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Firefighter Wins $13M from City After Massive Pole Shaft Fall
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Associated Press
October 23, 2009
SEATTLE – The city of Seattle must pay a former firefighter $12.75 million for debilitating injuries suffered when he fell 15 feet through a fire-station pole hole, a King County Superior Court jury decided on Thursday.
Mark Jones, 45, was on temporary assignment at Station 33, the city’s southernmost fire station, when he was injured trying to get to the restroom in the early hours of Dec. 23, 2003, according to court papers.
He’d awakened in the dark fire-station bunk room and entered the wrong door, falling 15 feet through an unguarded fire-pole hole to the concrete floor below. The door to the pole was just a few feet away from a similar door to the restroom, Jones said in court papers.
The jury’s decision followed a six-week trial in King County Superior Court Judge Susan Craighead’s courtroom in the King County Courthouse in Seattle.City officials say they have not yet decided whether to appeal.
The City Attorney’s Office said the award was about half what Jones, a South Snohomish County resident, had sought in his civil suit against the city. But it was more than double what the city had offered to try to settle the case out of court, said Suzanne Skinner, director of the civil division in the City Attorney’s Office.
One of Jones’ attorneys, Dick Kilpatrick, of Bellevue, said in a telephone interview there had been another fall at the same pole in the same station in the middle of the night in 1976.
Jones said in court papers that his injuries were the result of negligence on the part of the city and the Fire Department for failing to install a proper guard at or around the fire pole or the door that opened to it.
“I was knocked unconscious when I fell and suffered a head injury,” he said in court papers. “When I fell, I broke nine ribs on my right side, and fractured my pelvis in multiple places.”
Jones said he suffered fractures to five lower-back vertebrae and had lung, bladder and liver injuries.
Because of his injuries, Jones has not been able to return to work, Kilpatrick said. He tried working part time in office clerical jobs with the Fire Department, but even those were too difficult, Kilpatrick said.
Kilpatrick said Jones still suffers breathing difficulties, the result of complications of his lung injury, along with chronic pain, and he has not recovered from the head injury.
Jones will never be able to return to work of any kind, Kilpatrick said.
During the trial, the city of Seattle offered to settle the case for $4 million, plus $1 million the city had paid for Jones’ medical expenses and for litigation costs, totaling $5 million, the maximum amount of the city’s self-coverage, said City Attorney Tom Carr. That amount was rejected by Jones’ guardian, his twin sister Margie Jones, who is listed in 2008 city records as a Seattle firefighter.
Skinner said the city’s insurance carrier, AIG, would be responsible for the award amount above the city’s $5 million self-insurance.
Skinner said the city is considering an appeal. “We have to take a look and see if there are appealable issues,” she said.
“We’re satisfied with what the jury did,” Kilpatrick said.
BUKOWSKI
29 days ago
72 comments
I agree Common sense!!!
PokerFace208
about 1 month ago
72 comments
I can see the validity of a negligence claim... But I also agree with soakinwet - he should have been using a flashlight or something... Especially considering this was NOT his normally assigned station. When doing my rideouts with various places, I always used my cell phone to light my way in the dark. A little common sense sometimes goes a long way... and NOT necessarily a long way DOWN!
FireEMT74223
about 1 month ago
20 comments
I don't understand people. I agree, should have installed something after the first accident. Everyone sues to get rich these days. I understand he had severe injury, but $13M?? He should still receive his pay and should have his medical bill covered, naturally as with any injury. But $13M? There's just no need for that much.
soakinwet
about 1 month ago
200 comments
I have a dual opinion on this one. 1 why didn't they install the guard after the first incident? 2 turn on a flashlight dipstick! Just my opinion.