Fife Portal, Llc v. Centurylink, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedAugust 11, 2020
Docket52415-5
StatusUnpublished

This text of Fife Portal, Llc v. Centurylink, Inc. (Fife Portal, Llc v. Centurylink, Inc.) 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
Fife Portal, Llc v. Centurylink, Inc., (Wash. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

August 11, 2020

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II

FIFE PORTAL, LLC, a Washington Limited No. 52415-5-II Liability Company; FIFE PORTAL 140 OWNERS ASSOCIATION, LLC, a Washington Limited Liability Company; Z.V. COMPANY, INC., a Washington Corporation,

Appellants, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

v.

CENTURYLINK, INC., a Washington Corporation; PACIFIC UTILITY CONTRACTORS, INC., a Louisiana corporation licensed to do business in Washington, JOHN DOE 1; JOHN DOE 2,

Respondents.

MAXA, J. – Fife Portal, LLC; Fife Portal 140 Owners Association, LLC (“Association”);

and Z.V. Company, Inc. (collectively “Fife Portal”) filed suit against CenturyLink, Inc. and its

subcontractor Pacific Utility Contractors, Inc. (“Pacific”) to recover for damage to Fife Portal’s

property and underground utilities. Pacific caused the damage when drilling for the installation

of underground conduit for CenturyLink. The trial court found Pacific liable as a matter of law

on summary judgment.

Fife Portal sought to recover as damages the value of time spent working on the property

repair and the lawsuit by George Humphrey, allegedly working for his independent company

First Corps, Inc., and by Peter Wooding. Humphrey was the manager of Fife Portal, LLC and No. 52415-5-II

the president of the Association. Wooding managed Z.V. Company’s property. The trial court

in a partial summary judgment order precluded Fife Portal from making this claim because it

involved the personal time of Humphrey and Wooding, which the court ruled was unrecoverable.

Fife Portal also sought to present evidence that Humphrey’s estimate for future

restoration costs regarding Fife Portal’s property should include an amount for unknown

conditions on the damaged property. In an evidentiary ruling during trial, the trial court

precluded Fife Portal from presenting this evidence.

At trial, the trial court granted CenturyLink’s motion for judgment as a matter of law and

dismissed all of Fife Portal’s claims against CenturyLink. A jury subsequently awarded Fife

Portal damages against Pacific. The court entered judgment against Pacific for the amount of the

awarded damages, treble damages, interest, and attorney fees. Pacific eventually paid that

judgment in full. Fife Portal acknowledges that Pacific’s payment of the judgment generally

precludes Fife Portal from recovering the judgment amount again from CenturyLink even if

CenturyLink is found liable. But Fife Portal claims that its appeal regarding CenturyLink’s

liability is not moot because this rule does not apply to treble damages, which can be recovered

twice from different parties.

We hold that (1) the trial court did not err in granting partial summary judgment

precluding Fife Portal from seeking recovery for the value of Humphrey’s and Wooding’s time

or in excluding evidence at trial that Humphrey’s estimate for future restoration costs should

include an amount for unknown conditions; and (2) Fife Portal’s appeal regarding CenturyLink’s

liability is moot because as a matter of law, CenturyLink cannot be liable for treble damages on

Fife Portal’s liability theories.

Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.

2 No. 52415-5-II

FACTS

Background

The Association managed the Fife Portal Industrial Park in Fife. Fife Portal, LLC and

Z.V. Company were two members of the Association. Humphrey was the manager of Fife

Portal, LLC and the president and only officer of the Association. He also was the president of

First Corps, Inc., a real estate development company that designed and developed the industrial

park. Wooding managed Z.V. Company’s property.

CenturyLink’s Conduit Work

CenturyLink applied to the City of Fife for a permit to install conduits under a public

right-of-way in Fife to expand CenturyLink’s cable network. The right-of-way was located

adjacent to Fife Portal’s property. The City issued the permit in June 2015.

In September 2015, CenturyLink retained Pacific to install the conduits. CenturyLink

directed Pacific to drill under a public sidewalk on the right-of-way. CenturyLink required

Pacific to employ a drilling method that uses a drill to bore a path underground through which

conduit can be pulled from the entry point to the exit point.

CenturyLink’s Engineering Drawings

CenturyLink prepared engineering drawings regarding Pacific’s installation of the

conduits. The drawings instructed Pacific to bore under the sidewalk. CenturyLink’s drawings

mistakenly showed that there was a distance of nine feet from the edge of the sidewalk to Fife

Portal’s property line. The actual distance was six inches to a foot.

Damage to Underground Utilities

In October 2015, Pacific began work on installing CenturyLink’s conduits. Pacific

placed CenturyLink’s conduits on Fife Portal’s property, two or three feet beyond the boundary

3 No. 52415-5-II

line of the right-of-way. While drilling, Pacific struck and damaged Fife Portal’s underground

storm drain pipe. Without giving notice to Fife Portal, Pacific excavated the pipe, attempted to

repair the damage, and reburied the drain, causing damage to Pacific’s landscape area.

Several days later, Pacific again struck the storm drain pipe as well as the City’s

underground water main, causing the water main to rupture and blow apart asphalt above,

creating a large hole. Pacific then notified Fife Portal about its work on Fife Portal’s property

and damage to its underground utilities.

First Corps Work for Fife Portal

Fife Portal hired First Corps, the original developer of the industrial park, to investigate

Fife Portal’s property and ascertain the extent of damage. As the president of First Corps,

Humphrey rendered all services on behalf of that company.

Fife Portal asserted a claim for First Corps/Humphrey’s time from October 2015 to June

2016 that totaled 568.95 hours at $350 per hour. The claim was broken down as 194 hours for

“Legal” and 374.95 hours for “Site.” Fife Portal produced a log that provided a date and a

description of the time Humphrey spent in the two categories.

There was no written agreement between Fife Portal and First Corps regarding work on

this project. Humphrey agreed to his own $350 rate on behalf of Fife Portal. Humphrey testified

that eventually he would bill First Corps for his time and First Corps would bill the Association.

However, the summary judgment record reflected that First Corps had not billed Fife Portal and

had not been paid for these services even though they had been performed months earlier.

In addition, Fife Portal claimed as damages the value of time incurred by Wooding, the

representative of Z.V. Company. Fife Portal asserted a claim for 200 hours at $250 per hour.

The claim was broken down as 40 hours for “Legal” and 160 hours for “Site.” Fife Portal did

4 No. 52415-5-II

not provide a date or description of Wooding’s time. There was no evidence that Wooding had

been retained to participate in repair work.

Lawsuit Against Pacific and CenturyLink

Fife Portal filed a lawsuit against Pacific and CenturyLink to recover for the damage

Pacific caused. The lawsuit asserted claims for common law trespass; trespass under RCW

4.24.630; violation of the Underground Utility Damage Prevention Act (UUDPA), chapter

19.122 RCW; and negligence.

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