Sondra Sampson v. Mattress Firm, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedAugust 26, 2025
Docket40581-8
StatusUnpublished

This text of Sondra Sampson v. Mattress Firm, Inc. (Sondra Sampson v. Mattress Firm, 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
Sondra Sampson v. Mattress Firm, Inc., (Wash. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

FILED AUGUST 26, 2025 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals, Division III

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

SONDRA SAMPSON, a Washington ) No. 40581-8-III resident, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) ) MATTRESS FIRM, INC., a Delaware ) Corporation; DEDICATED ) TRANSPORTATION, LLC, an Oregon ) Limited Liability Company; VALERY ) MUKHIN, a resident of the State of ) Oregon; JOHN DOE NO. 1 and JOHN ) DOE NO. 2, ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) Defendants, ) ) DSI LOGISTICS, LLC, a Delaware ) Limited Liability Company, ) ) Appellant, ) ) BNS INSTALLATION ) INCORPORATED, an Oregon Company, ) ) Respondent. )

MURPHY, J. — Sondra Sampson was injured when a delivery person lost control

of the bed frame being delivered to Sampson’s home and it struck Sampson. Sampson

sued Mattress Firm, Inc. (Mattress Firm), DSI Logistics, LLC (DSI Logistics), and

Dedicated Transportation, LLC (Dedicated) based on the belief that Mattress Firm No. 40581-8-III Sampson v. Mattress Firm, Inc.

retained DSI Logistics to deliver the purchased products, and DSI Logistics contracted

with Dedicated to make this particular delivery. DSI Logistics later pursued a third-party

complaint against BNS Installation Incorporated (BNS) for breach of contract,

contractual defense and indemnity, and additional insured obligation, alleging that BNS,

not Dedicated, made this particular delivery to Sampson.

BNS moved for summary judgment dismissal of the third-party complaint, arguing

the evidence showed that Dedicated, not BNS, made the delivery where Sampson was

injured. The trial court found that DSI Logistics failed to present sufficient evidence to

create a genuine issue of material fact as to whether BNS made the Sampson delivery and

dismissed DSI Logistics’ third-party complaint. We agree and affirm.

FACTS

Overview

Sondra Sampson purchased “Red Carpet Delivery Service” when she bought a

mattress, mattress protector, bed frame, and pillow from Mattress Firm. Clerk’s Papers

(CP) at 91, 111. Mattress Firm contracted with DSI Logistics to deliver the purchased

items to Sampson’s home. DSI Logistics does not make deliveries. Rather, it enters into

independent hauler contracts with other entities to perform the actual deliveries. Relevant

to this appeal, DSI Logistics had contracts with both Dedicated and BNS to deliver

goods.

2 No. 40581-8-III Sampson v. Mattress Firm, Inc.

The delivery of Sampson’s purchases occurred on January 9, 2019. Sampson

alleged that during the delivery service personnel lost control of the bed frame for the

mattress, which sprang open and struck Sampson.

In November 2021, Sampson initiated a personal injury lawsuit in Cowlitz County

Superior Court against Mattress Firm, DSI Logistics, Dedicated, Valery Mukhin, alleged

to be the sole member of Dedicated, and two unidentified delivery personnel for

Dedicated.

On August 30, 2023, DSI answered and asserted affirmative defenses to

Sampson’s complaint, and asserted a third-party complaint against BNS. DSI Logistics

alleged that BNS entered an independent hauler’s contract with DSI Logistics to deliver

goods as the basis for its breach of contract and contractual indemnity claims, as well as

other associated claims, and alleged it was BNS that made this particular delivery to

Sampson. As evidence that BNS made the delivery to Sampson, DSI Logistics attached

an order detail showing BNS as the contractor. The order detail is a DSI Logistics

generated document used for billing approval and identifies the contractor for the

Sampson delivery on January 9, 2019 to be “BNS Installation Incorporated” and

“Timothy [Misiuk].” 1 CP at 353. The document’s history shows that the order detail was

1 There are two spellings of Timothy Misiuk throughout the record: “Musiuk” and “Misiuk.” At his deposition, his name is spelled “Misiuk” and we adopt this spelling.

3 No. 40581-8-III Sampson v. Mattress Firm, Inc.

created on January 15, 2019, at 9:04 p.m., by Jeff Costello.

BNS answered the third-party complaint on September 20, 2023, with denials of

allegations and the specific denial that BNS made any delivery to Sampson. On

December 18, 2023, BNS filed a motion for summary judgment. In its motion for

summary judgment, BNS requested dismissal of all claims, asserting that it did not

deliver the mattress and bed frame to Sampson, and alleging that DSI Logistics sued BNS

on the sole basis that Dedicated was insolvent.

The trial court granted BNS’s motion for summary judgment, concluding, “[t]here

is no reasonable evidence supporting DSI [Logistics’] contention that BNS conducted the

subject delivery and therefore BNS is dismissed with prejudice from this action.” CP at

458.

Red Carpet Delivery Service

A service unit delivery report for the “Red Carpet Delivery Service” shows that on

January 9, 2019, driver Victor Onofrei delivered to Sondra Sampson, at her home address

in Longview, Washington, the items purchased from Mattress Firm between 5:22 p.m.

and 5:40 p.m.

Written discovery produced by DSI Logistics regarding the delivery

In an April 14, 2022, response to written discovery requests from Sampson, DSI

Logistics confirmed that this incident was investigated by DSI within weeks of its

4 No. 40581-8-III Sampson v. Mattress Firm, Inc.

occurrence. 2 DSI Logistics stated that it contracted with Dedicated to perform the subject

delivery to Sampson, and in the weeks following the January 9, 2019, occurrence, DSI

investigated the claim in conjunction with Dedicated. Relevant interrogatories and

answers include:

Interrogatory No. 1:

Did Defendant DSI deliver the furniture described in Exhibit A hereto to [Sampson]’s home . . . ? If yes, please provide the name, address, and telephone number of the person or persons who made the delivery.

Answer:

DSI contracted the delivery of furniture described at Exhibit A to [Sampson]’s home. Co-defendant [Mattress Firm] and contractor Dedicated Transportation delivered the furniture described in Exhibit A.

CP at 96 (some capitalization omitted).

Throughout its answers and responses to specific questions, DSI Logistics

identified Dedicated as the entity that delivered the mattress to Sampson.

Interrogatory No. 3:

Did a contractor or Defendant DSI deliver the furniture described at Exhibit A hereto to [Sampson]’s home . . . ? If yes, please provide the name, address, and telephone number of the contractor that did so.

2 This discovery was answered approximately 17 months prior to the filing of a third-party complaint against BNS by DSI Logistics.

5 No. 40581-8-III Sampson v. Mattress Firm, Inc.

DSI objects to this interrogatory to the extent it seeks information not within DSI’s possession or control. Subject to and without waiving the foregoing, co-defendant [Mattress Firm] and contractor of DSI, Dedicated Transportation delivered the furniture to [Sampson]’s home. Dedicated Transportation is owned by Valery Mukhin. DSI believes Valery is located at [address given]. The last known phone number DSI has for Valery is [phone number given].

In its answers and responses to written discovery, DSI Logistics produced detailed

and specific information that it was Dedicated that made the delivery to Sampson.

Interrogatory No. 10:

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