Madelynn M. Tapken v. Spokane County

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJanuary 12, 2016
Docket32909-7
StatusUnpublished

This text of Madelynn M. Tapken v. Spokane County (Madelynn M. Tapken v. Spokane County) 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
Madelynn M. Tapken v. Spokane County, (Wash. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

FILED Jan. 12,2016 In the Office of the Clerk of Court W A State Court of Appeals, Division III

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

MADEL YNN M. TAPKEN, a single ) No. 32909-7-III person, ) ) Appellant, ) ) v. ) ) SPOKANE COUNTY, Public ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION WorksiDepartment of Engineering & ) Roads, a Municipal Corporation, ) ) Respondent, ) ) CONRAD MALINAK, a single person, et ) aI., ) ) Appellant. )

LA WRENCE-BERREY, J. Madelynn Tapken was a passenger on a motorcycle

driven by Conrad Malinak. She suffered serious injuries and paralysis as a result of

Malinak not perceiving the sharpness of a right turn and crashing his motorcycle.

Tapken brought this personal injury action against Malinak and Spokane County.

Tapken premised the County's liability on its failure to design and maintain a safe No. 32909-7-III Tapken v. Spokane County

roadway. Malinak asserted a similar cross-claim against the County.} At the conclusion

of plaintiffs' evidence to the jury, the County moved for judgment as a matter of law on

the issues of liability and proximate cause. The trial court granted the County's motion.

The trial court determined as a matter of law that the County was not negligent; but even

if it was, that its negligence was not the proximate cause of plaintiffs' injuries.

Tapken and Malinak appeal. They assert various errors. We agree with only one

of their assertions. We hold that the trial court erred by granting the County's motion for

judgment as a matter of law. We therefore reverse and remand for a new trial.

FACTS

In the summer of2011, Malinak and Tapken met while working at Red Robin in

downtown Spokane. At the time, Malinak had owned his motorcycle for a few months

and had previously owned a similar bike. When Tapken learned Malinak had a

motorcycle, she told him that she enjoyed taking rides and had frequently ridden with her

father and ex-boyfriends. Tapken knew how to ride as a passenger, including that she

should match and not resist the operator's leaning of the motorcycle on turns. The two

arranged to take a ride together, and the first time out was uneventfuL

On their second ride, they left Spokane to drive on the Palouse. The weather was

1 The parties at trial and in their briefs refer to Tapken and Malinak as plaintiffs.

2 No. 32909-7-111 Tapken v. Spokane County

sunny and approximately 60 degrees. The two rode to Fairfield and then took Prairie

View Road out of town toward Waverly, driving at approximately the speed limit of 45

m.p.h.

Just before Waverly, the road forks into a "Y" intersection, known as the "Waverly

Y." It is a triple intersection, in that each of the three intersecting roads splits into two

legs as they converge, forming a triangle of unused roadway at the convergence of the

intersection. The convergence of these three roads creates aneed to regulate the traffic.

Spokane County elected to regulate the converging traffic with various signs.

Specifically, for a driver coming from the north and driving toward Waverly, there is a

yield ahead warning sign 800 feet from the intersection, and two yield signs in the

intersection--one for a driver veering right and another for a driver veering left. As a

driver passes the yield ahead warning sign (800 feet from the intersection), a driver sees a

large hawthorn bush located on the right side of the road several hundred feet toward the

intersection. Because of its close proximity to the road and the contour of the road

bending to the left near it, the large hawthorn bush obscures both the yield sign for traffic

veering right and a portion of the road to the right. This makes it difficult for a driver

approaching from the north to gauge the sharpness of both the right and the left tum

For easeofreference, we will also.

3 No. 32909-7·II1 Tapken v. Spokane County

choices until the driver is much closer to the large bush and intersection. There is no sign

warning a driver to reduce speed below the posted speed of 45 m.p.h.

As he approached the intersection from the north, Malinak slowed to 35·40 m.p.h.,

anticipating he would veer to the right. 2 Malinak began to lean right. But almost

immediately, he realized that the right tum was sharper than he had earlier perceived.

Believing that he was going too fast to veer right, he braked and leaned left, trying to

make the more gradual left tum. Tapken did not follow the lean, resulting in the

motorcycle running straight through the intersection, traveling in the air for over 50 feet

and into a quarry. Tapken was severely injured and permanently paralyzed. She initiated

the present action.

At trial, the plaintiffs presented testimony from three County employees about the

design and maintenance of the road, followed by testimony from three experts and then

testimony from Malinak. Of the experts, Andrew Harbinson testified first as a collision

analyst. Although he was unable to reconstruct the accident because there was

insufficient physical evidence at the scene, he did state that there was no evidence of

excess speed. He testified that the motorcycle travelled approximately 56 feet in the air

2 Because of her head injury, Tapken does not remember the events of the day and did not testifY at trial. Since there were no other witnesses, Malinak was the only source of information about the events that transpired.

No. 32909-7-III Tapken v. Spokane County

before landing off the roadway and therefore was traveling between 35 and 43 m.p.h.

when it departed from the roadway.

Next, the plaintiffs presented testimony from Dr. Richard Gill, a human-factors

engineering consultant. He testified how a reasonable motorist would respond to the

intersection. In his opinion, the intersection was misleading and needed to be

reconfigured. Primarily he took issue with the triple-"Y" having three points where

traffic crosses, one of which has no form of traffic control. He then testified that because

there were speed warnings around previous curves, a driver would have expected there to

be a speed warning here if the maximum safe speed was less than the speed limit.

Finally, he testified that the yield ahead sign was too far from the intersection, and that

people were likely to forget about it in the 12 seconds between seeing the yield ahead sign

and seeing the yield sign near the intersection.

After this, the plaintiffs presented a videotaped deposition of Transportation

Engineer Edward M. Stevens. He testified that a yield sign is an inappropriate sign to

control speed and that a driver would not have been able to see the yield sign to the right

in time to actually yield. He also calculated that the reasonable safe speed for a right tum

there was approximately 20 m.p.h.

At the conclusion of the plaintiffs' evidence, the County orally moved for

5 No. 32909-7-III Tapken v. Spokane County

judgment as a matter of law, both on liability and on proximate cause. The trial court

looked to the duties imposed on drivers under chapter 46.61 RCW: to slow when

approaching a yield sign, to drive at an appropriate reduced speed when approaching and

crossing an intersection, and to see what would be seen by a person exerCising ordinary

care. The trial court then looked at testimony establishing that yield signs are only used at

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