IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
TERRY CRAWFORD, individually; No. 85227-2-I
TERRY CRAWFORD and SUSAN
CRAWFORD, husband and wife and DIVISION ONE
the marital community comprised
thereof,
Appellants,
v.
NW HOME IMPROVEMENT AND
REPAIR, a Washington Corporation, UNPUBLISHED OPINION
Respondent,
OLYMPIC SKYLINE ASSOCIATION
OF APARTMENT OWNERS, a
Washington Nonprofit Corporation; and
TARGA REAL ESTATE SERVICES, a
Washington Corporation,
Defendants.
BOWMAN, J. — Terry and Susan Crawford (collectively Crawford) appeal a
summary judgment order dismissing their personal injury claims against
Northwest Home Improvement and Repair Inc. (NW Home). Crawford argues
that the trial court erred by determining their claims are time barred because the
complaint did not describe NW Home with “reasonable particularity” to toll the
statute of limitations. We reverse and remand for further proceedings.
FACTS
In February 2017, NW Home contracted with Targa Real Estate Services
Inc., an agent of Olympic Skyline Association of Apartment Owners (Olympic
No. 85227-2-I/2
Ass’n), to remove and replace two mailbox kiosks at the Olympic Skyline
Condominiums (Olympic Condos). On June 8, 2017, NW Home’s owner Robert
Kukay and several employees arrived at Olympic Condos to complete the work.
Terry,1 a United States Postal Service employee, arrived a few minutes later.
Terry briefly spoke to the NW Home employees and then began removing the
mailboxes’ locks. One of the locks jammed, and Terry began to pull on it. The
mailbox kiosk fell on top of him and pinned him against his mail truck. Terry
called for help and several men lifted the kiosk off him.
Soon after, Crawford hired an attorney. On July 14, 2017, a case
manager at the attorney’s law firm called a representative of Olympic Condos,
asking for information about the accident. The representative told the case
manager he “did not know anything about this incident and refused to disclose
any further details.”
On April 28, 2020, Crawford sued and timely served Olympic Ass’n. The
complaint also named as defendants “Doe Corporations” I and II. The complaint
described the incident and how it occurred. It alleged that Doe Corporation II is
“the Contractor hired by Defendant OLYMPIC [ASS’N] and/or Defendant DOE
CORPORATION I, to conduct maintenance, repairs and/or construction work at
the common property of Olympic [Condos],” and that Olympic Ass’n is obligated
“to monitor and maintain the condition and integrity of the roadways, sidewalks
and structures contained within, including all cluster mailboxes.” Crawford
sought personal injury and loss of consortium damages.
1
We refer to Terry Crawford by his first name when necessary for clarity.
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Crawford served their first set of interrogatories and requests for
production with the complaint, asking Olympic Ass’n “whether, on the date of the
subject incident you retained a third party to conduct maintenance, repairs and/or
construction work at the subject property commonly known as Olympic
[Condos].” In August 2020, Olympic Ass’n answered that “[a] contractor from
NW Home Improvement and Repair, Inc. was on site to replace the mailboxes”
and provided Kukay’s name and contact information. So, on December 2, 2020,
“given the anticipated joinder of an additional defendant,” Crawford and Olympic
Ass’n jointly moved to continue the trial date for eight months, which the trial
court granted. Then, on December 22, 2020, Crawford’s attorney sent a certified
letter to NW Home at Kukay’s attention, informing him of the lawsuit, providing a
copy of the complaint, and expressing their intention to add NW Home as a
defendant.
On January 7, 2021, Crawford moved under CR 10(a)(2) to amend their
complaint to name Targa for Doe Corporation I and NW Home for Doe
Corporation II. The court denied the motion without prejudice because Crawford
failed to provide proof of service to the attorney for Olympic Ass’n. Crawford
renewed their motion on March 12, 2021, and the court granted it on March 26.
Crawford filed their amended complaint on April 20, 2021.
On March 31, 2022, NW Home moved for summary judgment, arguing
that Crawford did not timely assert their claims under RCW 4.16.080 and .170
and “Washington case law” because Crawford did not “identify [NW Home] with
reasonable particularity” to toll the three-year statute of limitations, which expired
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on June 8, 2020. On May 5, 2022, the trial court granted NW Home’s motion and
dismissed Crawford’s claims against it.
Crawford appeals.2
ANALYSIS
Crawford argues the trial court erred by dismissing their claims against
NW Home as time-barred. We agree.
We review orders on summary judgment de novo, engaging in the same
inquiry as the trial court. Kim v. Lakeside Adult Fam. Home, 185 Wn.2d 532,
547, 374 P.3d 121 (2016). “Summary judgment is appropriate only if there is no
genuine issue as to any material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment
as a matter of law.” Rublee v. Carrier Corp., 192 Wn.2d 190, 198, 428 P.3d 1207
(2018); CR 56(c). We consider facts and inferences in a light most favorable to
the nonmoving party. Id. at 199.
Under RCW 4.16.170, service on one of two or more codefendants tolls
the statutes of limitations as to unserved defendants. Sidis v. Brodie/Dohrmann,
Inc., 117 Wn.2d 325, 329, 815 P.2d 781 (1991). In some cases, “if identified with
reasonable particularity, ‘John Doe’ defendants may be appropriately ‘named’ ”
for purposes of RCW 4.16.170. Id. at 331.
In Powers v. W.B. Mobile Services, Inc., 182 Wn.2d 159, 164, 339 P.3d
173 (2014), our Supreme Court had occasion to “build on” its holding in Sidis. It
explained that for a plaintiff to show that an unnamed defendant is identified with
2
Olympic Ass’n and Targa are not parties to this appeal.
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“reasonable particularity,” the plaintiff must show that
(1)(a) from the commencement of the statute of limitations, the
plaintiff made a diligent effort to identify the actual defendant given
the information reasonably available to the plaintiff and (b) the
plaintiff provided information about the unnamed defendant in the
complaint to the greatest extent possible, including describing the
unnamed defendant’s acts and appearance and (2) the defendant
had or should have received such notice of the action that it will not
be prejudiced in maintaining a defense on the merits at the time
when the placeholder for the defendant, such as “John Doe” or
“ABC Corporation,” is replaced with the defendant’s actual name.
Id. at 164-65. The first prong is satisfied only when the plaintiff shows it made a
“reasonable effort to identify an unnamed defendant and that actually naming the
defendant was unreasonably difficult given the information available.” Id. at 165.
In Powers, the plaintiff was injured while working at a residential
construction site when a handicap access ramp platform collapsed. 182 Wn.2d
at 161-62. Powers “ ‘tried to find out exactly who put the ramp together,’ ”
including asking his employer, but his attempts failed. Id. at 162. Three years
later and a few days before the statute of limitations ran, Powers timely sued
Premier Communities Inc., the owner of the residential property, and Pacific
Mobile Structures Inc., the contractor Premier hired to supply the ramp. Id. at
161-62. Because Powers could not identify the entity that built the ramp, he
named “John Doe One” as the “ ‘builder of the handicap access ramp where the
incident occurred.’ ” Id. at 162.
Two months after Powers filed his lawsuit, Premier sent a copy of the
complaint to the builder of the access ramp but did not disclose the builder’s
identify to Powers. Powers, 182 Wn.2d at 162. Over a year after filing his
complaint, Powers obtained a discovery response from Pacific identifying W.B.
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Mobile Services Inc. as the builder and installer of the ramp. Id. at 163. Four
months later, Powers moved to amend his complaint to replace John Doe One
with W.B. Mobile. Id. W.B. Mobile then moved to dismiss the claim as time-
barred, which the trial court granted. Id.
Division Two determined Powers timely moved to amend the complaint
under RCW 4.16.170 and reversed and remanded to the trial court. Powers v.
WB Mobile Servs., Inc., 177 Wn. App. 208, 215, 311 P.3d 58 (2013). The
Supreme Court affirmed Division Two. Powers, 182 Wn.2d at 167. It held that
Powers identified W.B. Mobile with “reasonable particularity” to toll the statute of
limitations because he “ ‘tried to find out exactly who put the ramp together’ ” and
provided information about W.B. Mobile in his complaint “to the greatest extent
possible.” Id. at 166. It noted that “actually naming W.B. Mobile in his complaint
was unreasonably difficult given the information available because Power’s
attempts to ascertain the identity of W.B. Mobile were stymied by inaccurate
information from his employer and the lack of an available record showing who
installed the ramp.” Id. And W.B. Mobile could not show prejudice because it
received a copy of the complaint from Pacific within 90 days of the time Powers
filed his complaint. Id. at 167. As a result, W.B. Mobile received timely notice of
Power’s claim and suffered no prejudice in maintaining its defense on the merits.
Id.
Like the plaintiff in Powers, the facts here when viewed in the light most
favorable to Crawford show that their complaint identified NW Home with
reasonable particularity. Crawford tried to identify the company replacing the
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mailboxes that fell on Terry. A month after the incident, a case manager at the
law firm representing Crawford called a representative at Olympic Condos to get
more information about the incident. But the representative told the case
manager that they “did not know anything about this incident and refused to
disclose any further details.” As a result, naming NW Home in Crawford’s
complaint was unreasonably difficult. So, Crawford described the unknown
defendant in their complaint to the greatest extent possible:
Defendant DOE CORPORATION II is the business hired by
Defendant OLYMPIC [ASS’N] and/or Defendant DOE
CORPORATION I to manage maintenance, repairs and/or
construction matters at the subject property on its behalf. As
Defendant OLYMPIC [ASS’N]’s and/or Defendant DOE
CORPORATION I’s designated maintenance, repair and/or
construction management entity, agent and/or representative,
Defendant DOE CORPORATION II also has the obligation to
monitor and maintain the condition and integrity of the roadways,
sidewalks and structures contained within, including all cluster
mailboxes.
Further, in April 2020, Crawford filed the complaint and their first set of
interrogatories and requests for production, asking for information about the
identity of Doe Corporation II. Olympic Ass’n responded and disclosed NW
Home’s identity on August 3, 2020. Then, on December 22, Crawford informed
NW Home of the lawsuit and provided it with a copy of the complaint. And in
January 2021, Crawford moved to amend the complaint to replace Doe
Corporation II with NW Home.
NW Home argues that Crawford did not act diligently to identify it as a
defendant. It suggests that Crawford could have asked the NW Home
employees who were on-site the day of the accident to identify their employer.
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But under Powers, a plaintiff must make a diligent effort to identify the actual
defendant given the information reasonably available to the plaintiff, which
Crawford did. Olympic Ass’n stymied Crawford’s attempt to learn NW Home’s
identity by refusing to discuss the case. And NW Home identifies no other
reasonably available source for the information. Its suggestion that Crawford,
immediately after allegedly sustaining an injury, should have questioned workers
on the scene about the various contractual relationships of the parties is
inherently unreasonable.
NW Home also argues that Crawford’s identification of NW Home in their
complaint is “inadequately vague” because NW Home did not have on ongoing
contract with Olympic Ass’n to provide maintenance, repairs, or construction. But
Crawford knew nothing about the business relationship between Olympic Ass’n
and NW Home. And Crawford’s complaint described Doe Corporation II as the
business that has “the obligation to monitor and maintain the condition and
integrity of . . . all cluster mailboxes.” That language, when read in context of the
entire complaint, adequately describes the defendant as the business
responsible to maintain the condition and integrity of the Olympic Condos cluster
mailboxes—the source of his injury on June 8, 2017.
Finally, citing an order on summary judgment in Engelstein v. United
States Department of Agriculture, No. C20-916 TSZ, 2022 WL 92981 (W.D.
Wash. Jan. 10, 2022), NW Home argues that the “substantial passage of time”
prejudiced it in its ability to defend against the lawsuit. In Engelstein, the
Western District held that a delay of nearly four years prejudiced a defendant to a
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bicycle personal injury lawsuit because “it did not know the identity of the
bicyclist, the type of bicycle, the bicyclist’s actions, or why the accident occurred.”
Id. at *3.
This case is different. Kukay and other NW Home employees were
present when the mailboxes injured Crawford. NW Home observed the mailbox
kiosk and was aware of its condition and how the incident occurred. Further,
Crawford amended their complaint just a few months after discovery began. And
in anticipation of that motion to amend, they sent NW Home a copy of their
complaint and moved to continue the trial date for eight months, which the trial
court granted. NW Home offers no compelling explanation of how the delayed
notice prejudiced their ability to maintain a defense.
Because Crawford timely served at least one named defendant and their
complaint described NW Home with reasonable particularity, the statute of
limitations was tolled as to NW Home. We reverse and remand for further
proceedings.
WE CONCUR:
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