Wrinkle v. Norman

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedFebruary 12, 2016
Docket112441
StatusUnpublished

This text of Wrinkle v. Norman (Wrinkle v. Norman) 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
Wrinkle v. Norman, (kanctapp 2016).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

No. 112,441

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

RODNEY P. WRINKLE, Appellant,

v.

GENE NORMAN and CHARLENE NORMAN, Appellees.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appeal from Jefferson District Court; GARY L. NAFZIGER, judge. Opinion filed February 12, 2016. Affirmed.

Stephen G. Dickerson, of The Dickerson Law Group, of Overland Park, for appellant.

Robert J. Luder and Michael W. Shunk, of Luder & Weist, LLC, of Overland Park, for appellees.

Before ATCHESON, P.J., SCHROEDER, J., and HEBERT, S.J.

ATCHESON, J.: Our innate sense of fairness winds up bruised when a Good Samaritan is seriously injured and must bear the financial consequences of that injury, especially if the chain of events leading to the harm includes another person's carelessness. At the same time, basic principles of negligence law do not impose liability on a person whose carelessness is merely a remote link in a chain culminating in what amounts to an unpredictable injury to someone else. In this case, that innate sense collides with those legal principles. Even taking the facts most favorably to Plaintiff Rodney P. Wrinkle—indisputably a Good Samaritan on an early spring afternoon in

1 2006—the legal principles win out here. We, therefore, affirm the Jefferson County District Court's entry of summary judgment for Defendants Gene and Charlene Norman.

The case has a lengthy history and has already made one trip to the Kansas Supreme Court, which reversed an earlier summary judgment for the Normans. Wrinkle v. Norman, 297 Kan. 420, 301 P.3d 312 (2013) (Wrinkle I).

We first offer an overview of the facts rendered favorably to Wrinkle as the party opposing summary judgment.

Wrinkle, a neighbor of the Normans, saw some of their cows had escaped from a pen and were headed toward the highway. Although Wrinkle had no legal obligation to do anything, he did what we would like to think most people would do. He herded the cows back onto the Normans' land and, except for a calf, into the pen in the backyard, thereby rescuing the animals and preventing a serious hazard to motorists. The calf somehow got tangled up in a clothesline Gene Norman had temporarily taken down. According to Wrinkle, the calf was strangling as it futilely struggled to get free. Wrinkle could have walked away—the calf was no longer on the loose and posed no danger to passersby. Moved by the plight of a young animal in life-threatening distress, he didn't. Wrinkle untangled the clothesline, liberating the calf. The calf immediately bolted toward the gate of the pen. The calf somehow dragged the clothesline as it ran; the line caught Wrinkle from behind, knocking him off his feet. Wrinkle landed on his back on a concrete pad between the poles used to string the clothesline. Wrinkle seriously injured his back, resulting in an extended hospitalization.

After Wrinkle was released from the hospital, he spoke with the Normans, who he did not really know, about submitting a claim for his medical bills to their homeowner's insurance carrier. The record isn't entirely clear whether a claim was filed or what

2 became of it. We infer the insurance company did not pay Wrinkle's medical bills and plainly did not resolve the matter to his full satisfaction.

In December 2007, about 22 months after the incident, Wrinkle filed a civil action against the Normans to recover damages related to his injury. The petition went through a couple of amendments. Wrinkle alleged the Normans negligently failed to keep their cows penned and negligently placed the clothesline in such a way the calf got caught. He also alleged his back injury was the legal consequence of the Normans' negligence. The Normans denied liability.

The parties undertook discovery. During his deposition, Gene Norman described the mechanism for keeping the gate on the cow pen shut. He also testified that he had taken down the clothesline and looped it around one of the T-shaped poles on the concrete pad when he had been cutting trees in the yard sometime before Wrinkle was hurt. Wrinkle testified during his deposition that he had not noticed the clothesline or how it was positioned before the calf had become entangled.

The district court initially granted summary judgment to the Normans on the grounds that Wrinkle was a trespasser on their property and they did not breach the limited duty landowners owe trespassers. See Jones v. Hansen, 254 Kan. 499, 510, 867 P.2d 303 (1994) (landowner liable only for "willfully, wantonly, or recklessly injuring" trespasser). This court affirmed in Wrinkle v. Norman, 44 Kan. App. 2d 950, 242 P.3d 1216 (2010), rev'd 297 Kan. 420, 301 P.3d 312 (2013); the Kansas Supreme Court reversed in Wrinkle I. The Supreme Court held that Wrinkle should not have been treated as a trespasser but as the holder of a privilege to enter the Normans' land to prevent serious harm to the cattle, since the animals would have been imperiled if allowed to roam around the highway. 297 Kan. 424-25. Accordingly, the Normans owed Wrinkle a duty of reasonable care under the circumstances to protect him from potentially injurious conditions. 297 Kan. at 425.

3 Because the district court had applied an incorrect legal standard disadvantaging Wrinkle in entering summary judgment, the Supreme Court reversed and remanded to the district court for further proceedings. 297 Kan. at 426. Justice Rosen filed a separate opinion in which he agreed with his colleagues about the duty owed Wrinkle but dissented from the remand because the facts on summary judgment neither entailed a breach of a legal duty nor suggested a triable issue of proximate cause, since the Normans' putative negligence did not bring about a foreseeable injury. 297 Kan. at 428- 29 (Rosen, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part).

On remand, the Normans filed another summary judgment motion that largely drew from Justice Rosen's opinion and the issues he discussed—a discussion the majority acknowledged but declined to address substantively. See 297 Kan. at 426. The district court again entered summary judgment for the Normans, this time finding they breached no duty owed Wrinkle and no legally proximate cause linked their conduct to his injuries. Wrinkle has appealed the district court's ruling.

We apply the same well-settled standard of review as the district court in testing the appropriateness of summary judgment. Parties seeking summary judgment have the obligation to show, based on sufficient evidentiary materials, there are no disputed issues of material fact and judgment may, therefore, be entered in their favor as a matter of law. Shamberg, Johnson & Bergman, Chtd. v. Oliver, 289 Kan. 891, 900, 220 P.3d 333 (2009); Korytkowski v. City of Ottawa, 283 Kan. 122, Syl. ¶ 1, 152 P.3d 53 (2007). In essence, the movants (here, the Normans) argue there is nothing for a jury or a trial judge sitting as factfinder to decide that would make any difference. The party opposing summary judgment (here, Wrinkle) must then point to evidence calling into question a material factual representation made in support of the motion. Shamberg, 289 Kan. at 900; Korytkowski, 283 Kan. 122, Syl. ¶ 1. If the opposing party does so, the motion should be denied so a factfinder may resolve that dispute.

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