Sandoe v. Lefta Associates

551 A.2d 76, 1988 WL 130799
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 5, 1988
DocketNos. 86-1506, 87-149
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 551 A.2d 76 (Sandoe v. Lefta Associates) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sandoe v. Lefta Associates, 551 A.2d 76, 1988 WL 130799 (D.C. 1988).

Opinions

ROGERS, Chief Judge:

These consolidated appeals raise two principal issues: the constitutionality of the District’s statute of repose, D.C.Code § 12-310 (1981), and the sufficiency of the jury instructions on the standard of care that is owed by a landowner to a person lawfully on the premises. Appellants R. Sonya Sandoe and John Sandoe and appel-lee/cross-appellant Lefta Associates contend that the statute violates due process and equal protection because its distinction between construction professionals and owners and occupiers of land is an arbitrary classification that is not rationally related to furthering a legitimate governmental purpose. The Sandoes also contend that the trial judge erred in refusing to instruct the jury that a landowner has a duty to persons lawfully on the premises to inspect the property for latent, dangerous defects. We hold that § 12-310 is constitutional. We further hold that the trial judge’s instructions did not adequately inform the jury of the factors to be considered in determining whether or not Lef-ta breached its duty of reasonable care to Mrs. Sandoe. Accordingly, we reverse and remand for a new trial.

[78]*78I

R. Sonya Sandoe and John Sandoe sued Lefta Associates (“Lefta”), appellee/cross-appellant, a partnership that owns the Embassy Square Hotel at 22nd and N Streets, N.W., and Norair Engineering Corp. (“No-rair”), appellee, the general contractor and builder of the hotel, for damages resulting from personal injuries suffered by Mrs. Sandoe while she was making a routine pest inspection of the hotel at the owner’s request. Her injuries occurred when she stepped on an airshaft grate which collapsed, causing her to fall thirty feet. The complaint alleged negligent construction and maintenance of the grate by Lefta and Norair. Lefta filed a cross-claim against Norair for indemnification and contribution.1

In November, 1983, Judge Hannon granted Norair’s motion for summary judgment on the ground that the Sandoes’ cause of action was barred by the District of Columbia’s statute of repose, D.C.Code § 12-310 (1981),2 because Mrs. Sandoe’s injury occurred more than ten years from the date that the hotel was substantially completed. A jury trial of the Sandoes’ claims against Lefta, the only remaining defendant, resulted in a verdict in favor of Lefta. The Sandoes’ motion for a new trial was denied.

Most of the relevant facts are not in dispute.3 At the time of her fall, Mrs. Sandoe was a licensed exterminator with Town and Country Exterminating Company, which was owned by the Sandoes. Lef-ta had hired Town and Country because of a serious rat infestation problem at the hotel. On September 20, 1979, Mrs. San-doe went to the hotel to assist her son with the rat extermination problem, which he had been unable to resolve. After inspecting interior portions of the building, Mrs. Sandoe began inspecting the hotel’s outside perimeter for rat burrows.

Around the perimeter of the hotel are a series of airshafts that serve the hotel’s underground garage. Each shaft is equipped at the bottom with a fan, and each shaft is covered with a metal grate. Mrs. Sandoe walked over several of the grates without incident. One grate, how[79]*79ever, gave way when she stepped on it, and she fell thirty feet to the concrete bottom of one of the shafts. An angle iron which was supposed to support the grate was missing, so that when Mrs. Sandoe stepped on the grate, it immediately collapsed. Mrs. Sandoe sustained serious physical injuries as a result of the fall which produced great pain and suffering, significant disability, large medical bills, and resulted in a loss of consortium for her husband.

The main issue at trial was determining who was responsible for the absence of the angle iron. Frank Peters, Norair’s general superintendent during construction of the hotel, testified that, to the best of his knowledge, all of the angle irons were installed in all of the shafts when Lefta assumed control of the building. He believed that damage to a bolt removed from one of the angle irons was caused by the raising and lowering of a covering grate, presumably by Lefta’s employees after the building was constructed. The shafts and fans were designed to be serviced by removing the grate and lowering a ladder down into the shaft. Since a grill was welded over the interior side of each fan, it would be difficult to service the fan and clean the shaft’s drainage hole from inside the garage. Peters also indicated that, because of financing commitments, there was great urgency to complete construction of the hotel. Lacking the proper tool to install the angle irons with anchor bolts as contemplated in the architects’ plans, Peters directed, without the architects’ approval, that the angle irons be secured by using a “ram set” gun, which he contended was an acceptable alternative.

Peters’ testimony was disputed by two expert witnesses. Elliot Gitlin, one of the hotel’s architects, testified that the plans he approved required the angle iron to be bolted with % inch diameter anchor bolts. A ram set gun would not have been a suitable alternative to fasten these bolts since the ram set nail is at most V& of an inch in diameter and is likely to fracture the masonry wall when installed. Edgar Seaquist, a licensed consulting engineer hired by Lefta to investigate the accident, testified that the ram set method would be completely inadequate. He stated, however, that he had carefully inspected the wall of the subject shaft and found no evidence of ram set holes or any other indication that an angle iron had ever been affixed to this wall. This testimony was corroborated by Richard Tate, Lefta’s chief of maintenance, who said that he inspected all of the ventilation shafts after Mrs. San-doe’s fall and found that two of the shafts were missing angle irons.

There was additional testimony about why this unsafe condition was not detected and corrected during the eleven years between the completion of construction and Mrs. Sandoe’s accident. Mr. Gitlin testified that he conducted a “walk around” inspection of the premises before the building was turned over to Lefta. However, he did not inspect such detailed matters as the installation of angle irons and grates because he assumed that the general contractor had properly carried out the installation in accordance with the plans approved by the architects. Gitlin also testified, without contradiction, that the District of Columbia building and safety inspectors who inspected the building prior to issuing the certificate of occupancy also probably overlooked the missing angle irons.

Mr. Tate testified that there was no occasion for Lefta to remove the grates over the ventilation shafts because the shafts were cleaned, and the fans maintained, from inside the garage. Although the grills over the fans were originally welded in place, the welds were later broken so that the grillwork could be removed easily. Approximately once a month, Lefta employees open the grillwork and perform any necessary maintenance work the fans may need. To clean the drains at the bottom of the shafts, a long rod with a scoop on the end is extended through the grill from inside the garage into the shaft to remove any materials in the drain.

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Bluebook (online)
551 A.2d 76, 1988 WL 130799, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sandoe-v-lefta-associates-dc-1988.