Cooke v. Nationwide Mutual Fire Insurance

14 So. 3d 1192, 2009 Fla. App. LEXIS 8626, 2009 WL 1741370
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJune 22, 2009
Docket1D08-3602
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 14 So. 3d 1192 (Cooke v. Nationwide Mutual Fire Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cooke v. Nationwide Mutual Fire Insurance, 14 So. 3d 1192, 2009 Fla. App. LEXIS 8626, 2009 WL 1741370 (Fla. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinions

KAHN, J.

Appellant Barbara Cooke seeks review of an adverse final summary judgment dismissing a suit arising from the death of her husband, Gary Cooke. The claim here involves multiple vehicles and two accidents that occurred on a stretch of southbound Interstate 75 in Alachua County. We reverse because the negligence, if any, of appellant’s decedent was not an intervening and superseding cause acting to break the chain of causation, which appellant claims was initiated by the negligence of one or more of the appellees.

BACKGROUND

Gary Cooke died when his sport utility vehicle collided with the back of a flatbed truck driven by Robert Kindler, not a party to this appeal. Mr. Cooke was operating his vehicle at the posted speed limit of 70 m.p.h. Mr. Kindler, using downshifting, had slowed his truck to a speed of 20 to 30 m.p.h.

Farther south on Interstate 75, perhaps as far as one and one-half miles, but the precise distance not being shown in the present record, another accident had occurred earlier. Although the facts of this earlier accident (“first accident”) may be disputed later in this litigation, for purposes of summary judgment, we recite the facts in a light most favorable to appellant, who was the non-moving party in the trial court. The first accident occurred when appellee Hector Ramirez (Ramirez), operating a tractor-trailer owned by appellee United Parcel Service, Inc. (UPS), encountered, or nearly encountered, a phantom vehicle that entered the southbound lane in which Ramirez was operating. Ramirez steered the UPS truck into the emergency lane, striking another tractor-trailer owned by Carrera Transport, Inc., and properly parked in the lane. The impact scattered UPS packages across the southbound lanes of Interstate 75. A little more than an hour after the first accident, Mr. Cooke met his demise in the second accident when his vehicle collided with Mr. Kin-dler’s.

The record shows that as a result of the first accident, southbound traffic on Interstate 75 had slowed and backed up to the crest of a hill north of the scene of the first accident. Deputy Hanson of the Alachua County Sheriffs Office parked his patrol car in the southbound emergency lane, with the hill between his car and the scene of the first accident. Deputy Hanson switched on his warning lights and ignited three or four roadside flares. According to Hanson’s testimony, traffic continued to move at a high rate of speed southbound past the patrol car. Deputy Hanson observed that most vehicles did not begin to [1194]*1194slow and apply their brakes until reaching the top of the hill, at which point the drivers of those vehicles would have been able to see the first accident and the traffic that had backed up as a result of the debris strewn across the highway.

Mr. Kindler was operating at just below the posted speed limit of 70 m.p.h. when he passed the Hanson patrol car. Kindler did not see the emergency flares previously deposited by Deputy Hanson. Nevertheless, Kindler had been notified on his citizens’ band radio of traffic backups and lane closures ahead of him. Accordingly, after passing the patrol car, Mr. Kindler switched on his four-way flashers and slowed by downshifting his truck. Ultimately, and upon reaching the crest of the hill north of the first accident and south of Deputy Hanson’s patrol car, Mr. Kindler was traveling between 20 and 30 m.p.h.

As Kindler approached the scene of the first accident, and perhaps as Kindler was cresting the hill, the vehicle driven by Mr. Cooke collided with Kindler’s truck. Expert testimony suggests that Mr. Cooke had not slowed, and was, in fact, traveling at the posted speed limit of 70 m.p.h. Although Deputy Hanson estimated that the second accident occurred only 180 yards north of the first accident, subsequent investigations put the intervening-distance at a higher figure, perhaps as great as one and one-half miles.

Mr. Kindler gave a bit more detail as to the traffic conditions on Interstate 75. He testified that at the point of the second accident, the center lane was moving at about 25 m.p.h., and the left lane was moving at a pace somewhat less than the normal highway speed. The right lane was void of traffic, because it was blocked ahead, owing to the first accident.

Mrs. Cooke brought a wrongful death action, alleging that her husband’s death had been caused by the negligence, or combined negligence, of the phantom vehicle, Ramirez, UPS, and Carrera Transport. Appellee Nationwide Mutual Fire Insurance Company, as the uninsured motorist carrier for the Cookes, stands in the place of the phantom vehicle. The trial court dismissed Carrera Transport as a party to this suit. After pretrial discovery, UPS and Ramirez moved for summary judgment, as did Nationwide. The trial court granted the motions with the following ultimate conclusion of law:

In this case, the slowing of traffic from the first accident, which resulted from an impact involving a vehicle owned by Defendant UPS (which was driven by Defendant HECTOR L. RAMIREZ) and a Carrera Transport vehicle and was allegedly initiated by the actions of a “phantom vehicle,” merely provided an occasion for Mr. Cooke’s negligence, which caused the second accident. This court finds, as a matter of law, that Mr. Cooke’s actions and omissions constituted an intervening and superseding cause that acted to break the chain of causation.

ANALYSIS

“Summary judgment is proper if there is no genuine issue of material fact and if the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Volusia County v. Aberdeen at Ormond Beach, L.P., 760 So.2d 126, 130 (Fla.2000). “Thus, our standard of review is de novo.” Id. In resolving this appeal, we must determine whether the trial court properly found the actions of appellees did not, as a matter of law, proximately cause Mr. Cooke’s death. “[Wjhere reasonable persons could differ as to whether the facts establish proximate causation — i.e., whether the specific injury was genuinely foreseeable or merely an improbable freak — then the resolution of the issue must be left to the fact-finder.” [1195]*1195McCain v. Fla. Power Corp., 593 So.2d 500, 504 (Fla.1992) (emphasis in original). A trial judge may take the matter of proximate causation from the fact-finder “only where the facts are unequivocal, such as where the evidence supports no more than a single reasonable inference.” Id.

The doctrine of intervening and superseding cause sometimes stands as a factor in the proximate causation analysis. Nevertheless, the existence of such an intervening cause — generally the agency, act, or negligence of another, not a defendant in the action — does not always insulate the original negligent actor. Without commenting upon whether the ultimate facts will demonstrate negligence on the part of either Ramirez or the phantom vehicle, we note that a negligent actor “is not absolved of liability when his conduct ‘sets in motion’ a chain of events resulting in injury to the plaintiff.” Gibson v. Avis Rent-A-Car Sys., Inc., 386 So.2d 520, 522 (Fla.1980). “If an intervening cause is foreseeable the original negligent actor may still be held liable. The question of whether an intervening cause is foreseeable is for the trier of fact.” Id.

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Bluebook (online)
14 So. 3d 1192, 2009 Fla. App. LEXIS 8626, 2009 WL 1741370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooke-v-nationwide-mutual-fire-insurance-fladistctapp-2009.