Michael Lang, Res/cross-app.. V. Platinum Nine Holdings, Llc, Apps/cross-res.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJuly 28, 2025
Docket86205-7
StatusUnpublished

This text of Michael Lang, Res/cross-app.. V. Platinum Nine Holdings, Llc, Apps/cross-res. (Michael Lang, Res/cross-app.. V. Platinum Nine Holdings, Llc, Apps/cross-res.) 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.

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Michael Lang, Res/cross-app.. V. Platinum Nine Holdings, Llc, Apps/cross-res., (Wash. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

MICHAEL J. LANG, individually, and No. 86205-7-I as Personal Representative of the ESTATE OF FRANK E. COSTA, on DIVISION ONE behalf of the Estate and all statutory beneficiaries,

Respondent/Cross UNPUBLISHED OPINION -Petitioner,

v.

PLATINUM NINE HOLDINGS, LLC, a Washington Limited Liability Corporation, doing business as NORTHWEST AMBULANCE, a company; NORTHWEST AMBULANCE CRITICAL CARE TRANSPORT, a company, and XYZ, a fictitious entity or company,

Petitioners/Cross- Respondents,

and

RUBATINO REFUSE REMOVAL, INC.; RUBATINO REFUSE REMOVAL, LLC, a Washington Limited Liability Corporation; RUBATINO REFUSE, LLC, a Washington Limited Liability Corporation; RUBATINO REFUSE REMOVAL HOLDINGS, LLC, a Washington Limited Liability Corporation; RUBATINO LITTER SOLUTIONS, INC., a Washington Corporation; RUBATINO HOLDING COMPANY, INC., a Washington Corporation; and RUBATINO No. 86205-7-I/2

ENGINEERING, LLC, a Washington Limited Liability Corporation; and XYZ Corporation,

Defendants.

SMITH, J. — In 2020, an ambulance operated by Platinum Nine Holdings,

LLC (NWA) crashed while transporting Frank Costa to the hospital. Costa died

as a result. Costa’s estate, through Michael Lang, sued NWA for negligence.

NWA moved for summary judgment, claiming they were immune from liability

under RCW 18.71.210. Lang also moved for summary judgment, contending

RCW 18.71.210 was not relevant to the facts of the case and requesting

dismissal. The court denied NWA’s motion for summary judgment and granted

Lang’s motion in part.

After a trial, the jury ruled in Costa’s favor and awarded Costa’s estate

2.3 million dollars in noneconomic damages. After NWA submitted payment,

they served Lang with notice of appeal. A dispute arose between the parties

about NWA’s ability to appeal. Lang moved to deny the appeal, contending an

accord and satisfaction created a settlement agreement precluding either party’s

ability to appeal. The court denied the motion.

NWA appeals, asserting the trial court erred in granting Lang’s summary

judgment motion in part because the trial court misconstrued RCW 18.71.210.

Lang cross-appeals, claiming the trial court erred in denying a motion to enforce

the settlement agreement because the parties reached an accord and

satisfaction.

2 No. 86205-7-I/3

Finding no error, we affirm.

FACTS

Background

In November 2020, Platinum Nine Holdings, LLC (NWA), picked up Frank

Costa to transport him to the hospital for lab testing. NWA is a Washington

limited liability company doing business as Northwest Ambulance. Costa was 78

years old and suffered from metastatic breast cancer. He resided at Genesis

Care Center (Genesis) in Everett.

Genesis requested an ambulance transfer after concerning bloodwork.

NWA employees Jack Wilson, Henry Shaw, and Kat Averill responded to the

call. 1 The ambulance crew moved Costa from his bed to the ambulance

stretcher and secured him with two lap belts and guardrails. NWA did not use

shoulder straps to secure Costa to the gurney. Wilson later testified that

shoulder straps were for “specific patients” who “weren’t able to control their

upper body;” that he had rarely seen anyone use shoulder straps; and that he

could not recall being trained on how to use them.

During transport, Costa’s condition deteriorated and Wilson called an

emergency code. Shaw, driving the ambulance, turned on the lights and sirens.

Driving in the left lane of Highway 526, the ambulance came up on a garbage

truck. When the garbage truck started to move to the right, Shaw accelerated to

pass on the left. But as the ambulance sped up, the garbage truck merged back

1 Averill was in training at the time of this call.

3 No. 86205-7-I/4

left. Hitting the brakes, Shaw swerved to the right of the garbage truck, aiming

for a shoulder to have more room to slow down. He did not see the highway

divider to the right of the garbage truck. The ambulance hit the highway divider

head-on at 53 miles per hour.

During the crash, Costa came off the gurney and hit the ambulance wall.

He sustained injuries to his head and neck. Radioing for help, Shaw triaged

Costa as “code red,” meaning “you will die momentarily.” Another ambulance

transported Costa to the hospital and he died later that day of blunt force trauma.

Summary Judgment Proceedings

Michael Lang, as representative for Costa’s estate, sued NWA for

wrongful death. In his complaint, Lang alleged that NWA was negligent and that

that negligence caused Costa’s death. In its answer, NWA asserted that

RCW 18.71.210 rendered it immune from liability. Both parties moved for

summary judgment addressing NWA’s claimed immunity.

NWA subsequently admitted negligence, stating that its employees failed

to exercise ordinary care by not securing Costa to the gurney with all available

straps and by not avoiding an accident. NWA further admitted that Costa

suffered serious injuries as a result of that negligence, expressly stating that

NWA’s “negligence proximately caused Frank Costa’s accident-related injuries

and death.” NWA maintained, however, that it was not grossly negligent and

therefore still immune from liability under RCW 18.71.210.

4 No. 86205-7-I/5

NWA moved for summary judgment based on its claim that

RCW 18.71.210 provides qualified immunity because NWA was a licensed

ambulance service whose emergency medical technicians (EMTs) were

performing emergency transport services at the time of the crash. NWA

reiterated that it was not grossly negligent and that in operating the ambulance

and stretcher, the EMTs were performing actual emergency medical procedures.

Lang’s motion for partial summary judgment asserted that RCW 18.71.210

had no application to the facts at issue because NWA’s failure to properly secure

Costa was not part of any actual emergency medical procedure. Lang continued

on to state that neither driving nor buckling seatbelts are medical procedures

within any field of medical expertise. Lang also pointed out that the statute

defined “emergency medical services” as distinct from transportation.

The trial court rejected NWA’s interpretation of RCW 18.71.210 and ruled,

as a matter of law, that “driving an ambulance is not emergency medical service.”

Determining that NWA was, thus, not immune from suit, the court granted Lang’s

motion for partial summary judgment and denied NWA’s motion.

The issue of noneconomic damages continued to trial. And although

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Michael Lang, Res/cross-app.. V. Platinum Nine Holdings, Llc, Apps/cross-res., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michael-lang-rescross-app-v-platinum-nine-holdings-llc-washctapp-2025.