Leonard v. Moran Foods, Inc.

343 P.3d 693, 269 Or. App. 112, 2013 Ore. App. LEXIS 1582
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedFebruary 11, 2015
Docket100811857; A150101
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 343 P.3d 693 (Leonard v. Moran Foods, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leonard v. Moran Foods, Inc., 343 P.3d 693, 269 Or. App. 112, 2013 Ore. App. LEXIS 1582 (Or. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

LAGESEN, J.

While driving as part of his job as a district manager for defendant Moran Foods on the night of November 1, 2009, defendant Tito Feliciano struck plaintiffs daughter, Lindsay Leonard, with his car as she was crossing Foster Road in Portland in a marked but faded crosswalk under a streetlight that was not working. The collision killed Leonard. Plaintiff, Leonard’s father, filed this wrongful death negligence action against a group of defendants whose conduct, he alleges, converged to cause Leonard’s death: Feliciano (for his negligent acts as a driver); Moran Foods, Inc. (for its vicarious liability as Feliciano’s employer and for its own negligence in failing to provide adequate training to Feliciano on the company’s cell phone use policy and on safe driving); Moran Foods’ parent company, Supervalu, Inc. (for failing to provide adequate training to Feliciano on its cell phone use policy); the City of Portland (the city) (for negligent maintenance of the crosswalk markings); and Portland General Electric Company (PGE) (for negligent maintenance of the streetlight).

The case went to trial against Feliciano and Moran Foods only. The trial court dismissed Supervalu and the city from the caseonsummaryjudgment,concludingthatthere was no evidence from which a reasonable factfinder could find that those parties’ conduct, even if negligent, played a causal role in the accident; the court dismissed PGE from the case after plaintiff settled with PGE. The trial court also did not permit plaintiff to present to the jury his theory that Moran Foods’ alleged negligence in training Feliciano on the company’s cell phone use policy contributed to the accident, having granted summary judgment to Moran Foods on that theory. The jury ultimately returned a verdict finding Leonard 51 percent at fault, Feliciano 34 percent at fault, and Moran Foods 15 percent at fault. As required by ORS 31.600,1 the trial court entered judgment in favor of defendants.

On appeal, the primary question confronting us is this: should plaintiff have been permitted to make his case against Supervalu and the city to the jury? That is, at [115]*115summary judgment, did plaintiff come forward with evidence that would permit a reasonable factfinder to find either that Supervalu’s failure to train Feliciano adequately on its cell phone use policy, or the city’s failure to maintain the crosswalk markings, was a substantial factor in Leonard’s death?

We answer that question in the negative with respect to Supervalu, but conclude otherwise with respect to the city and, accordingly, reverse and remand for a new trial. We also address the other issues raised by the parties that may bear on the trial court’s conduct of the trial on remand: (1) Whether the trial court erroneously granted summary judgment to Moran Foods on plaintiffs claim that Moran Foods negligently failed to train Feliciano on the company’s cell phone use policy; (2) whether the trial court erred by denying plaintiff leave to amend the complaint to add a claim for punitive damages against Moran Foods; (3) whether the trial court erred by denying Moran Foods’ motion for a directed verdict on the remaining specification of direct negligence against it; and (4) whether the trial court committed instructional error either when it gave defendants’ requested instruction on amendments to Oregon’s mobile communications device law, ORS 811.507, which did not take effect until after the accident, or when it declined to give defendants’ requested instruction regarding Leonard’s obligation, as a pedestrian, to keep a proper lookout.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Substantive Facts2

On the evening of November 1, 2009, Feliciano was driving a company-owned vehicle westbound on SE Foster Road in Portland. His destination was the Moran Foods Save-A-Lot store located on that road. While driving, Feliciano used his company cell phone to contact four different Moran Foods stores, including the store on Foster Road to which he was headed.

[116]*116Less than one mile from the store, a marked crosswalk maintained by the city transects Foster Road. Feliciano was aware of the crosswalk from experience. In addition, that night as he was driving, he observed two signs warning him to look for pedestrians as he traveled toward the crosswalk. The crosswalk was demarcated with “ladder bars”— vertical reflective stripes — but some of the ladder bars in the westbound lanes had worn away to varying degrees, with the middle ladder bar in the westbound lanes having worn away completely. The “stop line” that preceded the ladder bar — which indicates where a driver should stop for pedestrians — also had been worn through to the asphalt in some areas. On that evening, the streetlight above the crosswalk, which was owned by the city and maintained by PGE, was out. The net effect of the faded ladder bars and the lack of lighting was a “dark zone” in a part of the crosswalk spanning the westbound lanes of Foster Road.3

Sometime before 7:25 p.m., Leonard and her roommate, Jessica Finlay, entered the crosswalk from the north, stepping into the right westbound lane of Foster. Feliciano was approaching the crosswalk at that time, traveling in the left westbound lane of Foster.4 He was “looking straight ahead” and not talking on or otherwise using his cell phone at the time, although it was lying face up on the passenger seat of his car. He did not see the two women in the crosswalk, and he did not stop. Instead, the right front corner of Feliciano’s car struck them both. Leonard died at the scene of the collision from her injuries; Finlay was hospitalized and later died of her injuries.

B. Procedural Facts

Plaintiff initiated this wrongful death action, alleging that the negligence of each of the named defendants (Feliciano, Moran Foods, Supervalu, the city, and PGE) caused Leonard’s death. As noted, plaintiff dismissed [117]*117PGE from the case pursuant to those parties’ settlement. Plaintiffs theory of liability with respect to Supervalu, and one of plaintiffs theories of liability with respect to Moran Foods, was that (1) just before the collision, Feliciano received an incoming call on his cell phone; (2) Feliciano’s phone, which was lying face up on the passenger seat, illuminated to signal receipt of that call; (3) although Moran Foods and Supervalu had a policy prohibiting cell phone use by employees while driving, they negligently failed to train employees on, or to enforce, that policy; which, in turn (4) caused Feliciano to be distracted from the road as he approached the crosswalk. Supervalu moved for summary judgment, and Moran Foods moved for partial summary judgment. The trial court granted summary judgment to Supervalu on the ground that the evidence on summary judgment was insufficient to permit a reasonable factfinder to find that Feliciano was distracted by his cell phone at the time of the accident and, thus, insufficient to permit a finding that any negligence in training on, or enforcing, the company’s cell phone use policy played a causal role in the accident.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
343 P.3d 693, 269 Or. App. 112, 2013 Ore. App. LEXIS 1582, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leonard-v-moran-foods-inc-orctapp-2015.