In a personal injury action the trial court entered a judgment for the defendant Leathers despite a verdict against the defendant Leathers and for the defendant Shiroma. Plaintiff appeals only from the judgment for the defendant Leathers.
The sole issue is the extent of Mrs. Leathers’ liability.
The circumstances leading up to plaintiff’s injury are unusual. Vehicles driven by the two defend *569 ants, SHroma and Leathers, collided. The collision was not horrendous and the cars remained operable; however, some glass and debris did fall on the pavement. A jury could find the defendant Mrs. Leathers negligently caused the collision.
Plaintiff was in his car, waiting at a stop sign, when the collision occurred on the cross street in front of him. He stopped in his lane, got out and instructed Mrs. Leathers to move her car, which she did. Plaintiff put out flares and directed traffic. Plaintiff noticed his car was impeding traffic. He asked a young man, White, to move his car out of the way. White was too young to be licensed as a vehicle operator. He got in the car, lurched forward, struck another vehicle, veered across the street and struck plaintiff. Plaintiff was struck about 15 minutes after the initial collision.
Plaintiff contends the jury should decide whether Mrs. Leathers is liable for plaintiff’s injuries because of her negligence in causing the initial collision.
Plaintiff’s contention raises the issue examined at length in Mr. Chief Justice O’Connell’s specially concurring opinion in
Dewey v. A. F. Klaveness & Co.,
A jury could have found that Mrs. Leathers’ conduct was a cause in fact of plaintiff’s injury. A neg *570 ligent defendant, however, is not liable for' every injury for which her conduct is a cause in fact.
The court has no problem in concluding that Mrs. Leathers had a duty to act reasonably to avoid inflicting physical injury. However, Mrs. Leathers’ conduct is in breach of that duty and she is negligent only if, as a reasonably prudent person, she should have foreseen that plaintiff might be injured. ① The jury determines whether the injury is foreseeable unless the court is of the opinion that there is insufficient evidence to support a finding that the injury was foreseeable.
The precise question before us is whether there is sufficient evidence to enable a jury to find Mrs. Leathers was negligent; that is, is there sufficient evidence to enable the jury to find that Mrs. Leathers should have foreseen that plaintiff might be injured because of her conduct?
In
Stewart v. Jefferson Plywood Co.,
supra (
“The premise upon which this standard is based is the concept that an actor should not be liable unless he is at fault in the legal sense. Although legal fault is not the exact equivalent of moral fault, the predicate is blameworthiness in some sense; the actor being regarded as blameworthy if his conduct is, according to community standards, generally considered as creating a danger to persons in the *571 situation in which the plaintiff finds himself. ‘Thus the standard represents the general level of moral judgment of the community, what it feels ought ordinarily be done, and not necessarily what is ordinarily done, although in practice the two would very often come to the same thing.’ 2 Harper & James, The Law of Torts, p. 903 (1956).”255 Or at 608 .
We broadened this basic concept of blameworthiness to include an anticipation of general kinds of harm to persons in the general class threatened:
“An important corollary of this principle is that ‘liability is confined to harms actually resulting that are of the general kind to be anticipated from the conduct and, for the same reason, liability is confined to situations in which the person harmed is one of the general class threatened.’ ”255 Or at 608-609 .
However, we limited what the defendant should be held to foresee as follows:
“Thus fault, as the term is usually understood, is not associated with conduct which causes harm through the concatenation of highly unusual circumstances. If, in our appraisal of the community’s conception of fault, we find that the conduct in question clearly falls outside the conception, we are charged with the duty of withdrawing the issue from the jury.”255 Or at 609 .
We applied these factors to the evidence in Stewart and held defendant’s negligence was a question for the jury. The evidence was that the defendant negligently started a fire in its mill. The fire spread to defendant’s log deck about 1,000 feet away. Sparks from the burning deck fell on the roof of a nearby warehouse. The plaintiff heard about the fire and that help was needed. He went to the fire and was directed *572 to go to the warehouse roof and put out the sparks. He did so and fell through a covered skylight.
In
Gunn v. Hi-C-Home, Inc.,
supra (
The present case, however, we find is on the other side of the scales. We hold that there was no evidence from which the jury could find that Mrs. Leathers should have foreseen this kind of injury to the class of persons to which plaintiff belonged. Using the test of Stewart, we find “plaintiff’s injury and the manner of its occurrence was so highly unusual that we can say as a matter of law that a reasonable man, making an inventory of the possibilities of harm which his conduct might produce, would not have reasonably expected the injury to occur.”
Articulating reasons which do not consist merely of statements supporting a judgment already intuitively made is not easy. The two events which we find most unforeseeable by a reasonable person in defendant’s position were the plaintiff leaving Ms ear in a traffic lane and later having an incompetent driver move the car.
In
Stewart
we recognized the problem of defining when the harm is foreseeable. We observed that if we adopted “a detailed, mechanism-of-harm description of the result and the risks” few harms would be considered foreseeable.
Kukacka v.
Rock,
Plaintiff states that Kukacka should be distinguished because “defendant did not create a dangerous condition on the highway which continued until plaintiff was injured. Rock’s car was off the road and presented no hazard to oncoming traffic.” This is a distinction; however, we consider the cause of plaintiff Allen’s injuries to be a concatenation of circumstances as “highly unusual” as those in the Kukacka case.
Plaintiff cites
White v. Rosenberry,
441 Pa 34,
Plaintiff also contends that 2 Restatement (Second) Torts supports his position. Sections 435 (1), 439 *574 and 447 are stated in broad enough terms to be construed to make plaintiff’s injuries foreseeable. On the other hand, § 435 (2) is broad enough in terms to justify a decision that defendant should not be responsible for plaintiff’s injuries. The section states:
“The actor’s conduct may be held not to be a legal cause of harm to another where after the event and looking back from the harm to the-actor’s negligent conduct, it appears to the court highly extraordinary that it should have brought about the harm.” 2 Restatement (Second) Torts, 449 § 435 (2).
Affirmed. .
Notes
Prosser writes in terms of duty rather than negligence. Prosser, Torts (4th ed), § 43-, We are of the opinion, however, that our approach, in terms of negligence is basically the same as Prosser’s in terms of duty; certainly both are based upon foreseeability.
