Buroker v. Pratt Industries, Inc.

2020 Ohio 2845
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 7, 2020
Docket19AP-383
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2020 Ohio 2845 (Buroker v. Pratt Industries, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buroker v. Pratt Industries, Inc., 2020 Ohio 2845 (Ohio Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

[Cite as Buroker v. Pratt Industries, Inc., 2020-Ohio-2845.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO

TENTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

William K. Buroker, :

Plaintiff-Appellant, : No. 19AP-383 v. : (C.P.C. No. 18CV-4383)

Pratt Industries, Inc., et al., : (REGULAR CALENDAR)

Defendants-Appellees. :

D E C I S I O N

Rendered on May 7, 2020

On brief: Robert W. Kerpsack Co., LPA, and Robert W. Kerpsack, for appellant. Argued: Robert W. Kerpsack.

On brief: Plunkett Cooney, P.C., Christina L. Corl and Daniel J. Hurley, for appellees Pratt (Corrugated Logistics), LLC, and Pratt (Jett Corr), Inc. Argued: Daniel J. Hurley.

On brief: Hannah, Campbell & Powell, LLP, Kenneth A. Calderone, and R. Brian Borla, for appellees Turmoil Trucking LLC, and Dwayne A. Snyder. Argued: R. Brian Borla.

APPEAL from the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas

BRUNNER, J. {¶ 1} Plaintiff-appellant, William K. Buroker, appeals from a judgment of the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas entered on June 14, 2019, in favor of defendants- appellees, Pratt Corrugated Logistics, LLC ("Pratt (Corrugated Logistics)"), Pratt Jett Corr, Inc. ("Pratt (Jett Corr)"), Turmoil Trucking, LLC ("Turmoil"), and Dwayne A. Snyder ("Snyder") (hereafter referred to collectively as "appellees"). In its decision, the trial court granted appellees' motions to strike affidavits submitted on behalf of Buroker and granted appellees' motions for summary judgment on Buroker's claims against them. For the reasons that follow, we reverse and remand this matter for trial. No. 19AP-383 2

I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND A. Overview {¶ 2} This matter arises from a one-vehicle accident of a tractor-trailer commercial vehicle that occurred on May 26, 2016 on State Route 83 in Chatham Township, Medina County, Ohio. Buroker was the owner, operator, and sole occupant of the semi-truck that was pulling the trailer when it went off State Route 83 into a ditch, which resulted in the semi-truck and the trailer being turned over. Buroker had picked up the pre-loaded trailer at Pratt Industries, Inc.'s ("Pratt Industries")1 facility in Springfield, Ohio and was in route to a delivery location in Avon, Ohio when the accident occurred, approximately two and one-half hours after he had left Pratt's Springfield facility. At the time of the accident, Buroker had a commercial driver's license ("CDL") and was a self-employed truck driver under the name Buroker Trucking. He was not working pursuant to any lease agreement. {¶ 3} Buroker filed the underlying negligence action against multiple parties on May 23, 2018, seeking compensatory damages for personal injuries and property losses incurred in the accident. Buroker's theory of liability is that an employee at Pratt Industries' Springfield facility had failed to lock the pins in the rear tandem axle of the trailer before he hooked up to the trailer and that it was this failure that caused the accident. B. Facts {¶ 4} Pratt Industries is the parent company of Pratt (Corrugated Logistics). Pratt (Jett Corr) owns and operates a box plant under the Pratt Industries name in Springfield, Ohio. Pratt (Jett Corr) contracts with Pratt (Corrugated Logistics) to haul its corrugated boxes to Pratt (Jett Corr)'s customers. Pratt (Corrugated Logistics) sometimes subcontracts hauling jobs to Turmoil, which is owned by Snyder. {¶ 5} In the underlying matter, Turmoil was scheduled to haul 15 trailers pre- loaded with corrugated boxes from Pratt Industries in Springfield, Ohio, to a company in Avon, Ohio, on May 26, 2016. Because Turmoil did not have enough semi-trucks available to do the hauling for Pratt (Jett Corr), Snyder contacted Buroker and offered him the job of picking up one of the pre-loaded trailers and delivering the load to the company in Avon. Snyder told Buroker he would be paid in full, with Turmoil and Snyder not receiving money for hauling that trailer.

1 Buroker substituted appellee Pratt (Jett Corr) for Pratt Industries, Inc. as a party-defendant. No. 19AP-383 3

{¶ 6} On the date of the accident, Buroker drove his semi-truck to Pratt Industries in Springfield where he met Snyder and received the bill of lading for the shipment he would be hauling. Buroker testified at his deposition that he backed his semi-truck "up to the [pre- loaded trailer], hooked up to it. Walked around, made sure the lights worked, kicked the tires and we left." (Buroker Dep. at 44.) He testified that he never opened the trailer door and looked inside because the trailer was sealed. Buroker further testified that, after performing those tasks, he did not check the brakes or lift the hood. He testified that he observed the locking handle on the axle pins before leaving the Pratt (Jett Corr) facility, but he did not note whether the axle pin was in the up and locked position. {¶ 7} Buroker further testified at his deposition that he followed Snyder, who was also driving a tractor trailer from the Pratt (Jett Corr) facility to the Columbus area, where they became separated, with one of them driving north on Interstate 71, while the other taking the west outerbelt, Interstate 270 north, to Interstate 71 north of Columbus. When Buroker was on Interstate 71 north of Columbus, Snyder was nowhere in sight. When Buroker exited Interstate 71 at State Route 83, he still had no sight of Snyder. {¶ 8} Approximately two and one-half hours after Buroker left Pratt Industries, after traveling roughly 150 miles, the trailer went off the road into a ditch on State Route 83, at which point Buroker "laid the truck over" rather than cross the centerline of State Route 83 into southbound traffic. (Buroker Dep. at 57.) Buroker stated that "[t]he trailer steered itself into the ditch," and that "[i]t felt like it had to be a steering axle. All of a sudden, my * * * trailer just starts going into the ditch and there wasn't no pulling out. I tried." Id. at 58. Buroker testified that he had not noticed any swaying of the trailer before that. He reiterated, "[i]t acted like it had a steering axle on the back. When it went off, it went off. By the time I--when I looked in my rearview mirror, I didn't see nothing but trailer. It was that fast." Id. at 59-60. Buroker believed the trailer behaved that way because "[t]he trailer tandems weren't pinned. So that allows them things to move and it becomes like a steering axle." Id. at 60. Buroker testified further: When I observed the trailer tandems, they were upside down on the road, okay. When I observed the rails that they slide on * * * [t]hey were intact. They weren't bent. They weren't nothing. So there was nothing holding that set of trailer tandems underneath that trailer other than the DOT bumper on the back. No. 19AP-383 4

So in other words, when it hit the culvert, it knocked them completely out of there. Now if they would have been pinned, that couldn't have happened. Id. at 113-14. Buroker stated he did not know who unlocked the pins but believes it was whoever was "jockeying" the trailers at Pratt Industries' Springfield facility. Id. at 118. {¶ 9} On May 23, 2018, Buroker filed the underlying action against multiple defendants,2 including Pratt Industries and its subsidiaries, Turmoil and Snyder, asserting that the defendants' negligence in maintaining, equipping, and/or loading the trailer,3 proximately caused the accident. Buroker further alleges that, as a direct and proximate result of the defendants' negligence, he incurred numerous injuries, including permanent physical injuries, pain, suffering, emotional distress, loss of property, and permanent impairment to his earning capacity.

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Bluebook (online)
2020 Ohio 2845, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buroker-v-pratt-industries-inc-ohioctapp-2020.