Kevin Schibel, et ux v. Spokane Teachers Credit Union

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedAugust 15, 2019
Docket35977-8
StatusUnpublished

This text of Kevin Schibel, et ux v. Spokane Teachers Credit Union (Kevin Schibel, et ux v. Spokane Teachers Credit Union) 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
Kevin Schibel, et ux v. Spokane Teachers Credit Union, (Wash. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

FILED AUGUST 15, 2019 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals, Division III

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION THREE

KEVIN SCHIBEL and TERRI SCHIBEL, ) husband and wife and the marital ) No. 35977-8-III community composed thereof, ) ) Appellants, ) ) v. ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) SPOKANE TEACHERS CREDIT ) UNION, a Non-Profit Organization, ) ) Respondent. )

SIDDOWAY, J. — Kevin Schibel appeals the defense verdict reached in his

personal injury action against Spokane Teachers Credit Union. We find no error in the

trial court’s decision that his status as invitee or licensee was a question for the jury.

Other claimed errors raised on appeal were unpreserved. We affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

In July 2014, Kevin Schibel and his wife commenced a negligence action against

Spokane Teachers Credit Union (STCU) to recover damages for injuries Mr. Schibel

sustained from a fall in an STCU parking lot. No. 35977-8-III Schibel v. Spokane Teachers Credit Union

In December 2011, when Mr. Schibel sustained his injury, STCU operated a

banking branch on property it owned on Division Street in Spokane. A smaller building

located next to STCU’s property was occupied by Chairs Coffee.

On an evening that month, Mr. Schibel attended a songwriters association meeting

at Chairs. When he arrived at around 6:45 p.m., it was fairly clear, but dark. There was

no snow. He pulled into Chairs’ parking lot to park but it was full, so he drove around

the block and parked in an adjacent lot, which he later learned was STCU’s.

Upon leaving Chairs a couple of hours later and walking toward the lot where he

had parked, Mr. Schibel could see wheel stops on the asphalt lot that had been painted

yellow. But what he did not see, in passing between two cars in STCU’s parking lot, was

an unpainted wheel stop in front of him. He caught his toe on the stop and fell hard on

his left knee. He proved unable to stand on his left leg, and two men who were standing

nearby approached and helped him to his car. Realizing he would not be able to walk,

Mr. Schibel drove himself to the hospital, where he was diagnosed with a fractured

kneecap and underwent surgery the next morning.

After filing his suit and conducting discovery, Mr. Schibel moved for partial

summary judgment, asking the court to determine that he was STCU’s business invitee as

a matter of law. Among the undisputed facts he argued supported his motion were the

following:

2 No. 35977-8-III Schibel v. Spokane Teachers Credit Union

 STCU “was aware that many patrons of Chairs Coffee park vehicles in their parking lot routinely.”  STCU “did not make any efforts to exclude patrons of Chairs Coffee from its parking lot during the day or after hours.”  STCU “has a ‘customer parking only’ sign in its parking lot, that [STCU] admits is worn, faded, and cannot be viewed at night.”  STCU’s “reason for failing to exclude patrons of Chairs Coffee is to foster better relations with both current clients, and potential new clients.”

Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 13.

STCU resisted summary judgment on the basis that it never extended any

invitation to Mr. Schibel, it did not receive a benefit from Mr. Schibel’s use of its parking

lot, and Mr. Schibel had not known he was parking in a lot owned by STCU. It

characterized itself as having “tolerated,” not “invited,” Mr. Schibel and other Chairs

customers who used its lot, and argued that tolerating the parkers qualified them, at most,

as licensees.

At the hearing on the summary judgment motion, Mr. Schibel and STCU agreed

that the material facts were undisputed. Despite their agreement on that score, the trial

court not only denied Mr. Schibel’s motion for partial summary judgment but refused to

decide his legal status as a matter of law.

The case proceeded to a jury trial. In proposing jury instructions, Mr. Schibel

proposed instructions addressing invitee status but none addressing licensee status.1

1 Mr. Schibel’s original proposed jury instructions included an instruction defining “licensee.” His amended proposed instructions dropped the licensee definition, however.

3 No. 35977-8-III Schibel v. Spokane Teachers Credit Union

STCU proposed instructions addressing licensee or social guest status but none

addressing invitee status.

The trial court persisted in its position that Mr. Schibel’s status as an invitee or

licensee was a question for the jury. Its jury instructions included instructions on the

definition of invitee and the duty owed an invitee, and on the definition of licensee and

the duty owed a licensee.

When the court provided the parties with its jury instructions and invited

objections, Mr. Schibel reiterated his objection that the evidence did not support

instructing on licensee status and STCU repeated its objection that the evidence did not

support instructing on invitee status. No other objections to the invitee and licensee

instructions were raised.

The jury returned a verdict in favor of STCU. Mr. Schibel timely moved for

reconsideration and a new trial, rearguing that his status as invitee or licensee should not

have been submitted to the jury. He also complained that during closing argument, the

lawyer for STCU misstated the law. The motions were denied.

Mr. Schibel appeals.

ANALYSIS

Mr. Schibel assigns error to (1) the denial of his motion for partial summary

judgment, (2) the trial court’s instruction 14, stating that a licensee is owed no duty with

respect to dangerous conditions of which the licensee can be expected to have

4 No. 35977-8-III Schibel v. Spokane Teachers Credit Union

knowledge, (3) defense counsel’s allegedly misleading argument to the jury, and

(4) allegedly outdated tort standards contained in the court’s instructions on comparative

fault.

Before the date for hearing this appeal, we directed the parties to submit

supplemental briefing addressing whether appellate review of the trial court’s denial of

summary judgment was available after trial. For reasons we explain, we reframe Mr.

Schibel’s first assignment of error to address the trial court’s instructions rather than its

denial of summary judgment.

I. THE TRIAL COURT DID NOT ERR IN REFUSING TO INSTRUCT THE JURY SOLELY ON INVITEE STATUS

While Mr. Schibel seeks to have us review the trial court’s denial of partial

summary judgment, the “denial of summary judgment cannot be appealed following a

trial if the denial was based upon a determination that material facts are in dispute and

must be resolved by the trier of fact.” Johnson v. Rothstein, 52 Wn. App. 303, 304, 759

P.2d 471 (1988). In that case, “the losing party must appeal from the sufficiency of the

evidence presented at trial, not from the denial of summary judgment.” Adcox v.

Children’s Orthopedic Hosp. & Med. Ctr., 123 Wn.2d 15, 35 n.9, 864 P.2d 921 (1993).

The rule is supported by policy (we favor the decision that is based on the best record)

and by the purpose of summary judgment (the objective of avoiding useless trials is no

longer served once trial takes place). Johnson, 52 Wn. App. at 306-07. Only if a trial

5 No. 35977-8-III Schibel v. Spokane Teachers Credit Union

court’s summary judgment decision incorrectly resolved what was solely a substantive

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