John O'connell, V Macneil Wash Systems Limited

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedSeptember 12, 2017
Docket49161-3
StatusUnpublished

This text of John O'connell, V Macneil Wash Systems Limited (John O'connell, V Macneil Wash Systems Limited) 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 O'connell, V Macneil Wash Systems Limited, (Wash. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

September 12, 2017

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II JOHN O’CONNELL, No. 49161-3-II

Appellant,

v.

MACNEIL WASH SYSTEMS LIMITED, a UNPUBLISHED OPINION Canadian designing and manufacturing company doing business in Thurston County, Washington,

Respondent, And

AUTO WASH SYSTEMS LLC, a Washington limited liability company; CHARTER INDUSTRIAL SUPPLY, LLC, a Washington limited liability company; PATRICK HARRON & ASSOCIATES, LLC, a Washington limited liability company; ANDERSON BOONE ARCHITECTS, PS, a Washington professional service company; KAREN BOWMAN and “JOHN DOE” BOWMAN, and their marital community; and DOE CORPORATIONS 1 through 3; Jointly and Severally,

Defendants.

BJORGEN, C.J. — MacNeil Wash Systems Limited (MacNeil) sold John O’Connell a car

wash system, which did not include safety bollards at the entrance of the car wash. O’Connell

was injured when a customer lost control of her vehicle and drove into him at the car wash No. 49161-3-II

entrance. O’Connell sued MacNeil under the Products Liability Act, chapter 7.72 RCW (Act),

and the superior court granted MacNeil’s motion for summary judgment on all claims.

O’Connell appeals, arguing that the trial court erred in dismissing his claims because he

created genuine issues of fact as to (1) whether MacNeil was a product manufacturer or seller of

a relevant product, namely a car wash system and (2) whether that car wash system was

unreasonably safe (a) because of its design, which failed to include a safety bollard at the

entrance of the car wash or (b) because it lacked a warning that the equipment would not protect

against this type of harm.

We hold that O’Connell raises genuine issues of material fact and the trial court erred in

granting summary judgment to MacNeil. Accordingly, we reverse and remand.

FACTS

O’Connell desired to start a car wash business. In his research, he read on MacNeil’s

website that it was “the largest, most trusted, dependable car wash equipment people in the

world.” Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 536-37. O’Connell contacted a representative from Auto Wash

Systems LLC (Auto Wash), MacNeil’s independent distributor, who coordinated and facilitated

the sale of a car wash system to O’Connell. The Auto Wash representative told O’Connell that

MacNeil was “the Cadillac of car wash systems.” See CP at 166. O’Connell took no part in

selecting specific equipment for the car wash. Auto Wash told O’Connell what MacNeil

equipment he would need to operate his car wash.

Although not clear from the record, it appears that O’Connell hired an architect to draw

up plans for a car wash building, and then submitted those plans to Auto Wash, which in turn

gave them to MacNeil. MacNeil does not design the buildings that house its equipment.

2 No. 49161-3-II

MacNeil prepared an estimate of all the required parts for O’Connell to start his car wash,

the total cost of which was approximately $478,000. Included in that estimate were parts for a

vehicle conveyor and for a correlator, which served as the “entry guide onto [the] conveyor.” CP

at 112. A MacNeil representative told O’Connell that the correlator “would guide vehicles

safely” onto the conveyor and wash platform. See CP at 534-35. MacNeil did not include

protective bollards in the equipment package.

MacNeil also prepared drawings showing how the car wash equipment should be

organized and installed in the proposed building housing the car wash. If the building and

equipment package do not work together, MacNeil requires that the purchaser’s architect draw

up new building plans that will work with its equipment.

After O’Connell approved MacNeil’s proposed drawings, MacNeil prepared additional

“shop drawings” to assist the subcontractors in building and installing the car wash equipment.

O’Connell’s car wash was built according to the drawings prepared by MacNeil. Auto Wash

installed the MacNeil car wash equipment, and MacNeil’s vice president of sales in the Western

Region was on the premises during the construction and installation. O’Connell’s car wash, “Go

Green,” opened for business in February 2010.

On October 8, 2011, O’Connell stood near the correlator and conveyor, while directing

customer Karen Bowman into the car wash. The correlator was working properly. During this

process, Bowman felt the vehicle’s wheels go “up,” causing her to step on the accelerator. Her

vehicle accelerated off the correlator and struck O’Connell, severely injuring him.

MacNeil’s equipment manual did not warn that the correlator-conveyor equipment would

not protect others from suddenly accelerating vehicles and did not recommend the use of bollards

3 No. 49161-3-II

to protect from such a risk. After his injury, O’Connell installed bollards, costing about $1,000

for labor and materials, in front of the place where he had been standing to prevent further

similar incidents.

O’Connell sued MacNeil under the Act, alleging that MacNeil was not only the

manufacturer of the parts for the car wash, but also that it was the designer of it. O’Connell

contended that MacNeil’s failure in its design to include bollards at the entrance of the car wash

and its failure to warn that the correlator-conveyor would not prevent vehicles from striking him

made it liable under the Act.

MacNeil moved for summary judgment on O’Connell’s claims. In opposition, O’Connell

submitted the declaration of Gary Sloan, a “forensic human factors” specialist.1 CP at 173.

After conducting an investigation of the incident, Sloan opined in pertinent part:

Exhibit L shows frames . . . grabbed from the videos that were taken at the time of the incident. The time spanning these two events was about 0.67 seconds . . . [when] the Kia’s left front tire struck the conveyor guide rail at an angle when it was about halfway across the second correlator. It follows that 1) the correlators failed to align the vehicle’s front tires with the conveyor; 2) the guide rail did not provide an adequate barrier with respect to guarding Mr. O’Connell from exposure to the hazard, and 3) there was little time for Mr. O’Connell to appreciate the danger and respond to it in time to avoid harm.

CP at 177.

1 According to Sloan’s declaration: Human Factors seeks to reduce accidents and improve efficiency by researching and applying information about human physical, physiological, and psychological characteristics and limitations to the design and operation of equipment, settings, and consumer products. From the perspective of my discipline, if an incident having negative consequences is predictable, then reasonable precautions should be taken to reduce the likelihood of its occurrence and the severity of its negative consequences. CP at 174.

4 No. 49161-3-II

As shown in Exhibit N, the initial physical interface between vehicles entering the Go Green Car Wash and MacNeil equipment consisted of the [correlators] and, potentially, the conveyor guide rails. Yet, in the MacNeil operator manual for these components, there is no mention of the danger posed by approaching vehicles at this interface or what can be done to mitigate risk.

CP at 178.

I have systematically explored a wide range of different trajectories for a vehicle intruding into the area occupied by Mr. O’Connell. . . . [A] bollard could have been provided that would have offered protection to Mr. O’Connell over a wide range of vehicle trajectories.

CP at 180.

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