John Neice, V. Pierce County Recycling Composting & Disposal

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedOctober 15, 2024
Docket58519-7
StatusPublished

This text of John Neice, V. Pierce County Recycling Composting & Disposal (John Neice, V. Pierce County Recycling Composting & Disposal) 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
John Neice, V. Pierce County Recycling Composting & Disposal, (Wash. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

October 15, 2024

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II JOHN NEICE No. 58519-7-II

Appellant,

v.

PIERCE COUNTY RECYCLING, PUBLISHED OPINION COMPOSTING AND DISPOSAL LLC DBA LRI, a for profit Washington LLC doing business in Pierce County; and STEARNS, CONRAD AND SCHMIDT, CONSULTING ENGINEERS INC., DBA SCS ENGINEERS, a for profit foreign environmental and general contractor,

Respondents.

GLASGOW, J.—Pierce County Recycling, Composting and Disposal LLC, d/b/a LRI, a

landfill operator, hired Scarcella Brothers Inc. as a general contractor to build a waste disposal cell

and to make repairs to control liquid leaching from the landfill. LRI also hired Stearns, Conrad

and Schmidt Consulting Engineers Inc., d/b/a SCS Engineers to provide engineering services. LRI

entered into separate contracts with both Scarsella and SCS Engineers.

John Neice, a Scarsella employee, was working as a surveyor when he breathed in landfill

gas from an excavation, allegedly causing serious injury to his lungs. Scarcella was presumably

immune from suit as Neice’s employer under Washington’s Industrial Insurance Act, Title 51

RCW. Neice sued LRI and SCS Engineers, claiming that the negligence of both companies caused

his injury. Each defendant moved for summary judgment, arguing that Scarsella was entirely No. 58519-7-II

responsible for Neice’s safety. SCS Engineers also argued that it was entitled to immunity under

RCW 51.24.035, a statute that immunizes design professionals from suit under certain

circumstances. The trial court granted both defendants’ motions.

We reverse the trial court’s grant of summary judgment as to Neice’s premises liability

claim because Neice was a business invitee, and there is a genuine issue of material fact as to

whether LRI breached its duty to him as a business invitee. But we affirm the dismissal of Neice’s

other claims against LRI because Neice failed to present a genuine issue of material fact as to

whether LRI retained the ability to supervise the manner in which Scarsella employees, like Neice,

did their work.

We also hold that SCS Engineers is entitled to immunity under RCW 51.24.035 because

the relevant work occurred on a construction site, SCS Engineers did not assume responsibility for

Scarcella employees’ safety by contract, and SCS Engineers did not exercise control over the

premises where the work was performed. Thus, the trial court properly dismissed Neice’s claims

against SCS Engineers.

FACTS

I. BACKGROUND

A. The Project

LRI operates a landfill in Graham, Washington. In 2020, the company needed a new waste

disposal cell. LRI moved the soil excavated from the waste disposal cell construction site to the

west slope of the landfill, where it was also making repairs to prevent liquid from leaching. The

repairs were necessary to keep leachate, or “garbage water,” from seeping through the soil,

2 No. 58519-7-II

potentially preventing further construction or contaminating the groundwater. Clerk’s Papers (CP)

at 54.

LRI contracted with Scarsella Brothers as a general contractor to build the cell and perform

the repairs. LRI also contracted with SCS Engineers as a consultant to design the cell, to provide

field engineering for remediation of leaching sites, and to provide construction quality assurance

services.

LRI’s contract with Scarcella provided that, as general contractor, Scarsella was “solely

responsible for the means, methods, techniques, sequences[,] and procedures of construction.” CP

at 114. Scarsella was responsible for providing all necessary equipment. Scarsella was also

“responsible for initiating, maintaining[,] and supervising all safety precautions and programs.”

CP at 117. Scarsella agreed to “take all necessary precautions for the safety of . . . all persons on

the site,” and it agreed to “provide the necessary protection to prevent damage, injury[,] or loss

to[] all persons on the site.” Id. It was “solely responsible for the safety of its employees,

subcontractors, agents, representatives, and invitees.” Id. LRI and SCS Engineers were expressly

not responsible for Scarsella’s “means, methods, techniques, sequences[,] or procedures of

construction, or the safety precautions and programs incident thereto.” CP at 120.

All of the work done by SCS Engineers at the landfill was covered by a single contract.

The agreement between consultant SCS Engineers, and LRI1 provided that SCS Engineers would

be responsible for its own activities and those of its employees and subcontractors. SCS Engineers

would not “direct, supervise[,] or control the work of [LRI’s] consultants and contractors or their

1 SCS Engineers’ contract was with Waste Connections and its subsidiaries, presumably including LRI. The specific relationship between Waste Connections and LRI does not appear in our record, but no party disputes that LRI is bound by this agreement.

3 No. 58519-7-II

subcontractors.” CP at 89. And SCS Engineers expressly would not “advise on, issue directions

regarding, or assume control over safety conditions and programs for others at the [jobsite].” Id.

The contract further provided that “[n]either the professional activities of” SCS Engineers, nor the

presence of its employees, would “be construed to imply that [SCS Engineers] control[led] the

operations of others or [had] any responsibility for jobsite safety.” CP at 89-90.

SCS Engineers’ postconstruction report provided additional details about its

responsibilities in the cell construction project. According to the report, SCS Engineers prepared

technical specifications, construction drawings, and construction quality assurance guidelines.

SCS Engineers kept daily records of construction progress—including information about tests

related to Scarsella’s work, “[a]reas of non-conformance[,] and required corrective actions.” CP at

202. It also prepared field reports “to summarize ongoing construction activities and discussions

with [Scarsella].” Id.

There was no contract between SCS Engineers and Scarsella. Although Scarcella, Neice’s

employer, acted as a general contractor, SCS Engineers’ contract was with LRI; SCS Engineers

was not a subcontractor of Scarsella and Scarsella was not a subcontractor of SCS Engineers.

LRI’s contractor orientation briefing listed “potentially deadly [landfill gas]” as a

workplace hazard, but its section on required personal protective equipment and safe work

practices did not mention gas monitors. CP at 149. The agreement between LRI and SCS Engineers

listed the cost of using certain equipment, including rates for a hydrogen sulfide meter and various

gas analyzers. Scarsella did not require its employees to wear gas monitors at the landfill.

4 No. 58519-7-II

B. Neice’s Injury

Neice was a Scarsella surveyor who worked on the cell construction project. In addition to

other work, he helped repair leachate seeps that SCS Engineers identified.

One morning, Neice worked on an excavation on the west slope of the landfill that had

been emitting an especially strong smell.

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