Price v. Blaine Kern Artista, Inc.

893 P.2d 367, 111 Nev. 515, 42 A.L.R. 5th 943, 1995 Nev. LEXIS 46
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedApril 27, 1995
Docket25207
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 893 P.2d 367 (Price v. Blaine Kern Artista, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Price v. Blaine Kern Artista, Inc., 893 P.2d 367, 111 Nev. 515, 42 A.L.R. 5th 943, 1995 Nev. LEXIS 46 (Neb. 1995).

Opinion

*517 OPINION

Per Curiam:

Appellant Thomas Price filed an action sounding in strict products liability and negligence as a result of injuries sustained when he was wearing a large manufactured “head” and was pushed or fell to the floor in a Reno club. The district court found that Price’s injuries resulted from a supervening cause and entered summary judgment against him. We conclude that material factual issues precluded summary judgment and therefore reverse.

FACTS

Thomas Price filed an action in strict tort liability and negligence against Blaine Kern Artista, Inc. (“BKA”), a Louisiana corporation that manufactures oversized masks in the form of caricatures resembling various celebrities and characters (hereafter “caricature mask”). The caricature mask covers the entire head of the wearer. Price alleged in his complaint that the caricature mask of George Bush which he wore during employment as an entertainer at Harrah’s Club in Reno was defective due to the absence of a safety harness to support his head and neck under the heavy weight. He also alleged that his injury occurred when a Harrah’s patron pushed him from behind, causing the *518 weight of the caricature mask to strain and injure his neck as he fell to the ground.

On BKA’s motion for summary judgment, the district court determined that the patron’s push that precipitated Price’s fall constituted an unforeseeable superseding cause absolving BKA of liability. Price then moved for reconsideration and/or amendment of the district court’s order granting summary judgment and submitted a supplemental affidavit avowing that he could not say categorically what caused his fall, and that he may have merely stumbled or tripped. The district court refused to consider the supplemental facts and denied the motion.

On appeal, Price assigns error to the summary disposition of his complaint.

DISCUSSION

Summary judgment is appropriate only when a review of the record in a light most favorable to the nonmoving party reveals no genuine issues of material fact and judgment is warranted as a matter of law. Butler v. Bogdanovich, 101 Nev. 449, 451, 705 P.2d 662, 663 (1985). In determining whether summary judgment is proper, the nonmoving party is entitled to have the evidence and all inferences reasonably drawn therefrom accepted as true. Wiltsie v. Baby Grand Corp., 105 Nev. 291, 292, 774 P.2d 432, 433 (1989). Accordingly, a district court may not grant summary judgment if a reasonable jury could return a verdict in favor of the nonmoving party. Oehler v. Humana, Inc., 105 Nev. 348, 350, 775 P.2d 1271, 1272 (1989). Our review of a summary judgment is de novo. Tore, Ltd. v. Church, 105 Nev. 183, 185, 772 P.2d 1281, 1282 (1989).

The focal point of this appeal is whether the unknown assailant’s push that caused Price to fall to the ground is an intervening, superseding cause of Price’s injuries, insulating BKA from liability. Legal causation is germane to both negligence and strict tort liability, and is therefore relevant to both theories under which Price seeks relief. See Shoshone Coca Cola Bottling v. Dolinski, 82 Nev. 439, 443, 420 P.2d 855, 858 (1966).

Price argues that legal causation is a question of fact to be decided by the trier of fact and that an intervening criminal or tortious act by a third party does not necessarily preclude liability as a matter of law. In so arguing, however, he concedes (rather improvidently, we suggest) that BKA, a Louisiana corporation, could not reasonably be expected to have foreseen an attack on a user of one of its products by a third-party assailant in Reno, Nevada, and relies exclusively on the prospect that a jury might *519 reasonably infer that a performer wearing a top-heavy, oversized caricature mask may stumble, trip, be pushed, or become imbalanced for numerous reasons. 1 That same jury, according to Price, may find that BKA proximately caused Price’s injury due to its failure to equip the caricature mask of our former President with a safety harness.

BKA first counters that legal causation, although normally a jury issue, may nevertheless be resolved summarily in appropriate cases when there is no genuine issue of material fact on the issue of foreseeability. See Van Cleave v. Kietz-Mill Mini Mart, 97 Nev. 414, 633 P.2d 1220 (1981) (on issue of causation, inferences will be drawn favoring party opposing motion for summary judgment, but the opponent must nevertheless show that he can present evidence at trial to support his claim). BKA next argues that this is an appropriate case for summary judgment because, by Price’s own admission, the third-party attack forming the basis of his complaint was not foreseeable to BKA, and is thus a superseding cause of Price’s injuries.

Contrary to BKA’s assertions, we conclude for two reasons that genuine issues of material fact remain with respect to the issue of legal causation.

First, with respect to the negligence claim, while it is true that criminal or tortious third-party conduct typically severs the chain of proximate causation between a plaintiíf and a defendant, the chain remains unbroken when the third party’s intervening intentional act is reasonably foreseeable. El Dorado Hotel, Inc. v. Brown, 100 Nev. 622, 628-29, 691 P.2d 436, 441 (1984). Under the circumstances of this case, the trier of fact could reasonably find that BKA should have foreseen the possibility or probability of some sort of violent reaction, such as pushing, by intoxicated or politically volatile persons, ignited by the sight of an oversized caricature of a prominent political figure. We certainly cannot preclude such an inference as a matter of law and decline to penalize Price for his attorney’s lack of acuity in conceding this issue. Indeed, while the precise force that caused Price’s fall is *520 uncertain, shortly before the fall, an irate and perhaps somewhat confused patron of Harrah’s took issue with the bedecked Price over Bush’s policy on abortion rights.

Second, with respect to the claim for relief based upon strict products liability, there was no basis for the summary disposition of Price’s complaint. Although it is well established that the doctrine of strict products liability does not exempt an injured plaintiff from proving the element of causation, we agree that

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893 P.2d 367, 111 Nev. 515, 42 A.L.R. 5th 943, 1995 Nev. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/price-v-blaine-kern-artista-inc-nev-1995.