Lead Opinion
— In this appeal the basic issue is the inter
Belden & Thompson, Inc. (hereinafter Belden), a masonry contractor, was awarded a subcontract by the prime or general contractor, Strom Construction Company (hereinafter Strom), to furnish masonry work and materials in the construction of the Tacoma Labor Center Building. The general contract cost was $976,000 of which Belden’s subcontract represented $46,436. During construction, Frank Jones, one of Belden’s emplоyees, was injured when the flooring on which he was working collapsed due to lack of shoring beneath. Strom was responsible for determining whether or not to shore the floor and for the installation of any shoring. Strom’s foreman chose not to shore.
Jones sued Strom and Layrite Concrete Products of Seattle, Inc. (hereinafter Layrite), another subcontractor. Strom, as a third-party plaintiff, then instituted a third-party action against Belden for indemnification under an indemnity clause of the subcontract. On the morning of trial, Strom and Layrite settled with Jones. Strom’s contribution toward the settlement was $14,500. Trial then рroceeded before a jury on the third-party claim. At the conclusion of the evidence, the trial court granted Strom’s motion for a directed verdict on the issue of indemnification. In reaching this conclusion, the trial court considered the evidence in a light most favorable to Belden and most strongly against Strom, thereby holding the sole cause of Jones’ injuries to be the lack of shoring under the floor upon which he had been working. The trial court, then, relying upon Tucci & Sons, Inc. v. Carl T. Madsen, Inc.,
In the process of reaching its ruling, the trial court held
Belden essentially assigns error to the trial court’s liberal construction of the indemnity clause in question.
In Felton v. Menan Starch Co.,
Moreover, and specifically with respect to indemnity provisions, it is to be noted that: (a) clauses which purport to exculpate an indemnitee from liability for losses flowing solely from his own acts or omissions are not favored and are to be clearly drawn and strictly construed, with any doubts therein to be settled in favor of the indemnitor; (b)
With the foregoing principles in mind, we turn to the indemnity clause here in issue. That clause, one of 16 provisions printed on the back of a standard form contract, states that Belden, as a subcontractor, agrees:
To indemnify and save harmless the Contractor from and against any and all suits, claims, actions, lоsses, costs, penalties, and damages, of whatsoever kind or nature, including attorney’s fees, arising out of, in connection with, or incident to the Subcontractor’s performance of this Subcontract.
At first blush, the clause appears to be broad and sweeping in its language and coverage. Nevertheless, on closer reading and analysis it ties the losses, which it saves Strom harmless from, to claims “arising out of,” “in connection with,” or “incident to” Belden’s “performance” of the subcontract. It makes no mention of or reference to Strom’s “performance” of the primary contrаct. It is, therefore, Belden’s performance of the subcontract, and losses “arising” from, connected with, or incidental to that performance, which forms the keystone on which indemnity turns. Thus, it is clear that unless an overt act or omission on the part of Belden in its performance of the subcоntract in some way caused or concurred
Furthermore, and in keeping with the principles of construction above alluded to, it does not appear reasonable or in keeping with the overall purpose and intent of the subcontract, to isolate and read the indemnity clause in such a fashion as to virtually cast Belden into the role of an insurer of Strom’s perfоrmance of its separate and nondelegated primary contractual obligations. Certainly, it could not have been the intent of the parties in executing a subcontract, which represented only approximately l/20th of the overall contract price for the projeсt, to constitute Belden an indemnitor of Strom as against any and all losses or damages occurring to Belden or its employees as a direct and sole result of Strom’s, or another of its subcontractor’s, negligence in the performance of duties not delegated to Belden. Such an interрretation does not appear to us to square with a realistic effort on the part of the parties to logically allocate as between them the risk of loss arising out of the construction project and the subcontract in question. In any event, the indemnity clause in issue is not wholly free of ambiguity and, since Strom ostensibly provided and/or required the subcontract form embracing the instant indemnity clause, the doubt created by the ambiguity should be resolved against it.
It is for these reasons that we reverse the judgment of the trial court and remand the cause for retrial.
Insofar as Tucci & Sons, Inc. v. Carl T. Madsen, Inc., supra, and Griffiths v. Henry Broderick, Inc.,
One final and incidental issue remains for resolution. In entering judgment against Belden under the indemnity clause, the trial court awarded Strom attorneys’ fees in the amount of $3,325 incurred in the defense of the action instituted by Jones, and $2,500 resulting from prosecution of Strom’s third-party сlaim against Belden on the indemnity provision. In an earlier case, we authorized an award of attorneys’ fees for the defense of a claim indemnified against. Abrahamson v. Burnett,
The cause is remanded for new trial. Costs will abide the result.
Hunter, Wright, Utter, and Brachtenbach, JJ., and Langsdorf, J. Pro Tern., concur.
Notes
“A covenant, promise, agreement or understanding in, or in connection with or collateral to, a contract or agreement relative to the construction, alteration, repair, addition to, subtraction from, improvement to, or maintenance of, any building, highway, road, railroad, excavation, or other structure, project, development, or improvement attached to real estate, including moving and demolition in connection therewith, purpоrting to indemnify against liability for damages arising out of bodily injury to persons or damage to property caused by or resulting from the sole negligence of the indemnitee, his agents or employees is against public policy and is void and unenforceable.” RCW 4.24.115.
Union Pac. R.R. v. Ross Transfer Co.,
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring in part; dissenting in part) — I concur with thе majority’s disposition of attorneys’ fees. I dissent from the interpretation and disposition of the indemnity contract.
First, Belden asserted it was not bound by the contract of indemnity because the agreement ran counter to RCW 4.24.115. The trial court rejected that contention, declaring
The trial court’s refusаl to apply RCW 4.24.115 is bottomed on a specific holding that the statute is unconstitutional, thus, denying Belden its claimed statutory protection. Belden has not assigned error to, argued, or otherwise challenged the ruling. That being the case, we should not consider the unchallenged ruling further. ROA 1-43; Hockley v. Hargitt,
Second, аs the majority points out, the indemnity clause in the contract requires the subcontractor, Belden, to indemnify the contractor, Strom,
from and against any and all suits, claims, actions, losses, costs, penalties, and damages, of whatsoever kind or nature, including attorney’s fees, arising out of, in connection with, or incident to the Subcontractor’s performance of this Subcontract.
It is the majority’s view that the indemnitor’s action must “cause” or be a “participating cause” of the loss involved. I disagree. Neither the words nor the idea is embodied in the contract.
Further, the majority adds that Belden’s mеre presence on the jobsite, inculpably performing its specified contrac
In Tucci & Sons, Inc. v. Carl T. Madsen, Inc., 1 Wn. App. 1035,
As we view this indemnity clause, it would be most difficult to assemble words which describe a more comprehensive and all-inclusive intent by the indemnitor to indemnify the indemnitee for all losses suffered by the indemnitee, “of whatsoever kind or nature,” so long as they had some cоnnection with the indemnitor’s performance of the subcontract.
The majority would require “an overt act or omission on the part of Belden in its performance of the subcontract” which caused or concurred in causing the loss involved. Yet, the provision requires only a loss “arising out of, in сonnection with, or incident to the Subcontractor’s performance of this Subcontract.”
Since Belden agrees that its employee’s presence on the construction site was a cause-in-fact of the accident, it does violence to the clear contractual intеnt of the parties to
Without question, the parties did not contract for a lawsuit to determine the question of negligence. Rather, they utilized an indemnity agreement, the terms and effect of which were well known to the area contractors, as a means of assigning the risk of third-party liability claims. This is not unique. In construing an indemnification agreement which contained the requirement that the loss occur “in connection with” the subcontractor’s performance of his subcontract, the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals said in Alamo Lumber Co. v. Warren Petroleum Corp.,
Here, however, Alamo had contracted to install cabinets, and when the two men were overcome by gas they were admittedly installing the cabinets near the uncapped pipe. Since the only requirement for indemnity is that the employee’s injury have some connection with Alamo’s work, Warren is entitlеd to recovery over against Alamo.
Words used in a contract must be given their usual and ordinary meaning. Honeywell, Inc. v. Babcock,
I would affirm that portion of the trial court’s judgment dealing with the indemnification agreement.
Finley and Rosellini, JJ., concur with Stafford, J.
