Spee West Construction Co., V. David Walter

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedFebruary 28, 2022
Docket82139-3
StatusPublished

This text of Spee West Construction Co., V. David Walter (Spee West Construction Co., V. David Walter) 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
Spee West Construction Co., V. David Walter, (Wash. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

NOTICE: SLIP OPINION (not the court’s final written decision)

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IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DAVID WALTER, No. 82139-3-I

Respondent, DIVISION ONE

v. PUBLISHED OPINION

SPEE WEST CONSTRUCTION CO., a Washington Corporation and general contractor,

Appellant,

FIDELITY & DEPOSIT CO OF MD,

Defendant.

SMITH, J. — David Walter was working in a trench at a construction site

when an excavator bucket crushed his leg. He sued Spee West Construction

Co. for negligence, and a jury found that Spee West’s negligence was a

proximate cause of Walter’s injury, that Walter’s non-economic damages totaled

$4.5 million, and that Walter was 10 percent contributorily negligent. Spee West

appeals, challenging the court’s decision not to give an implied assumption of the

risk jury instruction and its decision to give a lighting-up instruction. Because the

assumption of the risk instruction was not warranted and the lighting-up

instruction was supported by substantial evidence, we affirm.

FACTS

In April 2018, Spee West was working on a construction project at Mt. Si

High School, and subcontracted with Continental Dirt Contractors for utilities For the current opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/wareports/. No. 82139-3-I/2

installation. Walter, who had 15 years of construction experience, was offered a

job as a pipe-layer for Continental Dirt and began work on April 11. On that day,

he met with his foreman and the other members of the Continental Dirt crew, and

worked most of the day with Scott White, an excavator operator, fixing cracks in

the sewer line at an excavation site.

On Walter’s second day on the job, he again worked with White, digging a

second excavation site to install a plug in the sewer line. Walter finished that

project while White moved to a third site, and then Walter went and joined him.

At the third excavation site, the goal was to remove a sewer line. White used the

excavator to dig down to the sewer line and Walter helped install a trench box, a

piece of equipment used to protect workers from a possible trench cave-in. The

trench box consisted of two eight feet tall side panels separated by spreader bars

used to keep the walls apart. Once the trench box was installed, Walter’s

foreman told him to go into the trench to dig down and install a pump. Walter got

into the trench and began digging at the farthest point in the trench from the

excavator, where the concrete column from under a manhole served as a wall.

He dug out a pile of debris and signaled for White to remove it, which White did.

When White brought the excavator bucket back, Walter signaled for it to

go down, anticipating that White would continue digging at the other end of the

trench, closer to the excavator. Instead, White brought the bucket all the way

down and smashed it into the concrete pipe. Smashing the concrete and

removing it was the planned method for removing the sewer line, but Walter had

2 For the current opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/wareports/. No. 82139-3-I/3

not realized the plan until White brought the bucket down. 1 Once Walter saw

what White was doing, he “got onboard.” White brought the bucket up again, and

Walter stepped back against the spreader bars at the end of the trench box, in a

place where he could see and be seen by White, and signaled for the bucket to

come closer. Walter testified as to what happened next: “so the bucket had

come up, it’s coming in. And then I told him, ‘Down,’ and I told him ‘Down, down.’

And when I glanced up to see if he was looking at me, it looked like he was

looking at [the excavator bucket’s] teeth, not me.” The bucket continued coming

closer and started crushing Walter‘s legs against the spreader bars. Walter

began feeling a “terrible” pain and started screaming until the pressure of the

bucket released.

White, the only other witness to this event, testified that he could not see

Walter at the time of the accident, that he was looking at the front of his bucket,

and that he thought it was the curling of the bucket, not a movement forward, that

crushed Walter’s legs. He also testified that the work had been proceeding

safely up until that point and that there was no reason for Walter to feel unsafe in

the thirty minutes leading up to the injury.

Following the accident, Walter was taken to the emergency room and

stayed in the hospital for three days before being discharged with a knee brace

and crutches. An MRI 2 indicated a hole in the cartilage behind his kneecap, a

1 While there was some evidence that a person did not need to be in the

trench while a pipe was being removed in this way, there was also evidence that it is a common practice. 2 Magnetic resonance imaging.

3 For the current opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/wareports/. No. 82139-3-I/4

tear on the meniscus, bruising of the bones, fluid, and muscle strains. Walter’s

pain did not improve with physical therapy and he was referred to an orthopedic

surgeon. Walter had surgery in December 2018, which helped, but his pain

continued to get worse. Walter was eventually cleared to return to work in June

2019, but had to take a job as an excavator operator, rather than a pipe-layer,

because of the pain in his knee.

In December 2019, Walter sued Spee West for negligence. The case

proceeded to a jury trial in September 2020. Evidence at trial established that

standard procedure is for the person in the trench to direct the excavator with

hand signals and that the excavator operator is supposed to stop moving the

bucket if they lose sight of the hand signals. The parties introduced evidence of

certain abnormalities at the construction site—the trench box was at an angle,

not level; White was using a larger than usual excavation bucket—but ultimately

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