Title: State ex rel. Beutler, Inc. v. Honorable Sandra C. Midkiff
Citation: N/A
Docket Number: SC98251
State: Missouri
Issuer: Missouri Supreme Court
Date: April 6, 2021

SUPREME COURT OF MISSOURI 
en banc 
STATE ex rel. 
) 
BEUTLER, INC. d/b/a GEORGE J. SHAW 
) 
CONSTRUCTION CO. and 
) 
BRIAN HENDERSON, 
) 
) 
Relators, 
) 
) 
v. 
) 
No. SC98251 
) 
THE HONORABLE SANDRA C. MIDKIFF, ) 
) 
Respondent. 
) 
ORIGINAL PROCEEDING IN PROHIBITION 
Joshua McArthur (“McArthur”), an employee of R&B Trucking, filed a 
negligence suit against Brian Henderson (“Henderson”) and Beutler, Inc. d/b/a George J. 
Shaw Construction Co. (“Shaw”) for injuries McArthur sustained while operating a dump 
truck on a construction site.  Shaw and Henderson filed a motion for summary judgment, 
asserting immunity from suit under the workers’ compensation exclusivity doctrine.  The 
circuit court overruled the motion.  Shaw and Henderson now seek a writ of mandamus 
directing the circuit court to enter summary judgment in their favor.  This Court has the 
authority to “issue and determine original remedial writs.”  Mo. Const. art. V, § 4.1.  
Opinion issued April 6, 2021, and modified 
on the Court's own motion June 1, 2021
 
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Because Shaw is McArthur’s statutory employer under section 287.040.21 and Henderson 
is McArthur’s statutory co-employee under section 287.120.1, each is immune from suit.  
This Court’s preliminary writ is now made permanent. 
Background 
 
On September 30, 2016, McArthur was injured while operating a dump truck for 
R&B Trucking at the Cerner Trails Campus construction project in Jackson County.  
Henderson, who was employed by Shaw, was performing excavation work on the same 
project and “dumped an oversized load of wet clay, dirt, and boulder(s) into the bed of 
the dump truck” that McArthur operated.  The force of this drop propelled McArthur into 
the ceiling of the cab, causing substantial injuries.  McArthur received workers’ 
compensation benefits arising out of the incident from his direct employer, 
R&B Trucking.  On February 26, 2018, McArthur filed a negligence action against 
Henderson and Shaw. 
 
The chain of subcontractors connecting Shaw to McArthur is as follows: the 
Cerner Trails Campus construction project was owned by Cerner Properties 
Development, Inc. (“Cerner Properties”).  Cerner Properties hired J.E. Dunn Construction 
(“Dunn”) to serve as the general contractor for the project, and Dunn hired Shaw as a 
subcontractor to provide excavation services for the project.  Shaw entered into a separate 
agreement with C-Sharp Trucking (“C-Sharp”) to haul material excavated by Shaw on 
and off the project site.  C-Sharp then entered into a separate agreement with R&B 
                                              
1   All statutory references are to RSMo Supp. 2017 unless otherwise noted.   
 
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Trucking to perform a portion of the work C-Sharp was obligated to perform for Shaw.  
Put simply, R&B Trucking was a subcontractor to Shaw’s subcontractor, C-Sharp. 
 
In their amended answers to McArthur’s negligence petition, Shaw and Henderson 
pleaded as an affirmative defense that McArthur’s common law action was “barred by 
the workers’ compensation exclusivity doctrine” because Shaw was McArthur’s statutory 
employer and Henderson was McArthur’s statutory co-employee under section 287.040.  
Shaw and Henderson then filed a motion for summary judgment, asserting immunity 
from suit under the workers’ compensation exclusivity doctrine.  The circuit court 
overruled the motion, finding the relationship between R&B Trucking and C-Sharp was a 
“relationship between a for-hire motor carrier operating within a commercial zone …  
and an owner, as defined in section 301.020 and operator of a motor vehicle,” per section 
287.040.4, thereby negating Shaw’s status as McArthur’s “statutory employer.”  Shaw 
and Henderson petitioned this Court for a writ of mandamus directing the circuit court to 
vacate its initial judgment overruling Shaw and Henderson’s motion for summary 
judgment and to enter summary judgment in their favor.  
Analysis 
 
A writ of mandamus is available only if the relator demonstrates a “clear, 
unequivocal, specific right to a thing claimed.”  State ex rel. Reg’l Convention v. Burton, 
533 S.W.3d 223, 226 (Mo. banc 2017) (quotation marks omitted).  However, “[w]hen a 
defendant is entitled to immunity as a matter of law, prohibition is an appropriate 
remedy.”  State ex rel. Alsup v. Kanatzar, 588 S.W.3d 187, 190 (Mo. banc 2019) 
(quotation marks omitted).  Shaw and Henderson are claiming immunity from common 
 
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law suit under section 287.040, rendering prohibition an appropriate remedy.  This Court 
has discretion to treat a “relator’s petition for a writ of mandamus as one for a writ of 
prohibition.”  State ex rel. Chassaing v. Mummert, 887 S.W.2d 573, 577 (Mo. banc 
1994). 
 
Under Missouri’s workers’ compensation laws, in exchange for providing 
mandatory workers’ compensation coverage – without regard to fault – employers and 
their employees are granted immunity from civil lawsuits arising out of workplace 
injuries.  See § 287.120.  “The Workers’ Compensation Law … supplants the common 
law in determining the remedies for on-the-job injuries.”  Vatterott v. Hammerts Iron 
Works, Inc., 968 S.W.2d 120, 121 (Mo. banc 1998). 
 
Section 287.040 extends the workers’ compensation obligations (and civil 
immunity protections) to “statutory employers.”  See § 287.040.  If an injured employee 
qualifies as a “statutory employee” of the “statutory employer,” their right to recover 
under workers’ compensation laws excludes all other rights and remedies the employee 
might have.  Section 287.040 is designed to prevent employers from dodging workers’ 
compensation obligations by hiring independent contractors by “defining the company 
that hires the independent contractor as a statutory employer.”  McCracken v. Wal-Mart 
Stores E., LP, 298 S.W.3d 473, 480 (Mo. banc 2009).   
 
Section 287.040 sets out the definition for “statutory employer”: 
Any person who has work done under contract on or about his premises 
which is an operation of the usual business which he there carries on shall 
be deemed an employer and shall be liable under this chapter to such 
contractor, his subcontractors, and their employees, when injured or killed 
 
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on or about the premises of the employer while doing work which is in the 
usual course of his business. 
 
§ 287.040.1.  The status as a “statutory employer” survives any chain of contractors and 
subcontractors because an “independent contractor shall be deemed to be the employer of 
the employees of his subcontractors and their subcontractors when employed on or 
about the premises where the principal contractor is doing work.”  § 287.040.2 (emphasis 
added).  Here, there is an unbroken chain of contractor-subcontractor relationships 
making Shaw McArthur’s statutory employer. 
The circuit court concluded the chain of subcontractors was broken by the 
relationship between C-Sharp and R&B Trucking, finding it met the exception from 
workers’ compensation exclusivity provided in section 287.040.4.  Section 287.040.4 
provides: 
The provisions of this section shall not apply to the relationship between a 
for-hire motor carrier operating within a commercial zone as defined in 
section 390.020 or 390.041 or operating under a certificate issued by the 
Missouri department of transportation or by the United States Department 
of Transportation, or any of its subagencies, and an owner, as defined in 
section 301.010,[2] and operator of a motor vehicle. 
 
The circuit court concluded that R&B was a for-hire motor carrier operating within a 
section 390.020 commercial zone3 and under a MODOT-issued certificate and that        
                                              
2   “Owner” is defined as “any person, firm, corporation or association, who holds the legal title 
to a vehicle ….”  § 301.010(43).  “Operator” is defined as “any person who operates or drives a 
motor vehicle.”  § 301.010(42).  
3   “Commercial zone” is defined as: 
[A]ny municipality within this state together with that territory either within or without 
the State of Missouri, extending one mile beyond the corporate limits of such 
municipality and one additional mile for each fifty thousand inhabitants or portion  
thereof …. 
 
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C-Sharp was an owner and operator of a motor vehicle under section 301.010.  Thus, the 
circuit court concluded, the relationship between C-Sharp and R&B Trucking was 
exempt from the exclusivity provision and broke the chain of contractor-subcontractors 
that, otherwise, would make Shaw McArthur’s statutory employer. 
 
Shaw and Henderson argue the exception found in section 287.040.4 is 
inapplicable to the underlying case because that exception applies only to the relationship 
between a for-hire motor carrier and an owner-operator of a motor vehicle.  Shaw and 
Henderson contend this means for-hire motor carriers are not responsible for workers’ 
compensation claims by independent owner-operators and, by the same token, would not 
be entitled to immunity from civil lawsuits for negligence brought against them by those 
owner-operators.  Shaw and Henderson allege the circuit court’s analysis focused on the 
wrong relationship when determining the exception in section 287.040.4 applied; they 
argue the focus should not have been on the relationship between C-Sharp and R&B 
Trucking but, rather, on the relationship between McArthur and Shaw.  Shaw and 
Henderson are correct.   
The circuit court’s findings regarding the application of section 287.040.4 are 
erroneous for several reasons.  Section 301.010 includes statutory entities in its definition 
of “owner,” but it notably excludes statutory entities from its definition of “operator.”  
C-Sharp qualifies as an “owner” under section 301.010, but it does not qualify as an 
                                                                                                                                                  
§ 390.020(4).  The circuit court found R&B was operating in Kansas City, Missouri. 
 
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“operator.”4  As a result, section 287.040.4 does not apply to C-Sharp’s relationship with 
R&B Trucking.  It follows, therefore, that the “relationship” outlined in section 287.040.4 
is one in which the for-hire motor carrier is the employer and the owner-operator is the 
contractor hired as a driver by the carrier.  The exception in section 287.040.4 applies 
only when the injured worker is a party to the relationship, not when someone upstream 
from the injured worker is a party.  McArthur tries to avoid this result by claiming there 
were genuine issues of material fact concerning whether (and how) section 287.040.4 
applies.  On the stipulated and agreed facts, however, all of the facts necessary to 
determine whether (or how) to apply section 287.040.4 are undisputed and only legal 
issues remain. 
 
Because the exception in section 287.040.4 does not apply to break the chain of 
subcontractors, it is clear from the language of section 287.040.2 that Shaw is 
McArthur’s statutory employer.  Shaw, as an independent contractor, is the statutory 
employer of Shaw’s subcontractors’ employees.  If Shaw’s subcontractors hire 
subcontractors of their own, section 287.040.2 provides that Shaw is deemed to be the 
statutory employer of the employees of those subcontractors as well.  Because R&B 
Trucking is the subcontractor of C-Sharp and C-Sharp is the subcontractor of Shaw, it is 
inescapable under section 287.040.2 that Shaw is the statutory employer of R&B 
                                              
4   The fact that the parties stipulated below that C-Sharp is an “operator” of a motor vehicle does 
not impact this analysis.  Whether the undisputed facts show C-Sharp was an “operator” of a 
motor vehicle under § 287.040.4 is not a question of fact, but rather a question of law to which 
parties cannot stipulate.  Parr v. Breeden, 489 S.W.3d 774, 779 (Mo. banc 2016).  Here, the 
undisputed facts are that Shaw’s agreement was with C-Sharp Trucking, Inc., not with Mr. David 
Cobbins d/b/a “C-Sharp Trucking.” 
 
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Trucking’s employees, including McArthur.  Accordingly, Shaw is immune from suit.  
And it follows that Henderson also is immune as McArthur’s statutory co-employee 
because Henderson is an employee of Shaw, who is McArthur’s statutory employer.  See 
§ 287.120.1 (“Any employee of such employer shall not be liable for any injury.”).    
 
McArthur also raised an argument in the circuit court (which was not addressed in 
the circuit court’s order overruling the motion for summary judgment) and before this 
Court that McArthur’s constitutional right to trial by jury is violated by the application of 
the statutory employment defense in this case.  McArthur contends the workers’ 
compensation regime does not replace an employee’s cause of action against a third party 
for negligence and a statute that abrogates the right to trial by jury for an existing cause 
of action is invalid because it infringes upon a constitutional right. 
 
The constitutional validity of the workers’ compensation scheme has long been 
upheld.  The ability of the legislature to “regulate or entirely abolish the common-law 
rules of liability and the defenses of fellow servants and contributory negligence and of 
assumption of risk is thoroughly established ….”  De May v. Liberty Foundry Co., 37 
S.W.2d 640, 647 (Mo. 1931).  No reason exists “why [the legislature] may not require 
compensation to be made to an employee for accidental injuries received in the course of 
his employment in hazardous occupations, according to a different rule from that 
prescribed by the common law, and place the supervision of the new plan in the hands of 
an administrative commission instead of the courts.”  Id. (quotation marks omitted). 
McArthur contends his claims are different because they are asserted against third 
parties and, therefore, have not been abrogated.  As stated above, however, McArthur’s 
 
9 
claims are covered by the workers’ compensation statutes and the exclusive remedy 
provision is not limited to claims against direct employers – it also applies to statutory 
employers and, under the circumstances in this case, statutory co-employees.  The 
workers’ compensation regime replaces an employee’s cause of action against statutory 
employers.  Direct and statutory employers both are required to provide workers’ 
compensation protection and both are entitled to civil immunity.  The application of the 
statutory employment defense in this case does not violate McArthur’s constitutional 
right to a trial by jury. 
Conclusion 
 
For the reasons set forth above, this Court’s preliminary writ of prohibition is now 
made permanent. 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
_____________________________    
 
Paul C. Wilson, Judge 
 
 
Draper, C.J., Russell, Powell, Breckenridge, 
and Fischer, JJ., concur.