Guy R. Bucci, Esquire
Charleston, West Virginia
Attorney for Appellee
John M. Slack, III, Esquire
Jackson & Kelly
Charleston, West Virginia
Attorneys for Childress
David M. Kersey, Esquire
Jerry Cameron, Esquire
Brewster, Morhous & Cameron
Bluefield, West Virginia
Attorneys for Lo-Ming
JUSTICE NEELY delivered the Opinion of the Court.
1. If an indemnity contract relative to the
construction, alteration, repair, addition to, subtraction from,
improvement to, or maintenance of any building, highway, road,
water, sewer, electrical or gas distribution system, excavation or
other structure, project, development, or improvement attached to
real estate contains an explicit provision indemnifying a party for
its "sole negligence," it is not void on its face under W.Va. Code
55-8-14 [1975]. This section requires courts to void a broad
indemnity agreement only if the indemnitee is found by the trier-of-fact to be solely (100 percent) negligent in causing the harm
and the contract that allowed the indemnity for sole negligence was
not, in substance, a contract allocating the duty to purchase
insurance for the benefit of all parties to the contract.
2. W.Va. Code 55-8-14 requires courts to void a broad
indemnity agreement only: (1) if the indemnitee is found by the
trier-of-fact to be solely (100 percent) negligent in causing the
accident; and (2) it cannot be inferred from the contract that
there was a proper agreement to purchase insurance for the benefit
of all concerned.
3. If an indemnity contract indemnifies against "any and all" attorney's fees, those fees include fees paid in attempting to enforce the ultimately upheld indemnity agreement.
Neely, J.:
This is a wrongful death suit by the spouse of the late
Thurman Dalton (plaintiff below, appellee) against his employer,
Childress Service Corp. (defendant below) and Lo-Ming Coal Corp.,
appellant. Mr. Dalton was killed in an on-the-job accident while
modifying part of a coal processing plant for Childress, his
employer. Lo-Ming holds mining rights to tracts of coal property;
Lo-Ming contracted with Childress to mine coal on Lo-Ming's land.
As part of their contract (which was drafted by Childress),
Childress agreed to indemnify Lo-Ming "against any and all
liabilities . . . arising out of or attributed directly to
[Childress'] performance under this agreement." The circuit court
held that despite the fact that Childress was held to be 73 percent
negligent, the indemnity agreement was void under W.Va. Code 55-8-14 [1975]. Appellant assigns error to that ruling, as it is
incorrect as a matter of law. We agree, and reverse the decision
of the Circuit Court of Boone County.See footnote 1
Mr. Dalton, an employee of Childress, was killed while he was moving a belt conveyor structure which transferred coal refuse out of the Childress-operated plant. Lo-Ming owned the mining rights to the land and hired Childress to perform the mining, but Lo-Ming did not direct Childress in the details of the mining work.
Four Childress employees were detailed by Childress management to
work on moving a belt conveyor structure. All four employees had
extensive mining experience, and the operation was routine. Mr.
Dalton was a mechanic/plant operator and the union safety
committeeman for the plant. The belt conveyor weighed 5,000
pounds; the conveyor was attached to the plant at one end, and
rested on two legs at the other end. The men took two slings and
attached them to four points on the belt structure; they then hung
the slings on the boom of the Childress-owned crane.
Then they began to remove the structure. The legs were
first cut out from under the structure. Mr. Dalton and a co-worker
climbed onto the building to sever the belt conveyor structure from
the building. Mr. Dalton performed the final cuts himself. As the
cuts were made, the belt structure dipped and pinned Mr. Dalton
against the building, crushing him to death. The accident could
have been prevented if the Childress employees had properly used a
tag line, an extra line attached to the belt structure that would
have steadied the conveyor after it was cut loose. The proper tag
line technique was well-known to the four Childress employees and
was a routine safety precaution.
Before trial, Childress and Mrs. Dalton settled for
$500,000. The jury assigned 73 percent of the negligence to
Childress; 17 percent of the negligence to Mr. Dalton, and only ten
percent of the negligence to Lo-Ming. As part of the settlement
agreement, Ms. Dalton waived all rights to any further claims
against Childress-- including claims that would be covered by the
indemnity clause in the Childress/Lo-Ming contract against Lo-Ming.See footnote 2
The contract between Childress and Lo-Ming (a contract
drafted by Childress) contains the following indemnity clause:
Article VII: Indemnity
7.1 Processor (Childress) agrees to indemnify
and hold harmless Operator (Lo-Ming), and its
subsidiaries and related companies, and the
officers, directors and employees of such
companies, against any and all liabilities,
demands, losses, claims and damages of any
kind, whether on account of injury to or death
of any person or persons, damage to or loss of
property, violation of law or regulation, or
otherwise, arising out of or attributed,
directly, to Processor's performance under
this agreement, together with any and all cost
and expenses including attorney's fees which
may be incurred in connection therewith.
Furthermore, Lo-Ming required Childress to purchase adequate
insurance before allowing work to begin: Under Article 10.1 of the
contract, Lo-Ming required Childress to purchase liability and
workers' compensation insurance before allowing Childress to begin
work. Childress subscribed to workers' compensation and obtained
a $1,000,000 general liability policy from The Travelers. The
liability policy specifically extended coverage to cover all
potential liability under the indemnity clause of the Lo-Ming/Childress contract.
In Valloric v. Dravo Corp., 178 W.Va. 14, 357 S.E.2d 207
(1987), we held that a broad indemnity clause that specifically
exempted the "sole negligence" of the indemnitee was valid and
enforceable under W.Va. Code 55-8-14 [1975]. Accord, Riggle v.
Allied Chemical Corp., ___ W.Va. ___, 378 S.E.2d 282 (1989).
W. Va. Code 55-8-14 [1975] provides in part:
A covenant, promise, agreement or
understanding in or in connection with or
collateral to a contract or agreement entered
into on or after the effective date of this
section [6 June 1975], relative to the
construction, alteration, repair, addition to,
subtraction from, improvement to or
maintenance of any building, highway, road,
railroad, water, sewer, electrical or gas
distribution system, excavation or other
structure, project, development or improvement
attached to real estate, including moving and
demolition in connection therewith, purporting
to indemnify against liability for damages
arising out of bodily injury to persons or
damage to property caused by or resulting from
the sole negligence of the indemnitee, his
agents or employees is against public policy
and is void and unenforceable and no action
shall be maintained thereon. [Emphasis
added.]
Generally, indemnity clauses serve our goals of
encouraging compromise and settlement by reducing settlement
discussions to bilateral discussions, by encouraging adequate
levels of insurance, and by allowing the parties to a contract to
allocate among themselves the burden of defending claims. The
indemnity agreement between Childress and Lo-Ming had the same
beneficial effect as did the agreement in Riggle. In Riggle, we
held that a similar indemnity agreement was:
. . . perfectly proper; its object was to
allocate risks for insurance purposes.
Persons employing contractors are cognizant of
workers' compensation immunity and principles
of joint and several liability. Without a
contract provision like the one at issue in
this case, a person contracting for work on
his premises could be hit with an entire
judgment for damages when a worker is injured,
even though the owner of the premises was but
one percent negligent. Although it is true
that under the indemnity provision [the
indemnitor] could be held responsible for all
damages to a worker even though only one
percent negligent, appellant was expected to
buy adequate insurance against this risk.
Thus . . . contractual allocations of risk
similar to the one before us are favored;
certainly they are not contrary to public
policy.
Riggle, ___ W.Va. at ___, 378 S.E.2d at 289.
Although the agreement in Riggle contained the "magic
words" excepting the "sole negligence" of the indemnitee, the
reasoning about a priori allocations of joint and several liability
and ensuring that adequate insurance coverage is obtained perfectly
address the issue before us today: a just public policy demands
that indemnity agreements be permitted unless they go beyond a mere
allocation of potential joint and several liability and indemnify
against the sole negligence of the indemnitee without an
appropriate insurance fund, bought pursuant to the contract, for
the express purpose of protecting all concerned. A contract that
provides in substance that A shall purchase insurance to protect B
against actions arising from B's sole negligence does not violate
the statute as public policy encourages both the allocation of
risks and the purchase of insurance.
It would be silly for us to hold a broad indemnity
clause, even if it included the magic words "sole negligence," void
on its face just because of the remote possibility that it might
indemnify an indemnitee against his sole negligence under
circumstances where there was not a properly purchased insurance
fund under a valid clause allocating risks and requiring insurance
coverage. A more rational interpretation of W.Va. Code 55-8-14
[1975] is that this section requires courts to void a broad
indemnity agreement only: (1) if the indemnitee is found by the
trier-of-fact to be solely (100 percent) negligent in causing the
accident; and (2) it cannot be inferred from the contract that
there was a proper agreement to purchase insurance for the benefit
of all concerned. In this way, the harm that the Legislature
wanted to guard against in W.Va. Code 55-8-14 [1975] can be
prevented without undermining the valid liability and insurance
concerns of people doing business in West Virginia.
Here Lo-Ming was not indemnified for their "sole
negligence"; the jury found Lo-Ming to be only ten percent
negligent. Therefore, the indemnity agreement requiring Childress
to indemnify Lo-Ming in this situation does not violate the public
policy contained in W.Va. Code 55-8-14 [1975] under even the most
literal possible interpretation. However, the insurance provisions
of this contract make it clear that the so-called "indemnity"
clause is really only an agreement to purchase insurance, and thus
would have protected Lo-Ming even if Lo-Ming had been found 100
percent negligent. Accordingly, the settlement between Ms. Dalton
and Childress controls all potential liability of Lo-Ming and Lo-Ming should have been dismissed from the suit.
Furthermore, the indemnity clause provides for "any and
all cost and expenses including attorney's fees which may be
incurred in connection therewith." [Emphasis added.] This
language covers both expenses incurred defending third-party claims
as well as those incurred in making Childress perform under the
agreement. As the Virginia Supreme Court held in a similar case:
In our opinion, [the indemnitee] is entitled
to recover its attorney's fees from [the
indemnitor] pursuant to . . . their contract.
We see no public policy limitation against
this result as [the indemnitor] seems to
suggest. We are committed to the view that
parties may contract as they choose so long as
what they agree to is not forbidden by law or
against public policy. [The indemnitor]
contracted to pay [the indemnitee] attorneys'
fees in certain situations, and we think the
present situation falls fairly within the
terms of that agreement.
Chesapeake & Potomac Tel. v. Sisson & Ryan, 362 S.E.2d 723, 729
(Va. 1987). If the indemnity contract language can be fairly read
to indemnify for all related attorney expenses, then expenses
incurred in successfully enforcing the agreement are covered by the
indemnity clause. Here, Childress indemnified Lo-Ming against "any
and all" attorneys expenses, so reimbursement for those is properly
awarded to Lo-Ming.
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the Circuit
Court of Boone County is reversed, and this case is remanded with
directions to dismiss Lo-Ming from all further proceedings and to
make an award of attorney fees.