Robison v. Cascade Hardwoods, Inc.

117 Wash. App. 552
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJuly 8, 2003
DocketNo. 28818-4-II
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 117 Wash. App. 552 (Robison v. Cascade Hardwoods, 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
Robison v. Cascade Hardwoods, Inc., 117 Wash. App. 552 (Wash. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

Hunt, C.J.

Todd Robison, a logging truck driver, appeals the trial court’s grant of summary judgment to Cascade Hardwoods, Inc. Robison sued Cascade for damages from severe internal injuries caused by an extreme electrical shock while operating Cascade’s trailer loader apparatus at Cascade’s lumber mill. Robison argues that summary judgment was improper because (1) under the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur, ordinarily such an electrical shock would not occur absent negligence; and (2) the only reasonably possible source of the electricity was under Cascade’s exclusive control. We agree, reverse, and remand for trial.

[556]*556FACTS

I. Electric Shock While Operating Trailer Loader

It had been raining heavily for hours when Robison delivered a load of logs to Cascade in March 1994. There was no evidence of any lightning or thunderstorms that early spring day, just driving rain.

After Cascade workers unloaded the logs from his truck, Robison proceeded to Cascade’s “trailer loader,” an apparatus that lifts an empty trailer and places it on top of the truck tractor, piggyback, to shorten the unit and to make it easier to drive. While operating the trailer loader, an exceptionally powerful electrical shock rendered Robison unconscious and caused severe internal electrical burns.

Cascade obtains 12,500 volts of electricity from the local electrical utility (which grounds at 7,200 volts). Cascade then distributes the electricity to a transformer, which steps down the voltage to 480 (grounding at 277 volts). After being routed through distribution panels, overhead wires carry this voltage to the trailer loader’s motor, which is again stepped down to 24 volts at the trailer loader winch.

A. The Trailer Loader

Cascade’s electrically powered trailer loader comprises a metal A-frame, a steel cable winch, and a hook hanging from the crossbar. The truck driver swings the hook over to a wire cable grapple strap on his truck trailer, connects the hook to the strap, and presses his thumb on a “free swinging” “up/down controller” button on a cord dangling from the loader’s crossbar. 3 Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 440, 437. This button, powered by a 24-volt electric controller, activates a steel winch powered by a 480-volt electric motor.

The winch motor operates only while the truck driver is pressing the up/down controller button. The driver continues to press the controller button to make the winch wind the steel cable, causing the loader’s hook to lift the truck [557]*557trailer off the ground. The driver then swings the trailer over the truck’s cab, where he lowers the trailer onto supports. When he lifts his thumb off the controller button, the winch motor stops.

B. The Accident

On the day of Robison’s electrical injuries, the rainwater had accumulated under the trailer loader to such a depth that it seeped over Robison’s ankle-covering rubber boots. Standing in the pool of rainwater, Robison leaned his stomach against his truck chassis to reach one rubber-gloved hand out to connect the loader’s hook to his trailer’s strap. With his other rubber-gloved hand, Robison pressed the loader’s controller button to activate the cable winch motor. As he pressed the button, he heard a loud bang and everything went gray. He was rendered unconscious for about a minute and a half.

When Robison regained consciousness, he felt shaky all over and experienced severe pain in his chest and queasiness in his stomach. Using wooden sticks to push the loader’s control buttons, he managed to finish loading his trailer. Still shaking and with his chest burning inside, he immediately made the short 300-foot drive to Cascade’s office, where a Cascade employee saw him sweating, out of breath, and extremely thirsty. Robison sat down and drank as much water as he could, even though he had great difficulty holding the cup in his hand. After Robison rested for a few minutes, Lawrence “Swede” Johnson, a Cascade safety and quality control director, took Robison to the hospital’s emergency room, where Robison was admitted.

II. Electrical Injuries

Although Robison was not burned externally, he suffered severe internal burns and chronic, debilitating medical conditions: (1) burns in his esophagus and mouth; (2) burn-like lesions in his stomach and intestines; (3) chronic fecal incontinence; (4) occasional throbbing headaches; (5) [558]*558hearing loss from a ruptured tympanic membrane; (6) permanent blurred vision, light sensitivity, and night blindness; (7) destruction of over half his teeth; (8) sharp, chronic pains in his abdomen and joints; (9) intermittent seizures; (10) gallstones; and (11) memory loss. These conditions have required five surgeries on his stomach and intestines to repair burned tissue and remove the stones, as well as extensive psychotherapy.

Since 1990, Dr. Andrew Willner has been Robison’s primary physician at the Enunclaw Medical Clinic, where Robison had long been a patient even before seeing Dr. Willner. In addition to training in electrical injuries during his residency and his experience with electrical injuries in the emergency room, Dr. Willner has treated other patients with electrical injuries over the years, 50 percent of whom, like Robison, did not exhibit visible entry and exit points. Dr. Willner’s expert medical opinion was “that to a degree of reasonable medical certainty Mr. Robison sustained an electrical burn that included intrathoracic and gastrointestinal membranous injury.” 1 CP at 155.

The State Department of Labor and Industries (L&I) hired Dr. Borys Buniak, a gastrointestinologist from Syracuse University, to provide expert opinion about the cause of Robison’s injuries. Since 1993, Dr. Buniak has seen patients with electrical injuries. He, too, opined that Robison’s injuries, some of which developed over time after the shock, were causally related, “on a more-probable-than-not basis,” to an electrical injury with a severe burn.1 1 CP at 168.

Dr. Raphael Lee, director of the electrical trauma research program and professor at the University of Chicago, concurred. Dr. Lee stated that the absence of external burns, as with all of Robison’s symptoms, was consistent [559]*559with burn victims who are electrically shocked while in water, such as a swimming pool, a pond, or standing water on a golf course. He understood that at the time of Robison’s electrical contact, it was a rainy day, “everything was just so soaking wet,” and Robison’s booted feet were immersed in mud. 1 CP at 173.

III. Cascade’s Maintenance of Trailer Loader’s Electrical Systems

The origin of the electric shock that burned Robison is uncertain. Robison’s electrical expert essentially eliminated the 24-volt transformer for the trailer loader’s winch, but the record does not eliminate other electrical components associated with the trailer loader and its vicinity. Although Cascade argues that Robison’s truck was not eliminated as a source, nothing in the record suggests that the truck or its 12-volt truck battery would have had sufficient electrical capacity to have been the source of such severe electrical burns. And there is no evidence of any electrical storm or lightning on that early March day.

A. Previous Incidents

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117 Wash. App. 552, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robison-v-cascade-hardwoods-inc-washctapp-2003.