Charles Pamplin, Respondent/cross-appellant v. Safway Services, Llc, Appellant/cross-respondent ( 2017 )


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  •  IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    CHARLES PAMPLIN,                     )
    )          No. 75634-6-1
    Respondent Cross-Appellant,    )
    )          DIVISION ONE
    v.                      )
    )          UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    SAFWAY SERVICES, LLC, a Delaware)
    corporation,                         )
    )                                                   (.721
    Appellant Cross-Respondent,    )                                                    nr.)
    "r"ak
    )                                          ".11
    rn
    23      C)
    PARKER DRILLING MANAGEMENT )                                                            -11      -71
    SERVICES, INC., a Nevada corporation;)                                                       r—
    >
    (11rn 0
    PARKER TECHNOLOGY, INC.,                                                                ....>
    an Oklahoma corporation; PARKER
    DRILLING COMPANY, a Delaware
    corporation; THOMPSON METAL
    FAB, INC., an Oregon corporation,
    Defendants.                 FILED: April 17, 2017
    TRICKEY, A.C.J. — Safway Services, LLC, appeals the jury's verdict against
    it based on Charles Pamplin's negligence claim. Safway contends the trial court
    erred by denying its motions for judgment as a matter of law because Pamplin did
    not provide evidence of proximate cause. Safway also requests a new trial
    because the trial court failed to give its requested superseding cause instruction.
    There was sufficient evidence that Safway's negligent construction of the scaffold
    proximately caused Pamplin's injury. The trial court properly denied Safway's
    request for a superseding cause instruction because the record does not support
    such an instruction. We affirm.
    No. 75634-6-1 /2
    FACTS
    Parker Drilling Company (Parker) was the general contractor for a project
    building oil rigs in Vancouver, Washington. Parker hired Safway Services, LLC as
    a subcontractor to construct, maintain, and dismantle scaffolds at the work site.
    On December 14, 2010, a Safway scaffold crew began to construct the
    scaffold at issue. The scaffold was built to about 11 feet high before Parker called
    the Safway crew away. The scaffold was 2 feet wide at the base and 11 feet high
    and was not secured to the oil rig structure, in violation of the Washington
    Administrative Code (WAC).1
    When the Safway crew left, they had removed the access ladder but failed
    to mark the scaffold with a red tag or any other warning sign, which would have
    indicated it was not ready for use. This was a violation of Safway's safety and
    health procedure manual and policy. But the crew did not mark the scaffold with
    a green tag, which would have indicated that it was safe to use.2
    The Safway crew did not do further work on the scaffold that day and left
    the work site around 4:30 p.m. Parker's rig manager, Randy Nix, testified there
    was red barricade tape around the scaffold and that it did not have a tag or ladder
    when he observed it between 4:30 p.m. and 5:00 p.m.
    Charles Pamplin arrived at the work site with Albert Scott after 6:00 P.m.
    They saw a 3-foot long access ladder section and a green tag affixed to! the
    scaffold, but did not see any red barricade tape. Pamplin and Scott could access
    1 WAG 296-874-20002, 40004.
    2 There was conflicting testimony below regarding whether the scaffold was surrounded
    by red barricade tape. See, 4,I Report of Proceedings (RP) (July 6, 2015) at 92, Cf. 2
    RP (July 7, 2015) at 164.
    2
    No. 75634-6-1 / 3
    the partial ladder section by climbing onto a tire placed near it. Assuming the
    scaffold was ready for use, Pamplin and Scott began to work on it around 6:30
    p.m. Pamplin and Scott primarily used a man-lift to access the scaffold, and
    Pamplin used the ladder section twice prior to their midnight lunch break.
    Following his midnight lunch break, Pamplin returned to the scaffold to
    retrieve a jacket that he had left behind on it and began to climb the partial ladder.
    The scaffold tipped over and the fall injured Pamplin.
    Pamplin sued Safway for his injury, alleging that Safway "negligently failed
    to properly erect, secure, and maintain scaffolding" at the work site.3 Safway
    argued at trial that an unknown third party had altered the signals on the scaffold
    after the Safway crew had left it and, therefore, it was not responsible for Pamplin's
    injury.
    Before the case was submitted to the jury, Safway moved for judgment as
    a matter of law, arguing that Pamplin had failed to introduce sufficient proximate
    cause evidence linking Safway's alleged negligence and Pamplin's injury. The trial
    court denied Safway's motion.
    Safway requested that the trial court include superseding cause language
    in its proximate cause instruction to the jury. Safway argued that its theory that
    third parties altered the scaffold warranted a superseding cause instruction, and
    that the Safway crew could not have foreseen other parties altering the scaffold's
    marking. The trial court denied Safway's request to instruct the jury on
    superseding causes.
    3   Clerk's Papers (CP) at 6.
    3
    No. 75634-6-1 /4
    The jury returned a verdict in favor of Pamplin for $947,285.00, with fault
    attributed 35 percent to Pamplin and 65 percent to Safway. The verdict was
    reduced by 35 percent for a total of $615.735.25. The trial court denied Safway's
    renewed motion for judgment as a matter of law or a new trial. Safway appeals.4
    ANALYSIS
    Judgment as a Matter of Law
    Safway argues that the trial court erred by denying its motions for judgment
    as a matter of law. Safway contends that no evidence supports a reasonable
    inference that Safway proximately caused Pamplin's injury.5 We disagree.
    The civil rules set out the standard for granting a motion for judgment as a
    matter of law:
    If, during a trial by jury, a party has been fully heard with respect to
    an issue and there is no legally sufficient evidentiary basis for a
    reasonable jury to find or have found for that party with respect to
    that issue, the court may grant a motion for judgment as a matter of
    law against the party on any claim, counterclaim, cross claim, or third
    party claim that cannot under the controlling law be maintained
    without a favorable finding on that issue.
    CR 50(a)(1). A party may move for judgment as a matter of law at any time before
    submission of the case to the jury. CR 50(a)(2). If the trial court denies the motion,
    the party may request a new trial if the appellate court concludes that the trial court
    erred in denying the motion for judgment as a matter of law. CR 50(d).
    4 Charles Pamplin filed a cross-appeal, but has not offered any supporting arguments in
    his brief. Thus, we treat his cross-appeal as abandoned.
    5 Safway also argues that the trial court's oral ruling on its motions for judgment as a matter
    of law were legally deficient. An assignment of error to an oral statement of the trial court
    is not a proper assignment of error. Jones v. Nat'l Bank of Comm., 
    66 Wash. 2d 341
    , 344,
    
    402 P.2d 673
    (1965). Safway improperly assigns error to the trial court's statements
    explaining its reasoning in denying Safway's motions for judgment as a matter of law.
    Such statements are not available as grounds for assignments of error.
    4
    No. 75634-6-1/ 5
    A renewed motion for judgment as a matter of law may be granted when,
    viewing the evidence and reasonable inferences therefrom in favor of the
    nonmoving party, the court concludes that no substantial evidence supports the
    jury's verdict. Cowsert v. Crowley Maritime Corp., 
    101 Wash. 2d 402
    , 405, 
    680 P.2d 46
    (1984). "Evidence is substantial if it would convince an unprejudiced, thinking
    mind of the truth of the declared premise." 
    Cowsert, 101 Wash. 2d at 405
    .
    In reviewing a trial court's decision regarding a judgment notwithstanding
    the verdict, we apply the same standard as the trial court. Goodman v. Goodman,
    
    128 Wash. 2d 366
    , 371, 
    907 P.2d 290
    (1995). The reviewing court's inquiry is limited
    to whether the evidence presented below was sufficient to sustain the jury's
    verdict. Indus. lndem. Co. v. Kalleviq, 
    114 Wash. 2d 907
    , 915-16, 
    792 P.2d 520
    (1990).
    The trial court denied both Safway's initial motion for judgment as a matter
    of law prior to the jury's verdict and its renewed motion. In both motions, Safway
    argued that Pam pun failed to meet his evidentiary burden to prove proximate cause
    because he did not offer evidence showing that Safway marked the scaffold as
    ready for use.
    In order to prevail on a negligence claim, the plaintiff must establish the
    existence of a duty, a breach of that duty, and a resulting injury. Schooley v.
    Pinch's Deli Market, Inc., 
    134 Wash. 2d 468
    , 474, 
    951 P.2d 749
    (1998). The claimed
    breach of duty must be a proximate cause of the resulting injury for legal liability to
    attach. Pratt v. Thomas, 
    80 Wash. 2d 117
    , 119, 
    491 P.2d 1285
    (1971); Ferrin v.
    Donnellefeld, 
    74 Wash. 2d 283
    , 285, 
    444 P.2d 701
    (1968).
    5
    No. 75634-6-1 / 6
    Proximate causation requires a reasonable connection between the act or
    omission of the defendant and the injury suffered by the plaintiff. Rucshner v. ADT,
    Sec. Sys., Inc., 
    149 Wash. App. 665
    , 686, 
    204 P.3d 271
    (2009); Riojas v. Grant
    County Pub. Util. Dist., 
    117 Wash. App. 694
    , 697, 
    72 P.3d 1093
    (2003). Proximate
    causation requires both factual and legal causation. Hartley v. State, 
    103 Wash. 2d 768
    , 777, 
    698 P.2d 77
    (1985). Factual causation involves a determination of some
    physical connection between an act and an injury, and is generally left to the jury.
    
    Schooley, 134 Wash. 2d at 478
    . Legal causation is determined by the court, which
    evaluates "whether, as a matter of policy, the connection between the ultimate
    result and the act of the defendant is too remote or insubstantial to impose liability."
    
    Schooley, 134 Wash. 2d at 478
    -79.
    Therefore, whether proximate causation exists is a "mixed question of law
    and fact." 
    Rucshner, 149 Wash. App. at 686
    (holding whether employer's failure to
    conduct a criminal background check proximately caused child rape was a
    question for the jury); Rasmussen v. Bendotti, 
    107 Wash. App. 947
    , 959, 
    29 P.3d 56
    (2001) (trial court properly dismissed claim where alleged negligence was not
    proximate cause of death).
    Negligence can be proven by circumstantial evidence, even without any
    direct eyewitness testimony. Wise v. Hayes, 
    58 Wash. 2d 106
    , 108, 
    361 P.2d 171
    (1961); Gerard v. Peaslev, 
    66 Wash. 2d 449
    , 456, 
    403 P.2d 45
    (1965). But
    speculation cannot replace proof, and a verdict unsupported by evidence is
    vulnerable to a renewed motion for judgment as a matter of law. Galloway v.
    6
    No. 75634-6-1/7
    United States, 
    319 U.S. 372
    , 395, 
    63 S. Ct. 1077
    , 
    87 L. Ed. 1458
    (1943); Moore v.
    Chesapeake & 0. Ry. Co., 
    340 U.S. 573
    , 578, 
    71 S. Ct. 428
    , 
    95 L. Ed. 547
    (1951).
    Here, the jury could find that Safway's conduct was a proximate cause of
    Pamplin's injury based on the physical, circumstantial, and testimonial evidence
    offered by the parties. The parties agree that the scaffold was erected in a way
    that rendered it unsafe for use at the time Pamplin encountered it. The scaffold
    was too narrow and should have been secured in order to comply with applicable
    WAC provisions.6 Also, Safway workers left the scaffold before it was completed
    and did not return to finish its construction or securement. Expert testimony was
    presented that the scaffold was left in a defective and hazardous condition and
    was not tied, guyed, or braced, which made it tip over when Pamplin climbed it.
    The jury could have found that the hazardous condition of the scaffold was
    a cause of Pamplin's injury based on the physical and testimonial evidence he
    submitted. Pamplin did not need to provide evidence about the state of the signals
    on the scaffold when it was left by the Safway workers or observed by Nix to
    establish proximate causation. Therefore, the jury could find that the hazardous
    nature of the scaffold alone was a direct cause of Pamplin's injury. This physical
    and testimonial evidence is sufficient to establish proximate cause.
    Safway argues that Pamplin failed to bridge a gap between Safway's
    negligence and his injury because Pamplin did not show that Safway was
    responsible for the signals indicating the scaffold was ready. Safway contends
    6See, e.g., WAC 296-874-20002 (requiring that scaffolds are properly designed and
    constructed); see also WAC 296-874-40004 (scaffolds with a height to least base
    dimension ratio of greater than four to one must be guyed, tied, braced, or equivalently
    secured to prevent tipping).
    7
    No. 75634-6-1 /8
    that the signals alone were the proximate cause of Pamplin's injury because they
    caused Pamplin to climb the scaffold. Safway relies on the uncontroverted
    testimony of the Safway crew and Nix. The Safway workers testified that they did
    not leave a ladder section or a green tag, and Nix testified that there was red
    barricade tape around the scaffold after the Safway crew had left for the day.
    Safway's argument ignores that its negligent construction of the scaffold
    was a proximate cause of Pamplin's injury, regardless of the signals placed on it.
    There may be more than one proximate cause of an injury, and the concurring
    negligence of a third party does not necessarily break the causal chain. Smith v.
    Acme Paving Co., 
    16 Wash. App. 389
    , 396, 
    558 P.2d 811
    (1976). Safway's duties
    to Pamplin included properly constructing and securing the scaffold, and using
    appropriate signaling to warn that the scaffold was not ready for use. Even if
    Safway did not breach its duty to indicate that the scaffold was not ready for use,
    the jury could find that its negligent construction of the scaffold was a proximate
    cause of Pamplin's injury. Expert testimony established that the scaffold's
    improper construction and lack of securing, which violated WAG provisions
    designed to ensure safety, caused the scaffold to tip over when Pamplin climbed
    it.
    The physical and circumstantial evidence offered was sufficient to support
    the jury's verdict that Safway's negligence proximately caused Pamplin's injury.
    The trial court properly submitted the question of proximate causation to the jury
    for its determination of whether cause in fact existed based on the testimonial and
    physical evidence submitted to it by the parties.
    8
    No. 75634-6-1 /9
    Superseding Cause Jury Instruction
    Safway argues the trial court erred as a matter of law by denying its request
    to instruct the jury on superseding cause. Safway argues that it was prejudiced
    because the jury could not properly consider Safway's superseding cause theory.
    Because instruction 16 correctly instructed the jury on proximate cause and the
    record does not support an instruction on superseding cause, we affirm.
    Jury instructions are sufficient if they permit the parties to argue their
    theories of the case, are not misleading, and when read as a whole, properly inform
    the trier of fact of the applicable law. Douglas v. Freeman, 
    117 Wash. 2d 242
    , 256-
    57, 
    814 P.2d 1160
    (1991). If the trial court's jury instructions are sufficient, the
    court is not required to provide a party's proposed instruction, even though that
    instruction may be an accurate statement of the law. City of Seattle v. Pearson,
    
    192 Wash. App. 802
    , 820-821, 
    369 P.3d 194
    (2016).
    A party is entitled to have its theory of the case submitted to the jury under
    appropriate instructions when the theory is supported by substantial evidence.
    Little v. PPG Indus., Inc., 
    19 Wash. App. 812
    , 823, 825, 
    579 P.2d 940
    (1978), aff'd in
    part, 
    92 Wash. 2d 118
    , 
    594 P.2d 911
    (1979). "Evidence is substantial if it would
    convince an unprejudiced, thinking mind of the truth of the declared premise."
    Jefferson County v. Seattle Yacht Club, 
    73 Wash. App. 576
    , 588, 
    870 P.2d 987
    (1994). "'If a given set of facts supports two or more theories of law, the court must
    instruct on all the theories to which the facts pertain." Hester v. Watson, 
    74 Wash. 2d 924
    , 929, 
    448 P.2d 320
    (1968) (quoting Harris v. Fiore, 
    70 Wash. 2d 357
    , 360, 
    423 P.2d 63
    (1967)). Failure to permit instructions on a party's theory of the case,
    9
    No. 75634-6-1/10
    where there is evidence supporting the theory, is reversible error. State v.
    Williams, 
    132 Wash. 2d 248
    , 259-60, 
    937 P.2d 1052
    (1997) (citing State v. Griffin,
    
    100 Wash. 2d 417
    , 420, 
    670 P.2d 265
    (1983)).
    A superseding cause is an act of a third person that prevents the original
    actor from being liable for harm to another, although his antecedent negligence is
    a substantial factor in bringing about the harm. Campbell v. ITE Imperial Corp.,
    
    107 Wash. 2d 807
    , 812, 
    733 P.2d 969
    (1987) (quoting RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF
    TORTS § 440 (Am. LAW INST. 1965)). But an intervening act which could be
    reasonably anticipated by the wrongdoer does not supersede the original
    negligence. Acme Paving 
    Co., 16 Wash. App. at 397
    ; Ward v. Arnold, 
    52 Wash. 2d 581
    ,
    584, 
    328 P.2d 164
    (1958).7 Reasonable foreseeability does not require that the
    precise manner or sequence of events in which a plaintiff is harmed be
    foreseeable. Anderson v. Dreis & Krump Mfg. Corp., 
    48 Wash. App. 432
    , 443, 
    739 P.2d 1177
    (1987). Even if the intervening act of the third person was negligent, if
    the original actor should have realized that the third person would be negligent the
    act does not become a superseding cause. 
    Campbell, 107 Wash. 2d at 813
    . "'If the
    likelihood that a third person may act in a particular manner is . . . one of the
    hazards which makes the actor negligent, such an act[,] whether innocent,
    negligent, intentionally tortious, or criminal[,] does not prevent the actor from being
    7 Safway offers Qualls v. Golden Arrow Farms, Inc., 
    47 Wash. 2d 599
    , 
    288 P.2d 1090
    (1955),
    to argue that the issue of foreseeability of an intervening act merited a superseding cause
    instruction and should have been determined by the jury. In Qualls, the issue presented
    concerned the wording of a superseding cause jury instruction, rather than whether a
    superseding cause instruction was 
    appropriate. 47 Wash. 2d at 602-04
    . Because a
    superseding cause was not merited under the Restatement factors, we do not have to
    reach this issue.
    10
    No. 75634-6-1 / 11
    liable for harm caused thereby." 
    Campbell, 107 Wash. 2d at 813
    (first alteration in
    original) (quoting RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF TORTS § 449). Further, a superseding
    cause jury instruction is inappropriate if the original negligence was one of the
    actual causes of the resulting harm. Egede-Nissen v. Crystal Mountain, Inc., 
    21 Wash. App. 130
    , 142-43, 
    584 P.2d 432
    (1978), aff'd and modified, 
    93 Wash. 2d 127
    ,
    
    606 P.2d 1214
    (1980).
    Relevant considerations in determining whether an intervening act was a
    superseding cause are "whether (1) the intervening act created a different type of
    harm than otherwise would have resulted from the actor's negligence; (2) the
    intervening act was extraordinary or resulted in extraordinary consequences; (3)
    the intervening act operated independently of any situation created by the actor's
    negligence." 
    Campbell, 107 Wash. 2d at 812-13
    (emphasis omitted); accord Herberg
    v. Swartz, 
    89 Wash. 2d 916
    , 927-28, 578 P.2d 17(1978); RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF
    TORTS § 442.
    Safway requested the following jury instruction, which included superseding
    cause:
    The term "proximate cause" means a cause which in a direct
    sequence unbroken by any superseding cause, produces the injury
    complained of and without which such injury would not have
    happened.[81
    The trial court did not err as a matter of law in refusing to instruct the jury
    on superseding cause. Safway's theory of the case was that a third party altered
    the signals on the scaffold, falsely indicating that it was ready to use. This was not
    a superseding cause under the Restatement factors. First, the alleged intervening
    8   CP at 258.
    11
    No. 75634-6-1/12
    act did not produce a different type of harm than otherwise would have resulted
    from Safway's negligent construction of the scaffold. The nature of the signals
    attached to the scaffold at the time a person climbed it did not alter the type of
    harm that was likely to result from Safway's negligently constructed scaffold tipping
    over.9
    Second, the alleged intervening act was not extraordinary and did not result
    in extraordinary circumstances. The Safway crew members testified that they
    removed the ladder and did not place a green tag on the scaffold, which should
    have signaled to other workers not to use the scaffold. The possibility that other
    workers altered the signals on the scaffold is insufficient to require a superseding
    cause instruction. The likelihood that a third party would alter the signals on the
    scaffold was one of the possibilities that made Safway's leaving the scaffold in a
    dangerously unsecured and hazardous condition negligent. Further, a third party's
    altering of the signals was reasonably foreseeable and would not supersede
    Safway's original negligence of constructing a hazardous scaffold and failing to
    secure it.
    Third, the alleged intervening act of a third party altering the signals on the
    scaffold did not operate independently of Safway's negligent construction of the
    scaffold. A third party altering the signals attached to the scaffold would make it
    9 Safway argues that Albertson v. State, 
    191 Wash. App. 284
    , 
    361 P.3d 808
    (2015), merits
    reversal. In Albertson, the trial court erred in instructing on superseding cause because
    the harm suffered was the same and, therefore, was foreseeable as a matter of 
    law. 191 Wash. App. at 298
    . Safway argues that it did not have a duty to monitor the scaffold and,
    therefore, any third party alteration was not foreseeable as a matter of law. This ignores
    that the harm suffered (Pamplin's injury) would have been the same regardless of the
    signals placed on the scaffold, as a proximate cause was the scaffold being hazardous
    and unsecured.
    12
    No. 75634-6-1 / 13
    more likely that someone would use the scaffold. Using the scaffold was
    dangerous because Safway constructed the scaffold negligently. Both acts
    contributed to the risk of the same harm: that the scaffold would tip over when
    someone was using it, and that the person would be injured.
    Finally, Safway's original negligence in constructing the scaffold and leaving
    it unsecured was an actual cause of Pamplin's injury. Expert testimony established
    that the scaffold was left in a hazardous and unsecured condition, which caused
    the scaffold to tip over when Pamplin climbed it. A superseding cause was
    inappropriate because Safway's negligence in constructing a hazardous scaffold
    and failing to secure it was an actual cause of Pamplin's injury.
    In sum, the Restatement factors, as adopted by Washington courts, do not
    support Safway's argument that the evidence presented warranted a superseding
    cause instruction. The trial court did not err as a matter of law in refusing to instruct
    the jury on superseding cause.
    Safway argues that it did not have a duty to prevent third parties from
    altering its scaffold and, therefore, any unauthorized alteration was a superseding
    act that caused a harm Safway was not tasked with preventing. This is incorrect.
    Safway had two duties: (1) to properly construct and secure the scaffold, and (2)
    to warn others that the scaffold was not ready to use by affixing the proper signals.
    Even assuming that the red barricade tape allegedly placed on the scaffold should
    have been sufficient to warn others to not use the scaffold, Safway breached its
    duty of care when it left the scaffold in a hazardous and unsecured condition. This
    could reasonably be found to be an original cause of Pamplin's injury.
    13
    No. 75634-6-1/ 14
    Affirmed.
    WE CONCUR:
    14