Strouse v. Webcor Construction

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 23, 2019
DocketA148863
StatusPublished

This text of Strouse v. Webcor Construction (Strouse v. Webcor Construction) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Strouse v. Webcor Construction, (Cal. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Filed 3/27/19; Certified for partial publication 4/23/19 (order attached)

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

JAMES STROUSE, Plaintiff and Respondent, A148863 v. WEBCOR CONSTRUCTION, L.P., (Alameda County Super. Ct. No. RG13670376) Defendant, Cross-complainant and Appellant; ACCO ENGINEERED SYSTEMS, Cross-defendant and Respondent.

Webcor Construction, L.P. (Webcor) was the general contractor for the rehabilitation of the California Memorial Football Stadium in Berkeley (the Project). Webcor hired ACCO Engineered Systems (ACCO) to perform ventilation and plumbing services on the Project. James Strouse, an ACCO employee, suffered a workplace injury when his leg fell into a 12-inch deep expansion joint after the plywood safety cover gave way. He sued Webcor for negligence, and Webcor filed a cross-complaint against ACCO for indemnity. A jury found Webcor 100 percent liable for Strouse’s injuries. On appeal, Webcor contends the trial court erred in instructing the jury using CACI No. 1009B, which, in Webcor’s view, does not accurately state the holding of Hooker v. Department of Transportation (2002) 27 Cal.4th 198 (Hooker). Webcor further contends the trial court erroneously instructed on negligence per se based on regulations promulgated under the California Occupational Safety and Health Act (Cal- OSHA). Finally, Webcor argues the trial court erred in granting ACCO’s motion for attorney fees. We affirm the judgment.

1 FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND A. Webcor’s Contract with the University of California and Subcontract with ACCO In 2009, Webcor entered into a contract with the University of California (UC) for the “California Memorial Stadium Seismic Safety Improvements.” Under the contract, Webcor was “solely responsible for initiating, maintaining, and supervising all safety precautions and programs in connection with the performance of the Contract.” Webcor was required to take adequate precautions to prevent damage, injury, or loss to “Employees involved in the Work and other persons who may be affected thereby.” The contract also required Webcor to “designate a responsible member of [its] organization at the Project site whose duty shall be the prevention of accidents.” Webcor was further obligated to “continuously require and follow up with Subcontractors about their job site maintenance and their conformance in providing a safe work place,” “enforce all safety- related requirements in the Contract Documents,” and “review, monitor and coordinate the implementation of individual Subcontractors’ Safety Programs.” Webcor hired ACCO to perform ventilation and plumbing services on the Project. Under the subcontract, ACCO agreed to “comply fully with all laws, orders, citations, rules, regulations, standards and statutes with respect to occupational health and safety [and] . . . accident prevention,” to “conduct inspections to determine that safe working conditions and equipment exist of their work area,” and to “accept[] sole responsibility for providing a safe place to work for its employees.” Webcor’s Safety Manual was part of the contract documents that ACCO was required to follow. It required ACCO employees to report any unsafe practice or condition to their supervisor immediately, and also report unsafe conditions to Webcor. With regard to floor openings, the Webcor Safety Manual reminded ACCO to check that openings were covered and that covers were secured and identified. B. Webcor’s Expansion Joints and Safety Covers An expansion joint is a gap left between concrete sections of a structure to allow the sections to move independently in the event of an earthquake. As part of the seismic

2 upgrade of the stadium, Webcor created and constructed 50 expansion joints that were placed throughout the structure. Before a permanent covering is installed over each expansion joint, there is a gap 12 inches wide and 12 inches deep in the concrete. The gaps must be covered or have guardrails around them. For the Project, Webcor’s carpenters designed, constructed, and installed protective plywood covers for all of the expansion joints. It was undisputed at trial that Webcor was responsible for the Project’s general access areas, which were described as areas like “hallways” used by “everyone” including subcontractors for making deliveries and accessing different areas of the stadium. Strouse’s accident occurred at an expansion joint in line 53, a general access area near a loading dock used by ACCO and other subcontractors to make deliveries. Because this was a high-traffic area, the safety covers for the expansion joints had to withstand two times the maximum anticipated load, which would require either a metal plate or two layers of three-quarter inch plywood that were secured and labeled “do not remove.” Webcor’s site safety manager, Joe Villela, instructed Webcor’s carpenters to make sure the safety covers were secured and had smooth transitions. Webcor’s carpenter foreman, Victor Paz, testified that the safety covers were constructed with doubled-up three-quarter inch plywood, sized to cover the 12-inch gap. The wood was anchored with 16-penny nails, roto-hammered in place, and secured with pieces of tie wire. Webcor tested the design of the safety covers by driving a scissor lift over them to ensure they were strong and stayed in place. Villela testified Webcor was the sole entity that maintained the safety covers, and Webcor carpenters were the only ones allowed to repair them. This was a duty Webcor “did not delegate to its subcontractors.” ACCO did not perform any work on the safety covers and was not allowed to do any carpentry work on the Project. Subcontractors were told during weekly meetings to notify Webcor if they needed to remove a safety structure to perform their work, and Webcor would remove and replace it. Villela testified it was reasonable for ACCO employees to trust that Webcor had properly installed, secured, and inspected the safety covers.

3 C. Reports of Unsecured Covers Prior to Strouse’s accident, Webcor knew that the safety covers in the line 53 area had been damaged or had become unsecured due to subcontractors removing them without securing them back in place. ACCO’s general foreman Chris Ensel testified that he brought up the condition of the safety covers to Villela and informed him that people were removing safety covers to perform work in the expansion joints. The condition of the safety covers was “brought up more than a couple times” by Ensel and other tradesmen in the weekly foreman meetings when Webcor was asking for input. Ensel felt his concerns were not being adequately addressed, and he was dissatisfied with the response he received from Villela. Eventually, however, Ensel became “accustomed” to the condition and stopped bringing it up. Ensel did not contact ACCO’s safety department about the safety covers as required by ACCO’s mitigation escalation path. He was aware that ACCO’s subcontract required it to provide its employees with a safe place to work, but he felt this was not a “reachable goal” because Webcor was not adequately supporting ACCO. D. Webcor’s Retained Control of Safety on the Jobsite Webcor’s safety expert J. Robert Harrell testified that Webcor retained overall safety responsibility on the job site. Villela testified that he was responsible for conducting daily inspections of the jobsite to look for safety problems, as required by Webcor’s contract with the UC, even on weekends if workers were present (as they were the weekend before Strouse’s accident). Up to 12 superintendents and 12 foremen of Webcor were also required to perform daily inspections. Villela was responsible for documenting each of his daily inspections in an inspection report. The last documented inspections before Strouse’s January 9, 2012, accident were conducted on January 3, 4, and 5, 2012.

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Strouse v. Webcor Construction, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strouse-v-webcor-construction-calctapp-2019.