Great Plains Roofing and Sheet Metal, Inc. v. K Building Specialties, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedApril 29, 2022
Docket124170
StatusPublished

This text of Great Plains Roofing and Sheet Metal, Inc. v. K Building Specialties, Inc. (Great Plains Roofing and Sheet Metal, Inc. v. K Building Specialties, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Great Plains Roofing and Sheet Metal, Inc. v. K Building Specialties, Inc., (kanctapp 2022).

Opinion

No. 124,170

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

GREAT PLAINS ROOFING AND SHEET METAL, INC., Appellant,

v.

K BUILDING SPECIALTIES, INC., et al., Appellees.

SYLLABUS BY THE COURT

1. Under K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 16-121(b), the Kansas anti-indemnity statute, an indemnification provision in a construction contract is void and unenforceable if it requires the promisor to indemnify the promisee for the promisee's negligence or intentional acts or omissions.

2. When an indemnification provision permits indemnity "to the maximum extent allowed by applicable law," the provision is valid, but it limits the promisor's indemnification liability so that the promisor is not responsible for the promisee's negligence.

3. When an injured party asserts a claim for negligence, all parties whose causal negligence contributed to the injury must be joined to the original action, with no distinction between tort claims and contract claims. This is called the one-action rule.

1 4. The intent and purpose of the Legislature in adopting K.S.A. 60-258a was to impose individual liability for damages based on the proportionate fault of all parties to the occurrence which gave rise to the injuries and damages even though one or more parties cannot be joined formally as a litigant or be held legally responsible for his or her proportionate fault. It was the intent of the Legislature to fully and finally litigate in a single action all causes of action and claims for damages arising out of any act of negligence.

5. Kansas law requires defendants seeking to minimize their liability in comparative fault situations not involving a chain of distribution or similar commercial relationship to do so by comparing the fault of other defendants to reduce their own share of liability and damages. If a defendant chooses to settle and obtain release of common liabilities involving other parties whom the plaintiff did not sue, the defendant does not have an action for comparative implied indemnity or postsettlement contribution. Under Kansas comparative fault procedure, such a remedy is not necessary, and such an action defeats the policy of judicial economy, multiplying the proceedings from a single accident or injury.

6. The doctrine of comparative fault requires all the parties to the occurrence to have their fault determined in one action.

7. The causal fault or negligence of all parties to the occurrence, including the negligence of the injured plaintiff and any third parties, should be submitted to the jury and the percentage of fault of each determined in one lawsuit.

2 8. When a contract requires a promisor to indemnify another for the promisor's share of negligence, the underlying negligence tort controls the promisor's liability, and it becomes impossible to determine contractual liability without a determination of fault.

9. To prevail on a claim for partial indemnity or contribution against a third-party defendant, the settlor must show that it actually paid damages on behalf of that third party. If the third party was never at risk of having to pay for its own damages, the settlor cannot show it benefited the third-party defendant, and the value of its contribution claim is zero.

10. Comparative implied indemnity, or as it is more accurately termed postsettlement contribution, describes the cause of action initiated by a tortfeasor in a negligence lawsuit to recover from a joint tortfeasor the share of the damages proportional to the joint tortfeasor's fault.

11. For a tortfeasor to pursue a claim of contribution or comparative implied indemnity against a joint tortfeasor who was not sued by the plaintiff, the tortfeasor must join the joint tortfeasor as a third party under K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 60-258a(c) and assert a timely claim against the joint tortfeasor.

12. The requirement to join additional parties under K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 60-258a(c) does not distinguish between tort and contract claims, but instead focuses on the need for a fact-finder to determine the percentage of negligence attributable to each party.

3 13. An exception to the one-action rule allows plaintiffs to pursue separate actions against tortfeasors where there has been no judicial determination of comparative fault, but this exception does not allow defendants to bring separate actions.

Appeal from Johnson District Court; PAUL C. GURNEY, judge. Opinion filed April 29, 2022. Affirmed.

Jenifer W. Svancara, Jeffrey C. Baker, and Christopher R. Staley, of Sanders Warren Russell & Scheer LLP, of Overland Park, for appellant.

David J. Welder and Michael G. Norris, of Norris Keplinger Hicks & Welder, LLC, of Leawood, for appellees.

Before ISHERWOOD, P.J., GREEN and BRUNS, JJ.

GREEN, J.: An on-the-job accident injured Philip Andrew Trokey, and he sued Great Plains Roofing and Sheet Metal, Inc. (Great Plains) in Jackson County, Missouri. Great Plains settled with Trokey. Then, Great Plains filed an indemnification suit against K Building Specialties, Inc. and Installtec, Inc. (K Building) in Johnson County, Kansas. K Building and Great Plains both moved for summary judgment. The Johnson County District Court granted summary judgment for K Building. Great Plains appeals. Because Kansas' one-action rule bars Great Plains from postsettlement contribution, we affirm.

FACTS

In July 2014, Great Plains and K Building were subcontractors working on a construction project at the John Deere Regional Facility in Olathe, Kansas. Great Plains and K Building had separate contracts with The Weitz Company (Weitz), the general contractor. K Building's employee, Spencer Plumb, operated an aerial lift despite not

4 having an aerial lift certification and not fully inspecting the lift before operating it. While Plumb operated the lift, it tipped over. The K Building employee in the lift bucket, Philip Andrew Trokey, suffered injuries including a fractured femur, hip, ribs, multiple fractures to vertebrae, and a traumatic brain injury. Trokey sued the aerial lift's owner, Great Plains, in Jackson County, Missouri. His claims against Great Plains were: (1) supplying a dangerous chattel or product, (2) failure to warn, and (3) general negligence.

K Building's contract with Weitz instructed K Building to use the aerial lift owned by Great Plains. K Building agreed that it would be responsible for the safe operation of the aerial lift as follows: "Man lifts and scaffold will be provided by others for use by [K Building].

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Great Plains Roofing and Sheet Metal, Inc. v. K Building Specialties, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/great-plains-roofing-and-sheet-metal-inc-v-k-building-specialties-inc-kanctapp-2022.