City of Seward v. Afognak Logging

31 P.3d 780, 2001 Alas. LEXIS 134, 2001 WL 1148929
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 28, 2001
DocketS-9456
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 31 P.3d 780 (City of Seward v. Afognak Logging) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Seward v. Afognak Logging, 31 P.3d 780, 2001 Alas. LEXIS 134, 2001 WL 1148929 (Ala. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION

BRYNER, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

During a heavy rainfall, the City of Seward asked local contractor Afognak Logging to dispatch two bulldozers with operators to the Lowell Point bridge to help with flood control efforts. One of the bulldozers bogged down and suffered extensive damage in flood water that covered the highway near the bridge. Afognak sued to recover its damages, claiming that the city negligently failed to warn it that the flood had washed away the roadbed. A jury found the city liable, and the superior court awarded Afognak $89,000 in damages. We affirm, holding that the city owed Afog-nak an actionable duty of reasonable care, that neither discretionary function immunity nor emergency immunity protected the city, and that substantial evidence supports the damage award.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

The Lowell Point bridge stands between a waterfall and the Resurrection Bay about 800 yards southwest of downtown Seward. During periods of heavy rain, water collects behind the bridge and overflows the highway at *782 both ends. Heavy rains were falling in Seward on the morning of September 20, 1995. When Seward's engineering and utilities manager, Dave Calvert, checked the bridge, he found the waterfall spewing rock- and gravel-filled water toward the bridge, like a giant hose. Calvert radioed public works superintendent Floyd Ainsworth to report the condition of the waterfall. As he spoke with Ainsworth, Calvert saw the floodwaters chew away the roadbed south of the bridge, collapsing the highway's pavement. Ains-worth knew that the same kind of damage had occurred during previous floods.

Ainsworth came to the waterfall in response to Calvert's report of the washout and saw that the water collecting behind the bridge was threatening to spill north toward a lift station and south toward a cannery. Ainsworth called Afognak Logging and asked Afognak's manager, Steve Schafer, to dispatch a D-9 bulldozer and an operator to control the flooding. Because the city owned no large bulldozers, it had a standing arrangement for Afognak to provide equipment with operators; that day, the city orally agreed to pay $145 per hour for D-9 bulldozers with operators.

Schafer arrived at Lowell Point with a D-9 bulldozer and spent the morning attempting to clear channels for floodwaters to drain over the roadway at both ends of the bridge. Later that morning, at Ainsworth's request, someone from the city's emergency management office called Afognak for an additional bulldozer and operator. Afognak sent Lyle Johnson with a second D-9 bulldozer. While Johnson was working on the north side of the bridge, Ainsworth asked him to pick up some people stranded on the south side and ferry them across in his bulldozer to the north side. Ainsworth next instructed Johnson to cut a channel allowing flood water to drain across the highway on the south side of the bridge. Ainsworth failed to tell Johnson that the pavement on the south side of the bridge had collapsed earlier in the morning. The bridge and adjoining highway on the south side was covered with murky water and gravel, making the condition of the underlying roadbed impossible to see. After working some time without progress, Johnson bogged down in loose gravel and was forced to abandon his bulldozer. The bulldozer could not be retrieved from the waterfall until five days later. It was extensively damaged. Afognak estimated that the reasonable cost of repairing the bulldozer would be more than $100,000.

Afognak sued the city to recover its damages, alleging breach of contract, bad faith, negligence, fraud, and strict Hability. The superior court dismissed all but the negligence claim, allowing that claim to survive because the court found sufficient evidence to support a finding that the city negligently failed to warn Afognak of the washed out pavement south of the Lowell Point bridge. Concerning this theory, the court instructed the jury:

Now, in this case the plaintiff claims that the defendant's negligence caused a loss of plaintiff's bulldozer. For the plaintiff to win on this claim, you must decide that [it] is more likely true than not true (1) that the defendant knew that there existed a hidden, unknown and extrahazardous danger at the location where plaintiff was operating its bulldozer; (2) that the existence of the hidden, unknown and extra-hazardous danger could not have been reasonably foreseen by plaintiff; and (8) the defendant's failure to inform plaintiff of the hidden and extrahazardous danger at the location where plaintiff was operating the bulldozer was negligent and was a legal cause of the plaintiff's loss.

The jury found Seward negligent. After a non-jury trial on the issue of damages, the superior court awarded Afognak $89,700 plus prejudgment interest and attorney's fees.

Seward appeals.

III. DISCUSSION

On appeal, the city argues that the superi- or court should have dismissed Afognak's negligence claim because the city owed no duty to warn Afognak that the pavement had washed away and because two forms of statutory immunity protected the city from liability-discretionary function immunity and emergency immunity. The city also challenges the award of damages and prejudgment interest.

*783 A. Standard of Review

We review the denial of summary judgment de novo, applying our independent judgment. 1 We also review de novo whether the trial court correctly applied legal rules pertaining to damages 2 and prejudgment interests 3 A trial court's damage determination itself is a factual finding that we review for clear error; an award is clearly erroneous if we are "left with the definite and firm conviction on the entire record that a mistake has been committed." 4

B. Legal Duty

The city maintains that it was entitled to summary judgment or a directed verdict on negligence because it owed only contractual duties to Afognak. Since Afognak was an independent contractor, the city reasons that it bad no legal duty to warn Afognak of hazardous job-site conditions.

The superior court accepted this reasoning to a limited extent. Relying on Restatement of Torts § 413-which requires an independent contractor's employer to protect against any "peculiar and unreasonable risk of harm to others" arising from the contractor's work 5 -the court concluded that the city only had a duty to warn Afognak of "peeu-liar" dangers to its property. Based on this conclusion, the court instructed the jury that the city would be liable if it negligently failed to warn Afognak of "extrahazardous" conditions that Afognak could not reasonably have foreseen. Afognak alternatively argues that the city owed a duty of due care to warn against danger under the general test adopted in D.S.W. v. Fairbanks North Star Borough School District. 6

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 P.3d 780, 2001 Alas. LEXIS 134, 2001 WL 1148929, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-seward-v-afognak-logging-alaska-2001.