Court Opinion

ID: 4572295
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-10-02 14:06:07.094998+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:30:47.474250
License: Public Domain

RENDERED: SEPTEMBER 25, 2020; 10:00 A.M.
                  NOT TO BE PUBLISHED

           Commonwealth of Kentucky
                   Court of Appeals

                     NO. 2018-CA-0724-MR

DEWANE BEASEY                                         APPELLANT

           APPEAL FROM JEFFERSON CIRCUIT COURT
v.          HONORABLE DARRYL LAVERY, JUDGE
                   ACTION NO. 16-CI-001184

FORD MOTOR COMPANY; ABEL
CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, INC.;
AND ESIS, ON BEHALF OF ALLIED
BARTON SECURITY SERVICES, LLC                          APPELLEES

AND                  NO. 2018-CA-0824-MR

ABEL CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, INC.             CROSS-APPELLANT

        CROSS-APPEAL FROM JEFFERSON CIRCUIT COURT
v.          HONORABLE DARRYL LAVERY, JUDGE
                  ACTION NO. 16-CI-001184

DEWANE BEASEY; FORD MOTOR
COMPANY; AND ESIS, ON BEHALF
OF ALLIED BARTON SECURITY
SERVICES, LLC                                                CROSS-APPELLEES

AND                           NO. 2019-CA-0105-MR

DEWANE BEASEY                                                        APPELLANT

                APPEAL FROM JEFFERSON CIRCUIT COURT
v.               HONORABLE ANNIE O’CONNELL, JUDGE
                        ACTION NO. 16-CI-001184

FORD MOTOR COMPANY; ABEL
CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, INC.;
AND ESIS, ON BEHALF OF ALLIED
BARTON SECURITY SERVICES, LLC                                          APPELLEES

                                     OPINION
                                    AFFIRMING

                                   ** ** ** ** **

BEFORE: ACREE, CALDWELL, AND LAMBERT, JUDGES.

CALDWELL, JUDGE: While working as a fire and security officer, Dewane

Beasey injured himself by stepping into a water-filled hole at a construction site at

the Ford Motor Company (Ford) plant in Louisville in 2016. Beasey sued, among

others, Ford and Abel Construction Company, Inc. (Abel), who was helping

                                         -2-
construct an addition to Ford’s facility. A jury ruled in favor of Ford but found

Abel 60% at fault on a negligence per se claim alleging a breach of the Kentucky

Building Code (the Code), assigning the other 40% of fault to Beasey. The trial

court then, unusually, issued two judgments. Though there are stylistic differences

between them, the main substantive difference, for purposes of these appeals, is

that the first judgment stated that Beasey was entitled to interest but the second

made no mention of interest. Beasey appealed, listing both judgments; Abel cross-

appealed, listing only the second judgment. Appeal Nos. 2018-CA-0724-MR and

2018-CA-0824-MR.

             Beasey asserted Abel’s cross-appeal was untimely. Therefore, Abel

successfully asked us to stay the already-pending appeals while it sought relief

under Kentucky Rule of Civil Procedure (CR) 60.02 in the trial court to clear up

which judgment controlled. The trial court’s ruling did not address CR 60.02, but

instead held the second judgment was intended to supersede the first and the lack

of language indicating that intent in the second judgment was a clerical error

subject to correction at any time under CR 60.01. Beasey then filed appeal No.

2019-CA-0105-MR, asserting the trial court’s order was improper. We elect to

resolve all three related appeals in this opinion.

                                          -3-
          RELEVANT FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

             Procedurally, these three appeals are reminiscent of a civil procedure

final exam in their complexity. The underlying facts which gave rise to Beasey’s

suit are simpler, however.

             In January 2016, Beasey, a fire and security officer for Allied Barton

Security Services (Allied), responded to a call about a burst or leaking pipe at the

Ford plant. Beasey tried to locate the riser to drain the pipe. In so doing, he

stepped into the construction site. Plastic sheeting and/or a plywood barricade

erected by Abel to, ostensibly, prevent entry to the construction site had been

removed or pushed aside. Beasey saw water on the floor near a column but

thought it was only a puddle. Unfortunately, the water filled a roughly three-feet-

deep hole. Beasey stepped into the hole and injured his knee and shoulder.

             Beasey then filed the underlying action, alleging ordinary negligence

against Abel for failing to warn/properly barricade the construction site and

negligence per se for failing to insulate properly the burst pipe, as allegedly

required by the Code via adoption of a national set of standards, the National Fire

Protection Agency Standards (the NFPA). Beasey also alleged Ford was negligent

for failing to maintain the aging pipe.

             The matter progressed to a lengthy trial held in March 2018. The jury

found against Beasey on all ordinary negligence claims. However, on the

                                          -4-
negligence per se claim, the jury found that Abel had failed to meet its duties under

the Code and that failure was a substantial factor in Beasey’s injuries, assigning

60% of the fault to Abel and 40% to Beasey. The jury awarded Beasey a total of

$314,253.53 in damages, $250,000.00 of which was for pain and suffering and

$64,253.53 of which was for past medical expenses.

                  On April 2, 2018, Beasey’s counsel e-filed a proposed judgment

which contained photocopies of the verdict forms completed by the jury and an

additional page stating that Beasey was entitled to recover $188,552.11 from Abel

(a forty-percent reduction from the jury’s verdict due to its finding Beasey forty-

percent at fault), which “shall accrue interest at the rate of SIX PERCENT (6%)

compounded annually . . . .” Apparently, counsel did not circulate the proposed

judgment amongst opposing counsel before tendering it. The next day, the trial

court issued a short order requiring Beasey to file within ten days “a proposed

judgment consistent with the jury’s verdict. Prior to filing, Plaintiff shall provide a

copy to counsel for each Defendant for each to sign off and approve as to form

only.”1

                  Counsel for the various defendants were not satisfied with Beasey’s

proposed judgment because, inter alia, it failed to address the trial court’s directed

verdict rulings. On April 11, counsel for Ford circulated a proposed judgment. No

1
    The judge signed that order on April 2, but it was not filed until April 3.

                                                   -5-
party, however, alerted the court to any objection it had to Beasey’s proposed

judgment. Thus, the court signed Beasey’s tendered judgment, and that signed

judgment was entered by the clerk of court on April 12, 2018 (hereafter the “first

judgment.”).2 Abel contends it did not timely receive copies of the first judgment.

                 On April 18, 2018, counsel for Ford tendered another judgment. That

judgment did not say that it amended, superseded, or supplemented the extant

judgment. Indeed, it did not mention the first judgment, nor did it mention any

entitlement by Beasey to interest. It did, however, contain a statement that all

counsel, including counsel for Beasey, agreed for it to be entered. Despite the

existence of the first judgment, and even though the second judgment did not

comply with the court’s order because it was not tendered by Plaintiff’s counsel or

within the ten-day deadline for submitting proposed judgments, the circuit judge

signed the second tendered judgment (hereafter the “second judgment”) on April

20, 2018, and it was entered by the clerk of court on April 23, 2018.3

                 On May 10, 2018, Beasey filed a notice of appeal stating that he was

appealing from both the first and second judgments. On May 30, 2018, Abel filed

its notice of cross-appeal, stating that it was appealing from the second judgment.

2
 Curiously, the trial judge signed the judgment on April 3, but it was not entered for nine days.
The reason for that unusually lengthy gap is not apparent from the face of the record.
3
    April 20, 2018, was a Friday; April 23, 2018, was the following Monday.

                                                -6-
The date of Abel’s cross-appeal is important because CR 74.01(1) provides in

relevant part that a cross-appeal must be filed “not later than 10 days after the last

day allowed for the filing of a notice of appeal.” A party has thirty days after the

judgment to file a notice of appeal under CR 73.02(1), so Beasey’s appeal from the

first judgment would have been due May 14, 2018,4 meaning Abel’s cross-appeal

from the first judgment would have been due ten days later (May 24, 2018). In

short, Abel’s May 30, 2018 cross-appeal is timely if the appellate window is

calculated from the entry of the second judgment but untimely if calculated from

the entry of the first judgment.

              Given Beasey’s position that Abel’s cross-appeal was untimely, in

October 2018, Abel filed a motion to vacate the first judgment pursuant to CR

60.02 or, in the alternative, to vacate that order under CR 60.01, which generally

permits correction of clerical mistakes at any time. Ford argued the motion should

be granted; Beasey, unsurprisingly, opposed it. In November 2018, we granted

Abel’s motion to abate these appeals to permit the trial court to rule on Abel’s

4
  Thirty days from April 12, 2018, was May 12, but that was a Saturday so Beasey had until the
following Monday—May 14—to file the notice of appeal via application of CR 6.01, which
provides in relevant part:

       In computing any period of time . . . the day of the act . . . after which the
       designated period of time begins to run is not to be included. The last day of the
       period so computed is to be included, unless it is a Saturday, a Sunday or a legal
       holiday, in which event the period runs until the end of the next day which is not a
       Saturday, a Sunday or a legal holiday.
.

                                               -7-
then-pending CR 60.02 motion. Our order did not mention the request for

alternative relief under CR 60.01.

               In December 2018, the trial court granted Beasey’s motion.5 The trial

court held that a court has ten days to amend a judgment on its own initiative under

CR 59.04, and so the second judgment was timely.6 The trial court held it was

“clear that it was the intention of the Court for the April 23, 2018, Order and

Judgment to amend and vacate the previous Order and be controlling in this case.”

The trial court also held that CR 60.01 applied because “[t]he fact that the second

order did not state ‘Amended Order and Judgment’ is a clerical error that the Court

now corrects.” Id. Finally, the trial court noted that only the second judgment had

been approved by all parties’ counsel. Oddly, the trial court did not address CR

60.02. Dissatisfied, Beasey appealed that ruling. Appeal No. 2019-CA-0105-MR.

5
 Circuit Judge Annie O’Connell granted the motion to vacate; Circuit Judge Darryl Lavery
conducted the trial and signed the two judgments.
6
  Ten days after the first judgment was April 22, 2018, which was a Sunday. The second
judgment was entered the next day, Monday, April 23, 2018. As the parties have not cited
authority to the contrary, we assume arguendo that CR 6.01 applied to deem the second
judgment having been entered within ten days of the first. Regardless, as will be discussed later,
CR 59.04 expressly applies to a court sua sponte ordering a new trial and thus is inapplicable
here.

                                               -8-
                                        ANALYSIS7

                        Abel’s Cross-Appeal Was Timely Filed

              Because it impacts whether Abel’s cross-appeal is timely, we must

begin by addressing the most recent appeal—Beasey’s appeal from the trial court’s

order granting post-judgment relief under CR 59.04/60.01.

                                CR 59.04 Is Inapplicable

              Adding to an already thorny procedural thicket, the trial court

curiously relied upon CR 59.04 in its post-judgment order. CR 59.04 provides:

              Not later than 10 days after entry of judgment the court
              of its own initiative may order a new trial for any reason
              for which it might have granted a new trial on motion of
              a party. After giving the parties notice and an
              opportunity to be heard on the matter, the court may
              grant a motion for a new trial, timely served, for a reason
              not stated in the motion. In either case, the court shall
              specify in the order the grounds therefor.

Obviously, the trial court’s post-trial order construing the second judgment as

having superseded the first was issued well more than ten days after the entry of

both previous judgments, and the trial court did not mandate a new trial in the

7
  The plethora of briefs submitted by the parties totals roughly 140 pages. We have carefully
read them but, to avoid making an already lengthy opinion truly unwieldy, we will discuss only
the matters we deem necessary to resolve properly these appeals.

                                              -9-
second judgment (nor has it ever so held). Consequently, we agree with Beasey

that the trial court’s reliance upon CR 59.04 was erroneous.8

            The Trial Court Did Not Err by Using CR 60.01 to Clarify
                 that the Second Judgment Amended the First

              The trial court also relied upon CR 60.01 in its post-judgment order.

That rule provides:

              Clerical mistakes in judgments, orders or other parts of
              the record and errors therein arising from oversight or
              omission may be corrected by the court at any time of its
              own initiative or on the motion of any party and after
              such notice, if any, as the court orders. During the
              pendency of an appeal, such mistakes may be so
              corrected before the appeal is docketed in the appellate
              court, and thereafter while the appeal is pending may be
              so corrected with leave of the appellate court.

              We stayed the first two appeals to permit the trial court to rule on

Abel’s post-judgment CR 60.02 motion, but the trial court ignored CR 60.02 in its

order. Nonetheless, we will not elevate rigid form over practical function and will

8
  Perhaps the trial court meant to cite to CR 59.05, which provides that “[a] motion to alter or
amend a judgment, or to vacate a judgment and enter a new one, shall be served not later than 10
days after entry of the final judgment.” However, when tendering the second judgment, no party
explicitly moved to alter, amend, or vacate the first. Ford and/or Abel have contended that
tendering the second judgment “had the same effect” and thus “should be construed as” a CR
59.05 motion. Record (R.) at 2559. But we need not resolve that interesting argument since we
conclude the trial court properly relied upon CR 60.01. Similarly, our conclusion that CR 60.01
was properly applied renders moot Abel’s alternate argument that its post-judgment motion
could have been granted under CR 60.02.

                                             -10-
leniently construe our stay order as being sufficiently broad to permit the trial court

to decide the matter under CR 60.01.

             Our substantive analysis begins with the fundamental fact that “[t]here

can be only one judgment or one final judicial determination upon a single cause of

action . . . .” 46 AM. JUR. 2D Judgments § 9 (2020). Therefore, either the first or

second judgment must control—both cannot do so simultaneously.

             Generally, “[a] judge, having rendered and signed one final judgment,

has no authority to sign another one” so “the entry of a second final judgment in

the same cause does not vacate the first, and if there is nothing to show that the

first is vacated, then the second is a nullity.” Id. Accord 49 C.J.S. Judgments §107

(2020) (“In the absence of a statute to the contrary it is a general rule that there can

be only one final judgment in any action . . . [thus] [i]t follows as a necessary

consequence of the general rule that, when a final judgment has once been entered,

no second or different judgment may be rendered between the same parties and in

the same suit, until the first has been vacated and set aside or reversed on appeal or

error. Where a second judgment is entered by a court after the first judgment has

become final the second judgment is void.”) (footnotes omitted). Application of

that general rule would lead to a preliminary conclusion that the second judgment

here was void. However, as with many general rules, there are exceptions. Most

pertinent here is an exception by which a second judgment issued when a court

                                          -11-
retains “plenary power” over the action (i.e., during the period when the court

retains jurisdiction) “is treated as a modified or reformed judgment that implicitly

vacates and supercedes [sic] the prior judgment, unless the record indicates a

contrary intent.” Price Construction, Inc. v. Castillo, 147 S.W.3d 431, 441 (Tex.

App. 2004).

              That general rule and the exception thereto align roughly with CR

52.02, which provides in relevant part that “[n]ot later than 10 days after entry of

judgment the court of its own initiative, or on the motion of a party made not later

than 10 days after entry of judgment, may amend its findings or make additional

findings and may amend the judgment accordingly.” In other words, a trial court

may modify its judgments within ten days after their entry; it may not do so after

that ten-day period expires. Thus, a second judgment issued after the trial court

lost jurisdiction would be void. See, e.g., Harris v. Camp Taylor Fire Protection

Dist., 303 S.W.3d 479, 482 (Ky. App. 2009) (explaining that a judgment becomes

final after ten days and, thus, a trial court loses jurisdiction ten days after its final

judgment is entered). But a second judgment issued within that ten-day period

must logically have been intended to supersede, or at least amend, the first

judgment. After all, there would be no reason for a trial court to issue a second

judgment if it did not intend to impact an extant judgment.

                                           -12-
             Here, the second judgment was issued (via application of CR 60.01)

ten days after the first judgment and, thus, was issued while the trial court retained

jurisdiction. Of course, better practice would have been for the second judgment to

have explicitly stated how it related to the first. But the regrettable lack of such

information is not dispositive. Instead, the second judgment’s silence as to its

relationship with the first means this case falls squarely within the presumption

that a second judgment issued while a court retains jurisdiction implicitly

supersedes the first judgment sub silentio. Price Construction, Inc., 147 S.W.3d at

441.

             That conclusion could be rebutted upon a showing of contrary intent.

But the parties have not made that showing. In fact, since all parties agreed to the

second judgment, but not the first, and the trial court expressly ordered the parties

to submit a judgment upon which all parties had agreed, it logically follows that

the trial court intended the second judgment to control. Indeed, that is exactly

what the court held when it granted relief under CR 60.01.

             Speaking thereof, we agree with the trial court that amending the

second judgment to merely state that it was an amended judgment was a

permissible correction of a clerical error. Based upon the sheer number of cases in

which the appellate courts of this Commonwealth have been tasked with

determining whether an error is clerical or judicial, it is an understatement to say

                                         -13-
the answer to that ever-vexing question is not always “readily apparent.”

Machniak v. Commonwealth, 351 S.W.3d 648, 653 (Ky. 2011). The potential for

confusion is heightened by the fact that, despite the name, even a judge may

commit a “clerical error.” Javier Steel Corp. v. Central Bridge Co. LLC, 353
S.W.3d 356, 359 (Ky. App. 2011). Despite the difficulty in doing so, properly

categorizing an error is crucial because only a clerical error may be corrected at

any time under CR 60.01. See Wides v. Wides, 300 Ky. 344, 188 S.W.2d 471, 473

(1945) (explaining that “unlike clerical errors, judicial errors cannot be corrected at

any time, but must be done seasonably, in accordance with statutory or code

provisions for the correction of erroneous judgments”).

              “[T]he distinction between clerical error and judicial error does not

turn on whether the correction of the error results in a substantive change in the

judgment.” Cardwell v. Commonwealth, 12 S.W.3d 672, 674 (Ky. 2000). Instead,

for nearly a century Kentucky has based the distinction on whether the error “was

the deliberate result of judicial reasoning and determination, regardless of whether

it was made by the clerk, by counsel, or by the judge.” Buchanan v. West

Kentucky Coal Co., 218 Ky. 259, 291 S.W. 32, 35 (1927) (quotation marks and

citation omitted).

             Clerical errors cannot be mistakes “of substance, of judgment, or of

law[,]” but instead generally are “inadvertences or oversights . . . apparent on the

                                         -14-
face of the document or record in which they appear, and are, therefore,

discoverable by inspection.” Id. at 35-36 (internal quotation marks and citation

omitted). Thus, errors which are plainly clerical include “an incorrect or missing

date on a document in the record; a mistake made when transcribing numbers; or a

mathematical error when calculating a judgment . . . .” Machniak, 351 S.W.3d at

652 (citations omitted).

             Here, Beasey appears to misconstrue what the error actually is. The

error is not that the second judgment did not mention interest. Indeed, the failure

to include interest in a judgment may, or may not, be a clerical error. Whittenberg

Engineering & Const. Co. v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co., 390 S.W.2d 877, 884 (Ky.

1965) (“It is our view that where failure to include interest is a clerical error it is

correctible under CR 60.01, but where no clerical error is shown, and certainly

none is shown here, then relief may be had only under the provisions of CR 59 or

CR 60.02 or by appeal.”). Instead, as the trial court aptly noted, the error manifest

from the face of the second judgment is the lack of a notation as to how it relates to

the first judgment.

             We are unpersuaded that the failure to include the word “amended” in

the caption of the second judgment was a reasoned, deliberate decision by the trial

court. Given the incontrovertible principle that there may be only one final

judgment in a case, it is difficult to fathom that a judge would intentionally issue

                                           -15-
two judgments without providing any guidance as to their relationship. Thus, the

lack of an indication in the caption as to whether the second judgment superseded

the first, such as by adding one word, “amended,” must logically be deemed an

oversight, easily perceptible from viewing the record.

               As the trial court noted in its order granting CR 60.01 relief, the court

intended the parties to all agree to (at least as to the form of) a judgment; only the

second judgment contained such agreement. Thus, we agree with the trial court

that the court intended for the second, agreed judgment to control over the first, to

which only Beasey agreed.9 That conclusion also fits within the previously

discussed principle that a second judgment issued within the narrow window in

which a trial court retains jurisdiction of a case implicitly supersedes any extant

judgments. In short, we affirm the trial court’s decision to correct a clerical error

in the second judgment to add the word “amended” in the caption thereof, meaning

that the second judgment is the operative judgment. That conclusion, in turn,

9
  Beasey’s attorneys stated in affidavits that they agreed to the second judgment with the
expectation that it would only supplement the first judgment, and that they believed the omission
of interest in the second judgment was unintentional. We are unsure as to the basis of those
beliefs. Based upon email discussions amongst counsel, it is uncontested that only Beasey’s
counsel agreed to the first judgment and there is nothing concrete to show that interest was
somehow unintentionally omitted from the second judgment. If Beasey’s counsel believed
Beasey to be entitled to interest, counsel should have raised the omission of interest in the second
judgment before agreeing to it instead of relying upon a curious, idiosyncratic interpretation of it.

                                                -16-
means Abel’s cross-appeal was timely filed.10 As will be seen later, however, that

does not mean Abel is entitled to relief.

                   Beasey’s First Appeal, No. 2018-CA-0724-MR11

               There Was Not a “Mary Carter” Agreement

               Beasey contends Ford and Abel entered into a secret “Mary Carter”

agreement prior to trial which they failed to disclose to the trial court until each

had received three peremptory challenges. See CR 47.03(1) (“In civil cases each

opposing side shall have three peremptory challenges, but co-parties having

antagonistic interests shall have three peremptory challenges each.”). Actually,

the agreement was a routine contractual indemnification agreement, not an

improper “Mary Carter” agreement.

               Ford’s position on indemnification was known well before the trial.

Ford filed a motion for summary judgment in June 2017 arguing, in part, that it

was contractually entitled to indemnification from Abel. The indemnification

portion of the contract between Ford and Abel was attached as an exhibit to Ford’s

motion for summary judgment, and provided in relevant part:

10
  A prevailing party typically is entitled to post-judgment interest under Kentucky Revised
Statute (KRS) 360.040, unless there are unusual factors which make interest “inequitable.”
Strunk v. Lawson, 447 S.W.3d 641, 650 (Ky. App. 2013). The second judgment contains no
mention of interest and we express no opinion on whether Beasey is entitled to interest or, if so,
the amount, or rate, thereof.
11
  Beasey offers to forego the issues presented in his first appeal if we deem Abel’s cross-appeal
untimely. But since we conclude the cross-appeal is timely, we must address the issues.

                                               -17-
             [Abel] will indemnify [Ford] . . . for all expenses . . .
             incurred by [Ford] in connection with all claims
             (including lawsuits . . . and other proceedings to recover
             for personal injury or death . . .) that are related in any
             way to [Abel’s] . . . performance or obligations . . . .
             [Abel’s] obligation to indemnify under this Section will
             apply regardless of whether the claim arises in tort,
             negligence, contract, warranty, strict liability or
             otherwise except to the extent of the negligence of
             [Ford].

              ....

             [Abel] shall be exclusively responsible for, shall bear,
             and shall relieve [Ford] from liability for all loss,
             expense, damage or claims resulting from bodily injury
             . . . sustained by any person or persons . . . arising out of,
             or in connection with the performance of work on
             [Ford’s] premises except that [Abel] shall not be
             responsible for or relieve [Ford] from liability for claims
             arising from the willful misconduct or the sole
             negligence of [Ford].

The trial court denied Ford’s summary judgment motion in August 2017, many

months prior to trial.

             On the first day of the trial, the trial court asked the defendants if their

interests were antagonistic, and Abel’s counsel generally responded in the

affirmative. No one objected or stated a contrary position. Thus, the trial court

granted Abel and Ford three peremptory challenges each.

             During a conference the court conducted with counsel outside the

jury’s presence later during the trial, Beasey’s counsel asked whether Abel had

agreed to indemnify Ford because Beasey’s counsel wanted to use that agreement

                                          -18-
to show bias by Ford’s risk manager, who had allegedly changed his opinion as to

who/what caused Beasey’s injuries. Abel’s counsel stated that Abel’s insurance

carrier had agreed to indemnify Ford pursuant to the contract. After discussion, the

trial court directed the parties to brief the indemnification/bias issues.

              A few days later, the trial court asked counsel why they had not

mentioned the indemnification agreement when asked if Ford and Abel had

antagonistic interests. Abel’s counsel responded that Abel and Ford were not

entirely aligned, as exemplified by Ford blaming Abel for not adequately

insulating the pipe that froze and burst. The trial court ruled that Beasey could not

mention the indemnification agreement to the jury, stating that the alleged bias was

too tenuous, and inadmissible under Kentucky Rule of Evidence (KRE) 403 as its

probative value was outweighed by its prejudicial effect.

              We begin by disagreeing with Beasey that the indemnification

agreement was a “Mary Carter” agreement. A “Mary Carter” agreement, so named

because of a notorious case from Florida,12 is defined in relevant part as:

              A contract, usu. secret, by which one or more, but not all,
              codefendants settle with the plaintiff and obtain a release,
              along with a provision granting them a portion of any
              recovery from the nonparticipating codefendants. • In a
              Mary Carter agreement, the participating codefendants
              agree to remain parties to the lawsuit and, if no recovery
              is awarded against the nonparticipating codefendants, to

12
 Booth v. Mary Carter Paint Co., 202 So. 2d 8 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1967), abrogated by
Dosdourian v. Carsten, 624 So. 2d 241 (Fla. 1993).

                                            -19-
             pay the plaintiff a settled amount.

BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY (11th ed. 2019). Here, Abel’s insurance carrier agreed

to indemnify Ford. That agreement did not involve Beasey, nor did either Abel or

Ford agree to pay Beasey a sum certain, regardless of the jury’s verdict. Thus,

there was no “Mary Carter” agreement.

             Having made that important distinction, we must now determine

whether the trial court erred by refusing to permit the jury to learn of the

indemnification agreement. We deferentially review a trial court’s evidentiary

decisions for abuse of discretion. See, e.g., Barnett v. Commonwealth, 317 S.W.3d
49, 61 (Ky. 2010).

             At its core, the indemnification agreement is a type of settlement

agreement. Settlement agreements are generally inadmissible in Kentucky.

Goodin v. White, 342 S.W.3d 282, 286 (Ky. App. 2011). However, settlement

agreements may be admissible “for purposes of impeachment concerning prior

inconsistent statements and bias[,]” id. at 287, because ‘“[a]ny proof that tends to

expose a motivation to slant testimony one way or another satisfies the requirement

of relevancy.’” Miller ex rel. Monticello Banking Co. v. Marymount Medical

Center, 125 S.W.3d 274, 281-82 (Ky. 2004) (quoting Robert G. Lawson, THE

KENTUCKY EVIDENCE LAW HANDBOOK § 4.15, at 183 (3d ed. 1993)).

                                         -20-
             That rubric aligns with KRE 411, which provides that “[e]vidence that

a person was or was not insured against liability is not admissible upon the issue

whether the person acted negligently or otherwise wrongfully” but is admissible to

show, among other things, “bias or prejudice of a witness.” But even if an

agreement is relevant, “[t]here is always the danger that a jury will show less

sympathy to an insured defendant, inappropriately resulting in a verdict for the

plaintiff.” Woolum v. Hillman, 329 S.W.3d 283, 287 (Ky. 2010). Therefore, a

court must determine whether the agreement’s probative value is substantially

outweighed by the danger of undue prejudice under KRE 403. Id. In making that

admissibility determination, a trial court is vested with “broad discretion to

evaluate the proof of bias on a case-by-case basis.” Id. at 289 (citing Wallace v.

Leedhanachoke, 949 S.W.2d 624, 628 (Ky. App. 1996)). However, “dual

concerns—the general inclusionary thrust of the Rules of Evidence and the more

particular preference to allow evidence of bias—weigh heavily in favor of

admissibility” of evidence of bias, though there may be “unusual circumstances

wherein the evidence would be either extremely prejudicial or minimally probative

. . . .” Baker v. Kammerer, 187 S.W.3d 292, 296 (Ky. 2006).

             The main thrust of Beasey’s bias claim is that a risk manager for Ford,

Danny Huffman, changed his theory of who was responsible for Beasey’s injuries

                                         -21-
after Ford and Abel reached their indemnification agreement. However, Beasey

offers nothing concrete to support his self-serving conjecture.

               A report made by, or approved by, Huffman shortly after the accident

indicated a “root cause” of the injuries was Abel “not hav[ing] adequate barriers

and lighting used to identify and block access to the excavation/hole where

[Beasey] fell.” Huffman apparently continued to believe the lack of

barriers/lighting was a root cause of the accident at his February 2017 deposition.

However, at a later deposition,13 and at trial, Huffman no longer believed those to

be root causes of Beasey’s injuries. Huffman testified that he did not believe the

investigation which preceded the initial report was thorough and had gained

additional information from “educating” himself.

               There is nothing inherently nefarious about a witness having an

opinion which evolves over time due to additional familiarity with the subject at

issue. Moreover, Beasey has not contradicted Ford’s assertion that the

indemnification agreement was not reached until after Huffman’s “trial” deposition

occurred. Logically, therefore, Huffman cannot have changed his mind based

13
   Huffman was unavailable for a previously-scheduled trial date, so his trial deposition was
taken in September 2017. Later, the trial was continued and so he testified live. Beasey has not
cited exactly where in the voluminous record, which is nearly 2700 pages long, we may find a
transcript of Beasey’s “trial” deposition. We again remind the parties that it is their affirmative
duty to cite to exactly where we may find matters in the record because we shall not sift through
the record to try to find them. However, since no party seems to disagree, we will assume solely
for the sake of argument that Huffman’s testimony at his trial deposition was similar to his trial
testimony.

                                               -22-
upon a then-nonexistent agreement. Indeed, Huffman’s avowal testimony at trial

indicated that he did not even know what “assumption of defense” meant. In short,

Beasey only has a subjective theory, not grounded upon any tangible evidence, that

Huffman changed his testimony about causation as a reaction to Abel’s insurance

carrier indemnifying Ford.

             As the trial court aptly noted, the allegations of bias here are

extremely attenuated. Therefore, we cannot find that the court abused its discretion

by refusing to permit Beasey to present testimony about the indemnification

agreement because “absent a more compelling degree of connection[,]” there is not

“clearly evince[d]” bias by Huffman and thus the “arguable relevance or probative

value” of the indemnification agreement “is insufficient to outweigh the well-

established rule as to the inadmissibility of evidence as to the existence of

insurance.” Wallace, 949 S.W.2d at 628.

             By contrast, our Supreme Court approved admitting testimony that an

expert doctor shared an insurance carrier with a defendant doctor in a wrongful

death action because of overwhelming evidence that the expert doctor “was biased

by their commonality of insurance because he believed that a judgment against his

insurance company could adversely affect his own premiums[,]” which the Court

deemed to demonstrate a “strong connection between common insurance and

witness bias . . . .” Woolum, 329 S.W.3d at 287, 290. The conjectural bias offered

                                         -23-
by Beasey falls well short of being “strong” and is much more akin to the facts of

Wallace.14

               No Error in Allowing Additional Peremptory Challenges

               Somewhat related to his argument regarding the indemnification

agreement, Beasey contends the trial court erred by granting Ford and Abel three

peremptory strikes apiece since the indemnification agreement caused their

interests to not be antagonistic. We disagree.

               Before we examine the merits of Beasey’s claim, we note that Abel

and Ford have not provided a satisfactory explanation of why they failed to tell the

trial court about the indemnification agreement prior to trial or, at the latest, when

the court asked if their interests were antagonistic. Nearly seventy years ago

Kentucky’s then-highest court reminded the bar that, as an officer of the court, “an

attorney owes the duty of good faith and honorable dealing to the courts before

whom he practices . . . .” Lewis v. Rice, 261 S.W.2d 804, 805 (Ky. 1953). We are

disappointed counsel did not timely, fully, and voluntarily divulge the relationship

between their clients to the court. The trial court was entitled to know the full

picture before having to allocate peremptory challenges.

14
  It is unclear what tangible relief Beasey would like us to afford him, even if we agreed with his
position on the indemnification agreement. In his brief, Beasey asks us to issue a “strong
reprimand” to the trial court. Beasey’s brief in No. 2018-CA-0724-MR at 17. But even a
“strong” reprimand would have no practical effect as it would not impact Beasey’s damage
award nor would it result in a new trial. Thus, a reprimand would be a toothless tiger, “full of
sound and fury, [s]ignifying nothing.” William Shakespeare, Macbeth, Act 5, Scene 5.

                                               -24-
               CR 47.03(1) provides that “[i]n civil cases each opposing side shall

have three peremptory challenges, but co-parties having antagonistic interests shall

have three peremptory challenges each.” The question is whether Abel and Ford

had antagonistic interests. Of course, the trial court unfortunately had to make that

determination before the indemnification agreement was brought to light. Indeed,

trial judges always must make that determination before the proof is presented and

so we must view the question as it existed when the court made its decision, not

based upon the perfect acuity only afforded by omniscient hindsight. Davis v.

Fischer Single Family Homes, Ltd., 231 S.W.3d 767, 774 (Ky. App. 2007). Our

review of a trial court’s decision is deferential, so “if the findings of fact are not

clearly erroneous or the opposite result is not compelled by the facts before the

trial court, the decision of the trial court will not be disturbed, even if we would

have come to a different conclusion.” Id. at 773.15

15
  Some cases state that we review an “antagonistic interests” decision under an abuse of
discretion standard. See, e.g., Sommerkamp v. Linton, 114 S.W.3d 811, 814-15 (Ky. 2003)
(“The Court of Appeals should not substitute its judgment for that of the trial judge in
determining whether antagonistic interests exist for the purpose of awarding peremptory
challenges in the absence of an abuse of discretion.”). Usage of that standard of review is
curious since our Supreme Court held more than forty years ago, albeit in a case pre-dating the
adoption of CR 47.03, that “the allocation of peremptory challenges in civil cases has occupied a
settled role as part of the trial process in this jurisdiction from 1830 to the present day. It is a
defined mechanism and does not depend on the exercise of judicial discretion.” Kentucky Farm
Bureau Mut. Ins. Co. v. Cook, 590 S.W.2d 875, 877 (Ky. 1979) (emphasis added).

                                               -25-
              However, if the issue has been properly preserved, a party does not

have to show prejudice to obtain appellate relief from an improper allocation of

peremptory challenges. Kentucky Farm Bureau Mut. Ins. Co., 590 S.W.2d at 877.

Here, the issue is not preserved because Beasey did not object contemporaneously

when the trial court afforded Abel and Ford additional peremptory challenges.16

The issue under these facts, therefore, is whether the trial court’s decision warrants

relief under CR 61.02, which provides that a “palpable error which affects the

substantial rights of a party may be considered . . . by an appellate court on appeal,

even though insufficiently raised or preserved for review, and appropriate relief

may be granted upon a determination that manifest injustice has resulted from the

error.” An error is palpable if it is “so egregious that it jumps off the page . . . and

cries out for relief[,]” Chavies v. Commonwealth, 374 S.W.3d 313, 323 (Ky. 2012)

(internal quotation marks and citation omitted), and is so elemental as to be “easily

perceptible, plain, obvious and . . . so serious that it would seriously affect the

16
  It is difficult to know how much Beasey’s counsel knew of the indemnification agreement
when the peremptory challenge allocation occurred. In its brief, Ford accuses Beasey’s counsel
of “[e]xpressing feigned surprise and outrage about the contractual indemnity provision of which
he had been long aware” but also states, seemingly contradictorily, that “it never occurred to
anyone to advise Beasey’s counsel when Abel or its liability insurer finally agreed to” enforce
the contractual indemnity provision. Ford’s brief in No. 2018-CA-0724-MR at 8, 12.
Regardless, Beasey did not contemporaneously object or press opposing counsel for information
about indemnification when the trial court asked if Ford and Abel had antagonistic interests, so
the issue was not properly preserved. Even if Beasey had preserved the issue, however, we
would still affirm the trial court.

                                             -26-
fairness to a party if left uncorrected.” Hibdon v. Hibdon, 247 S.W.3d 915, 918

(Ky. App. 2007) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).

               To determine if parties have antagonistic interests courts consider:

               1) whether the coparties are charged with separate acts of
               negligence; 2) whether they share a common theory of
               the case; and 3) whether they have filed cross-claims.
               Additional important factors are whether the defendants
               are represented by separate counsel; whether the alleged
               acts of negligence occurred at different times; whether
               the defendants have individual theories of defense; and
               whether fault will be subject to apportionment.

Sommerkamp, 114 S.W.3d at 815 (citations omitted). A court should not “give

disqualifying weight to a single factor . . . .” Id. at 816.

               Abel and Ford did not file cross-claims. However, they were:

represented by separate counsel, charged with discrete acts of negligence, did not

entirely share the same theory of the case, and were subject to apportionment of

fault. Moreover, a plain reading of the indemnification clause shows that Abel was

not required to indemnify Ford if Ford’s sole negligence led to the injuries. Under

the instructions given here, a jury could theoretically have found Ford alone was

negligent. In short, though Abel’s and Ford’s financial interests did align to a

degree, we find no error, palpable or otherwise, in the trial court’s decision to grant

them additional peremptory challenges under CR 47.03(1).17

17
   Beasey also contends the trial court erred by instructing the jury that they could apportion fault
to Allied. The jury ultimately apportioned no fault to Allied, and Beasey states the argument is

                                                -27-
                     Abel’s Cross-Appeal, No. 2018-CA-0824-MR

               Abel contends the trial court erred, for various reasons, by denying its

motion for summary judgment and for directed verdict. Before we may address

those arguments on the merits, however, we must address Abel’s brief’s lack of

compliance with the requirements of CR 76.12.

               CR 76.12(4)(c)(i) provides that an appellant’s brief should contain an

introduction “not exceeding two simple sentences” but Abel’s introduction

contains four paragraphs and is over a page long. CR 76.12(4)(c)(iv) requires an

appellant’s statement of the case to contain “ample references to the specific pages

of the record, or tape and digital counter number in the case of untranscribed

videotape or audiotape recordings,” but Abel’s brief cites infrequently and

insufficiently to the written record and cites mainly to Beasey’s deposition

testimony, not trial testimony. Similarly, CR 76.12(4)(c)(v) requires an appellant’s

argument section to provide “ample supportive references to the record . . . .”

               As we explained over three decades ago, “depositions not read into

evidence at a jury trial . . . should not be included in the record on appeal.” Lucas

v. Lucas, 720 S.W.2d 352, 353 (Ky. App. 1986). Abel does not show where

Beasey’s deposition was read into evidence at the trial. Perhaps this deficiency in

premised upon the matter being retried. Because we are not ordering a retrial, the issue is moot,
and we decline to address it.

                                              -28-
Abel’s brief is best highlighted by the fact that Abel argues vehemently that the

trial court erred in denying its motion for summary judgment but fails to specify

where we may find its motion in the nearly 2,700-page record. Again, “[i]t is not

the job of the appellate courts to scour the record in support of an appellant or

cross-appellant’s argument.” Dennis v. Fulkerson, 343 S.W.3d 633, 637 (Ky. App.

2011). Simply put, Abel’s brief contains insufficient citations to the record.18

               Perhaps most egregiously, Abel fails to state in its argument section

where, or how, it preserved any of its sundry claims of error for our review, despite

CR 76.12(4)(c)(v) requiring a statement “at the beginning of the argument” as to

“whether the issue was properly preserved for review and, if so, in what manner.”

This omission is critical because the nature of our review depends on whether an

issue has been preserved. Specifically, as previously discussed, we generally may

review unpreserved claims of error only for a palpable error under CR 61.02, but

even then, we typically only do so upon request. See, e.g., Webster v.

Commonwealth, 438 S.W.3d 321, 325 (Ky. 2014).

18
   Specifically, Abel’s statement of the case is over five pages long but contains only about three
citations to the written record and about three citations to the trial (not pretrial depositions); the
argument section of Abel’s brief is roughly sixteen pages long but contains approximately only
seven citations to the trial testimony, four of which are in the same sentence. Abel’s brief in No.
2018-CA-0824-MR at 21. In fact, Abel begins its argument section on page seven of its brief,
but it does not cite to any trial testimony until page fourteen. Glaringly, Abel’s roughly five-
page argument that the trial court erred by overruling its motion for summary judgment contains
a couple of citations to Beasey’s deposition but no other citations to the trial. Finally, Abel’s
argument section provides us with little to no citations to the written record.

                                                -29-
             Abel did not ask for palpable error relief, instead contending its issues

were adequately preserved. To show preservation, Abel relies upon a few citations

in the statement of the case section of its brief (not the argument section, as

required by CR 76.12) where it alleges it preserved its issues. But those citations

do not show preservation of all issues.

             Abel raises three overarching issues. First, it contends the trial court

erred in denying its motion for summary judgment but does not cite to where its

motion may be found in the record, nor does that section of its brief adequately cite

otherwise to relevant portions of the record.

             Regardless, the argument is not properly reviewable. “The general

rule under CR 56.03 is that a denial of a motion for summary judgment is, first, not

appealable because of its interlocutory nature and, second, is not reviewable on

appeal from a final judgment where the question is whether there exists a genuine

issue of material fact.” Transp. Cabinet, Bureau of Highways, Commonwealth of

Ky. v. Leneave, 751 S.W.2d 36, 37 (Ky. App. 1988). There is a limited exception,

commonly known as the Gumm exception, which permits appellate review when

“(1) the facts are not in dispute, (2) the only basis of the ruling is a matter of law,

(3) there is a denial of the motion, and (4) there is an entry of a final judgment with

an appeal therefrom. Then, and only then, is the motion for summary judgment

properly reviewable on appeal . . . .” Id. (citing Gumm v. Combs, 302 S.W.2d 616

                                          -30-
(Ky. 1957)). Here, as Beasey accurately notes, the trial court expressly held that

there were genuine issues of fact in the order denying summary judgment. R. at

1050. Therefore, the Gumm exception is inapplicable. Recbar, LLC v. Drake, 579
S.W.3d 198, 201 (Ky. App. 2019). Consequently, we decline to address further

Abel’s summary judgment-based arguments.

             Abel’s second main argument is that the trial court erred by denying

its motion for directed verdict on Beasey’s negligence per se claim, for three main

reasons. First, Abel contends Beasey was not within the class of persons intended

to be protected by the NFPA. See, e.g., Alderman v. Bradley, 957 S.W.2d 264, 267

(Ky. App. 1997) (explaining that negligence per se is “the violation of a statute,

ordinance, or administrative regulation” but that “[i]n order for a violation to

become negligence per se, the plaintiff must be a member of the class of persons

intended to be protected by the regulation, and the injury suffered must be an event

which the regulation was designed to prevent”). Second, Abel argues it could not

be found liable for negligence per se for not meeting requirements of the NFPA

which were not adopted by Kentucky. Third, Abel argues the alleged violation of

the NFPA was not a substantial factor in causing Beasey’s injuries.

             Under the familiar standard, a directed verdict is proper only if “there

is a complete absence of proof on a material issue or if no disputed issues of fact

exist upon which reasonable minds could differ” even while drawing “all fair and

                                         -31-
reasonable inferences from the evidence in favor of the party opposing the

motion.” Argotte v. Harrington, 521 S.W.3d 550, 554 (Ky. 2017) (internal

quotation marks and citations omitted). Thus, a party inherently raises an

insufficiency of the evidence argument when it claims entitlement to a directed

verdict.19

               Abel has cited to where it moved for a directed verdict at the close of

Beasey’s case-in-chief based upon an argument that Beasey was not within the

class of persons encompassed within the protection of the Code. Abel also cites to

what it believes to be where it argued for a directed verdict at the close of Beasey’s

proof due to Kentucky not having adopted the portion of the NFPA which Beasey

relies upon for his negligence per se claim.20 However, the cited portion of Abel’s

19
  Abel also offers a one-sentence argument that the trial court erred by instructing the jury on
negligence per se. Such an argument is conclusory and insufficiently developed to warrant
discussion.
20
   815 Kentucky Administrative Regulation (KAR) 7:120, §5(b) adopts the Kentucky Building
Code by reference. Section 905.2 of the Code as it existed at the time of Beasey’s injuries states
that “[s]tandpipe systems required by this code shall be installed in accordance with this section
and NFPA 14 as referenced herein.”
http://dhbc.ky.gov/Documents/2013%20KBC%202nd%20Edition%20(February%202014)%20-
%204.8.2014.pdf (emphasis added). But, as Abel’s argument goes, the Code does not later
“reference herein” NFPA 14, and so NFPA 14 was not adopted into the code which, in turn,
means a violation of NFPA 14 may not constitute negligence per se. The current version of the
Code remedies that situation by eliminating the “as referenced herein” language and instead
simply stating in Section 905.2 that “[s]tandpipe systems shall be installed in accordance with
this section and NFPA 14.”
http://dhbc.ky.gov/Documents/Proposed%202018%20Kentucky%20Building%20Code%20Seco
nd%20Edition.pdf.
        Abel also points out that the version of Section 905.2.1 of the Code in effect when
Beasey was injured provided that “[t]he riser piping, supply piping and the water service piping
shall be hydraulically designed or pipe scheduled in accordance with NFPA 14 as referenced in

                                               -32-
directed verdict argument does not actually contain such a discussion. Indeed, our

review of Abel’s motion for directed verdict did not reveal where it explicitly

argued that Kentucky did not adopt the NFPA sections at issue. Crucially, Abel

does not cite to where it moved for a directed verdict at the close of Beasey’s

proof, or at the close of all evidence, based upon its argument that any alleged

failure to comply with NFPA was not a substantial factor in causing Beasey’s

injuries.

              In sum, Abel has shown us where it argued at the close of Beasey’s

case he was not within the class of persons protected by the Code. Abel has not

Chapter 35 of this code.”
http://dhbc.ky.gov/Documents/2013%20KBC%202nd%20Edition%20(February%202014)%20-
%204.8.2014.pdf (emphasis added). According to Abel, however, Chapter 35 of the Code,
which may also be viewed using the link above and scrolling down further, did not reference the
section(s) of NFPA 14 relied upon by Beasey. Although Abel’s novel arguments are interesting,
we do not need to definitively opine on them due to the fatal preservation issues discussed
herein.
        In any event, we would likely be disinclined to afford Abel relief on the merits. Courts
interpret administrative regulations using the same fundamental tools and rubric used in
interpreting statutes. Commonwealth v. Estate of Cooper, 585 S.W.3d 253, 257 (Ky. App.
2019). We generally interpret statutes—and, thus, administrative regulations—as written,
affording the terms therein their normal meaning. Gooch v. Commonwealth, 496 S.W.3d 492,
495 (Ky. App. 2016). However, the paramount objective in interpreting statutes—and
administrative regulations—is to carry out the intent of the General Assembly—or, here, the
Housing Department. Id. We also will not interpret a statute literally if doing so would lead to
an absurd or unreasonable result. Id. It is plain that the Housing Department intended to adopt
NFPA 14. Abel’s hyper-technical construction thwarts that obvious intent. It would be
unreasonable and absurd to conclude the Housing Department failed to adopt any of the relevant
portions of the NFPA when its clear intent was to the contrary, but that would be the practical
impact of adopting Abel’s arguments. Indeed, it is uncontested that Beasey offered expert
testimony that the construction industry seems to believe the NFPA was applicable, drafting
errors in the Code notwithstanding. Thus, Abel’s argument—though superficially appealing—
would likely fail on the merits.

                                             -33-
shown where it raised the other arguments, nor has it shown where it renewed its

arguments at the close of all the evidence or moved for a JNOV.21

               Precedent clearly holds that a party:

               can only prevail on an insufficiency of the evidence
               claim if preserved through a motion for a JNOV, which
               in turn must be predicated on a directed verdict motion at
               the close of all the proof. A mid-trial directed verdict
               motion alone, like the one made and relied on in part now
               by [Abel], is insufficient to preserve an insufficiency of
               the evidence claim . . . . Failure to show preservation of
               claims prohibits this Court's review of those claims.

Steel Techs., Inc. v. Congleton, 234 S.W.3d 920, 926 (Ky. 2007), abrogated on

other grounds by Osborne v. Keeney, 399 S.W.3d 1 (Ky. 2012). Therefore, Abel

has not shown where it fully preserved any of its three directed verdict issues for

our review. As previously stated, we will not independently sift through this

colossal record to try to judicially triage Abel’s deficient brief.

               As federal courts have colorfully held when encountering similar

situations, “[j]udges are not like pigs, hunting for truffles that might be buried in

the record.” Emerson v. Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corp., 446 Fed. App’x 733,

736 (6th Cir. 2011) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). We also will

21
  Abel did not rectify the situation by providing a citation to where it renewed its directed
verdict motion at the close of proof in its reply brief.

                                               -34-
not engage in palpable error review since Abel neither requested nor briefed it. In

short, we affirm the trial court’s denial of Abel’s motion for directed verdict. 22

                                       CONCLUSION

               For the foregoing reasons, the Jefferson Circuit Court is affirmed in

all three appeals resolved herein.

               ALL CONCUR.

22
   Briefly, even if the claim had been properly preserved, we likely would have rejected Abel’s
argument that Beasey was not within the class of persons protected by the Code because the
NFPA was explicitly designed only to protect for loss due to fire. The General Assembly stated
in KRS 198B.050(3)(c) that the Code is expansively intended to “[p]rotect the public health,
safety, and welfare within the state.” KRS 198B.050(3)(c). Similarly, the Housing Department
also took a broad view of the class of persons the Code was designed to protect. Section 101.3
of the Code, as it existed at the time of Beasey’s injuries and as incorporated by reference at 815
KAR 7:120 §5, also sweepingly states that its provisions are designed to protect the public
health, safety and general welfare. See
http://dhbc.ky.gov/Documents/2013%20KBC%202nd%20Edition%20(February%202014)%20-
%204.8.2014.pdf. The General Assembly’s broad statement of intent controls over the
apparently more cramped scope of the NFPA. Adoption of the NFPA, in whole or part, via the
Code did not abrogate the broad scope of coverage expressed by the General Assembly and the
Housing Department.

                                               -35-
BRIEFS FOR APPELLANT/CROSS-     BRIEFS FOR APPELLEE/CROSS-
APPELLEE DEWANE BEASEY:         APPELLANT ABEL
                                CONSTRUCTION COMPANY,
James Bolus                     INC.:
Louisville, Kentucky
                                B. Scott Jones
Robert C. Heuke, Jr.            Louisville, Kentucky
Louisville, Kentucky
                                BRIEFS FOR APPELLEE FORD
Kevin C. Burke                  MOTOR COMPANY:
Jamie K. Neal
Louisville, Kentucky            R. Thad Keal
                                A. Michelle Turner
                                Louisville, Kentucky

                                NO BRIEF FOR APPELLEE ESIS,
                                ON BEHALF OF
                                ALLIED BARTON SECURITY
                                SERVICES, LLC

                              -36-