David Gray, Estate Of Julian David Gray-florance, Apps. v. City Of Seattle, Resp.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJune 3, 2019
Docket77577-4
StatusUnpublished

This text of David Gray, Estate Of Julian David Gray-florance, Apps. v. City Of Seattle, Resp. (David Gray, Estate Of Julian David Gray-florance, Apps. v. City Of Seattle, Resp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
David Gray, Estate Of Julian David Gray-florance, Apps. v. City Of Seattle, Resp., (Wash. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DAVID GRAY, as personal representative of the ESTATE OF No. 77577-4-I JULIAN DAVID GRAY-FLORANCE; DIVISION ONE Appellant, UNPUBLISHED OPINION V.

THE CITY OF SEATTLE, a municipal corporation; SEATTLE PUBLIC UTILITIES; RAY HOFFMAN, in his official capacity as Director of Seattle Public Utilities only; and DOES 1-50,

Respondents. FILED:June3,2019

APPELwIcK, C.J. — Gray-Florance died when the vehicle in which he was

riding skidded sideways and struck a fire hydrant on his passenger side door.

Gray, as personal representative of Gray-Florance’s estate, sued the City, alleging

that the hydrant’s standpipe was negligently installed, failed to breakaway as

designed, and caused Gray-Florance’s death. The trial court granted summary

judgment and dismissed the case. The Estate argues that the trial court erred in

concluding that it failed to present a genuine dispute of material fact as to

proximate cause. We affirm.

FACTS

On NewYear’s Eve 2013, Julian Gray-Florance, his friend Arthur Sawe, and

his girlfriend Kaycee Davis went to a bar in the Capitol Hill neighborhood of Seattle. No. 77577-4-1/2

Sawe drove them to the bar in Gray-Florance’s vehicle, and they stayed at the bar

for approximately two and a half hours. After leaving the bar, they got into Gray

Florance’s car and headed back to Sawe’s house. Sawe was driving, Gray

Florance was in the front passenger seat, and Davis was in the right rear

passenger seat.

While traveling northbound on Lakeview Boulevard East, the vehicle

fishtailed several times before Sawe lost control of the vehicle and veered west.

The vehicle then crossed the southbound lane of traffic and began a sideways

slide onto the west sidewalk. After it began to slide, the vehicle struck a crosswalk

sign before striking a fire hydrant on the passenger side, causing the vehicle to roll

over. In Detective James Bulawa’s inspection of the vehicle, he noted “contact

damage to the passenger’s door area . . . which continued into the interior of the

vehicle approximately 36 inches.” Witnesses estimated that the vehicle had been

traveling between 35 to 50 miles per hour.

The Seattle Fire Department responded to the scene and declared Sawe

and Gray-Florance deceased. Davis survived, suffering a fractured left leg,

bruising on her head, and burn marks on her right side. Dr. Richard C. Harruff, the

chief medical examiner at the King County Medical Examiner’s Office, later

concluded that Gray-Florance’s cause of death was “blunt force injuries of the

torso.”

On June 15, 2016, David Gray, as personal representative of the estate of

Gray-Florance (Estate), sued the City of Seattle (City), Seattle Public Utilities

(SPU), SPU Director Ray Hoffman, the City and SPU’s agents and employees,

2 No. 77577-4-1/3

and other individuals and entities he believed were at fault in the collision.1 The

Estate’s complaint included claims for wrongful death, negligence, and negligent

supervision. Specifically, the Estate alleged that

[the fire hydrant] did not break away immediately upon impact as designed. The riser section of the pipe left the fire hydrant too far above grade for the safety flange and safety bolts to breakaway as intended when struck by plaintiff’s vehicle. The height of the fire hydrant was not only negligently above grade, but it was also in violation of Seattle rules, codes, regulations, and/or ordinances as well as violating the manufacturer’s recommendations and requirements. The Estate further alleged that, “[a]s a proximate result of defendants’

negligence and at-fault acts or omissions, the vehicle’s frame and/or rocker panel

hooked the fire hydrant flange, causing the vehicle to flip over, resulting in fatal

injuries to both the driver Arthur Sawe, and the front seat passenger, plaintiff Julian

Gray[-Florance].” And, it alleged that “[i]n the ten years prior to the incident,

defendants altered or directed the alteration of the height and placement of the

hydrant leaving the roadway unprotected, unsafe, and in a dangerous condition for

any and all users of the road.”

The fire hydrant that Gray-Florance’s vehicle struck is located in the

sidewalk west of Lakeview Boulevard East. The hydrant is 2 feet from the curb

and 10 feet from the lanes of travel. Its assembly includes a standpipe that extends

below grade and connects to the City’s water main. Specifically, the standpipe

extends down through the concrete sidewalk, which functions as a “shear block”

The defendants, who are all respondents on appeal, are represented by the Seattle City Attorney’s Office. Therefore, we collectively refer to the respondents as “the City.”

3 No. 77577-4-1/4

to prevent the standpipe from shifting if external forces act upon it or the curbstand.

The curbstand is the visible, operational part of the assembly, commonly thought

of as the fire hydrant. It is affixed to the top of the standpipe at the flange, using

eight shear bolts. The flange, also referred to as the “shear plane,” is slightly less

than one inch thick.

During the collision, the vehicle struck the standpipe such that the flange

was positioned above the vehicle’s rocker panel. The rocker panel, a structural

component of the vehicle that runs the length of the vehicle under the driver side

door and passenger side door, ripped off the vehicle and wrapped around the

standpipe. The passenger side door also made contact with the hydrant’s

curbstand, and folded in half.

In 2005, the City added a nine inch standpipe extension to the hydrant. The

City’s 2005 “Standard Specifications for Road, Bridge and Municipal Construction”

(2005 Standard Specifications) required a hydrant’s flange to be set two inches

minimum and seven inches maximum above finished grade. The standard is

designed to be below the average bumper height on a vehicle, so that if a vehicle

hits it, it breaks the curbstand off but does not rip the standpipe out of the ground.

The parties do not dispute that the 2005 Standard Specifications applied to the

City’s 2005 height adjustment. And, they do not dispute that the curbstand broke

away from the standpipe during the collision.

One of the Estate’s experts, Edward Stevens, a civil engineer, found that

the underside of the hydrant’s standpipe flange was 8.6 inches above the sidewalk

on the side impacted in the collision. He also found that the top of the flange,

4 No. 77577-4-1/5

where the curbstand is designed to shear, was approximately 9.5 inches above

the sidewalk. The City’s expert, Nathan Rose, an accident reconstructionist,

measured the height of the bottom of the flange against the slope of the sidewalk,

and found that the bottom of the flange was between 7.8 and 8.6 inches above the

sidewalk. The City does not dispute that, according to its measurements, the

hydrant’s flange was between 0.8 and 1 .6 inches higher than specified in the 2005

Standard Specifications.

On June 12, 2017, the trial court granted the City partial summary judgment

as to whether Sawe was under the influence of intoxicants at the time of the

collision and negligent as a matter of law under RCW 5.40.050, and whether Gray

Florance was also under the influence of intoxicants. Specifically, the court found

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