Yuriy Matsyuk v. Viktor Pantyukhin and Lyubov Pantyukhin

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 25, 2020
DocketWD82414
StatusPublished

This text of Yuriy Matsyuk v. Viktor Pantyukhin and Lyubov Pantyukhin (Yuriy Matsyuk v. Viktor Pantyukhin and Lyubov Pantyukhin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yuriy Matsyuk v. Viktor Pantyukhin and Lyubov Pantyukhin, (Mo. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE MISSOURI COURT OF APPEALS WESTERN DISTRICT YURIY MATYSYUK, ) Appellant, ) ) v. ) WD82414 ) VIKTOR PANTYUKHIN and ) FILED: February 25, 2020 LYUBOV PANTYUKHIN, ) Respondents. ) Appeal from the Circuit Court of Pettis County The Honorable Robert L. Koffman, Judge Before Division Three: Lisa White Hardwick, P.J., and Alok Ahuja and Anthony Rex Gabbert, JJ. Yuriy Matysyuk was injured in an automobile accident while riding as a

passenger in a vehicle driven by Igor Pantyukhin.1 The vehicle was owned by Igor’s

father. Matysyuk sued Igor’s parents, Viktor and Lyubov Pantyukhin (collectively,

the “Pantyukhins”) in the Circuit Court of Pettis County, alleging that they had

negligently entrusted the accident vehicle to their son. The circuit court granted

the Pantyukhins’ motion for summary judgment. It found that the uncontroverted

facts failed to establish that Igor was incompetent to drive due to habitual

recklessness, and that Matysyuk would therefore not be able to prove an essential

element of his negligent entrustment claim. Matysyuk appeals. He argues that the

circuit court should have stayed proceedings on the Pantyukhins’ summary

judgment motion to permit him to conduct further discovery, and that a genuine

1 To distinguish him from his parents, we refer to Igor Pantyukhin by his first name in this opinion. No familiarity or disrespect is intended. issue of material fact existed regarding whether Igor was incompetent to drive. We

affirm.

Factual Background On October 7, 2014, Igor was driving Matysyuk, his co-employee, to the

jobsite of a pipeline project in Muskingum County in central Ohio, on which they

were both working for their employer, ProEnergy Services. Igor was driving a 1999

Honda Accord owned by his father Viktor Pantyukhin. On the way to the jobsite,

Igor drove off the right side of the roadway while attempting to negotiate a left-

hand curve. The vehicle struck a tree. Matysyuk was seriously injured in the

accident, was hospitalized for several weeks, and incurred medical expenses

exceeding $400,000. Igor was issued a citation for failure to control his vehicle. He

pleaded guilty to the offense, and was assessed fines and court costs totaling $120.

Igor was twenty years old at the time of the 2014 accident. He was residing

at home in Sedalia with his parents, the Pantyukhins, at the time.

Igor had been involved in a prior car accident in September 2011, when he

was seventeen years old, and three years prior to the accident involving Matysyuk.

In the 2011 incident, Igor failed to stop at a stop sign and collided with another

vehicle which was traveling on a cross-street. The driver of the other vehicle and two passengers in Igor’s vehicle were injured. Igor was driving a 2000 Suzuki Swift

owned by Viktor Pantyukhin in the 2011 accident. In connection with the 2011

accident, Igor was cited for failure to yield, and for failing to properly secure a minor

passenger.

Igor had one other motor-vehicle-related citation prior to the 2014 accident

involving Matysyuk. In June 2012, Igor pleaded guilty to failing to wear a seatbelt

and for failing to secure two minor children in seatbelts.

On September 26, 2014, Igor was listed as an “Excluded Driver” in the automobile insurance policy purchased by the Pantyukhins to insure the 1999

2 Honda Accord. Although Matysyuk’s Brief contends that Igor was excluded from

the policy because he had become “too costly to insure” and was “an unreasonable

risk,” nothing in the record suggests any reason for Igor’s exclusion from the

Pantyukhins’ automobile insurance policy. There is also no support in the record

for the assertion (made for the first time in the “Conclusion” of Matysyuk’s Brief)

that the Pantyukhins’ were “told by the insurance agent not to let [Igor] drive their

cars.”

On September 12, 2016, Matysyuk filed a Petition against Igor, their joint

employer, and the Pantyukhins. The petition alleged that the Pantyukhins

negligently entrusted their 1999 Honda to Igor, when he was incompetent to drive it

due to his habitual recklessness. The Petition also alleged a claim against the

Pantyukhins for negligent supervision, although that claim is not at issue in this

appeal.

On March 9, 2017, the Pantyukhins moved for summary judgment. They

argued that Matysyuk could not establish a necessary element of his negligent

entrustment claim: that Igor was incompetent to drive by reason of habitual

recklessness.

On April 10, 2017, Matysyuk filed his response to the Pantyukhins’ motion. Matysyuk responded to the Pantyukhins’ statement of uncontroverted material

facts, and alleged additional purportedly material facts. Matysyuk argued that

there was a genuine issue of material fact whether Igor was a habitually reckless

driver based on his 2011 accident, his 2012 citations, and his exclusion from the

Pantyukhins’ automobile insurance policy. Matysyuk’s response did not contend

that the Pantyukhins’ summary judgment motion was premature because he had

propounded written discovery to which the Pantyukhins had not yet responded, or

because he desired to take their depositions, or the depositions of other witnesses.

3 On April 24, 2017, the Pantyukhins filed a reply memorandum in support of

their summary judgment motion, which responded to Matysyuk’s statement of

additional facts.

Matysyuk filed a motion to strike some of the Pantyukhins’ responses to his

statement of additional material facts; he also moved for leave to file a sur-reply

memorandum. Once again, Matysyuk did not assert that proceedings on the

Pantyukhins’ motion should be stayed to permit him to conduct additional

discovery.

On May 18, 2017, the Pantyukhins noticed their summary judgment motion

for hearing on July 17, 2017. At the conclusion of the July 17 hearing, the circuit

court took the matter under advisement.

After the hearing concluded, Matysyuk filed a motion to stay proceedings on

the Pantyukhins’ motion for summary judgment pending further discovery. In his

motion, Matysyuk noted that the circuit court had asked during the July 17 hearing

“why proceedings on the Motion for Summary Judgment had not been stayed.”

Matysyuk noted that besides his first round of interrogatories, no other discovery

had been conducted between the parties. He requested that, before the court ruled

on the summary judgment motion, he be permitted to depose the Pantyukhins, Igor, and the Pantyukhins’ insurance agent to learn why Igor was excluded from the

Pantyukhins’ automobile insurance policy.

After conducting a further hearing, the circuit court denied Matysyuk’s

motion for stay on July 20, 2017.

On August 2, 2017, the circuit court granted the Pantyukhins’ motion for

summary judgment. In its judgment, the circuit court stated that the record

showed that “Igor has had one accident prior to the fateful one in the present case.”

The court found that “[t]his [one accident] is not sufficient to establish habitual recklessness,” as required to support a negligent entrustment claim against his

4 parents. The judgment also found (in a ruling not challenged here) that the

Pantyukhins were entitled to summary judgment on Matysyuk’s negligent

supervision claim.

Matysyuk later voluntarily dismissed his claims against Igor, and against

their employer, with prejudice. Matysyuk then filed this appeal.

Analysis I.

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Yuriy Matsyuk v. Viktor Pantyukhin and Lyubov Pantyukhin, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yuriy-matsyuk-v-viktor-pantyukhin-and-lyubov-pantyukhin-moctapp-2020.