Moss v. WASTE MANAGEMENT OF TEXAS, INC.

TERRY JENNINGS, Justice,

dissenting.

The majority errs in concluding that the “right to control is an essential element” of the negligence and premises liability claims brought by appellant, Kenneth W. Moss, against appellee, Waste Management of Texas, Inc. (“Waste Management”). Moss’s claims are not based upon the vicarious liability of Waste Management for the acts or omissions of its independent contractor and Moss’s employer, Rustin Transportation Co. (“Rustin”). Rather, the gist of Moss’s claims is that Waste Management was itself directly negligent in its operation and management of its facility where Moss was injured and that Waste Management created the dangerous situation in which Moss was injured. Thus, the trial court erred in submitting a question predicating Waste Management’s liability on its right to control Rustin’s work. Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.

Background Facts

Waste Management entered into a “Loading and Transportation Service Agreement” with Rustin, which is in the business of providing solid waste loading and transportation services, to retrieve waste from various Waste Management transfer stations, load it onto Rustin vehicles, and then transport it to various municipal landfills. Pursuant to the contract, Rustin could “not refuse” any waste shipments tendered by Waste Management.

Moss was seriously injured when a Rus-tin eighteen-wheel tractor-trailer, which had arrived to retrieve waste at Waste Management’s WRS Transfer Station, backed over him. In his Second Amended Petition, Moss alleged,

The WRS Transfer Station was designed and built by Defendant Waste Management with six (6) dumping bays and one (1) loading bay and was not designed to facilitate multiple loading areas. On February 26, 2004, Defendant Waste Management directed more garbage into the WRS Transfer Station than it was reasonably designed to accommodate with its one loading bay. Rustin Transportation, unable and unauthorized to refuse such additional garbage, was forced to utilize a bay that is designed exclusively for dumping in order to accommodate the excessive waste. It was during this use of a dumping bay for purposes of loading a Rustin ... tractor-trailer that ... Moss was severely injured.

Moss was a “spotter,” whose duties included performing random inspections of conventional garbage trucks arriving at the transfer station to unload their waste. Moss would have to leave his spotter position and enter a dumping area to check for unauthorized waste. Moss further alleged,

Due to the high volume of waste being allowed into the facility by Defendant Waste Management on February 26, 2004, and the facility’s inadequate design, loading hauling trucks were being directed to load from dumping bay number six (6). It was during the course of such an inspection that ... [Moss] was struck and run over by [a Rustin] eighteen-wheeled tractor-trailer ... [which] was backing into a dumping bay rather than the usual loading area. Defendant *86Waste Management had the sole control over the volume of waste allowed into the WRS Transfer Station.

Among other things, Moss alleged that Waste Management failed to use ordinary care to provide reasonably safe and adequate controlled truck access to its facility, to provide adequate signage and warning directed to the drivers of trucks entering its facility and/or to employees of contractors working at its facility, and to adequately control and/or limit the volume of garbage and traffic entering its premises. Moss also alleged that Waste Management knew or should have known that the design of the facility created an unreasonably dangerous or defective condition on its premises.

“Right to Control”

Waste Management and the majority have recast Moss’s lawsuit as one against Waste Management for the negligent activity of Rustin. In regard to the liability of premises owners and general contractors for the negligent activities of independent contractors, Texas has long recognized the rule that

One who entrusts work to an independent contractor, but who retains the control of any part of the work, is subject to liability for physical harm to others for whose safety the employer owes a duty to exercise reasonable care, which is caused by his failure to exercise his control with reasonable care.

Redinger v. Living, Inc., 689 S.W.2d 415, 418 (Tex.1985) (quoting Restatement (Second) of Torts § 414 (1977)). However, this rule is not applicable here because Moss is not claiming that he was injured by either the negligent activity of Rustin or by a premises defect created by Rus-tin’s work. See Dow Chem. Co. v. Bright, 89 S.W.3d 602, 606 (Tex.2002). Rather, from his petition as quoted above, it is quite clear that Moss is not pursuing a claim against Waste Management based on any negligent activity of Rustin or any premises defect created by Rustin.

Moss is claiming, quite simply and clearly, that Waste Management, which was contractually in complete control of the volume of garbage entering and leaving its facility, overloaded its facility with an excessive amount of garbage and the associated excessive amount of truck traffic. He asserts that he was injured when a Rustin eighteen-wheel tractor-trailer, through no fault of Rustin, was “forced” to load waste at a bay designed “exclusively for dumping.” Contrary to Waste Management’s and the majority’s characterization of Moss’s lawsuit, Moss asserts that he was injured by the negligence of Waste Management, not Rustin, and a premises defect created by Waste Management, not Rustin.

In support of its characterization of Moss’s claims and its holding that “the trial court did not err in concluding that a right to control is an element of the simple negligence claim asserted against Waste Management,” the majority relies on Dow Chemical Co. v. Bright, 89 S.W.3d 602 (Tex.2002). In Dow Chemical, Bright, an employee of an independent contractor, was injured when a pipe which had been improperly secured by another employee of the independent contractor, became unstable and fell on him at a construction site owned by Dow. Id. at 605. Bright sued Dow, specifically alleging that Dow had retained both contractual and actual control of the independent contractor’s work on Dow’s premises when he was injured. Id. Bright specifically argued that Dow was subject to liability because the independent contractor had created a premises defect “by its work activity,” i.e., a “dangerous condition” arose “because of the independent contractor’s work activity.” *87Id. at 606. The Texas Supreme Court concluded that no fact issues existed about the extent of contractual or actual control retained by Dow. Id. at 605.

Here, in stark contrast, Moss is not claiming that a premises defect was in any way created by Rustin’s activities. Rather, as clearly stated in his pleadings, Moss is alleging that Waste Management, which controlled the volume of garbage entering and leaving its facility, created the dangerous situation in which Moss was injured by overloading the transfer station with an excessive volume of garbage and forcing Rustin to use a bay designed “exclusively for dumping” to load garbage onto an eighteen-wheel tractor-trailer. He emphasizes that Waste Management’s transfer station “was not designed to facilitate multiple loading areas” that it required Rustin to use in order to retrieve the excessive shipments of garbage, which Rustin, pursuant to the contract, could “not refuse.”

Thus, the issue of whether Waste Management retained a “right to control” the work of Rustin at the transfer station is not relevant to Moss’s claims against Waste Management for its own negligence and its own creation of a dangerous condition on its premises.1

Conclusion

I would hold that the trial court erred in submitting the question to the jury predicating Waste Management’s liability to Moss on its right to control Rustin’s work. Because it is fundamental to our system of justice that parties have the right to be judged by a jury properly instructed in the law and the trial court’s error probably caused the rendition of a harmful judgment, I would remand the case to the trial court for a new trial. See Tex.R.App. P. 44.1(a)(1); Crown Life Ins. Co. v. Casteel, 22 S.W.3d 378, 388 (Tex.2000). The majority’s holding and judgment to the contrary is in error. Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.

. Although question number one of the charge asked the jury to find whether Waste Management exercised or retained some control over the manner in which Rustin performed its duties and responsibilities at the transfer station, question number two made no reference to Rustin and simply asked the jury to find whether the negligence of Waste Management caused the occurrence in question. Question two further stated,

With respect to the condition of the premises, [Waste Management] was negligent if—
a. the condition posed an unreasonable risk of harm, and
b. [Waste Management] should have known of the danger, and
c. [Waste Management] failed to exercise ordinary care to protect [Moss] from the danger, by both failing to adequately warn [Moss] of the condition and failing to make that condition reasonably safe.