Minor v. Zidell Trust
This text of 1980 OK 144 (Minor v. Zidell Trust) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinions
In this tort action we hold that proximate cause does present the dispositive question of law and affirm the trial court’s summary judgment in favor of the multiple defendants in the case.
An 86-year old man [Motorist] drove to a local shopping center [Owner] and let his wife off at one of the shops. He then attempted to park his automobile in the Owner’s second-story parking facility. Around the perimeter of this facility, there was a concrete curb [7¾" high], behind which stood a brick wall approximately 3-feet high. The wall marked the outer boundary of the elevated lot area. The curb and the wall behind it were clearly observable to the public.
After driving into one of the marked spaces along the outer-perimeter, Motorist saw another stall he liked better. While he began to back out of the first space, he noticed another car which had just taken the space he preferred. He then began to head back into the stall he had originally staked out. Continuing in motion or perhaps surging forward after negotiating the maneuver necessary to pull into the parking space first entered, the Motorist’s car went over the wheel curb, downward after crashing through the wall and then came to rest in the street below. Motorist does not remember either pressing down on the accelerator or going over the concrete curb. The police officer investigating the accident found nine feet of acceleration marks left by the back wheels in the very spot where Motorist had attempted to park. Motorist lost consciousness while proceeding into the parking stall. His theory of recovery rests both on Owner’s negligence and that of the architects. The defect is alleged to lie in the design and construction of the wheel curb and the wall behind it. From summary judgment for Owner and architects, Motorist brings this appeal.
The trial judge viewed the dispositive question-as to all defendants in the case-to be that of proximate cause. He did not attempt to deal with the issue of whether any duty had been in fact breached. We agree with that approach. The sole issue for decision is: Do the undisputed facts shedding light on the proximate cause of Motorist’s harm-as presented below by summary judgment motion-raise but a single inference of nonliability?
We answer in the affirmative and hold that the trial court correctly ruled that the alleged negligence of Owner and its architects in the maintenance, construction and design of the upper-level parking area was not-as a matter of law-the proximate cause of Motorist’s injuries. We need not hence concern ourselves with the correctness of the architect’s contention that their liability to the Motorist is legally expressible in terms coextensive with that of a builder or contractor whose “job” had been “accepted” by the owner.1
[394]*394I
The question we must answer when considering the proximate cause of the harmful event for which recovery is sought is: Is the collapse of the outer-perimeter wall to be regarded as proximately caused by the force of the runaway car moving against it under engine power, or by the combination of that factor in interaction with a defect in the wall’s design and construction? We view the thrust of the unguided automobile as the efficient, independent cause which was not in itself foreseeable.
Not every intervening cause will insulate the original negligent actor from liability.2 The law frequently views such cause as capable of “combining” or acting “in concert” with another act or omission to produce the injury. If so, each actor, if negligent, will be subject to liability for the harm that evolves.3 The same is said to be true when several causes operate to bring about a single result.4 But the causal nexus between an act of negligence and the resulting injury will be deemed broken with the intervention of a new, independent and efficient cause which was neither anticipate d nor reasonably foreseeable. An intervening causal factor of this character and magnitude is called the “supervening cause”. To qualify as a true supervening cause that cuts off possible liability for the original negligence, a cause must meet at least three requirements: (1) it must be independent of the original act (2) it must be adequate of itself to bring about the result and (3) it must not have been a reasonably foreseeable event.5
Unless the intervening cause meets these characteristics, the chain of causation, extending from the original act to the injury, is not broken.6 When the causal factor qualifies as “supervening”, the original negligence may be said to undergo a legal “transmutation” into a “remote cause” or “mere condition”.7
Motorist’s lapse into unconsciousness and the ensuing loss of his car’s control-all of which set the vehicle on a “wild”, “runaway” course that carried it over the wheel curb, through the wall of the rooftop parking facility and finally down to its resting place in the street-was so unusual and extraordinary an event as to merit recognition as unforeseeable in law.8 The independent, [395]*395intervening act-set in motion by Motorist-was so overpowering as to produce a break in the chain of causes that led to the harmful event. That act is hence to be regarded as supervening in that it operates to insulate all prior causative factors.
Summary judgment-as a means of awarding victory to one party as a matter of law-is a device most properly to be used when the undisputed material facts raise only one inference.9
The undisputed facts at the critical moment in issue are: (1) the Motorist’s lapse of consciousness, (2) the car, though driver-occupied, remained beyond anyone’s control and was left totally unguided, and (3) the car was being propelled by a sudden surge of forward thrust sufficient to produce nine feet of acceleration marks. We find nothing in the record to indicate the presence of any fact issue to be tried. The summary disposition was hence proper.10
II
Motorist’s suggestion that the enactment of comparative negligence in Oklahoma makes invalid the cause-versus-condition distinction or other tests of proximate causation is unpersuasive for two reasons. First, on more than one occasion since the Act’s11 passage we have followed that test.12 Second, the concept of compar-, ative negligence affects not causation inquiries, but breach-of-duty inquiries, issues of assumption of risk and contributory negligence.13
Finally, Motorist’s argument that his situation falls within a “special circumstances” exception to the cause — versus-condition doctrine is without merit. The special-circumstances approach relaxes the common law rule against liability for the [396]*396wilful act of a third party.14 At common law a person is not generally deemed liable for a third party’s deliberate act. This is because no liability arises for the wilful act of a person who is not an agent on a mission of his master. Here, liability is not sought to be imposed on the theory of Owner’s or architects’ wilful act. It does not hence fall within the special — circumstances rule.
In view of our disposition of this appeal, we need not deal with Motorist’s strict liability claims.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
1980 OK 144, 618 P.2d 392, 1980 Okla. LEXIS 336, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/minor-v-zidell-trust-okla-1980.