Downing v. Kingsley

221 P.3d 115, 43 Kan. App. 2d 30, 2009 Kan. App. LEXIS 897
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedDecember 24, 2009
Docket101,490
StatusPublished

This text of 221 P.3d 115 (Downing v. Kingsley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Downing v. Kingsley, 221 P.3d 115, 43 Kan. App. 2d 30, 2009 Kan. App. LEXIS 897 (kanctapp 2009).

Opinion

Malone, J.;

Ann G. Downing (Downing), administrator of the estate of Joseph B. Downing, and an heir-at-law, appeals the district court’s decision granting summary judgment to Robert W. Bulis and Unified School District No. 266 (U.S.D. 266) following a motor vehicle accident in which Joseph died after colliding with a vehicle driven by Janet S. Kingsley. For the reasons set forth herein, we affirm the district court’s judgment.

On the morning of October 25, 2005, Bulis was operating a school bus for U.S.D. 266, and he was traveling north in the inside lane of Ridge Road in Wichita. The school bus came to a stop at the intersection of Ridge Road and 37th Street North in order to malee a left turn onto 37th Street North. At that time, a vehicle driven by Kingsley was stopped at the same intersection facing east on 37th Street North. Kingsley’s vehicle prevented Bulis from being able to make a wide left turn with the school bus. After a while, Bulis gestured with Inis hands for Kingsley to cross the intersection so that Bulis could make his turn. After seeing Bulis make the hand gesture, Kingsley proceeded to cross the intersection and collided with Joseph’s vehicle which was traveling north in the outside lane of Ridge Road. Joseph died in the collision. Bulis continued to drive the children to school and did not remain at the scene of the accident.

Downing sued Kingsley and Bulis for Joseph’s wrongful death, including a claim for damages sustained by his estate. The petition alleged that Bulis “negligently made hand signals to defendant *32 Kingsley indicating to Kingsley that it was safe to cross the intersection.” Downing later filed a petition against U.S.D. 266, contending it was vicariously hable for Bulis’ alleged negligence. The two cases were consolidated by agreement of the parties. After completion of discoveiy, Bulis and U.S.D. 266 filed a joint motion for summary judgment which the district court granted. The district court found that by gesturing to Kingsley, Bulis did not assume a duty to ensure her safe passage across the intersection. The district court concluded that Kingsley had a duty to yield the right-of-way and that her duty could not be delegated to Bulis by reliance upon his hand gesture.

Summary judgment pleadings

In their joint motion for summary judgment, Bulis and U.S.D. 266 set forth the following statements of uncontroverted facts relevant to the motor vehicle collision:

“1. Defendant Robert W. Bubs began working as a school bus driver for U.S.D. 266 (Maize school district) in the spring of 2005.
“2. On the morning of October 25, 2005, Bubs was driving Bus 25 for U.S.D. 266. After all of the students are picked up, the normal route for Bus 25 is to proceed north on Ridge Road and then west on 37th Street to Maize Middle School.
“3. At the intersection of Ridge Road and 37th, Ridge Road has two northbound lanes and two southbound lanes. As Bubs approached the intersection, he was in the inside (left) northbound lane of Ridge Road so that he could turn left (west) onto 37th Street.
“4. It was approximately 7:00 a.m. when Bubs approached the intersection of Ridge Road and 37th Street and it was dark outside.
“5. As Bubs approached the intersection, he noticed a row of cars stopped at the stop sign on 37th Street facing east. The first vehicle in the row was a white minivan driven by defendant Janet Kingsley and also occupied by her fifth-grade daughter Holly Lewandowski who was ten years old at the time.
“6. It was Kingsley’s intention to proceed east on 37th Street across Ridge Road to her home at 6007 West 37th Street.
“7. As she sat at the intersection, Kingsley observed that traffic on Ridge Road was ‘mild to moderate’ in both directions.
“8. At the intersection, there were cement abutments on either side of 37th Street due to a culvert that ran under the road.
“9. It was Kingsley’s habit when travehng east on 37th Street to stop at the stop sign on Ridge Road and then pull ahead a httle farther to see past a mound of dirt that partiahy obstructed the view of traffic on Ridge Road to her right.
*33 “10. On the day in question, Bulis observed that the position of Kingsley’s van was such that he could not, with his 40-foot long school bus, execute a left turn that would clear Kingsley’s vehicle without striking the cement abutment.
“11. Bulis made a hand gesture directed toward Kingsley. He then slid open the window to his left to get a better view of the cement abutment and gestured again to Kingsley.
“12. According to Bulis, he intended his gesture to indicate to Kingsley that he could not execute his turn, that they were at an impasse and that if she proceeded through the intersection first, he would not hit her.
“13. While sitting at the intersection, Bulis did not check his outside rearview mirror to determine if any traffic was coming up behind him in the outside northbound lane of Ridge Road.
“14. Ten-year-old Holly Lewandowski saw Bulis’s gesture and told her mother that the bus driver was waving them across the intersection. Kingsley replied, ‘are you sure?’
“15. Kingsley then observed Bulis’s gesture and interpreted it as a motion to proceed across the intersection and that it was clear for her to cross.
“16. Kingsley felt she could rely upon Bulis’s motion because he was ‘high up’ and had ‘good mirrors.’
“17. Kingsley does not recall making eye contact with Bulis and she did not see him check his mirrors before gesturing to her.
“18. After observing Bulis’s gesture, Kingsley looked to the left and then leaned forward and looked to the right, checking for traffic on Ridge Road. Holly Lewandowski saw her mother look each direction twice.
“19. Kingsley looked to her right long enough to satisfy herself that there was no traffic coming from that direction.
“20. Kingsley proceeded east across Ridge Road in front of the bus driven by Bulis and into the path of a Wichita Municipal Transit Authority wheelchair transport bus operated by Joseph B. Downing that was traveling north on Ridge Road in the outside (right) lane.
“21. After the impact, the city bus skidded for a period of time before overturning. Downing ejected from his seat out the folding entry doors and was crushed by the bus.”

Downing filed a response to the summary judgment motion, and she attempted to controvert several facts proposed by Bubs and U.S.D. 266. Many of the attempts did not actually controvert the statements but, in fact, either supplemented or expounded on them:

“11. Controverted. Bulis testified during his video-recorded deposition as to the motion he made to Kingsley.

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Bluebook (online)
221 P.3d 115, 43 Kan. App. 2d 30, 2009 Kan. App. LEXIS 897, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/downing-v-kingsley-kanctapp-2009.