Court Opinion

ID: 987524
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-07-02 22:15:55.511405+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:49:29.540849
License: Public Domain

COURT OF APPEALS OP'.
                                                        STATE OF V/ASHINGTO?!

                                                        2013 HAR II   AH 8= 16

      IN THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

JACOB L. BEGIS,
                                                 No. 67502-8-1
                     Respondent,
      v.                                         DIVISION ONE

KING CUSTOM FRAMING, INC.,                       UNPUBLISHED OPINION
PAUL KING and ANGELIQUE KING,
husband and wife, and the marital
community comprised thereof,
                                                 FILED: March 11,2013
                    Appellants.

       Leach, C.J. — Paul King appeals a jury verdict awarding damages to

Jacob Begis, alleging numerous errors in the jury instructions. Begis sued King

and his company, King Custom Framing Inc. for damages caused by a 40-foot

fall through an unsecured rail at a construction site.      A jury awarded Begis

$683,400. Because the court's instructions did not misstate the law and allowed

both parties to argue their theories of the case and because the court did not

abuse its discretion by refusing to give King's proposed instruction, we affirm.

                                    Background

       In 2007, Jacob Begis applied for a general contractor's license to allow

 him to oversee construction of two luxury homes on waterfront property he

 owned in Snohomish County. Begis hired King to design and build the framing

 and deck work on the first home.        When King notified Begis that he had

 completed the deck and requested payment, Begis asked to inspect the work
NO. 67502-8-1 / 2

before paying. Begis began his inspection of the deck by walking out onto it and

testing the railing on the right-hand side by grasping it and leaning over to look

down. This railing held. When he performed the same test on another portion of

the deck, the railing—which had not been nailed down on one end—gave way.

Begis fell 40 feet and suffered serious injuries.

       Begis sued King for negligence.       King responded that his contract with

Begis did not include building permanent railings. He claimed that the railings he

built were only a temporary "visual barrier," to remain only until another

contractor completed the final work.       King also claimed that as the general

contractor, Begis negligently failed to establish a fall prevention plan for the

construction site.

       At trial, Begis called Mark Lawless, a construction expert, to testify that a

handrail assembly—even a temporary one—should be able to withstand 200

pounds of pressure in any direction. King testified that he understood the siding

company was responsible for the final rail installation, that he was not familiar

with Washington State building codes, and that he knew the railing in place could

not bear a 200-pound load.

       King took two exceptions to the jury instructions.     First, he objected to

instruction 21 about warning line systems on low-pitched roofs.        Second, he

objected to the court's failure to give his proposed instruction 11, which described

the scope of an employer's duty on a job site. The jury found for Begis. It
NO. 67502-8-1 / 3

awarded him $804,000, reduced by 15 percent for his contributory negligence,

for a net damage award of $683,400. King appeals.

                                Standard of Review

       We review de novo the adequacy of challenged jury instructions.1 "Jury

instructions are sufficient when they allow counsel to argue their theory of the

case, are not misleading, and when read as a whole properly inform the trier of

fact of the applicable law."2 If any of these elements is missing, the instruction is

erroneous; however, an erroneous instruction is reversible error only if it

prejudices a party.3 Where jury instructions correctly state the applicable law,

"the court's decision to give the instruction will not be disturbed absent an abuse

of discretion."4

       Further, we review a trial court's refusal to give a party's proposed jury

instruction for an abuse of discretion.5 A trial court abuses its discretion if it

exercises its discretion based on untenable grounds or for untenable reasons.6

                                     Analysis

       King first argues that jury instruction 21 prejudiced him because the

instruction was inapplicable and misleading. The instruction as given read,

       1State v. Mills, 154 Wn.2d 1, 7, 109 P.3d 415 (2005).
       2 Bodinv.CitvofStanwood, 130 Wn.2d 726, 732, 927 P.2d 240 (1996).
       3Anfinson v. FedEx Ground Package Svst., Inc.. 174 Wn.2d 851, 860,
281 P.3d 289 (2012).
       4 Micro Enhancement Int'l. Inc. v. Coopers & Lvbrand, LLP, 110 Wn. App.
412, 430, 40 P.3d 1206 (2002).
       5State v. Winings. 126 Wn. App. 75, 86, 107 P.3d 141 (2005).
       6State v. Smith. 124 Wn. App. 417, 428, 102 P.3d 158(2004).

                                        -3-
NO. 67502-8-1 / 4

      WAC 296-155-24515, "Guarding of low pitched roof perimeters,"
      provides that:
      Warning line systems:
      (a) Warning lines shall be erected around all sides of the work area,
          (i) When mechanical equipment is not being used, the warning
             line shall be erected not less than six feet (1.8 meters) from
             the edge of the roof...
      (b) The warning line shall consist of a rope, wire, or chain and
          supporting stanchions erected as follows:
          (ii) After being erected, with the rope, wire, or chain attached,
             stanchions shall be capable of resisting, without tipping over,
             a force of at least 16 pounds (71 Newtons) applied
              horizontally against the stanchion, 30 inches (0.76 meters)
              above the roof surface, perpendicular to the warning line,
              and in the direction of the roof edge.
          (iii) The rope, wire, or chain shall have a minimum tensile
                strength of 200 pounds (90 kilograms), and after being
              attached to the stanchions, shall be capable of supporting,
              without breaking, the loads applied to the stanchions.

       King argues that this instruction was inapplicable because it applied only
to pitched roofs, while Begis's injury occurred on a flat deck.

       King relies on Hemmingson v. Carbon Hill Coal Co..7 in which our
Supreme Court reversed a jury verdict after a trial court gave a jury instruction
based on an inapplicable statute. Mr. Hemmingson was injured while working in

a rock tunnel that connected to a coal mine but was not part of the mining

operations. The trial court instructed the jury regarding a coal mine owner's
statutory safety requirements, and the jury found the mine owner liable for
Hemmingson's injury. The Supreme Court based its decision on the differences
between a rock tunnel and an active coal mine, reasoning that the statute, which

addressed the ultrahazardous activity of coal mining, did not apply to less

dangerous mining operations, such as a gold mine or a rock tunnel.

       7 62 Wash. 28, 34-35, 112 P. 1111 (1911).
NO. 67502-8-1 / 5

       It would appear that an instruction entitled "Guarding of low pitched roof

perimeters," on its face, would not apply here because Begis fell from a flat

surface.   But here, unlike in Hemmingson, an expert witness testified that the

warning line rule did apply to horizontal decks, both by its terms and by general

analogy. Therefore, King's analogy to Hemmingson is inapposite.

       Further, King ignores that fact that he originally introduced the issue of a

"warning line" into the case by asserting the railing was only a temporary visual

barrier. After King alluded to "visual barriers" in his opening statement, Begis

questioned Lawless about several WAC provisions, with no defense objection.

King did not object to the admission of an exhibit that included WAC 296-155-

24515, or to Lawless reading this regulation aloud to the jury. He did not object

when Lawless testified that the rule also applied to work on a deck or any other

horizontal surface. King also cross-examined Lawless about the standards for

warning lines. Under these circumstances, the challenged regulation became

relevant. Given both parties' treatment of the "warning line" issue at trial, the trial

court correctly instructed the jury about WAC 296-155-24515.

       Additionally, we read the jury instructions as a whole to determine whether

they accurately state the law and allow each party to argue its theory of the case.

King argued that the railing was a temporary "visual barrier" that he constructed

to provide a warning until another contractor built a permanent railing. But the

jury also heard, without objection, the testimony of Begis's construction expert

that such visual barriers or "warning lines," when used on rooftops, must be set
NO. 67502-8-1 / 6

back six feet from the edge. The jury also heard, again without objection, expert

testimony that even temporary structures must comply with a regulation requiring

any railing to support 200 pounds of force.

       Responding to King's objection, the trial judge noted, "[T]he court is not

giving an instruction saying that this necessarily is the applicable WAC, rather,

indicating that there is a WAC of this nature that exists and certainly allowing

each side to use their own arguments." The court determined, based on the

facts presented at trial, that the instruction properly allowed both parties to argue

their respective theories of the case and that given King's reliance on the warning

line theory, "to not give this instruction, in this court's opinion, would almost be a

comment in terms of which argument the court is siding with." We agree. King

did not object to the trial testimony regarding warning line systems or to the

admission of a copy of WAC 296-155-24515 into evidence.               Given that the

parties addressed the rule at some length during the trial, the court did not err by

giving instruction 21.

       King also contends that the instruction potentially misled the jury because

it omitted prefatory language in the regulation stating the employer has the

responsibility to provide fall protection or fall restraint systems on pitched roofs.
Again, we disagree. King notes that his defense rested upon his claim that Begis
was responsible for his own injury because Begis failed to take the precautions

required of a general contractor. Instruction 14 allowed King to argue this theory:

"A general contractor at a construction site has a duty to comply with Washington
NO. 67502-8-1 / 7

State Safety Regulations in its oversight of all employees, not just its own

employees."    The court reasoned, "I have given the instruction that is broad

enough that it allows the defense to argue that the general contractor does have

a duty. I think to go beyond that would be overstating the case." We agree.

      King also appeals the court's refusal to give his proposed instruction about

an employer's duties on the job site.          His proposed defense instruction 11

restated WAC 296-155-040:

      (1) Each employer shall furnish to each employee a place of
      employment free from recognized hazards that are causing or likely
      to   cause    serious   injury   or   death     to   employees.

      (2) Every employer shall require safety devices, furnish safeguards,
      and shall adopt and use practices, methods, operations, and
      processes which are reasonably adequate to render such
      employment and place of employment safe. Every employer shall
      do everything reasonably necessary to protect the life and safety of
      employees.

      (3) No employer shall require any employee to go or be in any
      employment or place of employment which is hazardous to the
      employee.

      (4) No employer shall fail or neglect:

              (a) To provide and use safety devices and safeguards.

           (b) To adopt and use methods and processes reasonably
      adequate to render the employment and place of employment safe.

              (c) To do everything reasonably necessary to protect the life
      and safety of employees.

      (5) No employer, owner, or lessee of any real property shall
      construct or cause to be constructed any place of employment that
      is hazardous to the employee.
NO. 67502-8-1 / 8

King argues that without this instruction, he was unable to present his theory of

the case. He contends that instruction 14 concerning a general contractor's duty

does not sufficiently address Begis's required duty of care as an employer.

However, in colloquy with the judge regarding the jury instructions, King

acknowledged that the other instructions described Begis's work-site duties

imposed by regulation and that he could argue Begis's negligence even without

his preferred instruction. Given this concession, we find no error.

                                    Conclusion

       Because the jury instructions as given properly stated the applicable law

and allowed each party to argue its theories of the case and because the court

did not abuse its discretion by refusing to give a redundant instruction, we affirm.

                                                    6.J               e-J
WE CONCUR:

                                                         -V       J.

                                        -8-