GERRARD, J.
The plaintiff in this case was injured on premises that were leased to her employer by a legally distinct entity that is owned and operated by the same shareholders as her employer. The question presented in this appeal is whether the plaintiff can go to district court and sue the entity that owns the premises for negligence, or whether her exclusive remedy is under the Nebraska Workers' Compensation Act (the Act).
Roper & Sons, Inc., is a funeral home that was incorporated in Lincoln, Nebraska, in 1914. It operates from real property owned by Roper's Real Estate Company,
In 2003, Roper & Sons purchased the Metcalf/Nelson Funeral Home, LLC (Metcalf). In 2005, Roper's Real Estate completed the purchase of what had been Metcalf's real property. Although Metcalf still exists as a business entity, the only member of its limited liability company is Roper & Sons. The Metcalf funeral home business operates from property owned by Roper's Real Estate, which is leased by Roper & Sons pursuant to an oral lease. The taxes on the property were paid by Metcalf. But neither Roper's Real Estate nor Metcalf have any employees of their own, and Tom Roper averred that Roper's Real Estate does not maintain, repair, or manage the property it owns—Roper & Sons is solely responsible for it.
The plaintiff in this case, Darlene Howsden, was an employee of Roper & Sons who worked at a former Metcalf property. There is an old elevator in the building that connects to two hallways: one running to the south, and the other running to the east. The elevator is rarely used to travel between floors, but employees apparently use it as a makeshift passageway between the hallways abutting it. Nonetheless, on some occasions, it was used to travel between floors. One day, when Howsden was leaving work, she went down one of the hallways and opened the elevator door to pass through. Unknown to her, the elevator was upstairs, so she fell down the elevator shaft into the basement and was seriously injured. She received workers' compensation disability and medical benefits under an insurance policy issued to Roper & Sons and expressly providing coverage for Roper & Sons, Roper's Real Estate, and Metcalf.
Howsden filed a complaint in district court against Roper's Real Estate, alleging that Roper's Real Estate's negligence caused her injuries. In response, Roper's Real Estate alleged among other things that Howsden's exclusive remedy was under the Act. Howsden and Roper's Real Estate filed cross-motions for summary judgment on the exclusive remedy issue, and the district court, citing our decision in Millard v. Hyplains Dressed Beef,
Howsden assigns that the court erred in (1) concluding that the exclusive remedy rule extended to Roper's Real Estate, an entity legally distinct from Howsden's employer, Roper & Sons, and (2) concluding it was bound by Millard.
An appellate court will affirm a lower court's granting of summary judgment if the pleadings and admissible evidence
We have held that if an injury arises out of and in the course of employment, the Act is the injured employee's exclusive remedy against his or her employer.
The issue presented to the district court was a disagreement about whether the "dual persona" or "dual capacity" doctrines should apply. We have discussed these doctrines in the past, although we have had no occasion to adopt or reject them. We have explained that under the "dual capacity" doctrine, an employer may become liable to an employee in tort if, with respect to that tort, the employer occupies a position which places upon it obligations independent of and distinct from its role as an employer.
But those doctrines are not precisely applicable here, because the question in this case is not whether Roper & Sons had another capacity, separate from its capacity as Howsden's employer, or even whether Roper & Sons had a second "persona" that was completely independent. The dual capacity and dual persona doctrines, to the extent they have any vitality, are implicated when there is one business entity that an employee nonetheless tries to sue as a "third party" because of an injury caused by a function of the employer that is separate from the employment relationship. For instance, the paradigmatic example is that of a truckdriver employed by a tire manufacturer, who was injured when one of the tires on his truck blew out.
In other words, the dual capacity and dual persona doctrines were intended to address situations in which the plaintiff alleges that his or her employer should nonetheless be considered a "third party"
Those courts have based their reasoning upon the principle that a business enterprise has a range of choices when determining how to organize itself into a corporate structure.
Many considerations may move a business entity to diversify its structure through the creation of other entities, but those considerations should include the obligations which arise as a consequence of such diversification.
Those courts have also reasoned that the separate identity of different corporate entities should be pierced only in cases of fraud.
LaBelle v. Crepeau
We agree with that reasoning. In this case, Roper & Sons chose to diversify its corporate form, presumably because of the business advantages of such diversity. But that choice has legal consequences. We are not at liberty to disregard the corporate form in the absence of circumstances that would justify invoking equitable power. But there are no such allegations here. Therefore, there is no basis in this record to set aside the corporate structure that Roper & Sons and Roper's Real Estate decided to form. We find merit to Howsden's first assignment of error.
We also find merit to Howsden's second assignment of error. Howsden argues that the court erred in finding that our decision in Millard was controlling here. We agree with Howsden that Millard is distinguishable.
As context, we note that several courts have held that an employee's third-party claim may be barred by the exclusive remedy rule based upon factors such as the third party's control of the employee's duties, payment of wages, and right to hire and fire.
Millard was such a case.
In this case, however, as explained above, the separate legal existence of Roper's Real Estate is established as a matter of law. And there is no basis in the record to conclude that Howsden was employed by both Roper & Sons and Roper's Real Estate. The evidence establishes beyond reasonable dispute that Howsden was hired and controlled exclusively by Roper & Sons. Neither Millard nor any other dual-employer case is pertinent here.
Roper's Real Estate also argues that even if it is a third party against which a tort claim can be maintained, there are other grounds upon which the district court's judgment can be affirmed. Roper's Real Estate argues that as a landlord, it has no direct liability for an allegedly dangerous condition on the premises
Roper's Real Estate is a legally separate entity from Roper & Sons, despite their corporate kinship, and there is no equitable basis in this record to justify piercing the corporate veil between the two entities. Roper's Real Estate is a third party to the employment relationship between Howsden and Roper & Sons, so Howsden's third-party claim against Roper's Real Estate is not barred by the exclusive remedy provisions of the Act. And Roper's Real Estate's other asserted defenses are not ripe for adjudication in this appeal. The judgment of the district court is reversed, and the cause is remanded for further proceedings.
REVERSED AND REMANDED FOR FURTHER PROCEEDINGS.