OPINION
Plaintiff Somchay Bansasine, as guardian for P.K., appeals the trial court’s summary judgment dismissing her negligence claim against defendant Lang Rajsavong. Specifically, Bansasine claims a reasonable juror could find that Rajsavong’s reckless driving was the actual and proximate cause of a driver, angered by Rajsavong’s driving, shooting P.K’s father, a passenger in Rajsa-vong’s ear. We affirm.
FACTS
Rajsavong was driving northbound on Interstate 15 with plaintiffs father when Lucas Bodell drove up close behind them, blinding Rajsavong with his lights. Rajsavong changed lanes, letting Bodell pass. Angered at being blinded, Rajsavong got behind Bo-dell and flipped on his high beams. He then sped up, passed Bodell, and changed back into the lane in which Bodell was driving. In response, Bodell drove up parallel to Rajsa-vong on the passenger side. Rajsavong then sped up to seventy-five miles per hour only to have Bodell follow suit. As Bodell caught up with Rajsavong, plaintiffs father made an obscene gesture at Bodell. Bodell pulled out a gun and displayed it in his palm. Rajsa-vong sped up in an effort to get away from Bodell. As Bodell drove by in his truck, Rajsavong heard a “bang,” and plaintiffs father told Rajsavong that he had been shot. Rajsavong took plaintiffs father to a hospital, where he later died.
Plaintiff brought suit against Rajsavong, claiming Rajsavong’s reckless driving resulted in the death of her father. Defendant filed a motion for summary judgment claiming defendant’s actions were not, as a matter of law, the proximate cause of plaintiffs injuries. The trial court granted the motion, concluding Bodell’s firing of a gun was an intervening and superseding act cutting off any liability of Rajsavong. Plaintiff appeals.
ANALYSIS
“Summary judgment is appropriate only when no genuine issues of material fact exist and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”
K & T, Inc. v. Koroulis,
A prima facie case of negligence requires proof of four elements: (1) defendant owed plaintiff a duty of care; (2) defendant breached that duty; (3) defendant’s breach of duty was the actual and proximate cause of plaintiff’s injury; and (4) plaintiff suffered damages as a result of defendant’s breach of duty.
Clark v. Farmers Ins. Exch.,
Proximate cause is “‘“that cause which, in natural and continuous sequence, (unbroken by efficient intervening cause), produces the injury and without which the result would not have occurred. It is the efficient cause — the one that necessarily sets in operation the factors that accomplish the injury.” ’ ”
Id.
(quoting
Mitchell v. Pearson Enters.,
Utah courts have consistently recognized that “ ⅛ more recent negligent [or criminal/intentional] act may ... relieve the liability of a prior negligent actor under the proper circumstances.’ ”
Steffensen,
We conclude the trial court was correct in determining that a reasonable juror could not have found that defendant’s driving was the proximate cause of the death of plaintiffs father. 2 We agree that a reasonable juror could not find that defendant should foresee that another driver on the road would fire a gun into his car simply because he shined his high beams on that person, passed him, then sped up as the driver tried to approach. 3 If such a response were so’ common as to make it foreseeable, the streets and highways of this country would be empty.
Plaintiff next claims that it is enough to prove only that defendant could have foreseen the general risk of harm that occurred. Specifically, plaintiff argues that defendant could reasonably foresee that aggressive behavior of some kind might be a response to his rude driving, which is exactly what occurred although the specific action was different from what might reasonably be expected, i.e, a car accident or running the defendant off the road. While we agree that “only the general nature of the injury need be foreseeable,”
Steffensen v. Smith’s Management Corp.,
Where the negligent conduct of the actor creates or increases the risk of a particular harm and is a substantial factor in causing that harm, the fact that the harm is brought about through the intervention of another force does not relieve the actor of liability, except where the harm is intentionally caused by a third person and isnot within the scope of the risk created by the actor’s conduct.
(Emphasis added.) Although we recognize that many aspects of today’s society are becoming more violent and confrontational, we cannot conclude that a gunshot is within the scope of the risk created by defendant’s rude and reckless driving.
Finally, plaintiff argues that defendant only needed to be able to foresee the injury that occurred, i.e., death, and not the specific means that caused that injury. In particular, plaintiff claims that because death was a foreseeable outcome of reckless driving — such as through a collision or being run off the road — it does not matter that the death resulted from a gunshot. Plaintiff mis-perceives the law. While plaintiff again correctly states that only the “general nature of the injury need be foreseeable,”
Steffensen,
CONCLUSION
The trial court properly held that under the facts of this case, defendant could not have foreseen that his “reckless driving” would lead to another driver firing a weapon into his car. As such, the trial court properly granted defendant’s motion for summary judgment. We therefore affirm.
DAVIS, Associate P.J., and GREENWOOD, J., concur.
Notes
. As alternative causes of action, plaintiff claimed both that the gun was fired intentionally and that it was fired accidentally.
. Plaintiff claims the following three cases mandate that we determine it was error to take this case from the jury:
Cruz v. Middlekauff Lincoln-Mercury, Inc.,
.We express no opinion as to the added effect of an obscene gesture in relation to the facts of this case with the exception of noting that it was the plaintiff’s father who made the obscene gesture to the shooter, and that it was this gesture that immediately precipitated the shooter brandishing the gun.
