|
Launched in 2001, USLAW is an organization of independent law firms with offices throughout the United States. Through USLAW, these firms share information in order to enhance the speed, efficiency and quality of legal services provided to each member's clients. By sharing this information, USLAW firms provide high quality legal services, without unnecessary expense to the client. |
Click here for more information about USLAW!
USLAW welcomes aticles, case law, trial results and items of interest to be submitted for future e-newsletters.
Please e-mail Roger M. Yaffe with submissions
|  |
 |
 |
General Contractor Not Entitled To Summary Judgment
Contract With Illinois Department Of Transportation Gave Contractor Duty To Control Safety
by Mike Resis, O’Hagan, Smith & Amundsen, L.L.C., Chicago, IL
In Moss v. Rowe Construction Co., 344 Ill. App. 3d 772, 801 N.E.2d 612 (4th Dist. 2003), an electrical worker’s estate brought a negligence action against the general contractor after the worker was killed while engaged in the removal of concrete foundations on a highway project. The worker had been employed by an electric subcontractor under contract to the defendant to remove traffic control devices and install new ones as part of the defendant’s contract with the Illinois Department of Transportation. Under the general contract, the defendant was obligated to control project safety, and the general contract’s requirements, along with the Illinois Department of Transportation’s standard specifications, were incorporated into the subcontract. The trial court granted summary judgment to the general contractor on grounds that it did not retain or exercise control over the work being done to remove the concrete foundations.
The appellate court reversed and remanded, holding that the defendant’s contract with the Illinois Department of Transportation created a genuine issue of material fact over the general contractor’s duty to control safety on the highway project. The court stated that the issue was not control over “means and methods” of performing the subcontractor’s work, but rather which party contractually had the duty to control safety. It criticized Shaughnessy v. Skender Construction Co., 342 Ill. App. 3d 730, 794 N.E.2d 937 (1st Dist. 2003) for disregarding contractual language that had obligated the general contractor to be responsible for initiating, maintaining and supervising all safety programs. It distinguished Ross v. Dae Julie, Inc., 341 Ill. App. 3d 1065, 793 N.E.2d 68 (1st Dist. 2003) on the basis that no contract had imposed a duty to control safety on the general contractor. Here, the general contractor had agreed to control safety on the project and the court stated that it could not ignore the specific contract language.
[PRINTER FRIENDLY VERSION]
|
|
|  |
 |
 |
|