DocketNumber: No. 115,531
Citation Numbers: 53 Kan. App. 2d 297, 387 P.3d 185, 2016 Kan. App. LEXIS 73
Judges: Buser, Hill, Leben
Filed Date: 12/23/2016
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
One afternoon in September 2011, in a rural part of Labette County, Darren Manley was driving north on one gravel road while John Patton was driving west on another, and their trucks collided at the unsigned intersection of those two roads. Manley was killed. His family, through his estate, sued the County, Patton, and the Hallbauers, who own the property at the southeast comer of the intersection.
The Manleys settled with both the County and Patton. Everyone agrees that at the time of the accident, trees and vegetation growing on the Hallbauers’ property obstructed the view of drivers traveling where Manley and Patton had been. The district court granted
Factual and Procedural Background
The facts aren’t substantially contested. On the afternoon of September 14, 2011, at the intersection of Anderson Road and 20000 Road in Labette County, Darren Manley was killed when his truck collided with John Patton’s truck. Manley was headed north on Anderson Road, which runs north and south. Patton was headed west on 20000 Road, which runs east and west. Both are gravel roads.
The intersection did not have any traffic signs. A professional engineer testified that he thought the roads carried fewer than 400 cars a day, making them both “low volume” roads. Labette County’s director of public works likewise testified that her office had studied tire average daily traffic of these two roads in January 2015 and found they were both “low volume” roads. The engineer also noted that it wasn’t uncommon for rural intersections in Labette and surrounding counties to have restricted visibility due to crops or trees. According to the officers who investigated the accident, there was no evidence that either driver had tried to brake or evade the collision.
The Hallbauers own and live on about 11 acres of land at the southeast comer of the Anderson/20000 intersection. At the time of the accident, a row of trees stretched along their property line from the intersection to the south, and another row followed their property line from the intersection to the east. According to the officers who investigated the accident, there were also more trees in the interior of the property, “making it impossible for westbound traffic to see approaching northbound traffic” and vice versa. The Manleys’ engineering expert said he believed that the accident was caused by the lack of traffic signs and the obstmcted visibility created by the Hallbauers’ trees.
After the accident, Manley’s estate, through his wife, son, and daughter, brought a wrongful-death lawsuit against Labette County, Patton (the driver of the other car), and the Hallbauers. The Manleys settled their claims against Patton and the County.
The Hallbauers filed a motion for summary judgment, arguing that they didn’t owe a duty to drivers to trim the trees on their property to maintain visibility at the intersection and thei'efore weren’t liable for Manley’s death in the car accident. The district court agreed; it granted the Hallbauers’ motion and certified its judgment as final under K.S.A. 2015 Supp. 60-254(b).
The Manleys have appealed to our court.
Analysis
The Manleys argue that the Hallbauers owed a duty to Manley to trim their trees to maintain visibility at the intersection and that the district court was wrong to conclude otherwise. Everyone agrees that, factually, the Hallbauers’ trees blocked visibility at the intersection. The question here is whether the law required the Hallbauers to do anything to remedy that situation. In other words, did the Hallbauers owe a duty to Manley?
The existence of a duty is a question of law. Elstun v. Spangles, Inc., 289 Kan. 754, 757, 217 P.3d 450 (2009). Because it’s a question of law and not a contested factual issue, it was appropriate for the district court to grant summary judgment on this question and rule on it without a full trial. See Drouhard-Nordhus v. Rosenquist, 301 Kan. 618, 622, 345 P.3d 281 (2015) (summary judgment appropriate when there’s no genuine issue of material fact); Martin
The underlying legal claim is for negligence. A negligence claim requires (1) the existence of a duty, (2) the breach of that duty, (3) an injury, and (4) sufficient causal connection between the duty breached and the injury sustained (a concept lawyers call “proximate causation”). Smith v. Kansas Gas Service Co., 285 Kan. 33, 39, 169 P.3d 1052 (2007). Where a duty exists, a person generally has the duty to act as a reasonably prudent person would act in similar circumstances. See Fieser v. Kansas Bd. of Healing Arts, 281 Kan. 268, 272, 130 P.3d 555 (2006); Wozniak v. Lipoff, 242 Kan. 583, 607, 750 P.2d 971 (1988).
But that duty doesn’t extend to everyone in the world. In Kansas, courts apply a foreseeability test: A person owes a duty if (1) the plaintiff is a foreseeable plaintiff and (2) the probability of harm is foreseeable. Berry v. National Medical Services, Inc., 292 Kan. 917, 920-21, 257 P.3d 287 (2011). In other words, “[t]he duty of care is intertwined with the foreseeability of harm.” Shirley v. Glass, 297 Kan. 888, 900, 308 P.3d 1 (2013); see Berry, 292 Kan. at 920-21. So an individual must act like a reasonably prudent person toward another individual if there is some sort of relationship between the two individuals that justifies imposing a legal obligation on one for the benefit of the other—a relationship based on foreseeability. See Prosser and Keeton, Law of Torts § 53 (5th ed. 1984). In this case, then, the question is whether the relationship between landowners and drivers on adjacent roads creates a duty: Would a reasonable landowner have foreseen a probability of harm to motorists from the obstructed view?
Obstructed visibility at an intersection creates a risk to people who drive on die roads, so Manley, because he was just such a driver, was a foreseeable plaintiff. But was the harm itself sufficiently foreseeable? Was the risk such that a reasonable person would have
On one hand, the risk created by obstructed visibility at an intersection is the risk of a car accident, which is exactly what happened here. The Hallbauers did know that the view was obstructed and agreed .that a stop sign would have made the intersection safer. On the other hand, these roads weren’t heavily traveled, the County had no record of any two-car accidents at the intersection until this one, and the Hallbauers had received no complaints in the 5 years they had owned the property about their trees obstructing the view. The County’s director of public works also implied that she hadn’t received any complaints about visibility at this intersection (if she had, she would have taken them to the Hallbauers, and they never received any complaints from the County).
Additionally, when visibility is obstructed, drivers generally have a responsibility to drive with more caution. See Toumberlin v. Haas, 236 Kan. 138, 144, 689 P.2d 808 (1984) (quoting Lyke v. State Highway Comm., 160 Kan. 709, 711, 165 P.2d 228 [1946]); McCleary v. Boss, 24 Kan. App. 2d 791, 794-95, 955 P.2d 127 (1997). This point is related to the long-standing rule that landowners don’t have a duty to protect people who enter their property from open and obvious dangers. Miller v. Zep Mfg. Co., 249 Kan. 34, 43, 815 P.2d 506 (1991) (relying on Restatement [Second] of Torts § 343A [1965]). Rather than placing a duty on the landowners, this rule assumes that people should be able to protect themselves from open and obvious dangers, and it’s related to foreseeability because a person may reasonably assume that others will protect themselves from open and obvious dangers. Restatement (Second) of Torts § 343A, comment e (1965). Here, these rules would suggest, it was reasonable for the Hallbauers to assume that drivers approaching this intersection would see that visibility was obstructed and would proceed with extra caution, making an accident less foreseeable. See, e.g., Toumberlin, 236 Kan. at 144.
So, returning to the question at hand, would a reasonable landowner have foreseen a probability of harm to motorists from the obstructed view?
We start our review with two Kansas Supreme Court cases that
The first case, Goodaile v. Cowley County, 111 Kan. 542, 207 P. 785 (1922), arose in 1922. The plaintiff, in a horse-drawn buggy, was injured at an intersection when a car appeared suddenly from behind a hedge and startled the horse. The plaintiff argued that the landowner was responsible for her injuries because the hedges blocked the view of the other road, but the court disagreed, finding that the startled horse caused her injury, not the obstructed view. 111 Kan. at 543, 545. Three years later, in Bohm v. Racette, 118 Kan. 670, 236 P. 811 (1925), a fatal car accident occurred at an intersection with visibility blocked by high hedges. The court followed Goodaile and held that landowners weren’t liable for injuries caused by vegetation that obstructed road visibility. 118 Kan. at 671. From these precedents, ¿e Hallbauers argue that a landowner has no duty to trim hedges or trees ¿at block ¿e view of drivers on an adjacent roadway. Indeed, on very different facts, our court relied on Goodaile to find that an accident wasn’t .caused by allege¿y obstructing vegetation. See McCleary, 24 Kan. App. 2d at 794-95.
But Goodaile and Bohm are not all that similar to our case. First, the plaintiffs in those cases argued that the duty was created by a statute requiring landowners to trim their hedges, and the court found no duty based on the statute—die court didn’t discuss whether a general common-law duty might exist. Bohm, 118 Kan. at 671; Goodaile, 111 Kan., at 543-44; see also McCleary, 24 Kan. App. 2d at 794 (plaintiff relied on K.S.A. 8-2011[a] to create duty and court found no duty); Thiessen v. Union Pacific R.R. Co., No. 76,152, 1997 WL 377342 (Kan. App.), rev. denied 262 Kan. 969 (1997) (holding, based on Goodaile, that K.S.A. 8-2011[a] doesn’t create a duty). Here, the Manleys argue that the Hallbauers owe a general common-law duty not based on any statute—in o¿er words, they argue for a different land of duty than what Goodaile
Second, the holdings in Goodaile and Bohm are not explidtly about duty; instead, the court in both cases phrased its holding in terms of tire landowners’ ultimate liability—for example, “the owners of the land are not fiable in damages” for the plaintiffs injury— and did not focus on whether the lack of liability was based on a finding of no duty or no proximate cause. Goodaile, 111 Kan. 542, Syl. ¶ 1; see Bohm, 118 Kan. 670, Syl. ¶ 1. Duty and proximate cause are separate and necessary elements of a negligence claim. Adams v. Board of Sedgwick County Commrs, 289 Kan. 577, 585-86, 214 P.3d 1173 (2009). Because they are related concepts in tort law, courts often discuss them together, Prosser and Keeton, Law of Torts § 53, and Kansas law applies a foreseeability test on both the duty and proximate-cause elements. See Berry, 292 Kan. at 920 (applying foreseeability to duty analysis); Hale v. Brown, 287 Kan. 320, 322-23, 197 P.3d 438 (2008) (applying foreseeability to proximate-cause analysis).
In this context, we think it questionable that proximate-cause holdings or nonspecific liability holdings from the 1920s should control our ruling on the specific issue—involving duty—in this case. The Goodaile courts reasoning seems substantially based on proximate cause: “Even if . . . the high hedges were in part the cause of the accident which resulted in tire plaintiff’s injury, it cannot be said that they were the efficient intervening cause of the accident. The horse was frightened by an automobile. That was what caused the accident.” 111 Kan. at 545. The Bohm court is less clear because it simply followed Goodaile: “[Goodaile] was based on negligence of tire owner for not trimming the hedge as required by law, and the principle there declared controls here.” 118 Kan. at 671. In summary, we can’t say that Goodaile and Bohm actually control the specific question here, about duty—but we must acknowledge that from a broader perspective, those cases dealt with the same factual situation that we have here and ultimately did not hold the landowners liable. See Majors v. Hillebrand, 51 Kan. App. 2d 625, 629-30, 349 P.3d 1283 (2015), rev. denied 303 Kan. 1078
So where do we turn to determine whether tire Hallbauers had a duty to cut down the trees that obstructed the views of drivers approaching the intersection? The American Law Institute has for many years adopted “Restatements” of the law in various areas, including torts. Its Restatement (Second) of Torts, issued in 1965, provides that a rural landowner has no liability for physical harm caused to someone outside the land itself when the injury was caused by a natural condition of the land, like trees. Restatement (Second) of Torts § 363 (1965). This rule was consistent with a common-law rule that landowners generally don’t owe a duty to drivers to cut down naturally occurring vegetation that obstructs the view at an intersection. See Prosser and Keeton, Law of Torts § 57 (5th ed. 1984) (noting that most states don’t impose liability in this circumstance). On the other hand, the newer Restatement (Third) of Torts would sometimes malee the landowner liable—if the landowner knew of the risk or the risk was obvious. Restatement (Third) of Torts: Liability for Physical and Emotional Harm § 54 (2012).
For several reasons, we find the position of tire Second Restatement persuasive here. First, the Kansas Supreme Court has applied the Second Restatement many times. E.g., City of Neodesha v. BP Corporation, 295 Kan. 298, Syl. ¶¶ 6-8, 287 P.3d 214 (2012) (applying Second Restatement to claim of damage due to abnormally dangerous activity); Sall v. T's, Inc., 281 Kan. 1355, Syl. ¶¶ 3-5, 136 P.3d 471 (2006) (applying Second Restatement to claim of failure to perform a duty a party has voluntarily undertaken); Long v. Turk, 265 Kan. 855, 861-62, 962 P.2d 1093 (1998) (applying Second Restatement to claim that special care must be used regarding inherently dangerous items); Werner v. Kliewer, 238 Kan. 289, Syl., 710 P.2d 1250 (1985) (applying Second Restatement to invasion-of-privacy claim). Second, the Third Restatement is based on a general formulation of negligence principles that is contrary to Kansas law: The Third Restatement does not úse a foreseeability analysis to determine whether a duty exists. Restatement (Third) of Torts § 7, comment j (2010); § 54, comment a (2012).
We also find it persuasive that several other states have found no duty in these circumstances. E.g., Driggers v. Locke, 323 Ark. 63, 70-72, 913 S.W.2d 269 (1996) (landowner owes no duty to users of roadway to trim holly bushes on his property growing close to intersection); Williams v. Davis, 974 So. 2d 1052, 1062 (Fla. 2007) (landowner had no duty to motorists with regard to natural conditions contained wholly within the private property’s boundaries); Pyne v. Witmer, 159 Ill. App. 3d 254, 261-62, 512 N.E.2d 993 (1987) (landowner has no duty to remove foliage on his property so that motorists approaching an intersection could see other motorists); Fritz v. Parkison, 397 N.W.2d 714, 715-17 (Iowa 1986) (owner of land abutting curved highway owed motorists no duty to remove trees located on owner’s property); Hackett v. Costa, 12 Mass. L. Rptr. 420, at *5 (Mass. Super. Ct. 2000) (landowner has no common-law duty to users of a highway to remove vegetation to
We mentioned already that we found tire Second Restatement rule consistent with Kansas caselaw. As we also noted, under both the Second Restatement and caselaw generally, landowners usually don’t owe a duty to drivers to cut down naturally occurring vegetation that obstructs the view at an intersection. Kansas caselaw hasn’t specifically discussed those rules, but we have had cases involving a corollary proposition. A different rule generally applies for artificial conditions on the land—in that event, landowners do owe a duty of reasonable care toward drivers. Restatement (Second) of Torts § 364 (1965). Kansas courts haven’t noted this natural/artificial distinction in the context of obstructions of the view of drivers, but they have recognized it in other contexts. See, e.g., Glaser v. U.S.D. No. 253, 271 Kan. 178, 186-87, 21 P.3d 573 (2001) (citing Restatement [Second] of Torts § 364 on artificial conditions); Carter v. Skelly Oil Co., 191 Kan. 474, 479-80, 382 P.2d 277 (1963) (noting distinction between natural and artificial conditions).
Generally, trees and other naturally occurring vegetation, weeds, and shrubbery are considered natural conditions, along with swamps, falling rocks, and the natural flow of surface water.
In sum, although there is a potential argument, for the plaintiff based on the Third Restatement, we have concluded that the Second Restatement’s position that there is no duty on a rural landowner in this Situation is.the most consistent with Kansas law. Our foreseeability analysis, the holdings of Gooclaile and Bohm, the rulings from other states, .and the traditional common-law rule all suggest that the Hallbauers did not .owe a duty to Manley to trim die naturally occurring trees and vegetation on their land that obstructed visibility at the intersection. The Manleys suggest that this ruling somehow grants landowners blanket immunity that would protect them from liability for using dynamite to remove tree stumps, for example. But the Manleys’ hypothetical is off the
We therefore affirm the district court’s judgment.