Nina Martin, App./cross-resp. v. General Construction Company, Resp./cross-app.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedOctober 14, 2013
Docket68132-0
StatusUnpublished

This text of Nina Martin, App./cross-resp. v. General Construction Company, Resp./cross-app. (Nina Martin, App./cross-resp. v. General Construction Company, Resp./cross-app.) 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
Nina Martin, App./cross-resp. v. General Construction Company, Resp./cross-app., (Wash. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

NINA L. MARTIN, individually and NO. 68132-0-1 as Personal Representative of the ESTATE OF DONALD R. MARTIN, DIVISION ONE RUSSELL L. MARTIN, THADDEUS J. MARTIN, and JANE MARTIN,

Appellants,

v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION DEMATIC dba/fka RAPISTAN, INC., MANNESMANN DEMATIC, and SIEMENS DEMATIC; GENERAL CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, WRIGHT SCHUCHART HARBOR COMPANY, WRIGHT SCHUCHART, INC.; FLETCHER GENERAL, INC., and FLETCHER CONSTRUCTION COMPANY NORTH AMERICA and FLETCHER BUILDING, LTD., CD

Respondents. FILED: October 14, 2013

Leach, C.J. — Donald Martin suffered a fatal injury while working at a

Kimberly Clark paper plant. His wife and children (collectively "the Martins")

appeal the trial court's summary dismissal of their claims against General

Construction Company (General Construction) and Fletcher Construction

Company North America (FCCNA). General Construction cross appeals,

challenging the trial court's denial of two summary judgment motions. NO. 68132-0-1/2

Because General Construction did not assume liability for the Martins'

claims and the statute of limitations barred the claims against FCCNA, we affirm

the trial court's dismissal of Martins' claims against General Construction and

FCCNA. Because a trial court's decision denying a motion for summary

judgment does not constitute a final judgment, we do not address General

Construction's cross appeal.

FACTS

On August 13, 2004, a component of Tissue Machine No. 5 (TM5) at

Kimberly Clark's Everett paper plant fatally crushed Donald Martin. The TM5

was installed as part of a large construction project in 1981 when Scott Paper

owned the plant. Wright Schuchart Harbor Co. (WSH) erected the TM5.

The parties dispute WSH's identity and ownership history. General

Construction asserts the following history. At the time of the TM5 installation,

Wright Schuchart Inc. owned WSH. In 1987, Fletcher Construction Company

Ltd., a subsidiary of FCCNA, purchased Wright Schuchart Inc. At the time,

FCCNA was a subsidiary of Fletcher Challenge, a multinational corporation

involved in industrial construction. In 1993, Fletcher Challenge merged

numerous subsidiaries, including WSH, into a single company, Fletcher General

Inc. Fletcher General succeeded to WSH's preexisting liabilities. NO. 68132-0-1/3

In 1996, senior management of Fletcher General formed GC Investment

Co. for the purpose of acquiring the majority of Fletcher General's assets. To

complete this acquisition, Fletcher General transferred these assets to a wholly

owned subsidiary, General Construction, and in exchange received all the

outstanding stock of General. Fletcher General sold this stock to GC Investment.

Their stock purchase agreement incorporated as exhibits a memorandum of

transfer of assets for capital contribution purposes and two memoranda of

assumption of liabilities executed by Fletcher General and General Construction

to accomplish the asset transfer to General Construction. Both the stock

purchase agreement and the memoranda of assumption of liabilities, in virtually

identical language, defined and allocated "assumed liabilities," which General

Construction acquired, and "excluded liabilities," which Fletcher General retained.

Fletcher General agreed to indemnify General Construction for excluded

liabilities.

In 2001, Fletcher General and Fletcher Construction Company Ltd.

merged into FCCNA. Following the merger, General Construction and FCCNA

agreed that FCCNA would continue to exist until at least 2006 and maintain a

minimum bond or level of assets to cover its potential liabilities. FCCNA filed a

certificate of dissolution on June 26, 2007. NO. 68132-0-1/4

FCCNA asserts that "Wright Schuchart Harbor Joint Venture," a "separate

and distinct corporate legal entity" from Wright Schuchart Inc. or Wright

Schuchart Company, installed TM5.1 In interrogatories, Ronald Johnson,

FCCNA's records custodian, stated,

The entities which previously comprised of Wright Schuchart Harbor Joint Venture had changed their names as necessary and were transferred to Sprague Resources Corporation as dividends by June 30, 1987 prior to the sale of Wright Schuchart, Inc. to Fletcher. Thus, these entities were not included in the sale of Wright Schuchart, Inc. to Fletcher in October 1987.

Johnson also testified that the joint venture "would be labeled Wright Schuchardt

[sic] Harbor, a joint venture, or sometimes it was labeled just Wright Schuchardt

[sic] Harbor. And that joint venture was owned by several different entities, which

did not include Wright Schuchardt, [sic] Incorporated."2

On June 29, 2007, the Martins filed this wrongful death and survival action

against defendants that the Martins alleged were responsible for Mr. Martin's

death, including "General Construction Company dba/fka Wright Schuchart

Harbor Company." The complaint did not name FCCNA as a defendant. On

October 19, 2007, General Construction answered the Martins' complaint and

asserted third party claims against Fletcher General and Fletcher Pacific

1 FCCNA did not raise this argument in its motion to dismiss, but the court referred to it in granting the dismissal. 2The record does not contain the equipment erection contract. We do not resolve the conflicting histories but use "WSH" to refer to whichever entity installed the TM5. -4- NO. 68132-0-1/5

Construction Company Ltd. (Fletcher Pacific). On December 11, 2009, General

Construction moved for summary judgment, asserting that it was not liable as a

successor to WSH. The trial court denied the motion on March 16, 2010.

The Martins filed an amended complaint on January 22, 2010, joining

FCCNA as a defendant. In its answer to the amended complaint, FCCNA raised

the statute of limitations as an affirmative defense.

On April 8, 2010, the Martins moved for summary judgment to establish

General Construction's liability as a successor to WSH and Fletcher General.

The court denied this motion. On October 1, 2010, General Construction filed a

renewed motion for summary judgment based on the lack of successor liability.

The trial court granted this motion and denied the Martins' subsequent motion for

reconsideration.

On November 23, 2010, FCCNA moved to dismiss, arguing that "the

statute of limitations for plaintiffs' claims against this defunct corporation had

expired by January 2010 when FCCNA was added as a party to this lawsuit."

The court granted the motion on January 13, 2011, and denied the Martins'

subsequent motion for reconsideration. It concluded that the Martins' amended

complaint did not relate back to the date of the original complaint under CR 15(c).

The Martins appeal, and General Construction cross appeals.

-5- NO. 68132-0-1/6

STANDARD OF REVIEW

We review summary judgment orders de novo, engaging in the same

inquiry as the trial court.3 Summary judgment is proper if, viewing the facts and

reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, no

genuine issues of material fact exist and the moving party is entitled to judgment

as a matter of law.4 A genuine issue of material fact exists if reasonable minds

could differ about the facts controlling the outcome of the litigation.5

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