              IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                         FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT



                             No. 98-50252




     MICHAEL COLTHARP,

                                 Plaintiff-Appellee,

          versus


     GOODWILL INDUSTRIES OF EL PASO INC,

                                 Defendant-Cross Claimant-Appellant,

          versus

     UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

                                 Cross Defendant-Appellee.




           Appeal from the United States District Court
                 for the Western District of Texas
                            (EP-97-CV-38-F)

                            August 24, 2000


Before GARWOOD, DAVIS and DEMOSS, Circuit Judges.

GARWOOD, Circuit Judge*:

     Goodwill Industries of El Paso, Inc. (Goodwill), defendant and

third-party plaintiff below, brings this appeal challenging both

     *
      Pursuant to 5TH CIR. R. 47.5 the Court has determined that this
opinion should not be published and is not precedent except under
the limited circumstances set forth in 5TH CIR. R. 47.5.4.
(a) the district court’s failure to reduce the award against it and

in    favor    of   its   employee      plaintiff-appellee    Michael    Coltharp

(Coltharp) by his percentage negligence as found by the jury, and

(b) the district court’s judgment denying Goodwill any recovery on

its    third    party     claim   for    indemnity   or   contribution    against

appellee-third-party defendant the United States.               We affirm.

                    Context Facts and Proceedings Below

       This case began as a Texas law negligence suit filed in state

court by Coltharp against his employer Goodwill for injuries

Coltharp received on the evening of July 13, 1994, when, in the

course and scope of his employment, he strained himself and was

injured while pulling a pallet loaded with grocery items at the

Fort Bliss, Texas, Commissary, which is owned and operated by the

United States.          Goodwill was a “nonsubscriber” under the Texas

Workers’ Compensation laws and did not carry workers’ compensation

insurance covering Coltharp.              Hence, Coltharp’s suit was not a

worker’s compensation action but rather was a negligence suit.

       Goodwill thereafter filed a third party claim against the

United States under the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA), 28 U.S.C.

§§ 1346(b), 2671 et seq. seeking indemnity and/or contribution in

respect to Coltharp’s claim against it.               The United States then

promptly removed the action to the district court below.                28 U.S.C.

§§ 1441(a), 1442(a).

       Goodwill had contracted in writing with the United States to



                                           2
perform night and day shelf stocking at the Commissary, and under

the terms    of   the    contract   it       was   an    independent   contractor.

Coltharp was injured while performing some of Goodwill’s shelf

stocking duties under this contract. The Commissary was undergoing

renovation, including the installation of new floor tile.                   None of

the renovation work was any part of Goodwill’s contract with the

United States.      Because some of the new tiles had broken, the

United States had rubber mats and plastic sheeting placed over them

to protect them from damage, including that incident to moving

pallets over them during shelf stocking.

     The mats and sheets had been so placed at least the day before

the day on which Coltharp was injured.                  The placement of the mats

and sheeting was not done by Goodwill and was not a part of its

contract, but it made Goodwill’s moving of its pallets used by it

in the shelf stocking work it performed more difficult.                    For this

reason, Ms. Wood, Goodwill’s project manager (the contract required

Goodwill    to    have   an   on-site        project      manager   with   overall

coordination of all daily work under the contract), being concerned

for the safety of the Goodwill employees, on the morning of the day

Coltharp was injured requested of the Commissary manager (an

employee of the United States) that the mats be removed.                       The

Commissary manager refused.         Ms. Wood accordingly determined to

advise the Goodwill day and night shift personnel of her concerns

and to allocate additional pullers to move the pallets.                         She



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testified six to nine pullers should have been working the night of

plaintiff’s injury to move the pallets over the mats and because it

was an unusually busy night.      However, only three pullers actually

worked that evening.

     When Coltharp began his duties that evening he realized that

the mats on the floor made his work more difficult, and expressed

his concern to Mr. Mier, the Commissary nighttime supervisor (an

employee of the United States).          Mier told him the mats could not

be removed.     Coltharp later voiced his concern to Marquez, his

Goodwill supervisor.        Marquez requested of Mier that the mats be

removed and Mier again refused.

     Marquez then suggested to Coltharp that he try to maneuver

around the mats.      Moving a pallet over a mat was less of a problem

when one person pushed and another pulled; whether to seek such

assistance was left to the discretion of each individual puller.

Coltharp successfully moved his pallet over the mats several times

before his injury, including five or six times, at least some of

which   were   with   the   assistance    of   another   puller,   over   one

particularly difficult area at which Coltharp ultimately suffered

his injury.    That occurred as he was moving the pallet by himself

but thought that a fellow Goodwill employee, who was behind him,

would offer assistance when he began to have trouble, but the

fellow employee did not.       Coltharp then felt a sharp pain in his

groin and suffered severe injury.



                                     4
       The Goodwill contract with the United States provided, as Ms.

Wood    was    aware,   that   Goodwill   was   entitled   to   seek   extra

compensation from the United States should the United States change

the conditions under which Goodwill had to perform its duties under

the contract.      Goodwill did not seek any such extra compensation.

       Coltharp‘s case against Goodwill was tried to the jury and

Goodwill’s contribution/indemnity claim against the United States

was simultaneously bench tried. The jury found that the negligence

of Coltharp, Goodwill and the United Sates, each, was a proximate

cause of Coltharp’s injury (Q1); that as between Coltharp and

Goodwill, 97% of the causative negligence was Goodwill’s and 3% was

Coltharp’s (Q2); that as between Goodwill and the United States,

65% of the causative negligence was Goodwill’s and 35% was the

United States’ (Q3); and that Coltharp’s actual damages amount to

$125,000 (Q4).      The district court treated the jury’s verdict as

binding for purposes of Coltharp’s suit against Goodwill; in regard

to Goodwill’s claim for contribution and indemnity against the

United States, the district court treated the jury’s verdict as

advisory only and entered its own findings of fact and conclusions

of law.       The district court rendered judgment on the verdict for

Coltharp against Goodwill in the amount of $125,000, and, on the

basis of its findings and conclusions, rendered judgment that

Goodwill take nothing on its claim against the United States.

       Goodwill brings this appeal raising only the following two



                                      5
claims of error, stated in its brief as follows:

           “1.   The first issue on appeal is whether the
      comparative negligence of Michael Coltharp is to be
      considered pursuant to Texas law in determining whether
      or not to reduce the money judgment by the percentage of
      negligence the jury determined attributable to the
      Plaintiff.

           2. The second issue on appeal is whether or not the
      United States retained sufficient control over the part
      of the work assigned to Goodwill Industries of El Paso,
      as an independent contractor as to create a legal duty by
      which the United States would be responsible for its
      negligent acts.”

                                      Discussion

      1.   Effect of plaintiff Coltharp’s contributory negligence

      The question posed by this issue had, at the time this case

was   orally    argued,         divided    the   Texas    Courts   of   Appeal,   and

applications for writs of error to the Supreme Court of Texas

raising that issue were pending or possible.                   As we advised the

parties, we accordingly withheld our decision to see if the Texas

Supreme Court would review one or more of those decisions and

resolve the issue.          It recently did so in The Kroger Co. v. Keng,

No. 98-1012, Tex. Sup. Ct., May 11, 2000, rehearing denied August

24, 2000 (affirming the decision of the Tyler Court of Appeals, 976

S.W.2d 882 (1998)).          Kroger holds that where an employee sues his

employer,      who   is     a    non-subscriber      to    workers’     compensation

insurance, for an injury incurred in the course and scope of his

employment, of which a proximate cause is the negligence of the

employer,   the      fact    that    the    employee’s     negligence    is   also a


                                            6
proximate cause of the injury not only does not bar the employee’s

recovery from the employer but does not in any way reduce that

recovery.    Under Kroger the district court correctly rendered

judgment for Coltharp against Goodwill in the full amount of his

$125,000 damages found by the jury, without any reduction on

account of the jury’s finding of 3% causative negligence on the

part of Coltharp.   We accordingly reject Goodwill’s first claim of

error.

     2.   Liability of the United States

     In its findings and conclusions the district court stated:

     “5. . . . The FTCA expressly has not waived liability
     [of the United States] for the negligent acts of its
     independent contractors. United States v. Orleans, 425
     U.S. 807, 814 (1976) . . .

     6. In Texas, the United States has no duty to see that
     an independent contractor performs its work in a safe
     manner. Levrie v. Department of the Army, 810 F.2d 1311
     (5th Cir. 1987) . . .

     7. Under Texas law, the duty of the United States to its
     independent contractor is similar to that of an owner or
     occupier of land to a business invitee. Shell Oil Co. v.
     Lamb, 493 S.W.2d 742, 747 [Tex. 1973]. One duty is to
     warn of hidden dangers that exists when a contractor
     enters the premises, or that arise from activity other
     than that of the contractor. Id.; Levrie, 810 F.2d at
     1313.

     8.   The United States owed no such legal duty to its
     independent contractor Goodwill because the placement of
     the mats was sufficiently open and obvious so as not to
     constitute a hidden danger on the premises.

     9. The second duty to an independent contractor involves
     injuries caused by an activity or instrumentality on the
     premises. Where the employer retains control of a part
     of the work assigned to the contractor, the employer has

                                 7
     a duty to exercise that control with reasonable care.
     Levrie, 810 F.2d at 1313; Redinger v. Living, Inc., 689
     S.W.2d 415, 417 (Tex. 1985). The “retained control” over
     the work “must be more than a general right to order the
     work to start or stop, to inspect progress or receive
     reports.” Redinger, 689 S.W.2d at 417.

     10. The evidence at trial demonstrated that the United
     States did not retain control over the work of the
     independent contractor within the meaning of Texas law.
     Under the Commissary Contract, the United States did not
     retain the right to direct Goodwill employees as to the
     details of their work; the Contract further provided that
     Goodwill was entitled to seek extra compensation should
     the United States change the conditions under which
     Goodwill was to perform under the contract. Plaintiff
     and other Goodwill employees took their instructions from
     Goodwill supervisors, not United States’ employees.
     Goodwill employees were not directed by United States
     employees on how to do their jobs.

     11. Defendant [Goodwill] at all times retained control
     of the work it had been contracted to perform. Goodwill
     project manager Janet Wood was aware of the placement of
     the mats and the government’s position with respect to
     removal of the mats well before Plaintiff arrived to work
     on the evening of Plaintiff’s injuries. With the notice,
     Goodwill had an opportunity to provide for additional
     personnel or develop an alternative plan for delivering
     the food items. Ms. Wood attempted to make arrangements
     for additional personnel; the evidence at trial
     demonstrated that when two or more persons “pushed and
     pulled” the pallets across the mats, the mats could be
     successfully negotiated without substantial difficulty.

     12. Because the United States did not retain control
     over part of the work assigned to its independent
     contractor, the United States owed no legal duty to
     Goodwill with respect to the placement of the mats on the
     tile floor of the Commissary. . . .”

     Goodwill admits that “the dangers were open and obvious.”

However, it contends that “the United States is responsible as a

result of retaining control.”

     Under our holding in Levrie v. Department of Army, 810 F.2d

                                 8
1311 (5th Cir. 1987), the question of whether the United States

retained sufficient control over its independent contractor within

the meaning of Texas law so as to be liable thereunder on the basis

asserted is a question of fact, and we review the district court’s

finding that the United States did not retain sufficient such

control under the clearly erroneous standard.   Thus, in Levrie, we

stated:

     “Under the terms of the Federal Torts Claims Act, the
     United States is not liable for the negligence of a
     government contractor.

     . . .

     Under Texas law, the owner of property has a general duty
     to use reasonable care to keep the premises under his
     control in a safe condition. This duty may subject the
     owner to liability for negligence in two situations: (1)
     those arising from a defect in the premises, and (2)
     those arising from an activity or instrumentality.
     Redinger v. Living, Inc., 689 S.W.2d 415, 417 (Tex.
     1985). This case involves the latter.

     Texas law provides generally that a property owner does
     not have a duty to ensure that an independent contractor
     performs his work in a safe manner.       Abalos v. Oil
     Development Co., 544 S.W.2d 627, 631 (Tex. 1976). Nor
     does the owner have a duty to protect the contractor’s
     employees from hazards that are incidental to, or part
     of, the work the independent contractor is hired to do.
     Shell Oil Co. v. Songer, 710 S.W.2d 615, 618 (Tex.App.-
     Houston [1st Dist.] 1986, no writ). However, when the
     owner of the premises exercises control over or
     interferes with the contractor’s performance of his work,
     the owner may be liable unless he exercises reasonable
     care in supervising the contractor’s activity. Redinger,
     689 S.W.2d at 418. In Redinger, the Texas Supreme Court
     stated that supervisory control might consist of the
     power to direct the order in which work shall be done or
     power to forbid its being done in a dangerous manner.
     Id.


                                 9
     The district court found that the defendants did not
     control the operations of Williams [the independent
     contractor] within the meaning of Texas law. This is a
     finding of fact, which we review under the clearly
     erroneous standard . . .” Id. at 1314 (emphasis added).

     After review of the record and consideration of the briefs and

argument of counsel, it is apparent to us that the district court’s

findings are not clearly erroneous and that it committed no error

of law in holding for the United States.    We accordingly reject

Goodwill’s second point of error.

                            Conclusion

     For the reasons stated, the judgment of the district court is

                            AFFIRMED.




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