COLBERT, J.
¶ 1 The issue in this matter is whether summary judgment was properly granted to decedent's employer pursuant to
¶ 2 On January 9, 2008, a field engineer for Verdigris Valley Electric Cooperative (Employer) met with a contract electrician for Integrated Service Company LLC (INSERV) in Catoosa, Oklahoma, concerning the installation of additional underground electrical service. They discussed the location of the additional service to the building and decided to use an existing junction box which the engineer observed was surrounded by a yellow metal barricade. He would later note: "I normally recommend that our members [customers] install a protective post an [sic] each corner of a pad mounted device in high traffic areas such as the INSERV plant, to help protect from getting ran [sic] over by vehicles or other equipment. I would never suggest having a barrier of any kind in front of any opening or door on VVEC equipment."
¶ 3 On June 5, 2008, a work crew from Employer was dispatched to install additional underground electrical service to INSERV. The four-man crew consisted of Jones, Jackson, Day, and Tiger. Jones and Jackson were journeymen electricians and Jones was the foreman. Day and Tiger were apprentices. Tiger had been in the journeyman apprentice program for approximately nine months of a four-year program. At the time of his death, Tiger had been certified only in the climbing school portion of his journeyman training. Day had worked for Employer only one month.
¶ 4 To provide the additional electric service to INSERV, the work crew would install three underground cables from a junction box to a transformer located on INSERV's premises. Employer, through its employees, decided the system would remain energized with high voltage electricity so that customers would not be inconvenienced by an interruption in electrical service. The existing junction box was energized with nominal 14,000/24,900 volts that would then transfer that high voltage electricity to the new service transformer and convert ("step down") the electricity into a much lower useable voltage which could be used by INSERV to run equipment.
¶ 5 When the crew arrived at the work site, they found the junction box surrounded by a yellow painted steel barricade, erected presumably to protect it from being struck by vehicles or trailers. The record does not establish who erected or owned the barricade, but Employer owned the junction box and associated electrical equipment. Affixed to the junction box was a warning concerning hazardous voltage and underground power
¶ 6 The barricade consisted of four corner posts with two rails connecting each post. The barricade did not satisfy the set back requirements of Employer's notice to keep structures ten feet away from the door and three feet away from the other sides. It also did not satisfy the set back requirements of the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), the National Electric Safety Code, and the Oklahoma Administrative Code, which adopted the 2002 edition of the National Electric Safety Code. The space between the junction box and the metal barricade was six and one half inches at the left side, eight inches at the right side, and eleven inches at the back. The height of the top rail varied from thirty-seven to forty-six inches. Most importantly, only nineteen inches separated the front of the junction box and the metal barricade. Employer's work crews understood that if an obstruction needed to be removed, they had the authority to do so. The foreman of the work crew would later explain that he viewed the barricade as a "hindrance" rather than a safety issue and did not remove the barricade or cut the flow of electricity to the junction box. However, the "Job Briefing Form," which was signed by the foreman and initialed by each of the work crew "to document hazard recognition and work procedures," documented the work crew's full knowledge that they would "work in [a] hot cabinet" and that the installation would require "hard hats, safety glasses, rubber gloves, [and an insulated] blanket."
¶ 7 Each of the three cables installed to connect the junction box with the transformer would comprise the three phase service (phases A, B, and C). They would be capped off by installing connections that would operate as a "plug" to be inserted into its own bushing located within the junction box and within the transformer. This would permit electricity to flow from an overhead line into the junction box and into the INSERV transformer. An eight-foot long insulated rod known as a "shotgun stick" would be used to push the plug into the opening of the bushing on the junction box while another crew member wearing insulated gloves would guide the connection. This process was to be repeated for each of the three cables.
¶ 8 The work crew began its installation by pulling wire through the underground conduit that had been placed between the transformer and the junction box. They then attached connectors to the ends of the phase wires and seated those connectors into bushings on the transformer rather than placing the connectors in "parking stands"
¶ 9 Jackson then attached the shotgun stick to cable "B" while Tiger attempted to approximate the connection for that cable. However, the steel barricade was so close to the junction box that there were only nineteen inches of clearance between the barricade and the front work area of the junction box. After numerous attempts, to seat the phase B connector into the designated bushing of the junction box, it was determined that the task could not be accomplished from outside the steel barricade. With no admonition or warning from the crew foreman Jones, journeyman Jackson, or any other member of the work crew, Tiger climbed over the barricade to position his six feet two inches 200 pound frame inside the nineteen inches of space between the junction box and
¶ 10 Subsequent investigation into the cause of Tiger's electrocution revealed that, when Phase A was connected to the junction box, it energized the core of the transformer which then allowed "back feed" to the unconnected Phases B and C at the junction box. The parties would later dispute the role of the barricade in the electrocution. The United States Department of Labor, Occupational Safety and Health Administration, issued a citation for two "serious" safety violations. Under OSHA, "the word serious as used in serious hazard, serious violation or serious condition means a hazard, violation or condition such that there is a substantial probability that death or serious physical harm could result." 29 C.F.R. § 1960.2(v). The citation provided:
OSHA ordered abatement of the violations and assessed a proposed penalty.
¶ 11 This action was brought in the District Court against Employer and INSERV on June 3, 2009. It alleged that Employer's choice to direct the work crew to install new service with a steel barricade located within nineteen inches of a high-voltage junction box demonstrated Employer's substantial certainty that serious injury or death to a worker would result. INSERV was dismissed from the action with prejudice on December 17, 2010. Employer moved for summary judgment in July, 2011. The trial court denied the motion, noting a list of facts to support an inference of Employer's knowledge of a substantial certainty that injury or death would result from its conduct.
¶ 12 Following the deposition of Plaintiffs' expert, Employer filed a second motion it termed a "Post-Discovery Motion for Summary Judgment." It emphasized Employer's safety record and the lack of dispute that Employer is a "safety-oriented" company. The trial court noted that members of the work crew had been trained concerning back-feed but had forgotten their training and therefore failed to apply it. The trial court further emphasized that, under company policy, Employer and its employees are "jointly responsible for safety." It concluded Employer was not aware of its "employee training deficiencies" until after Tiger's death. The
¶ 13 The appellate standard of review of a summary judgment is de novo.
¶ 14 Because the incident that gave rise to this action occurred in 2008, the applicable law is found in this Court's pronouncement in
(Emphasis added).
¶ 15
2005 OK 54, ¶ 22, 127 P.3d 572, (quoting 7 Causes of Action 2d 197, § 2 at 204). In determining whether this matter presents such a difficult case, the question becomes whether Employer's conduct and the surrounding circumstances support an inference of Employer's substantial certainty that injury or death to a worker would result from its conduct.
¶ 16 The lower courts held, as a matter of law, Employer's knowledge concerning the condition of the work site or the actions of its work crew did not demonstrate its substantial certainty that a worker would be injured or killed. That conclusion failed to consider that the knowledge or notice possessed by an agent while acting within the scope of authority is the knowledge of, or notice to the principal.
¶ 17 This matter presents facts very similar to those found in
¶ 18 Employer, through its employees, made several fateful decisions from which a jury could at least infer Employer's substantial certainty that at least one member of its work crew would be injured or killed as a result of its conduct or omissions. Those decisions began with the conduct of Employer's field engineer who sets out the policy and procedure for completing a project and who discussed with INSERV the options for the location of additional electric service. At that time, the engineer noticed the yellow metal barricade surrounding the junction box. Although he would later state that he would never recommend such a barricade, he did nothing to cause the work crew to modify or remove the illegal obstruction. Such conduct went beyond reckless disregard and deliberate indifference. It indicates Employer's substantial certainty that someone would be injured or killed by entering the steel barricade with less than nineteen inches from the barricade and the door of the junction box.
¶ 19 Those decisions continued with those of the work crew foreman, Jones, who acted as Employer's on-site policy maker concerning safety and apprentice training. Those decisions regarding safety, supervision, and apprentice training imply Employer's substantial certainty that serious injury or death would result from its conduct. They include: (1) not cutting the power and therefore placing the convenience of its customers over the
¶ 20 The record before this Court demonstrates overwhelming issues of material fact in dispute making summary judgment inappropriate. Those include Tiger's understanding of electricity and his experience installing high-voltage electric service. It is also unclear whether Tiger and Employer's work crew were required to work on the electrical system while it was "hot" and whether, under the circumstances, serious injury or death was substantially certain to occur. The parties disagree whether Employer's conduct rose to the level of intent necessary to maintain an action in tort notwithstanding the exclusive remedy provision of the Workers' Compensation Act.
¶ 21 The central question of fact, which was present throughout this litigation, is whether there is at least an inference from the facts and circumstances surrounding this incident that Employer was substantially certain a worker could be injured or killed by working on electrical cables within a steel barricade with only nineteen inches of clearance between it and the high-voltage junction box contrary to OSHA rules
CERTIORARI PREVIOUSLY GRANTED; OPINION OF COURT OF CIVIL APPEALS VACATED; DISTRICT COURT REVERSED; CAUSE REMANDED.
CONCUR: Reif, C.J., Watt, Edmondson, Colbert., and Gurich, JJ.
CONCURS BY REASON OF STARE DECISIS: Kauger, J.
DISSENT: Combs, V.C.J., Winchester, and Taylor, JJ.
Okla. Stat. tit. 85, § 12 (Supp. 2010)(eff. August 27, 2010). The same definition of intentional tort was carried forward in 2011 when the Oklahoma Legislature repealed section 12 and inserted the definition into section 302. Okla Stat. tit. 85, § 302(B)(Supp. 2011). The same definition of intentional tort appears in the Administrative Workers' Compensation Act which became effective February 1, 2014. Okla Stat. tit. 85A, § 5(B)(2) (Supp. 2014). Therefore, for any injury occurring after August 26, 2010, the substantial certainty standard is unavailable to an injured worker.