Clark v. Ohio Dept. of Transp.

2020 Ohio 5400
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 24, 2020
Docket19AP-495
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2020 Ohio 5400 (Clark v. Ohio Dept. of Transp.) 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
Clark v. Ohio Dept. of Transp., 2020 Ohio 5400 (Ohio Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

[Cite as Clark v. Ohio Dept. of Transp., 2020-Ohio-5400.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO

TENTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

Michael A. Clark, Administrator of the : Estate of Brandon William Carl, Deceased, : Plaintiff-Appellant, No. 19AP-495 : (Ct. of Cl. No. 2015-99JD) v. : (REGULAR CALENDAR) Ohio Department of Transportation, : Defendant-Appellee. :

D E C I S I O N

Rendered on November 24, 2020

On brief: D. Arthur Rabourne, L.L.C., and D. Arthur Rabourne; Law of Office of Terrence L. Goodman, LLC, and Terrence L. Goodman, for appellant.

On brief: Dave Yost, Attorney General, Peter E. DeMarco and William C. Becker, for appellee.

APPEAL from the Court of Claims of Ohio

KLATT, J.

{¶ 1} Plaintiff-appellant, Michael A. Clark, administrator of the estate of Brandon William Carl, appeals from a judgment of the Court of Claims of Ohio that granted summary judgment to defendant-appellee, the Ohio Department of Transportation ("ODOT"), and denied partial summary judgment to Clark. For the following reasons, we affirm the trial court's judgment. {¶ 2} In 2012, ODOT issued construction plans and solicited bids for a significant interstate improvement project in the Cincinnati area. The project included the widening No. 19AP-495 2

of I-75 and the reconstruction of the I-75 interchange with Hopple Street. The winning bidder, Kokosing Construction Company, Inc., executed a contract with ODOT on January 18, 2013 to complete the I-75 project. In the contract, Kokosing agreed that it was contractually bound by the construction plans ODOT had issued. {¶ 3} The final stage of the I-75 project included the demolition of the existing I-75 northbound exit ramp to Hopple Street once the construction of the new interchange rendered the existing ramp defunct. Using that ramp, traffic exited from the left side of I- 75 northbound, crossed a bridge that extended over I-75 southbound, and turned onto Hopple Street. The ramp bridge had a concrete deck, or surface, supported by steel girders, or beams. The bridge consisted of three spans: a 55-foot east span, a 73.5-foot center span, and a 49.5-foot west span. Each span had five girders. Four structures provided the bridge with vertical support: an abutment on the east end of the bridge, a pier on the east side of I-75 southbound, a pier on the west side of I-75 southbound, and an abutment on the west end of the bridge. Both the east and west spans were cantilevered: the girders of the east span extended 9 feet over the east pier and the girders of the west span extended 9.5 feet over the west pier. The cantilevered girders terminated with horizontal ledges extending from the bottom half of the girders, forming "seats," and the center girders terminated with horizontal ledges extending from the top of the girders, which rested on the "seats." Through these points of connection, called hinges, the east and west spans supported the center span. Given this configuration—two cantilevered spans supporting a center suspended span through hinges—the bridge was a double-hinged cantilevered suspended bridge. {¶ 4} In November 2014, Kokosing's project engineer asked a Kokosing design engineer to develop a demolition plan for the ramp bridge. The design engineer did so. Upon receipt of the demolition plan, Kokosing management discussed how to implement it during their weekly job-site meetings. Kokosing management had multiple decisions to make. First, they had to determine the method they would use to remove the bridge deck. Kokosing management decided to use a Komatsu excavator PC-400 with a Genesis LXP4000 attachment, which pulverizes concrete and shears steel rebar, reducing a bridge deck to rubble. Second, because the demolition plan did not contain a sequence for dismantling the deck, Kokosing management had to determine the order in which the No. 19AP-495 3

excavator would accomplish the deck removal. At the job-site meetings, Kokosing management decided that the excavator would begin demolishing the deck on the east side of the bridge and finish on the west side. Kokosing management made that decision based on the ability and ease of the excavator to access and depart the job site. {¶ 5} On the night of January 18, 2015, a Kokosing construction crew began to demolish the bridge. The excavator started pulverizing the deck beginning at the east abutment of the bridge and working west toward the east pier. Chunks of concrete and pieces of rebar fell through the bridge girders to the ground. After dismantling approximately 50 percent of the deck between the east abutment and east pier, the excavator operator noticed that the girders of the east span were lifting about one foot off their bearings on the east abutment. The Kokosing crew stopped work for the night, and the Kokosing field engineer sent the design engineer an email asking whether it was safe to continue demolition. In response, the Kokosing design engineer designed a tie-down plan, which used Hilti anchors to attach the east span girders to the east abutment wall. {¶ 6} When the Kokosing demolition crew returned for work on the night of January 19, 2015, the Hilti anchors were installed, securing the girders to the abutment. Recommencing the demolition work, the excavator operator used the Genesis attachment to dismantle the remainder of the deck between the east abutment and east hinge point, which was located nine feet to the west of the east pier. At that point, no deck held the east span girders down. When the excavator moved onto the center span, the weight of the excavator exerted a substantial downward force on the east span girders, which supported the center span girders at the hinges. Without the deck to hold the girders in place, the east span became a gigantic teeter-totter, with the east pier acting as the fulcrum. The weight of the excavator pushed the cantilevered end down and the east span girders straight up.1 As the east span tilted up, the east hinges failed, leaving the center girders without support on the east side. This caused the east side of the center span to fall, which resulted in the center girders pulling off the west hinges and the center span falling on the west side as well. The entire center span collapsed in one piece onto I-75 southbound.

1The Hilti anchors that secured the east span girders to the east abutment wall did not work as intended by the design engineer. They failed either by pulling out of the concrete or failing in shear. No. 19AP-495 4

{¶ 7} At the time of the collapse, Brandon Carl, a Kokosing labor foreman, was standing on the bridge approximately 20 to 25 feet to the west of the excavator. Carl was working as a "spotter," which required him to observe operations to ensure demolition debris did not endanger traffic on I-75 and, when necessary, to use a flashlight to signal the excavator operator to stop demolition. When the center span collapsed, Carl fell underneath the excavator, and it crushed him. {¶ 8} On February 9, 2015, Sharon Frye and Charles Carl, then co-administrators of Brandon Carl's estate, brought suit against ODOT. The complaint asserted wrongful death and survivorship claims predicated on negligence and breach of warranty. Frye and Charles Carl subsequently resigned as co-administrators, and Clark became the administrator of Carl's estate. Consequently, the trial court substituted Clark as plaintiff. {¶ 9} ODOT moved for summary judgment in its favor, arguing that it owed no duty of care or protection to Carl. ODOT relied on the general principle that an entity— such as ODOT—that hires an independent contractor—such as Kokosing—bears no liability for work-related injuries the independent contractor's employees may suffer while engaged in an inherently dangerous job—such as demolition. In response, plaintiff argued that the exception to the general rule of nonliability applied.

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2020 Ohio 5400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-ohio-dept-of-transp-ohioctapp-2020.