Joel And Stephanie Thoen v. Cdk Construction ( 2020 )


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  •   IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION ONE
    JOEL THOEN and STEPHANIE                            )      No. 79123-1 -I
    THOEN, as husband and wife,                         )
    )
    Appellant,
    v.
    )
    CDK CONSTRUCTION SERVICES,                          )      UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    INC., a Washington corporation,                     )
    )      FILED: March 23, 2020
    Respondent.
    VERELLEN,     J.   —   A general contractor can be directly liable for injuries to a
    subcontractor’s employee on a construction site under two theories. Based on its
    innate supervisory authority over the entire construction site, the general
    contractor has a statutory duty to provide a safe worksite for all workers by
    ensuring compliance with the Washington Industrial Safety and Health Act
    (WISHA).1 “[Nb analysis of whether the general contractor retained control is
    necessary.”2 A general contractor also owes a common law duty to provide a safe
    worksite so long as it has the right to exercise control over the site. Its “general
    I   Ch. 49.17 RCW.
    2      Vargas v. Inland Washington, LLC, 
    194 Wash. 2d 720
    , 736, 
    452 P.3d 1205
    (2019).
    No. 79123-1-1/2
    supervisory functions are sufficient to establish control.”3 Neither duty is
    predicated on the general contractor actually exercising control over the
    subcontractor or the subcontractor’s employees. Neither duty is limited to
    common work areas.
    Because the special verdict form and jury instructions prejudiced Joel
    Thoen by conditioning any finding of liability on general contractor CDK
    Construction Services, Inc. having exercised control over Thoen’s work as an
    employee of a subcontractor, a new trial is required.
    We reverse.
    FACTS
    Thoen worked for American Railworks (Am Rail), a specialized construction
    subcontractor that installs deck rails. General contractor CDK hired AmRail to
    install rails on the deck of a golf clubhouse. Because the deck was 11 feet above
    the ground, workers on the deck were supposed to wear fall protection equipment.
    Thoen, his boss, and another AmRail employee arrived on the job site to
    install the rails, but they forgot fall protection equipment. Thoen’s boss decided he
    would go on the deck to set the rails while Thoen and the other employee would
    assist from ladders. Thoen’s boss discussed this plan with CDK’s site supervisor.
    The site supervisor gave them a single fall protection harness to do the work,
    although he had more available.
    k~. at 731 (quoting Kelley v. Howard S. Wright Const. Co., 
    90 Wash. 2d 323
    ,
    331, 
    582 P.2d 500
    (1978)).
    2
    No. 79123-1-113
    While installing the rails, Thoen’s boss was handling one large, heavy rail
    and asked for help. Thoen climbed up to help without any fall protection
    equipment. He fell off the deck, landing on his head and back on asphalt.
    Thoen filed suit against CDK and alleged that it failed to provide a safe work
    site, first, because it failed to comply with safety regulations requiring a written fall
    protection plan for the work site, and second, because it failed to exercise its
    authority to provide a safe work site. Trial was held in September of 2018.
    The court approved a special verdict form asking the jury to determine, as a
    predicate question to determining liability, whether CDK “exercise[dJ control over
    [Thoen’s] work.”4 The special verdict form directed the jury not to answer any
    further questions if it decided that CDK did not exercise control over Thoen’s work.
    The court instructed the jury that it had to determine whether CDK “retained
    control over American Rallworks, LLC’s work site” to find it liable.5 The court also
    instructed the jury that CDK had a duty “to provide a safe place of work, within
    common areas it controls.”6 Because the jury answered “no” to the predicate
    question on the special verdict form, it answered no other questions. The court
    entered judgment for CDK.
    Thoen appeals.
    ~ Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 4402.
    ~ CP at 4422 (jury instruction 12); see CP at 4427 (jury instruction 16 stating
    that CDK was not liable unless it “retained actual control or the legal right of
    control” over Thoen’s work).
    6 CP at 4424 (jury instruction 13).
    3
    No. 79123-1 -114
    ANALYSIS
    We review de novo whether jury instructions and special verdict forms
    correctly stated the law.7 Jury instructions are considered in their entirety and are
    sufficient if they “(1) permit each party to argue his theory of the case; (2) are not
    misleading; and (3) when read as a whole, properly inform the trier of fact of the
    applicable law.”8 A special verdict form is inadequate if it “cloud[s] the jury’s
    vantage point of the contested issues.”9 It is reversible error when the jury
    instructions or the special verdict form misstate the law and prejudice a party.1°
    Four months after the parties filed their briefs in this appeal, our Supreme
    Court decided Vargas v. Inland Washington, LLC, which is dispositive of many of
    the issues here.11 We asked counsel for both parties to be prepared at oral
    argument to discuss Vargas’s impact on this case.
    ~ Afoa v. Port of Seattle, 
    191 Wash. 2d 110
    , 119, 
    421 P.3d 903
    (2018) (Afoa
    II); Canfield v. Clark, 
    196 Wash. App. 191
    , 199, 
    385 P.3d 156
    (2016). CDK argues
    we should conduct review under an abuse of discretion standard because
    “determining whether and to what extent a duty of care exists depends upon a
    factual determination.” Resp’t’s Br. at 14. This misunderstands the issues on
    appeal. Because it is undisputed that CDK was the general contractor who hired
    AmRail and its employee, Thoen, we consider the purely legal issue of whether
    the jury instructions and special verdict form correctly stated the law governing the
    duties a general contractor owes to employees of its subcontractors. See 
    Vargas, 194 Wash. 2d at 730
    (“Existence of a duty is a question of law.”) (quoting Hertog v.
    City of Seattle, 
    138 Wash. 2d 265
    , 275, 
    979 P.2d 400
    (1999)).
    8 Capers v. Bon Marche, Div. of Allied Stores, 
    91 Wash. App. 138
    , 142, 
    955 P.2d 822
    (1998).
    ~ld.at 143.
    10
    Id. at 142.
           11
    194 Wash. 2d 720
    , 
    452 P.3d 1205
    (2019).
    4
    No. 79123-1-1/5
    At oral argument, CDK contended it has no duty of care to the employees of
    a subcontractor absent a factual determination that it exercised control over the
    subcontractor’s work site. CDK misreads the controlling case law.
    In Vargas, our Supreme Court unambiguously stated that a general
    contractor can be directly liable for breaching either its statutory or common law
    duties regarding workplace safety.12 WISHA establishes a general contractor’s
    statutory duties, and it owes these specific duties to “all employees working on the
    premises.”13 Since WISHA’s enactment in 1973, these statutory duties have
    existed irrespective of a general contractor’s exercise of control over a
    subcontractor’s work.14 The common law also imposes a duty to see that proper
    12  kI. at 729. CDK claimed at oral argument that allowing a general
    contractor to be held directly liable for breaches of WISHA amounted to imposing
    either vicarious or strict liability. CDK misapprehends the scope of its statutory
    duties under WISHA. A general contractor has a specific, direct duty to all
    employees on a worksite to—among other duties—establish, supervise, and
    enforce an accident prevention program.
    Id. at 735,
    737 (citing
    WAC 296-155-100(1)). When a plaintiff shows a general contractor breached this
    duty and proximately caused him injury, then liability can attach. Because this
    standard requires proof of the general contractor’s own negligent breach of its duty
    of care, this is neither vicarious nor strict liability.
    13 Stute v. P.B.M.C., Inc., 
    114 Wash. 2d 454
    , 457-58, 
    788 P.2d 545
    (1990).
    14 See      at 464 (‘[W]e hold the general contractor should bear the primary
    responsibility for compliance with [WISHA] safety regulations because the general
    contractor’s innate supervisory authority constitutes sufficient control over the
    workplace.”); Adkins v. Aluminum Co. ofAm., 
    110 Wash. 2d 128
    , 153, 
    750 P.2d 1257
    (1988) (RCW49.17.060(2) “applies [to a general contractor] when a party asserts
    that the employer failed to comply with a particular WISHA standard or regulations.
    In such a case, all employees who work on the premises of another employer are
    members of the protected class.”).
    5
    No. 79123-1-1/6
    safety precautions are taken at the job site it oversees.15 This duty of care exists
    because a general contractor’s “general supervisory functions are sufficient to
    establish control over [a subcontractor’s] work conditions.”16 This duty extends to
    every part of the job site where the general contractor has the authority to
    supervise.17 Even if an area of the job site were under a subcontractor’s exclusive
    control, the general contractor’s duty remains.18
    Thoen argues special verdict form question one and several jury
    instructions misstated CDK’s duties and prejudiced him. Question I on the special
    verdict form required that the jury stop deliberating if it found CDK did not
    “exercise control over” Thoen’s work.19 Jury instruction 12 required that Thoen
    prove CDK “retained control over [AmRail]’s work site” for the jury to hold it liable
    for any breach, including breach of its statutory duty.2° Similarly, jury instruction
    16 prohibited finding CDK liable “unless you find that [CDK] retained actual control
    or the legal right of control over the manner, means and methods in which
    [AmRail] performed its work.”21
    15   
    Varcias, 194 Wash. 2d at 730
    (citing 
    Kelley, 90 Wash. 2d at 332
    ).
    16   
    Kelley, 90 Wash. 2d at 331
    .
    17   
    Varç~as, 194 Wash. 2d at 733
    (citing 
    Kelley, 90 Wash. 2d at 332
    ).
    18ki. (“[A] general contractor with supervisory authority over an area must
    ensure the area is safe regardless of whether the general contractor is present—a
    general contractor cannot shirk its duties merely by vacating the premises.”).
    19 CP at 4402.
    20    CP at 4422.
    21    CP at 4427.
    6
    No. 79123-1-1/7
    The special verdict form and the jury instructions misstated the scope of
    CDK’s statutory and common law duties. Under RCW 49.17.060(2), a general
    contractor’s duty to comply with WISHA is based upon its innate authority over the
    job site.22 CDK’s right to exercise authority meant it had a statutory duty to Thoen
    regardless of whether it exercised its authority.23 CDK also had common law
    duties to Thoen because it had the authority to supervise the part of the job site
    where he worked.24 Because question I on the special verdict form and jury
    instructions 12 and 16 misstated the law and misled the jury, the court erred by
    issuing them.
    The court also erred by adopting jury instruction 13. That instruction
    explained a general contractor met the standard of ordinary care if it took
    reasonable steps to provide a safe work environment “within common areas it
    controls.”25 Our Supreme Court rejected this “common work area” concept in
    22   
    Stute, 114 Wash. 2d at 462-64
    .
    23 CDK contended at oral argument that it had no duty to Thoen absent an
    exercise of control over AmRail because Vargas explained a general contractor
    could be directly liable for breaching its WISHA duties. CDK appears to
    misapprehend the meaning of “direct liability.” “Direct liability” is “liability for
    breach of one’s own duty of care.” 16 DAVID K. DEWOLF & KELLER W. ALLEN,
    WASHINGTON PRACTICE: TORT LAW AND PRACTICE § 4.1, at 178 (4th ed. 2013). If
    CDK had a statutory duty to Thoen only after exercising control over AmRail, then
    only vicarious liability could attach to it. See ~ç[~ (“Vicarious liability is legal
    responsibility by virtue of a legal relationship.”); 
    Vargas, 194 Wash. 2d at 730
    (“[A]
    general contractor. will be ‘vicariously liable for the negligence of any entity’
    .   .
    over which it exercises control.”) (quoting Afoa 
    II, 191 Wash. 2d at 122-24
    ).
    
    24Varqas, 194 Wash. 2d at 733
    .
    25 CP at 4424.
    7
    No. 79123-1-1/8
    Vargas and explained a general contractor’s common law duty actually extends to
    all portions of a job site “regardless of whether an expert other than the general
    contractor happens to be in charge of a specific job in the area.”26 In light of
    Vargas, jury instruction 13 misstated the law by limiting CDK’s duty only to
    common areas.
    Because the special verdict form and jury instructions misstated the law,
    Thoen is entitled to a new trial if the misstatements prejudiced him.27 Before
    concluding CDK did not “exercise control” over Thoen, the jury asked the court,
    “How broad is the meaning of ‘exercise control’     .   .   .?   Does it require active
    supervision, or is it more general, including not just ‘actual control’ but also a legal
    relationship to broader supervision?”28 The jury was confused about how to
    answer question 1 on the special verdict form, and its question revealed a
    fundamental misunderstanding about the scope of CDK’s statutory and common
    law duties to the extent it believed proof of “active supervision” or “actual control”
    was required. Notably, Thoen had warned the trial court that the jury could be
    confused by the instructions and verdict form because a general contractor could
    fail to comply with WISHA without being viewed as controlling a subcontractor’s
    work. Because the jury instructions and special verdict form misled the jury,
    26   
    Vargas, 194 Wash. 2d at 733
    .
    27   
    Capers, 91 Wash. App. at 142
    .
    28 CP at 4406. The jury referred to 17” as the source of the phrase
    “~
    “exercise control,” but the record does not reveal where to find paragraph 17.
    Because the phrase “exercise control” appeared in special verdict question 1 and
    the jury answered only that question, “IT 17” was likely a misprint.
    8
    No. 79123-1-1/9
    misstated the law, and resulted in a legally immaterial finding that prevented the
    jury from considering material issues, Thoen was prejudiced. Retrial is required.
    Thoen also assigns error to a jury instruction and special verdict form
    question regarding apportionment of fault to AmRail. We reach these issues to
    provide guidance on retrial.
    Pretrial, the trial court concluded it was “going to allow, essentially, an
    empty chair defense” and “allow the jurors to apportion damages amongst those
    parties.   .   .   Mr. Thoen, [AmRail], and CDK.”29 Jury instruction 20 directed the jury
    to “determine what percentage of the total negligence is attributable to each entity
    that proximately caused” Thoen’s injury, including AmRail.3° Question 8 of the
    special verdict form asked the jury to apportion 100 percent of the total liability for
    Thoen’s injury between Thoen himself, CDK, and AmRail. And question 3 of the
    special verdict form asked whether “the actions or omissions of immune entity
    [AmRail] [were] a proximate cause of [Thoen’s] damages?”31
    RCW 4.22.070(1) requires that a jury “determine the percentage of the total
    fault which is attributable to every entity which caused the claimant’s damages
    except entities immune from liability to the claimant under Title 51 RCW.” Title 51
    RCW, the Industrial Insurance Act, immunizes employers against lawsuits from
    29   Report of Proceedings (Sept. 5, 2018) at 188.
    30   CP at 4433.
    31   CP at 4403.
    9
    No. 79123-1-1110
    employees injured while working.32 RCW 4.22.070(1) prohibits the jury from
    considering the fault of “those entities immune from liability to the claimant under
    Title 51 RCW.” The jury should not be asked “to make an irrelevant determination
    of the immune employer’s fault.”33
    The legislature implemented this policy to ensure that the injured worker’s
    recovery, the Department of Labor & Industries’ reimbursement, and the
    third-party defendant’s liability exposure would not be reduced by the worker’s
    employer’s fault for the injury.34 A defendant, such as a general contractor, can
    argue the immune employer was the proximate cause of the worker’s injury, but
    “the exact percentage of fault attributable to an immune employer has no legal
    effect on the liability of the parties.”35 The legislature also enacted this statutory
    scheme to preclude a general contractor from raising an empty chair defense
    when sued by a subcontractor’s injured employee.36
    Here, it is undisputed that AmRail was immune under Title 51.
    RCW 4.22.070(1) prohibited the jury from considering AmRail’s fault when
    apportioning liability. Jury instruction 20 and question 8 of the special verdict form
    incorrectly directed the jury to do so. The court also erred by approving special
    Gilbert H. Moen Co. v. Island Steel Erectors, Inc., 
    128 Wash. 2d 745
    , 752,
    32
    
    912 P.2d 472
    (1996).
    ~ Edgarv. City of Tacoma, 
    129 Wash. 2d 621
    , 633-34, 
    919 P.2d 1236
    (1996).
    34k1.at632.
    35
    Id. at 633.
           36 
    Moen, 128 Wash. 2d at 761
    .
    10
    No. 79123-1-I/li
    verdict question 3. By asking the jury to determine whether AmRaiI proximately
    caused Thoen’s injuries, it effectively ordered the jury to consider an immune
    employer’s liability as part of an empty chair defense.
    On retrial, no attempt should be made to allocate fault to Title 51 immune
    employer AmRail, nor should CDK be allowed to raise an empty chair defense.
    CDK can argue it was not at fault without requiring a legally irrelevant and
    statutorily prohibited jury determination of an immune employer’s fault.
    Therefore, we reverse.
    V
    WE CONCUR: