our analysis is limited to claims based upon alleged
violations of the identified statutes and regulations. We do not address the viability of
any claims or potential claims based upon common law theories of premises liability
because such claims are outside the scope of the certified question.
2
struck one of the rails of McCarty's stepladder. Under the weight of the door,
the stepladder collapsed. McCarty was wearing a safety harness but it was not
secured to anything so he fell, striking his head and suffering a fatal injury.
The Federal Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA) investigated
the circumstances of McCarty's death because it occurred on property
containing a coal mine. The MSHA inspector concluded that McCarty's fall
resulted from the placement of the ladder directly below the door opening,
coupled with the installers' failure to follow the manufacturer's installation
instructions requiring that the door be blocked from motion so that it would
not move during the installation process.
McCarty's widow, Nancy J. McCarty, Individually and as the Personal
Representative of McCarty's Estate (collectively, the Estate) brought a wrongful
death action against Covol alleging, among other things, that Covol was
negligent per se for violating various coal mine safety statutes and regulations.
After a period of discovery, Covol moved for summary judgment on all claims.
The federal district court granted summary judgment. In its evaluation of the
negligence per se claim, which is our only concern, the district court reasoned
that at the time of the accident, McCarty was not within the class of persons
protected by Kentucky's mine safety laws and that his accidental death did not
occur under circumstances that our mine safety laws were intended to prevent.
The Estate appealed to the Sixth Circuit challenging, among other issues,
the district court's rejection of its negligence per se theory. We subsequently
granted the Sixth Circuit's request to certify the law in regards to whether the
3
statutes and regulations relied upon by the Estate were intended: 1) to protect
employees of independent contractors, such as garage door installers who, like
McCarty, were injured while working in the proximity of a mine site; and 2) to
prevent the type of accident that caused McCarty's death.
II. ANALYSIS
In 1942, the Kentucky General Assembly enacted KRS 446.070 to codify
the common law principles of negligence per se. St. Luke Hosp., Inc. v. Straub,
354 S.W.3d 529, 534 (Ky. 2011). KRS 446.070 provides: "A person injured by
the violation of any statute may recover from the offender such damages as he
sustained by reason of the violation, although a penalty or forfeiture is imposed
for such violation."
We said in Straub that "in accord with traditional legal principles related
to the common law concept of negligence per se, [KRS 446.070] applies
when . . . the plaintiff comes within the class of persons intended to be
protected by the statute [alleged to have been violated]." Id. Our case law also
recognizes two other conditions which must be satisfied for the application of
KRS 446.070. First, "[t]he statute must have been specifically intended to
prevent the type of occurrence that took place." Hargis v. Baize, 168 S.W.3d
36, 46 (Ky. 2005). Second, "the violation [of the statute] must have been a
substantial factor in causing the result." Id.
At this point, it must be noted that KRS 446.070 expressly references
only causes of action for "person[s] injured by the violation of any statute." No
reference is made in the statute to injuries that result from the violation of an
4
administrative regulation. Straub addresses that issue. When the violation of
an administrative regulation is at issue, "KRS 446.070 creates a cause of
action in [these] narrow circumstances . . . (1) the regulation must be
consistent with the enabling legislation and (2) it must apply to the safety of
the citizenry." Straub, 354 S.W.3d at 535 (citing Centre College v. Trzop, 127
S.W.3d 562, 567 (Ky. 2003)).
Furthermore, when a provision of the enabling statute for the
promulgation of administrative regulations expressly mandates compliance
with those regulations, the violation of the regulation is the equivalent of a
violation of a statute, thereby bringing the regulation within the scope of KRS
446.070. Hargis, 168 S.W.3d at 41. With these fundamental principles in
mind, we proceed to an examination of the statutes and regulations asserted by
McCarty's estate and his widow to determine whether a negligence per se claim
can be based upon those provisions.
A. KRS Chapters 351 and 352
We first consider the statutory provisions identified as applicable to the
Estate's negligence per se claims. The certified question generally refers to KRS
Chapters 351 and 352; the Estate specifically cites KRS 352.280, KRS
352.330, and KRS 352.340.
KRS Chapter 351 is titled "DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES"
and sets forth a multitude of statutory provisions applicable to the
organization, duties, and operations of that agency, which is the principal
agency overseeing mining operations in the Commonwealth. KRS 351.020 (the
5
Department of Natural Resources "shall administer all laws of the
Commonwealth relating to mines."). KRS 351.010(q) defines a "mine" as:
any open pit or any underground workings from which coal is
produced for sale, exchange, or commercial use, and all shafts,
slopes, drifts, or inclines leading thereto, and includes all buildings
and equipment, above or below the surface of the ground, used in
connection with the workings. Workings that are adjacent to each
other and under the same management, but which are
administered as distinct units, shall be considered a separate
mine[.]
(emphasis added).
Central to the Estate's argument is the assertion that McCarty's fatal
injury occurred at a "mine" because the garage door installation was being
performed at a building situated on a coal mine site. However, as emphasized
above in the statutory text, the only "buildings" that fall within the definition of
a "mine" are those being "used in connection with the workings [of the mine]."
As premised in the certified question itself, the structure upon which McCarty
was working was an "unfinished building." Apparently, at the time of the
accident, the building was under construction and was not being "used in
connection with the workings" of Covol's mining operations. Similarly, the
stepladder, harness, tools, and other equipment associated with the garage
door installation would not qualify as "equipment" within this statutory
definition because they were not being "used in connection with the workings"
of a "mine."
The Estate's invocation of KRS Chapter 351 is tenuous because the
Department of Natural Resources is tasked only with administrating coal
mining laws. The installation of a garage door on an unfinished building, even
6
though situated in proximity to a coal mine, lies outside the scope of KRS
Chapter 351 and the Department's bailiwick.
The criteria identified in Straub and Hargis for determining the
applicability of KRS 446.070 requires an assessment of the legislative intent
behind the statute: was the injured person among the class of individuals
intended to be protected by the statute, and was the occurrence of the kind
that the statute was designed to prevent? KRS 351.101, titled "Declaration of
legislative finding of fact," and KRS 351.241, titled "Statement of General
Assembly," provide critical insight into the legislative considerations
underpinning KRS Chapter 351. KRS 351.101 provides:
The General Assembly hereby finds and declares the following:
(1) The highest priority and concern of the Commonwealth must be
the health and safety of the coal industry's most valuable
resource, the miner.
(2) The continued prosperity of the coal industry is of primary
importance to the state.
(3) A high priority must be given to increasing the productivity and
competitiveness of the mines in this state.
(4) An inordinate number of miners are killed or injured during the
first few months of their experience in a mine and upon acquiring
new work assignments in a mine.
(5) These injuries result in the loss of life and serious injury to
miners and are an impediment to the future growth of the state's
coal industry.
(6) Mining is a technical occupation with various specialties
requiring individualized training and education.
(7) Injuries can be reduced through proper miner training,
education, and certification.
(8) Mine safety can be improved by the imposition and
enforcement of sanctions against licensed premises and certified
and noncertified personnel whose willful and repeated violations of
mine safety laws place miners in imminent danger of serious
injury or death.
(9) Abuse of illicit substances and alcohol in the mining industry
represents a serious threat to the health and safety of all miners.
7
Substance and alcohol abuse adversely affect the health and
safety of miners. Mine safety can be significantly improved by
establishing as a condition of certification that miners remain drug
and alcohol free.
(emphasis added).
Similarly, KRS 351.241 provides:
The General Assembly hereby finds and declares the following:
(1) Thousands of Kentuckians enter underground mines each day
to produce coal that is so vital to the economy of our nation and
the well-being of its people.
(2) The underground coal mine is a hazardous environment that
constantly requires the highest degree of safety consciousness on
the part of every individual.
(3) Despite training and a variety of safety efforts, each year coal
mines continue to take a heavy human toll: large numbers of
miners are injured; many are left permanently disabled; and a
lesser number pay the ultimate price--death.
(4) Many activities are performed by a variety of persons; therefore,
each coal miner is expected to learn and perform a large number
of tasks
(5) Miners frequently become engaged in unfamiliar tasks when
substituting for others or assisting a fellow worker.
(6) The American zeal for work and productivity very frequently
causes the miner to give second priority to normal safety measures
and precautions.
(7) Studies have demonstrated that experienced persons observing
and providing on-the-job counseling to individual miners
regarding their work habits can bring about a significant reduction
in underground mine accidents and fatalities.
(emphasis added).
These statutory provisions are dominated by references to miners and
the dangers miners confront while performing their jobs. In light of this
emphasis, these provisions signal that the class of persons the legislature
intended to protect by the statutory framework of KRS Chapter 351 is the
traditional coal miner and others associated with the process of extracting coal
8
who also are routinely exposed to the unique dangers and risks inherent to
coal mining. For the same reason, the dangers that these statutes purport to
address are the occupational hazards traditionally associated with mining coal
and working in a coal mining environment.
The Estate does not direct our attention to any specific provision from
KRS Chapter 351 in support of its negligence per se claim. We are unable to
identify any provisions within that chapter that impose upon coal mine
operators a special duty of care owed to independent contractors and
craftsmen who enter upon the premises to perform work unrelated to coal
mining. Of course, the traditional common law duty of a landholder to make
the property reasonably safe and to warn of unknown or latent dangers
remains applicable, see Lewis v. B & R Corporation, 56 S.W.3d 432, 437-38
(Ky. App. 2001), but that duty is outside the scope of the question we address.
Accordingly, we are constrained to conclude that the statutory text does not
support the theory that KRS Chapter 351 imposes statutory duties upon Covol,
the violation of which would support a negligence per se claim under KRS
446.070.
The certified question and the Estate's pleadings also refer to KRS
Chapter 352, which is styled: "MINING REGULATIONS." Chapter 352 sets
forth a host of provisions relating to mining operations, including certain safety
provisions aimed at reducing the dangers inherent to the coal mining
environment. Among the statutory subtitles contained in KRS Chapter 352 are
the following representative examples:
9
• 352.020 Mine ventilation plans — Methods of ventilation — Amount of air
required — Plan requirements.
• 352.090 Abandoned parts of mine to be posted — Sealing.
• 352.110 Mines to have two openings — Exception — Condemnation of land for
opening.
• 352.140 Operation of cages and cars.
• 352.161 Examination of conveyor belts.
• 352.220 Electricity in mines and surface installations.
• 352.241 Explosives and blasting devices in mines.
• 352.300 Stations for fire bosses — Persons not to pass or remove danger
signals.
• 352.550 Coercion of trade of miners prohibited.
A fair reading of KRS Chapter 352 in its entirety, as illustrated by the
above examples, fails to confirm the Estate's theory that the Chapter intended
to create duties owed by a coal mine operator to specialized workers whose
labor and injury are associated with coal mining only by the fortuitous
circumstance that they happen to take place on land occupied by a mining
operation. The Estate cites three provisions of KRS Chapter 352 in support of
its claim, which may be fairly abridged as follows:
1. KRS 352.280 - Examination of mine by properly certified person — Duties —
Frequency of examinations.
(1) In all mines the licensee, mine manager, or superintendent
shall employ one (1) or more properly certified persons.
(2) A properly certified person shall examine carefully, within
three (3) hours before each shift enters the mine:
(a) Every working place;
(b) All places adjacent to live workings;
(c) Every roadway where persons are required to work or
travel;
10
(d) All abandoned panels on the intake;
(e) Every set of seals on the intake; and
(f) All roof falls near active workings on the intake and on the
working sections.
(3) Before proceeding with the examination he shall see that the
air current is traveling its proper course.
(4) A properly certified person shall use approved gas detection
devices in the performance of the required examination and shall
examine the entrances to all worked-out and abandoned portions
adjacent to the intake roadways and working places under his
charge where explosive gas is likely to accumulate.
(6) If an explosive mixture of gas is discovered, the properly
certified person shall place a danger signal across the entrance to
every place where explosive gas is discovered or where immediate
danger is found to exist from any other cause. The signal shall be
sufficient warning to ensure that persons do not enter the area.
(7) When the mine is idle and workmen are required to go into
the mine, the section, portion, or part of the mine entered must be
inspected by a properly certified person within three (3) hours
before the workmen enter.
(8) Each week, a properly certified person designated by the mine
foreman shall examine each set of seals on the return, all
designated intake and return entries, and all escapeways.
(emphasis added).
2. KRS 352.330 - General duties of mine foreman -- Duty of licensee.
The mine foreman shall exercise general supervision over the
ventilating apparatus and the airways, traveling ways, working
places, pumps and drainage, and shall see that as the miners
advance their excavations proper breakthroughs are made as
required by law to properly ventilate the mine. He shall see that
employees are provided with sufficient props, cap pieces, and
timbers of suitable size, which shall be delivered to the working
place and shall see that the props are cut as square as practicable
at both ends and as near as practicable to the proper length
required or designated for the places where they are to be used.
The mine foreman shall see that the water is drained as nearly as
practicable out of the working places, and that the working places
are kept as free from water as practicable during working hours.
He shall see that every person employed to work in the mine
is, before beginning to work, instructed in the particular
danger incident to his work in the mine and furnished a copy
of the rules of the mine . . . . (emphasis added).
11
3. KRS 352.040 - Examination of mine by mine foreman or assistants —
Removal of dangers — Record.
(1) The mine foreman or his assistants shall visit and carefully
examine each working place in the mine at least every four (4)
hours while the mine employees are at work. He shall examine
as live workings, on regular inspections, all places in live sections
that are temporarily abandoned. . . . He shall see that every mine
liberating explosive gas is kept free of standing gas in all working
places and roadways, and that all accumulations of explosive or
noxious gases in the worked-out or abandoned portions of any
mine are removed as soon as possible after discovery. He shall
ensure that all preshift examinations are conducted by a certified
person and that examinations of conveyor belts have been
conducted. He shall not allow any person who may be endangered
by the presence of explosive or noxious gases to enter that
portion of the mine until the gases have been removed. He shall
direct and see that all dangerous places and the entrances to
worked-out and abandoned places in all mines are properly
barricaded across the openings, so that no person will enter, and
that danger signs are posted upon the barricade to warn persons of
existing danger . . . .
(2) The mine foreman or his assistants, fire bosses, or other
certified persons shall, at least once every week, travel and
examine all air courses, escapeways, the caches of self-
contained self-rescuer devices required by KRS 352.133, the
caches' contents, seals on the return, roads, and openings that
give access to old workings or pillar falls . . . .
(3) Examinations of conveyor belts shall be conducted by a
certified foreman or a certified belt examiner . . . . (emphasis
added).
The Estate posits that the duties created in these statutory provisions,
including the requirements for periodic inspections set forth in KRS 352.280
and KRS 352.040, apply equally to workers engaged in the mining operation
and to specialized independent contractors such as McCarty, who happen to be
upon the property. We respectfully reject this interpretation.
In the context of the statutory language, and construing the cited
chapters as a unified statutory scheme, it is manifestly clear that the legislative
12
intent in enacting these provisions was to target and ensure the safety of the
actual coal mining operations for the protection of the traditional coal miners
and the mining technicians and engineers, mechanics, maintenance personnel
workers, and other ancillary workers exposed to dangers of the mining
environment. Nothing in the statutory text tasks the mine operator with
tending to the safety of non-mining craftsmen and technicians and protecting
them from the hazards of their own non-mining occupations.
Given the extensive statutory emphasis on the dangers of mining, we
regard it as highly improbable that the General Assembly intended to burden
coal mine inspectors and supervisors with the duty to become versed in the
safety requirements'of such extraneous activities as installing massive garage
doors and other processes unique to the business of erecting buildings and
foreign to the process of extracting coal. The mine operator's unfamiliarity with
the special techniques, requirements, and hazards of the various construction
trades is certainly a major reason for using specialized outside contractors
instead of in-house laborers. Expecting the mine operator to provide safety
inspections for the unfamiliar work of specialized independent contractors
would divert resources away from the safety of workers actually engaged in
mining coal, thereby increasing the very risks that the statute is designed to
reduce.
From our review of KRS Chapters 351 and 352 in their entirety and in
context, we conclude that Mr. McCarty was not "within the class of persons
intended to be protected by the statute" as required for the application of KRS
13
446.070 and the principles of negligence per se, as set forth in Straub. We also
conclude that the occurrence identified as the cause of McCarty's tragic
death—the failure to secure the garage door in accordance with the
manufacturer's installation instructions, and its subsequent fall—is not the
type of occurrence that the foregoing mining statutes were intended to prevent.
Consequently, the Estate's claims cannot be based upon a negligence per se
theory predicated upon violations of KRS Chapters 351 and 352.
B. Administrative Regulations
The Estates relies upon three regulations in support of its negligence per
se claim under KRS 466.070: 805 KAR 7:090; 805 KAR 3:020; and 805 KAR
3:100. "KRS 446.070 creates a cause of action in [these] narrow circumstances
. . . (1) the regulation must be consistent with the enabling legislation and (2) it
must apply to the safety of the citizenry." Straub, 354 S.W.3d at 535 (citation
omitted).
There being no statutory text within the enabling statutes (KRS Chapters
351 and 352) which would support a negligence per se theory of liability for the
occurrence that injured McCarty, nor any precise mandate within the enabling
statutes for the promulgation of regulations that would include the
circumstances of this case, based upon the Straub rule alone, it would appear
that the administrative regulations cited by the Estate would, likewise, fail to
support a negligence per se claim. It would make little sense for the legislature
to enact statutory provisions limited exclusively to the reduction or elimination
of hazards associated with the mining of coal, and yet at the same time have
14
those same statutes serve as enabling legislation for administrative regulations
focused upon occupational hazards far removed from the mining of coal so as
to reach the hazards associated with installing large, commercial garage doors.
Our resolution of the statutory issues in the preceding section should, by the
same force of reasoning, resolve the Estate's arguments relating to the
administrative regulations.
The Estate relies heavily upon the mine visitor provisions of Section (1) of
805 KAR 7:090, a regulation concerned with "Surface Hazard Training." That
section provides that "[s]urface hazard training shall be provided by the [mine
operator] to visitors exposed to mine surface hazards[.]" Manifestly, a "mine
surface hazard" does not encompass the installation of a garage door on a
building under construction. To the extent that the garage door posed a
hazard during its installation, it was not a "mine" hazard. The enabling
statutes for this regulation are KRS 351.106, KRS 352.350, KRS 351.070, and
KRS 351.105, and yet an examination of those statutes does not disclose any
indication that this regulation could have been intended to bear the weight
advocated by the Estate.
805 KAR 3:020 concerns the establishment of "general operating safety
standards controlling the operation of the Commonwealth's surface coal and
clay mines, which include strip and auger mining operations." Neither the text
of the regulation nor the text of the enabling statutes, KRS 13A.100, and KRS
351.070, encompasses the installation of a garage door during the construction
of a building on the mining premises.
15
Similarly, 805 KAR 3:100 concerns "safety standards controlling the use
and operation of equipment in the Commonwealth's surface type coal and clay
mines, which include strip and auger mining operations." More specifically,
the regulation addresses "exposed moving machine parts that may cause injury
to persons," and power tools and machinery such as grinders, hand-held power
tools, fork lifts, trucks, front-end loaders, bulldozers, and excavators, etc. This
regulation is clearly geared toward addressing the safety of tools and
equipment routinely used in the excavation of coal or clay. It does not
encompass the instrumentalities of McCarty's accident.
None of the enabling statutes for the above-mentioned regulations
contain language that would support the promulgation of regulations creating
a duty owed by Covol to Mr. McCarty or the work in which he was engaged at
the time of his accident. Any administrative regulation purporting to reach
that hazard would fail as exceeding the scope of its enabling statute. St. Luke
Hosp., Inc. v. Straub, 354 S.W.3d 529 (Ky. 2011).
In summary, the administrative regulations cited by the Estate apply to
mining operations, mine workers and the traditional dangers and risks
ordinarily associated with coal mining. We find nothing in the text of these
administrative regulations which would indicate that McCarty was within the
class of persons to be protected, or that his injuries were within the type of
harms to be prevented by the regulations. We have examined the additional
range of regulations cited in the certified question (Sections 805 and 825), and
16
are unable to locate any provision which would change the result of our
discussion as set forth herein.
C. KRS 350.020
Although KRS Chapter 350 (titled "Surface Coal Mining) is not
specifically included within the Sixth Circuit's certified question, the Estate
cites KRS 350.020, which identifies the following hazards and dangers of
"unregulated surface coal mining operations:"
soil erosion, damage from rolling stones and overburden,
landslides, stream pollution, the accumulation of stagnant water
and the seepage of contaminated water, increase the likelihood of
floods, destroy the value of land for agricultural purposes, destroy
aesthetic values, counteract efforts for the conservation of soil,
water and other natural resources, destroy or impair the property
rights of citizens, create fire hazards, and in general create hazards
dangerous to life and property, so as to constitute an imminent and
inordinate peril to the welfare of the Commonwealth. The General
Assembly further finds that lands that have been subjected to
surface coal mining operations and have not been reclaimed and
rehabilitated in accordance with modern standards constitute the
aforementioned perils to the welfare of the Commonwealth.
(emphasis added). The statute further provides that the General Assembly's
purpose for the statute is "to minimize or prevent the injurious effects [of
unregulated surface coal mining] on the people and resources of the
Commonwealth."
The Estate maintains that the statute's reference to mining activities that
"in general create hazards dangerous to life and property" encompasses the
installation of garage doors at a coal mining site. We are persuaded otherwise.
The doctrine of ejusdem generis refutes the Estate's argument. Ejusdem
generis is a rule of statutory construction that provides "where, in a statute,
17
general words follow or precede a designation of particular subjects or classes
of persons, the meaning of the general words ordinarily will be presumed to be
restricted by the particular designation, and to include only things or persons
of the same kind, class, or nature as those specifically enumerated, unless
there is a clear manifestation of a contrary purpose." Kentucky Retirement
Systems v. Brown, 336 S.W.3d 8, 16 (Ky. 2011) (quoting Steinfeld v. Jefferson
County Fiscal Court, 229 S.W.2d 319, 320 (Ky. 1950)).
All of the particular hazards identified in the statute—water
contamination, blasting, dust issues, disposal of by-products, damage to
vegetation, and reclamation concerns—have a direct nexus to the
environmental consequences of "unregulated surface mining." The final
provision referring generally to "hazards dangerous to life and property" relates
to hazards that, likewise, have a direct nexus with the environmental hazards
of surface mining. The fortuitous installation of a heavy garage door on a coal
mining site has no nexus with unregulated coal mining, and is therefore, not
among the hazards addressed by KRS Chapter 350.
D. Hargis v. Baize, 168 S.W.3d 36 (Ky. 2005)
The Estate cites Hargis v. Baize as support for its claim that
administrative regulations promulgated to effect the safety of employees in a
regulated workplace from industrial hazards also protects independent
contractors exposed to those hazards. On the strength of Hargis, the Estate
argues that as an independent contractor, McCarty, like the decedent in
Hargis, was entitled to the protections afforded by the administrative
18
regulations governing the particular regulated industry, and so the Estate is
thereby entitled to assert a negligence per se claim based upon the violation of
those regulations. However, the instant case is clearly distinguished by its
facts. In Hargis, the deceased contractor, was engaged in the type of
work—hauling and unloading logs at a saw mill—that was a core function of the
regulated business, whereas the installation of garage doors is entirely
unrelated to Covol's core business. Unlike the circumstances we address here,
the regulations relied upon by the plaintiff in Hargis specifically applied to the
type of work at issue. We are convinced that Hargis does not support a claim
based upon negligence per se in this case.
III. CONCLUSION
Based upon the foregoing analysis, we conclude in response to the
request of the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit, that a
subcontractor injured while installing a garage door on an unfinished building
at a mine site may not maintain a wrongful death action against a mine
operator under a negligence per se theory for alleged violations of the Kentucky
mining statutes and regulations codified in KRS Chapters 350, 351 and 352
and KAR Sections 805 and 825.
The law is so certified.
All sitting. All concur.
19
COUNSEL FOR NANCY J. MCCARTY AND NANCY J. MCCARTY, AS PERSONAL
REPRESENTATIVE OF THE ESTATE OF DAVID W. MCCARTY, DECEASED:
Travis Leon Holtrey
Foreman Watson Holtrey, LLP
Lane C. Siesky
Siesky Viche, PC
COUNSEL FOR LIBERTY MUTUAL AGENCY MARKETS:
Mark Wayne Howard
Jones Howard Law PLLC
COUNSEL FOR COVOL FUELS NO. 2, LLC, A UTAH CORPORATION:
Robert E. Stopher
Robert Dmitri Bobrow
Boehl, Stopher 85 Graves, LLP
COUNSEL FOR AMICUS CURIAE
KENTUCKY JUSTICE ASSOCIATION:
Paul A. Casi, II
Jeffrey Wayne Adamson
Paul A. Casi, II, P.S.C.
Kevin Crosby Burke
20