Estate of Klink Ex Rel. Klink v. State

152 P.3d 504, 113 Haw. 332, 2007 Haw. LEXIS 81
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 20, 2007
Docket25430
StatusPublished
Cited by100 cases

This text of 152 P.3d 504 (Estate of Klink Ex Rel. Klink v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Klink Ex Rel. Klink v. State, 152 P.3d 504, 113 Haw. 332, 2007 Haw. LEXIS 81 (haw 2007).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

LEVINSON, J.

The plaintiffs-appellants Hildegard T. Klink, individually, as special administratrix of the estate of Aloysius Klink (Klink), and as next of friend of Dania M. Klink, a minor, Michael Klink, Diana Klink-James, Julia A. Klink, and Alexander M. Klink [hereinafter, collectively, “the Appellants”] appeal from the October 7, 2002 amended judgment of the circuit court of the third circuit, the Honorable Riki May Amano presiding, in favor of the defendant-appellee State of Hawai1 i [hereinafter, the State] and against the Appellants.

The present matter concerns the death of Klink in an automobile accident, which occurred on the island of Hawai'i on March 9, 1997. The Appellants raise sixteen points of error on appeal, contending in substance that the circuit court: (1) erred in concluding thuo *337 the State fulfilled its duty to design, construct, and maintain the highway and its duty to warn; (2) abused its discretion in excluding evidence of prior and subsequent accidents near the site of the subject accident; (3) clearly erred in finding that a warning sign was in place on the morning of the accident approximately 500 feet before the ■accident site; and (4) abused its discretion in allowing an expert witness for the State to testify regarding matters allegedly beyond the scope of his expertise. Intertwined with these points of error, the Appellants also challenge as clearly erroneous certain findings of fact (FOFs) entered by the circuit court on March 18, 2002.

. For the reasons discussed infra in section III, we hold, on the record before us, that the State is liable to the Appellants as a matter of law. We therefore vacate the circuit court’s October 7, 2002 amended judgment and remand for a trial on the issue of the Appellants’ damages.

I. BACKGROUND

A. The Accident

At approximately 7:00 a.m. on March 9, 1997, on a section of Route 130, located on the island of Hawai'i and known as the Páhoa Bypass, a northbound Subaru being driven by Klink crossed over the center line and into the southbound lane, colliding with an oncoming truck driven by Gordon Souder, killing Klink.

John Silva came upon the accident scene before the arrival of any police and proceeded to a local store to call for assistance. He did not recall seeing any water runoff on the highway.

Officer Martin Ellazar of the Hawai'i County Police Department (HCPD), trained in accident investigation and reconstruction, was assigned to the Traffic Enforcement Unit on the morning of the accident and arrived at the scene approximately one hour and fifteen minutes after the accident had occurred. He later testified that, throughout his approximately hour-long investigation, it was raining intermittently, he observed water traveling across the roadway, and he photographed an area “where the water runoff [wa]s up against the berm and the water [was] coming off of the northbound into the southbound lane.” Officer Ellazar also observed runoff debris—material deposited both along the lower western portion of the roadway and along the shoulder—which he said was indicative of water flowing across the roadway, but could not estimate when the debris had been deposited. At the time, he did not observe any water flowing from the eastside driveway that fronted the highway at the location of the accident.

HCPD Officer Randall Aurelio, who arrived at the scene at least fifteen minutes after the accident, did not observe any water flowing from the east side of the highway and crossing the roadway, nor did he observe any runoff debris on the northbound lane, but he did observe some water running down the southbound lane and the berm on the west side of the road. The water flow did not concern him.

B. The Highway

Sometime before 1991, the State approved highway designs drafted by a private firm for construction of the Pahoa Bypass and the accompanying shoulder areas, earthen banks, and driveways in the area of the accident. The State constructed the highway and opened it for traffic in 1991 and has had the legal responsibility to maintain it since then. Howard Haymore,.an employee of the State’s Department of Transportation (DOT), supervised its construction. The highway runs generally north and south, but the section where the accident occurred turns to the west on a 2000-foot radius curve with a 4.5 percent downhill grade toward the north and an average 2.4 percent superelevation 1 down toward the west. The highway plans included a cutbank on the eastern shoulder and the construction of two driveways in the area of the Klink accident. During the construction process, the shoulder of the road was cut into in order to achieve a uniform slope. Prior to *338 the March 9, 1997 accident, there was no drainage system at the site on the eastern shoulder but, in 1998, the DOT installed an interceptor ditch.

C. The Lawsuit And Testimony

On March 3, 1998, the Appellants filed a first amended complaint against the State and the other defendants, 2 alleging, inter alia: (1) that the State negligently designed, constructed, and maintained the Páhoa Bypass, such that the roadway was “deficient, dangerous, and inadequate”; (2) that the State failed to warn motorists adequately of the unsafe condition of the Bypass; and (3) that the State’s negligence was the legal cause 3 of Klink’s death.

On June 12, 2001, the State filed a motion in limine to exclude police reports describing twenty-two prior accidents and five subsequent accidents near the site of the subject collision. The Appellants’ counsel partially opposed the motion, seeking to have seven of the reports admitted for consideration by their accident reconstruction expert, Harry Krueper:

[Counsel]: ... I have no problem ... with the real substance of the motion [to exclude the reports]. It’s just that any time any expert analyzes a traffic accident he ordinarily looks at ... incidences that occurred on the roadway. I don’t believe ... Krueper is gonna specifically refer to the factors ... involved in other accidents but he would I believe ... say that he looked at the other accidents to determine what other factors may have influenced his investigation. But beyond that I don’t think that he’s going to say that ... because of an accident that occurred in 1992 he believes that this particular condition ... is negligent....
The court: Is he offering an opinion as to negligence?
[Counsel]: No, ... not negligence, rather it’s defective in design; excuse me. But I don’t believe he’s gonna refer ... specifically to any other accidents. He will say ... that he did look at all other incidences on this particular stretch of roadway to see if there was something there that clued him into what would be a design defect... .[0]ther than that I don’t think he’ll refer to anything specifically.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
152 P.3d 504, 113 Haw. 332, 2007 Haw. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-klink-ex-rel-klink-v-state-haw-2007.