Kennedy v. Sea-Land Service, Inc.

816 P.2d 75, 62 Wash. App. 839, 1991 Wash. App. LEXIS 354
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedSeptember 16, 1991
Docket25930-0-I
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 816 P.2d 75 (Kennedy v. Sea-Land Service, 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
Kennedy v. Sea-Land Service, Inc., 816 P.2d 75, 62 Wash. App. 839, 1991 Wash. App. LEXIS 354 (Wash. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

Kennedy, J.

Appellant Molly O. Kennedy challenges the trial court's summary dismissal of her negligence action against respondent Sea-Land Service, Inc. (Sea-Land). Appellant's decedent, James Kennedy (Kennedy) was employed by Container Stevedoring Company (Container Stevedoring), a subcontractor employed by Sea-Land. Kennedy was killed on the job. We find that there are genuine issues of material fact which, if resolved in appellant's favor, would establish that Sea-Land retained sufficient control over the workplace to give rise to a higher duty of care for the safety of the employees of the independent contractor than would otherwise exist; that there also are genuine issues of material fact as to whether the duty of care was breached; and that there are genuine issues of material fact as to whether any such breach proximately caused the death of Kennedy. Accordingly we reverse the summary judgment of dismissal and remand for trial.

*842 Facts

On the morning of October 18, 1984, Kennedy was run over and killed by a toploader, a piece of heavy machinery, while in the course of his employment by Container Stevedoring. On the day of his death Kennedy was working as a "tag-checker".

Sea-Land leases land from the Port of Seattle, Marine Terminal 5, on the Seattle waterfront. On this property Sea-Land maintains a storage yard where large containers are stored prior to being loaded onto vessels, or after being offloaded from vessels berthed adjacent to the terminal.

Sea-Land's usual preferred mode of container storage was to place the containers on wheeled semi-truck chassis for easy movement. However, on some occasions the containers would be placed directly on the pavement of the storage yard and stacked one on top of another. From time to time these "grounded" containers were moved in the course of Sea-Land's business operations. In order to move the containers Sea-Land owned a large toploader manufactured by Clark Equipment Company. The top-loader was used to pick up the grounded containers and place them on semi-truck chassis for movement to another location.

Container Stevedoring was the independent contractor employed by Sea-Land to move the containers. The independent contractor provided a driver for Sea-Land's toploader, a foreman who directed the moving operation, several longshoremen who strapped the containers onto the wheeled chassis, and, on the day of his death, Kennedy. Kennedy's job was to tag the containers after they were loaded onto the chassis. These tags provided the routing information for the containers. After the loaded containers were tagged, Kennedy would check them off on a computerized list. Sea-Land maintained a computer system to keep track of the location and destination of its containers. Sea-Land employed storage coordinators who worked the computers and planned the loading and *843 unloading of vessels. Sea-Land also employed seven stevedore managers whose duty it was to supervise where the grounded containers would be stacked and when and to where they would be moved. Mr. Mooney, Sea-Land's marine manager, had the overall supervisory responsibility to preplan the movement of containers within the yard. He also had the overall responsibility for the safety of the moving operations. He gave the orders to Container Stevedoring, which in turn performed the actual work of loading the grounded containers onto the chassis, strapping them down and tagging them.

On the day of the accident, the toploader was being used to pick up the containers from the grounded stacks. The driver would then back up and load the containers onto wheeled chassis. He would then drive forward again to pick up another container. The toploader was designed in such a manner that the driver had better visibility while backing up than while moving forward.

The toploader was moving in the same general pattern as it had been all that morning. Kennedy was hit while moving from right to left in front of the loader as it moved forward to pick up another container. The attention of the driver was focused on the stack of containers ahead of him. By the time he noticed Kennedy it was too late for him to stop. It is unclear why Kennedy walked in front of the forward moving toploader. There is evidence that Kennedy was not required to cross the path of the moving toploader in order to tag the loaded containers. There is circumstantial evidence that Kennedy may have "pretagged" an awaiting empty chassis. There is also evidence in the record that Sea-Land's workers were waiting to use the toploader for another purpose and there is at least an inference that someone at Sea-Land was in a hurry to obtain access to the toploader. The record also reflects that a contributing cause of the accident was that "everyone was in a hurry" (deposition testimony of Mr. Marshall, the foreman who had been hired by Container *844 Stevedoring on that particular day). Kennedy was seen running at one point, sometime previous to the accident.

Sea-Land provided not only the toploader but also all of the safety equipment and a safety manual for use by the independent contractor. The independent contractor's management attended Sea-Land's monthly safety meetings. The safety equipment consisted of cones which were used to designate the loading areas, brightly colored safety vests for the workers (Kennedy was not wearing a safety vest) and portable 2-way radios. However, radios were not in use in the toploader, or by the loading crew, or by Kennedy.

The evidence is disputed as to whose responsibility it was to determine whether the use of radios was reasonably necessary and if so, to see that radios were used. Sea-Land's witnesses claimed that duty rested with the independent contractor. Appellant's witnesses claimed that duty rested with Sea-Land.

The fatality occurred in an area bisected by a painted pedestrian walkway. The walkway led from an employee parking lot to the main operations building. Because of the location of the grounded containers, the toploader was being moved backward and forward across the pedestrian walkway. There was no stop sign at the walkway; nor was the toploader required to stop before crossing the walkway. Kennedy was not struck in the pedestrian walkway but rather some 14 feet from it. It is undisputed that the walkway was for the use of persons going from the parking lot to the operations building, rather than having any purpose related to the loading operation. However, there is at least an inference that a requirement that the toploader stop before crossing the walkway, even if intended for the safety of others than Kennedy, may have enabled the driver to see Kennedy before it was too late.

Sea-Land performed certain modifications on the toploader prior to the accident, principally the installation of an audible backup signal. The evidence is disputed as to whether the toploader was equipped with a forward- *845 moving signal. Sea-Land claims there was a forward-moving alarm or signal. Appellant's expert witness claimed there was no such signal. Appellant claims that Sea-Land negligently failed to equip the toploader with a 2-way radio and with an auditory and visual signal for the forward movement of the vehicle.

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Bluebook (online)
816 P.2d 75, 62 Wash. App. 839, 1991 Wash. App. LEXIS 354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kennedy-v-sea-land-service-inc-washctapp-1991.