AFFILIATED FM v. LTK Consulting Services

243 P.3d 521
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 4, 2010
Docket82738-9
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 243 P.3d 521 (AFFILIATED FM v. LTK Consulting Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
AFFILIATED FM v. LTK Consulting Services, 243 P.3d 521 (Wash. 2010).

Opinion

243 P.3d 521 (2010)

Certification from the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in AFFILIATED FM INSURANCE COMPANY, a Rhode Island corporation, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
LTK CONSULTING SERVICES, INC., a Pennsylvania corporation, Defendant-Appellee.

No. 82738-9.

Supreme Court of Washington, En Banc.

Argued October 20, 2009.
Decided November 4, 2010.

*523 William E. Pierson Jr., Law Office of William E. Pierson Jr. PC, Seattle, WA, for Plaintiff.

Brandon Hummel, Steven Stein, Jeffrey Winick, C. Steven Tomashefsky, Stein Ray & Harris LLP, Chicago, IL, Terence J. Scanlan, Skellenger Bender, P.S., Seattle, WA, for Defendant.

FAIRHURST, J.

¶ 1 A fire ignited on the Seattle Monorail System's (Seattle Monorail) blue train in 2004. The monorail's private operating company, Seattle Monorail Services (SMS), suffered millions of dollars in losses. The question presented is whether SMS, which does not own the Seattle Monorail, can bring a tort action against LTK Consulting Services, Inc., an engineering firm that worked on monorail maintenance before the fire, for negligently causing the fire. LTK assumes, for the sake of argument in its motion for summary judgment, that the cause of the fire was the train's faulty grounding system, the design of which LTK had itself suggested. LTK argues, however, that SMS's damages are purely economic losses stemming from repair costs, which SMS was contractually obligated to pay, and from business interruption. LTK believes that SMS's tort claims for such damages are barred under Washington tort law. We disagree. By undertaking professional engineering services, LTK bore a tort law duty of reasonable care encompassing safety risks of physical damage to SMS's property interests in the monorail. Hence, SMS's subrogee, Affiliated FM Insurance Company (AFM), may bring a claim of negligence against LTK for LTK's tortious injury of those interests.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

A. The fire

¶ 2 The Seattle Monorail is the elevated transportation system that connects Seattle Center with downtown Seattle, Washington. One day in May 2004, after leaving the Seattle Center Station with a load of passengers, the monorail blue train caught fire. The fire started beneath the floor of the passenger compartment of the train's front two cars, but the fire soon pierced the floor and engulfed the seating in both front passenger cars. Smoke from the fire spread to all four blue train cars. On the other monorail track, the red train stopped alongside the blue train, helping passengers escape. The red train was damaged by smoke. The cause of the fire was later found to be electrical: a shaft in the monorail's blue train motor had disintegrated, colliding with an electrically charged collector shoe.

B. SMS and the monorail concession agreement

¶ 3 Ten years before the fire, in 1994, the city of Seattle (City) entered a monorail concession agreement with SMS. The agreement granted rights to SMS related to the operation of the monorail:

The City hereby grants to [SMS] . . . the concession right and privilege to maintain and exclusively operate the Monorail System including the facilities, personal property *524 and equipment, together with the right to use and occupy the areas, described in this section, all subject to the conditions and requirements set forth in this Agreement.

Excerpt of Record (ER) 030, Ex. 1, § III.A. The agreement permitted SMS to run concession stands and required SMS to collect fares according to an agreed schedule. In exchange for these rights, SMS promised to pay "concession fees and charges" to the City. ER 034, Ex. 1, § V.A.

¶ 4 The agreement allocated responsibility among SMS and the City for maintaining the monorail. ER 053-074, Ex. 1, § XI.A-N. LTK and AFM agree that SMS bore the responsibility for emergency maintenance. ER 395. The agreement required SMS to grant the City "access to the Monorail System at all reasonable times to inspect the same and to make any repair, improvement, alteration or addition thereto of any property owned by or under control of the City." ER 095, Ex. 1, § XIX.A. To the extent "reasonably required" for such repairs or improvements, the agreement permitted the City to "interfere with the conduct of the business and operations of [SMS]." Id. § XIX.B.

¶ 5 The agreement also required SMS to carry an insurance "policy for fire and extended coverage, upset, collision and overturn, vandalism, malicious mischief, and other perils commonly included in the special coverage form," with the City designated as the loss payee. ER 081-082, Ex. 1, § XVII.A.1. In the event of damage from a fire for which SMS was not responsible, the agreement gave SMS the right to suspend payments to the City or terminate the agreement altogether, depending on the severity of the damage. ER 097, Ex. 1, § XXII.B-C.

C. LTK works on the monorail

¶ 6 The City contracted with LTK in 1999 "to examine the Monorail system and recommend repairs." Resp. Br. of LTK at 3. LTK completed its contractual obligations by 2002. The agreement between the parties is not before us, but we understand that SMS was not a party to the contract.

D. After the fire, AFM becomes involved

¶ 7 SMS and the City amended their agreement after the fire to allocate the costs and responsibilities for repairing the fire and smoke damage to the monorail. ER 349-50. SMS's insurer, AFM, paid $3,267,861 to SMS and was subrogated to SMS's rights against LTK. Asserting those rights now, AFM seeks to recover damages from LTK for SMS's losses.

E. The lawsuit

¶ 8 AFM brought suit against LTK in King County Superior Court in November 2006, claiming that LTK was negligent "in changing the electrical ground system for the Blue and Red Trains." ER 003, Compl. ¶ 4.2. AFM alleges that as part of LTK's contract with the City, "LTK Engineering recommended that the grounding system for the Blue and Red Trains that made up the Seattle Monorail System be changed." ER 002, Compl. ¶ 3.1.

¶ 9 LTK removed the suit to the United States District Court for the Western District of Washington and moved for summary judgment. LTK denied that it suggested changes to the trains' grounding system or that these changes were implemented, but for purposes of argument on summary judgment, assumes "that it recommended changes to the City, that those changes were implemented, and that their implementation resulted in a condition where the fault that occurred as a result of the drive shaft disintegration was not prevented." ER 384 n. 2 (Def.'s Mot. for Summ. J.). However, LTK argued that SMS's losses were purely economic and that it was not liable in tort for economic losses, at least in this circumstance where it was not in contractual privity with SMS. The losses were purely economic, in LTK's view, because they stemmed from business interruptions and SMS's contractual obligations to repair the City's monorail trains, and SMS did not have a property interest in the Seattle Monorail. The district court granted LTK's motion for summary judgment and denied AFM's motion for reconsideration.

¶ 10 AFM appealed to the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, which *525 certified the following question for this court's review:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
243 P.3d 521, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/affiliated-fm-v-ltk-consulting-services-wash-2010.