Jeffrey K. Markoff v. Puget Sound Energy, Inc.

447 P.3d 577
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedAugust 19, 2019
Docket77785-8
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 447 P.3d 577 (Jeffrey K. Markoff v. Puget Sound Energy, 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
Jeffrey K. Markoff v. Puget Sound Energy, Inc., 447 P.3d 577 (Wash. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

JEFFREY K. MARKOFF and ALICIA MARKOFF, individually and as a DIVISION ONE married couple; EDWARD C. NEWELL and TROY-LYNN NEWELL, individually No. 77785-8-1 and as a married couple; CHARLES MEYER and JULIE MEYER, individually PUBLISHED OPINION and as a married couple; JOEY P. HAUGEN and MYUNG K. HAUGEN, individually and as a married couple; NATHAN A. BUCK, individually; MICHAEL S. CAMLIN and CAN DACE M. CAMLIN, individually and as a married couple; RICHARD MARTELL- SCOTT, individually; and STEVE ROBERTS, individually,

Appellants,

v.

PUGET SOUND ENERGY, INC., a Washington corporation; PILCHUCK CONTRACTORS, INC., a Washington corporation; and MICHELS CORPORATION, a Wisconsin corporation, FILED: August 19, 2019 Res•ondents.

DWYER, J. — Nine firefighters responded to a report of a natural gas leak. Gas from a pipeline ignited, causing an explosion and injuring the firefighters.

The firefighters sued Puget Sound Energy Inc.(PSE) and its contractors, No. 77785-8-1/2

alleging, among their causes of action, that negligence or recklessness in the

decommissioning of the leaking pipeline was a cause of the explosion. The trial

court granted PSE's motion to dismiss on the basis that the professional rescuer

doctrine barred all of the firefighters' claims. We affirm.

I

On March 9, 2016, the Seattle Fire Department received a 911 telephone

call reporting a natural gas leak on the 8400 block of Greenwood Avenue North

in Seattle. Nine firefighters arrived on the scene at 1:09 a.m. and notified PSE of

the leak at 1:11 a.m. PSE did not take action to shut off the natural gas pipeline

that was the source of the leak until much later. After notifying PSE of the leak's

existence, the firefighters inspected a narrow passageway between 8411 and

8415 Greenwood Avenue North and determined that the gas was escaping from

a threaded coupling along a steel service line attached to the building at the 8411

address. The firefighters were unaware that gas had also escaped into and

underneath this building. As the firefighters continued investigating, an unknown

source ignited the gas at 1:43 a.m., causing an explosion that leveled both

buildings and injured the firefighters.

A subsequent investigation by the Washington Utilities and Transportation

Commission(WUTC)culminated in a report detailing the explosion's causes.

WUTC found that the gas leak and subsequent explosion would not have

occurred but for an improper decommissioning of the gas service line in 2004.

This work had been performed by an independent contractor, Pi!chuck

Contractors Inc. Pilchuck had recorded the line as being cut and capped despite

2 No. 77785-8-1/3

failing to actually cut and cap the line. However, WUTC also determined that the

immediate cause of the leak was external damage to the threaded coupling,

likely the result of individuals storing personal property in (and using the narrow

space) between the two buildings. WUTC's subsequent administrative

proceeding against PSE concluded in a settlement pursuant to which PSE was to

pay a $2.75 million fine, with the contingency that $1.25 million of the fine would

be suspended if PSE completed inspection and remediation of its deactivated

gas lines. There was no appeal from this final agency determination, and WUTC

is not a party to this case.

Not long after, on May 12, 2017, Jeffrey Markoff, one of the injured

firefighters, along with his wife Alicia, sued PSE, Pi!chuck Contractors, and

Michels Corporation, Pilchuck's parent company. The complaint alleged strict

liability under the public utility statute; common law negligence, willfulness, and

strict liability; outrage; infliction of emotional distress; loss of consortium; punitive

damages; and a right to injunctive relief.' Subsequently, Markoff amended his

complaint to add other injured firefighters as plaintiffs and to advocate for a

change in the existing law governing liability to professional rescuers.

PSE moved to dismiss the firefighters' first amended complaint, arguing

that the negligence and intentional tort claims were barred by the professional

rescuer doctrine, that the injunctive relief claim was both subject to the primary

jurisdiction of the WUTC's administrative proceeding and was also moot due to

1 The firefighters, recognizing that Washington law does not allow for the assessment of punitive damages, nonetheless sought them under Wisconsin law. Michels Corporation is a • Wisconsin corporation.

3- No. 77785-8-1/4

PSE's settlement with the WUTC,and that there was no independent cause of

action to assert under the pertinent section of the public utility statute. The trial

court dismissed all of the firefighters' common law, statutory, and strict liability

claims with prejudice, but reserved ruling on the injunctive relief claim to allow for

further briefing.

Applying the professional rescuer doctrine was appropriate, the trial court

reasoned, because the firefighters had been called to the scene to address a gas

leak, and a well-known and foreseeable danger of gas leaks is that the gas may

ignite and explode. The court also accepted PSE's reasoning that the pertinent

section of the public utility statute, RCW 80.04.440, did not create an

independent cause of action or revive causes of action otherwise barred by an

affirmative defense such as the professional rescuer doctrine. The trial court

pointed to the state's workers' compensation fund as an existing system of

accounting for the risk of injury assumed by professional rescuers.

Subsequently, PSE submitted the requested supplemental briefing in

support of its motion to dismiss the firefighters' injunctive relief claim. The

firefighters, however, did not submit supplemental briefing on the issue and

instead moved to voluntarily dismiss the injunctive relief claim without prejudice.

The firefighters' motion for voluntary dismissal was premised on their perception

that the trial court had not, in fact, held a hearing on the injunctive relief issue or

otherwise exercised its discretion to address it. The trial court disagreed,

explaining,

4 No. 77785-8-115

I think it's worth noting that in my opinion I have exercised discretion on the issue that is noted for a hearing today in front of me with regard to the injunctive relief. I heard that first hearing. I read all the briefing, and then I exercised discretion to have another hearing to delay, to say I need to do more research, I need the parties to educate me more through their briefing. .. . And I needed that in order to go forward. And I didn't have to. That's the definition of discretion. I could have said I will decide it. I will let you know in two weeks. I'm going to do the research. That's my discretion. I could have said we'll decide it in 90 days, but I want more briefing. That's what I did. I could have also just decided it right then that day in September, but I didn't. I exercised that discretion. That hearing [on PSE's Motion to Dismiss] had started. In my view, there's no question about that. There's always shades of gray.

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447 P.3d 577, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jeffrey-k-markoff-v-puget-sound-energy-inc-washctapp-2019.