Blood v. Qwest Services Corp.

224 P.3d 301, 2009 WL 1152148
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 28, 2009
Docket08CA0134
StatusPublished
Cited by359 cases

This text of 224 P.3d 301 (Blood v. Qwest Services Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blood v. Qwest Services Corp., 224 P.3d 301, 2009 WL 1152148 (Colo. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinions

Opinion by

Judge WEBB.

In this personal injury action that raises questions of first impression concerning recovery of exemplary damages, defendants, Qwest Services Corporation and Qwest Corporation (collectively, Qwest), appeal the trial court's judgment entered on a jury verdict in favor of plaintiffs, Andrew Blood (Blood) and Carrie Blood, and third-party defendant Public Service Company of Colorado, doing business as Xcel Energy (Xcel), and its denial of Qwest's post-trial motions.

We vacate the trial court's order increasing exemplary damages and remand for an evidentiary hearing on Blood's motion to increase exemplary damages. In all other respects, the judgment and orders are affirmed.

Table of Contents

I. INntrOGUCtIOM . seras eek ka ee aa ek een k ea e e dene n ek eae e kee kk ees 309

w rr e 309

B. Blood's Theory of the C@g@ .l kk errr lk reek aa kle. 309

C. Trial Court Rulings and Jury Verdict ......................... ...e... 309

II. Exemplary DAMAS sls kare erk kerk re e rake eae dar kre es 310

A. Constitutionality of Section 18-21-102 . . ll rere klk lls 310

1. Exemplary Damages and Nonparty Harm .......................... ... 310

2. Facial Challe@Ag@ keer ke sk ek kk ke ea ee ea er re ens 312

8. As Applied Challenge... ekle ere rk rr ee ekke kee eee kes 313

Sufficiency of the EVid@eAC@ ekke kee eek keke keke eek kes 314

The Amount of the Jury's Exemplary Damages Award ..................... 815

1. Reprehensibility kl eer er errr kk ekke ke ek kel ees 315

pse 316

3. Sanctions for Comparable Misconduct ........................... eee}. 317

D. Failure to Grant Qwest a Hearing .ll klk kk kkk} kl} 318

III. Qwest's Post-Accident CodUetb . ...l srk kev erk ak ka eee k kakes 320

A. Violation of the In Limine Ruling .. kkk kkk kkk} s 320
B. Closing Argument l... kkk kare kk ae ka kk ekke es 821

IV. The Joint Use COAtFACtK ................. .ll. erk a ek eae are e ea ek ke eae eee kakes 322

A. References to JUC Article XII ll kk eek kk ekke kee ees 822
B. Submitting Material Breach to Jury.... lll kkk kkk klk s 824

C. Jury's Verdict Holding Qwest 100% Culpable. ..... .................. eee e}} 325

D. Jury Instruction on Xeel's Responsibilities .. eee... 326

Qwest's Affirmative Def@AS@§ . .s. elev er kk ke ere kkk kkk ee kk ees 327

A. Worker's Compensation Act.. ................... .ll l kerk krs kkk a kaa e ees 827

1. Affirmative Defense or Jurisdictional Defense ......................... 827

2. WAIV@P .ll ears ea e rank ean e n e ea aan k ae ea n k nk ka ee rns 328

B. Premises Liability A@t verre ree kkk kk kkk ke eke eee eke 329

e 330

[309]*309I. Introduction

A. Facts

Blood suffered severe and permanent injuries while working on a wood utility pole (P5905) within the course and scope of his employment as a lineman for Xeel. Qwest owned P5905, along with thousands of similar poles in Colorado. Since 1960, it has shared with Keel use of its poles and has used poles owned by Xeel under a Joint Use Contract (JUC). The JUC made each party responsible for injuries to its employees arising from a jointly used pole, although indemnity was required if the injuries were caused "solely" by the other party's negligence or noncompliance with JUC specifications.

In anticipation of relocating P5905 at the request of the nonparty property owner, Xcel electric lines, Qwest telephone lines, and the sole supporting guy line had been removed shortly before the accident. On June 24, 2004, with the pole now unsupported, Blood climbed it to remove the last piece of Xcel equipment. The pole broke below ground where it had decayed, causing Blood to fall, and the pole came down on top of him.

B. Blood's Theory of the Case

Blood sued Qwest for negligence. His wife, Carrie, sued for loss of consortium. Blood asserted that Qwest's negligence in failing to have inspected P5905 since its installation in 1958, which would have detected the decay, was the sole cause of the accident. He sought exemplary damages on the basis that Qwest had no program periodically to inspect any of its poles, either before or after the accident.

Qwest asserted affirmative defenses including, as relevant here, Blood's comparative negligence; exclusivity under the Colorado Workers' Compensation Act, section 8-41-102, C.R.9.2008 (WCA), as Blood's statutory employer; and the Premises Liability Act, section 18-21-115(5)(b), C.R.S.2008 (PLA).

@west also pleaded third-party claims against Xcel for negligence, indemnity under the JUC, contribution, and breach of the JUC. Xeel counterclaimed against Qwest for negligence and breach of the JUC.

C. Trial Court Rulings and Jury Verdict

The trial court granted partial summary judgment for Xcel on Qwest's contribution claim, reasoning that the WCA abolished any tort duties of Xeel to Blood, and for Keel on Qwest's negligence claim, applying economic loss rule. The court also granted Qwest's in limine motions to exclude evidence or argument regarding the indemnity provision in the JUC, Qwest's not having implemented a post-accident periodic pole inspection program, and potential harm to nonparties from lack of such a program. None of these rulings has been appealed.

The jury was instructed that it could award exemplary damages only if Qwest acted in a "willful and wanton manner," meaning conduct "purposefully committed by a person who must have realized that the conduct was dangerous, and which conduct was done heedlessly and recklessly, either without regard to the consequences, or without regard to the rights and safety of others, particularly the plaintiff."

The jury found that Qwest was negligent, that Blood and Xeel were not negligent, and that Qwest was 100% at fault. It awarded $9,917,600 in economic losses, $1,000,000 in noneconomic losses, $10,000,000 for physical impairment and disfigurement, $750,000 for loss of consortium, and $18,000,000 in exemplary damages. The amount of compensatory damages is not contested on appeal. The jury also found that Qwest had breached the JUC. It returned a verdict in favor of Xeel on the JUC counterclaim.

Blood moved to increase exemplary damages under section 18-21-102@8)(a), C.R.S. 2008, because Qwest had not implemented a periodic pole inspection program between the date of the filing of this action and the trial. Without holding a hearing as requested by @west, the court granted the motion and increased the exemplary damages to three times the compensatory damages. The court denied Qwest's numerous post-judgment motions. After reducing the noneconomic damage awards under section 13-21-102.5(@8)(a), C.R.98.2008, judgment was entered against [310]*310Qwest for a total of $89,867,186, including prejudgment interest.

II. Exemplary Damages

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224 P.3d 301, 2009 WL 1152148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blood-v-qwest-services-corp-coloctapp-2009.