Thorabelle I. FOLSOM, the Personal Representative of the Estate of Robert T. Folsom, Petitioner,
v.
BURGER KING; Burger King of Spokane, Respondents,
Hatter Investments, Inc., Ed Hatter and Jane Doe Hatter, husband and wife, Respondents,
Spokane Security System, Inc., Respondent,
Robert W. Hanley and Jane Doe Hanley, husband and wife; and John Does I-V and Jane Does I-V, Defendants.
Dianna J. HARTVIGSEN, the Personal Representative of the Estate of Dawnya Michelle Calbreath, Petitioner,
v.
BURGER KING; Burger King Of Spokane, Respondents,
Hatter Investments, Inc., Ed Hatter and Jane Doe Hatter, husband and wife, Respondents,
Spokane Security System, Inc., Respondent,
Robert W. Hanley and Jane Doe Hanley, husband and wife; and John Does I-V and Jane Does I-V, Defendants.
Supreme Court of Washington, En Banc.
*303 Bryan Harnetiaux, Harbaugh & Bloom, Gary Bloom, Spokane, for Amicus Washington State Trial Lawyers Association.
Mark Vovos, Debra Stephens, Spokane, Moore & Royal, John Moore, Yakima, for Petitioners Folsom, et al.
Reed McClure, Pamela Okano, Seattle, Feltman, Gebhardt, Eymann & Jones, P.S., *304 Richard Feltman, Robert Greer, Spokane, for Hatter Investments, Inc., et al.
Ernest Greco, Mary Parry, Spokane, for Respondent Burger King.
Chase, Hayes & Kalamon, Richard Hayes, Gerald Kobluk, Spokane, for Spokane Security System, Inc.
*302 JOHNSON, Justice.
On May 17, 1992, Blake Pirtle entered a Spokane, Washington Burger King through the back door entrance and murdered employees Dawnya Calbreath and Robert Tod Folsom during a robbery. Pirtle was convicted on two counts of aggravated first degree murder. State v. Pirtle,
The suit against Hatter, Inc. was based on two theories: (1) the acts of Hatter, Inc. were "deliberately intended" to cause injury to the employees such that the employer's immunity under the Industrial Insurance Act is removed and (2) Hatter, Inc. had a separate and distinct persona as landowner. Against Burger King, plaintiffs based their theory of liability on Burger King's retained control over the operation of the franchised restaurant. Finally, the plaintiffs suit against Spokane Security was based on negligence.
All defendants brought motions for summary judgment. Burger King and Spokane Security argued they owed the employees no duty of care. Hatter, Inc. claimed immunity under the Industrial Insurance Act (IIA), RCW Title 51. The trial court granted summary judgment to defendants Burger King and Spokane Security. The trial court granted Hatter, Inc.'s motion for summary judgment on plaintiffs' "dual persona" theory of liability, but found sufficient facts to deny summary judgment on the "deliberate injury" exception to employer immunity. Both Hatter, Inc. and plaintiffs moved for discretionary review, which was granted. We reverse the trial court on the plaintiffs' deliberate intention claim against Hatter, Inc., and affirm the trial court on all other claims.
Due to the separate nature of each claim, we will provide additional facts as we discuss each issue.
ANALYSIS
Before reaching the merits of the parties substantive arguments, we must resolve plaintiffs' procedural issue. The trial court struck portions of an expert witness's affidavit relating to the duty of care or the standard of care in the fast food industry. Specifically, the trial court struck expert opinion that Spokane Security had a duty to remove its equipment after termination of its monitoring contract, and that the failure to do so fell below the standard of care in the security services industry. The trial court also struck expert opinion establishing the reasonable care required of a franchisor with respect to security at a franchised restaurant. The trial court excluded this evidence, concluding parts were legal conclusions, mixed statements of law and fact, invasion of the province of the jury, or opinions lacking proper foundation. The plaintiffs assign error to the trial court's decision and ask us to review the entire record, including those redacted portions, under the de novo standard of review.
Summary judgment is properly granted when the pleadings, affidavits, depositions, and admissions on file demonstrate there is no genuine issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. CR 56(c). Hutchins v. 1001 Fourth Ave. Assocs.,
An appellate court would not be properly accomplishing its charge if the appellate court did not examine all the evidence presented to the trial court, including evidence that had been redacted. The de novo standard of review is used by an appellate court when reviewing all trial court rulings made in conjunction with a summary judgment motion. This standard of review is consistent with the requirement that evidence and inferences are viewed in favor of the nonmoving party, Lamon,
We examined the expert's affidavits regarding the ability of police to respond to a telephone call to the sheriff's office and regarding the duties of the defendants to meet certain security standards. However, we agree with the trial court and affirm the decision to exclude portions of the expert testimony.
Employer Immunity
The trial court found there were genuine issues of material fact regarding the plaintiffs' "deliberate intention" theory under RCW 51.24.020 and, accordingly, denied summary judgment to the employer, Hatter, Inc.
Hatter, Inc. is an Idaho corporation whose only business is to manage and operate Burger King restaurants in the Spokane and northern Idaho area. Edwin Hatter is the sole shareholder of the voting common stock of Hatter, Inc., and both Edwin and Michaele Hatter are employees of Hatter, Inc. Hatter, Inc. employed employees Calbreath and Folsom and, until he was fired, Blake Pirtle. Plaintiffs have presented facts indicating Hatter, Inc. was aware of Blake Pirtle's criminal history and of the security risks the restaurant presented.
Generally, the IIA allows injured workers to receive speedy, no-fault compensation for injuries sustained on the job, and employers are given immunity from civil suits by employees. RCW 51.04.010. An exception to the immunity granted to employers exists where an employer deliberately injures an employee. RCW 51.24.020 reads:
If injury results to a worker from the deliberate intention of his or her employer to produce such injury, the worker or beneficiary of the worker shall have the privilege to take under this title and also have cause of action against the employer as if this title had not been enacted, for any damages in excess of compensation and benefits paid or payable under this title.
Washington courts have required a specific intent to injure in order to sustain a claim under RCW 51.24.020. Nielson v. Wolfkill Corp.,
Hatter, Inc. recognizes that under RCW 51.24.020 an employee may sue the employer "for all injuries resulting from the `deliberate intention of [his or her] employer to produce such injury,'" Foster v. Allsop Automatic, Inc.,
The trial court judge acknowledged this court's holding in Birklid v. Boeing Co.,
In addressing this statutory exception, Washington courts have interpreted the exception narrowly and have found "deliberate intention" typically when there is a physical assault by one worker against another. Birklid,
We analyzed RCW 51.24.020 in Birklid and concluded the language was broader than prior cases had established. We supported our analysis by observing that our prior case law had almost read the exception out of existence and an extremely narrow interpretation of the statute was not supported by the language of the statute. Birklid,
Applying Birklid's analysis of the "deliberate intention" requirement, we find the trial court erred in denying defendant Hatter, Inc.'s motion for summary judgment. In this case, the evidence viewed in the light most favorable to plaintiffs suggests that Hatter, Inc. may have known of Blake Pirtle's criminal history, of his sexual harassment of female co-workers, that the back door entrance did not have a security peephole and did not lock properly, that keeping cash in the restaurant may invite theft, and that there was no active security system. However negligent these acts might be, the statutory exception to employer immunity as discussed in Birklid requires more. No factual allegations are made and plaintiffs cannot establish that Hatter, Inc. had actual *307 knowledge injury was certain to occur or that Hatter, Inc. intended the murders of its employees to result from the brutal act of another. Under RCW 51.24.020, an employer must have knowledge an injury is certain to occur and willfully disregards that knowledge. The plaintiffs' proffered evidence does not meet this test. Essentially, plaintiffs cannot show that by operating the business in the way Hatter, Inc. did, Hatter, Inc. knew its employees would be killed. Without such a showing, employer immunity applies. Accordingly, we reverse the trial court on this issue and grant Hatter, Inc.'s motion for summary judgment.
Dual Persona
Plaintiffs allege Hatter, Inc. owed a duty to the employees in its persona as a lessee and occupier of land, and allege this duty is distinct from that owed as an employer. Under the "dual persona" theory, liability attaches if Hatter, Inc.'s "landowner status" can be found to be an entirely separate entity which creates separate liabilities from that of employer.
Hatter, Inc.'s business involves the operation of Burger King restaurants. Edwin Hatter, an employee of Hatter, Inc., is involved in the general management, the supervision of daily operations, the marketing, and the financial decisions of the restaurants. Plaintiffs allege Hatter, Inc. and Edwin Hatter have additional legal status as the landholders of several restaurant premises. Plaintiffs allege this landowner status gives rise to the obligation of maintaining the premises which was not, according to plaintiffs, passed on to Hatter, Inc. through an assignment of rights.
The "dual persona" theory is explained:
An employer may become a third person, vulnerable to tort suit by an employee, ifand only ifhe possesses a second persona so completely independent from and unrelated to his status as employer that by established standards the law recognizes it as a separate legal person.
2A Arthur Larson, The Law of Workmen's Compensation § 72.81 (1984). Plaintiffs must establish that the second function generates obligations distinct from those related to the employment activity. Corr v. Willamette Indus., Inc.,
The "dual persona" theory may apply when the employer occupies the property upon which the injury took place. See Evans v. Thompson,
In Evans v. Thompson,
The plaintiffs show that in 1991, Burger King granted Edwin Hatter the franchise. Edwin Hatter immediately assigned his interests as a lessee and franchisee to Hatter, Inc. Burger King permitted Edwin Hatter's assignment of the franchise to Hatter, Inc. because Hatter, Inc.'s sole business was directly related to the ownership and operation *308 of Burger King restaurants, 100 percent of the voting common stock was owned by the franchisee, and the ownership and transfer of the corporation's stock was subject to the franchise agreement.
Under the terms of the franchise agreement and of the lease agreement, Hatter, Inc. was required to operate a Burger King restaurant on the premises. The franchise agreement for the restaurant in question was site specific and provided in pertinent part:
BKC [Burger King Corp.] grants to FRANCHISEE and FRANCHISEE accepts a franchise ... to use the Burger King System and the Burger King Marks only in the operation of a Burger King Restaurant ("Franchised Restaurant") at North 2120 Argonne Road, Spokane, WA 99206.... FRANCHISEE agrees to operate the Franchised Restaurant at the specified location for the entire nine (9) year Term.... This franchise is for the specified location only....
Clerk's Papers at 1499.
The site at which FRANCHISEE shall operate the Franchised Restaurant is more fully described in Exhibit "A." During the Term of this Agreement the site shall be used exclusively for the purpose of operating a franchised Burger King Restaurant.
Clerk's Papers at 1484. Further, the lease agreement for the property contained a provision consistent with the franchise agreement. "Lessee will operate a Burger King Restaurant on the Demised Premises and the Demised Premises will be used for no other purpose." Clerk's Papers at 621. Unlike the defendants in Evans, neither Hatter, Inc. nor Edwin Hatter acquired a right to use the property for any individual purpose unrelated to the operation of a Burger King restaurant. Due to the express limits placed on Hatter, Inc. and Edwin Hatter by these contracts, plaintiffs have not shown either party's persona as land occupier is distinct and totally separate from its persona as employer.
The trial court correctly granted Hatter, Inc.'s and Edwin Hatter's motion for summary judgment. We affirm. The doctrine of "dual persona" cannot be applied to the facts of this case in order to circumvent the exclusive remedy of the IIA and to create potential liability for either of these parties.
Franchisor
Plaintiffs allege a factual question remains concerning the amount of control Burger King retained over the internal operations of the franchised restaurant which prevented summary judgment. Plaintiffs assert Burger King retained the right to control and supervise the franchised restaurant and, thus, owed a duty to exercise reasonable care in so doing.
Under this theory, the extent of control is the critical inquiry. Plaintiffs established that Burger King extended franchise rights to Hatter in 1991. Burger King's relationship with Hatter is one of franchisor/franchisee and is governed by franchise and lease agreements. The franchise agreement expressly states that a franchisee is an independent contractor and no fiduciary relationship between the parties exists. Despite this, the franchise agreement details certain standards which are established by Burger King for the operation of a restaurant by a franchisee. Many of the procedures and standards for operation and management of a restaurant are stated in Burger King's manual of operating data. These are guidelines for the operation of all Burger King restaurants. Under the franchise contract, the franchisee must adhere to the guidelines or risk termination of the contract.
The trial court granted Burger King's summary judgment motion finding, as a matter of law, that as a franchisor Burger King owed no duty of care to the employees. In order to establish actionable negligence, a plaintiff must establish: (1) the existence of a duty owed to the complaining party; (2) a breach of the duty; (3) resulting injury; and (4) that the breach was the proximate cause of the injury. Hansen v. Friend,
We have not addressed the issue of whether a duty of care is owed by a franchisor to the employee of a franchisee. Other jurisdictions that have examined this question have generally concluded no duty of care exists. In Hoffnagle v. McDonald's Corp.,
The Hoffnagle court held where the franchisee has the power to control the day-to-day operations, and where the franchisee owns the business equipment, operates the business, holds the operating licenses and permits, determines the wages, provides for the basic training and insurance for the franchisee's employees, and hires, fires, supervises, and disciplines the employees, no duty is created. Hoffnagle,
This approach is applied in other jurisdictions confronted with similar factual situations. See Coty v. United States Slicing Mach. Co.,
In this case, plaintiffs have not established that Burger King retained sufficient control to expose it to liability. In order to retain sufficient control, a franchisor must retain the ability to make decisions concerning the daily operation of the franchised restaurant. The franchise agreement between Burger King and franchisee expressly states that a franchisee is an independent contractor and that Burger King has no control over the terms and conditions of the franchisee's employees. Further, plaintiffs have not shown Burger King retained control over the security of the franchise restaurant. Burger King's authority over the franchise was limited to enforcing and maintaining the uniformity of the Burger King system. We hold, in this case, that plaintiffs have not established or presented facts supporting the theory that the franchisor Burger King owed any duty of care to the employees of the franchisee.
Duty to Rescue
Plaintiffs claim a "special relationship" arose between employees and Spokane Security under the voluntary rescue doctrine. To support this theory, plaintiffs allege that until June 30, 1991, Spokane Security had contracted with the former operator of the *310 restaurant to provide and maintain a security alarm system for the restaurant. On June 30, 1991, Edwin Hatter, the new franchise owner, terminated the contract. Although Spokane Security closed the account, the security alarm equipment was not removed because Spokane Security "didn't get around to it." Clerk's Papers at 1103. The security system included a button in the freezer, which the employees activated during the robbery. Since the security system remained, Spokane Security received a signal from the alarm and telephoned the restaurant, but found the telephone number disconnected. After determining the account was closed and was labeled "disregard signals," the Spokane Security employee took no further action. Throughout this sequence of events, plaintiffs allege three Washington State Patrol troopers were having coffee at a restaurant across the street. Further, they had their radio scanners on and were prepared to respond to dispatch calls. Plaintiffs argue if the troopers had been dispatched, the murders would have been prevented.
Plaintiffs allege a "special relationship" between Spokane Security and the employees arose out of the contract to provide security and the voluntary act of failing to remove the security equipment. Plaintiffs argue this "special relationship" created the duty of Spokane Security to rescue or attempt to rescue the employees. The trial court granted summary judgment to Spokane Security. Finding no "special relationship" between the plaintiffs and Spokane Security, the trial court determined Spokane Security owed no duty of care to the employees. We affirm the trial court; plaintiffs attempted to weave two theories of tort law together in an effort to impose potential liability on Spokane Security.
Under traditional tort law, absent affirmative conduct or a special relationship, no legal duty to come to the aid of a stranger exists. W. Page Keeton et al., Prosser and Keeton on the Law of Torts § 56 (5th ed.1984). Further, a private person does not have the duty to protect others from criminal acts of third parties. Hutchins v. 1001 Fourth Ave. Assocs.,
Plaintiffs allege a "special relationship" existed between Spokane Security and the employees, but fail to explain which exception applies. Spokane Security contracted to provide security monitoring for the Burger King restaurant; however, the contract was terminated by Hatter, Inc. 10 months prior to the murders. While the facts indicate the equipment remained in place and was functional, Spokane Security was not contractually obligated to provide security services and plaintiffs have not established there was a legally recognized or established special relationship with the employees. Absent facts to support this theory, plaintiffs' argument fails.
An additional exception to the traditional "no duty to rescue" rule may arise if a defendant takes steps to assist a person in need and acts negligently in rendering that assistance. This duty is not based on a previously established relationship as described above; rather, the duty arises when one party voluntarily begins to assist an individual needing help. Plaintiffs argue Spokane Security voluntarily agreed to render aid when Spokane Security failed to remove the security system. In this case, we must determine whether Spokane Security had a duty to protect the employees under the voluntary rescue doctrine.
*311 The Restatement (Second) of Torts § 324A (1965) states:
One who undertakes, gratuitously or for consideration, to render services to another which he should recognize as necessary for the protection of a third person or his things, is subject to liability to the third person for physical harm resulting from his failure to exercise reasonable care to protect his undertaking, if
(a) his failure to exercise reasonable care increases the risk of such harm, or
(b) he has undertaken to perform a duty owed by the other to the third person, or
(c) the harm is suffered because of reliance of the other or the third person upon the undertaking.
Typically, liability for attempting a voluntary rescue has been found when the defendant makes the plaintiff's situation worse by: (1) increasing the danger; (2) misleading the plaintiff into believing the danger had been removed; or (3) depriving the plaintiff of the possibility of help from other sources. W. Page Keeton et al., Prosser and Keeton on the Law of Torts § 56 (5th ed.1984).
Although Washington has not adopted section 324 of the Restatement, Webstad,
In this case, plaintiffs have failed to establish that the voluntary rescue doctrine applies. The duty to rescue arises when a rescuer knows a danger is present and takes steps to aid an individual in need. French v. Chase,
The plaintiffs have not presented any facts showing Spokane Security knew the tragic events would take place or that Spokane Security negligently withdrew from rescuing once the employees were in danger. Spokane Security did not undertake the duty to aid the employees by failing to remove the security system because the danger was not imminent and the threat of harm was not present. In this case, we decline to adopt a rule where the failure to remove the security system creates an ongoing duty to rescue employees from unknown dangers. Further, the failure of Spokane Security to telephone emergency services does not invoke the voluntary rescue doctrine because the failure to *312 call was not an affirmative act creating the harm, making the situation worse, or inducing reliance.
We affirm the trial court. Applying the facts of this case to traditional tort theories, plaintiffs have not shown that Spokane Security had a duty to assist the employees. Spokane Security's inaction did not create the danger to the employees, there was no special relationship between Spokane Security and the employees, and the voluntary rescue doctrine is not so broad as to cover the facts of this case.
CONCLUSION
Reversed in part, affirmed in part.
DOLLIVER, SMITH, GUY, MADSEN, ALEXANDER, TALMADGE and SANDERS, JJ., concur.
NOTES
Notes
[1] Restatement (Second) of Torts §§ 314A and 314B (1965) identify five relationships that give rise to an affirmative duty to act: (1) common carrier to passengers; (2) innkeeper to guests; (3) possessor of land open to public to visitors; (4) individuals voluntarily controlling another such that opportunities for protection are removed; and (5) employers to employees acting within the scope of employment.
