Ramona CHRISTENSEN and Jack Scott, Appellants, v. ALASKA SALES & SERVICE, INC., Appellee.
No. S-14963
Supreme Court of Alaska
Oct. 10, 2014
335 P.3d 514
V. CONCLUSION
We AFFIRM the superior court‘s order.
Terrance A. Turner and Natalie A. Cale, Turner & Mede, P.C., Anchorage, and Edward A. Gray and Heather Russell Fine, Eckert Seamans Cherin & Mellott, LLC, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, for Appellee.
Before: FABE, Chief Justice, WINFREE, STOWERS, MAASSEN, and BOLGER, Justices.
OPINION
WINFREE, Justice.
I. INTRODUCTION
Four years after a couple purchased a new car, it collided with two moose on the Parks Highway. The couple sued the car dealership for product liability, alleging that the car‘s seat belt failed to restrain the driver in the accident. The superior court granted summary judgment to the dealership, concluding that “no reasonable jury could find that the Plaintiffs have proven that the seat belt ... was defective.” The couple appeals; arguing that the superior court applied an incorrect summary judgment standard and that genuine issues of material fact made summary judgment inappropriate. Because we conclude that the couple has raised genuine issues of material fact regarding a seat belt defect and causation of the driver‘s injury, we reverse the superior court‘s grant of summary judgment.
II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
A. Facts
In spring 2004 Ramona Christensen and Jack Scott purchased a new 2004 Buick from Alaska Sales & Service, Inc. In June 2008 Christensen was driving the Buick on the Parks Highway when she collided with two moose. Other than Christensen, there were no witnesses to the accident. Photographs taken after the accident show damage to the Buick‘s front driver‘s side.
After the collision Christensen called the police to report the accident and called Scott to come pick her up at the scene. When
During the days following the accident, Christensen reported feeling lightheaded and dizzy. Christensen‘s speech became disfluent and broken, and her gait became unsteady, causing her to fall repeatedly. About one week after the accident, Christensen sought medical attention to address her worsening symptoms. A neurologist examined Christensen and ordered an MRI spectroscopy. The spectroscopy showed evidence of bilateral frontal lobe brain damage. Since 2008 numerous other physicians and psychiatrists have examined and treated Christensen for her continuing speech, short-term memory, and mobility problems.
Shortly after the accident Scott took the Buick to a repair shop. Scott suspected that Christensen‘s seat belt failed to work properly during the crash. Prior to the accident Scott had noticed that the seat belts in the Buick seemed different than what he was accustomed to—the Buick‘s seat belts sometimes had not retracted on their own or locked when suddenly pulled forward. When Scott asked the repair shop to repair the driver‘s seat belt, the repair shop responded that both the driver‘s and passenger‘s seat belts were not working properly. The repair shop contacted Alaska Sales & Service, but it refused to pay for seat belt replacements. Scott‘s insurance company agreed to pay for the replacements, and the repair shop replaced both seat belts. The original seat belts were not returned to Scott.
B. Proceedings
In 2010 Christensen and Scott filed suit against Alaska Sales & Service, claiming that the Buick‘s seat belt failed to work properly during the crash. After receiving answers to interrogatories, taking depositions of Christensen and Scott, and obtaining an expert affidavit, Alaska Sales & Service filed a motion for summary judgment. Alaska Sales & Service argued that Christensen and Scott had not presented enough evidence that the Buick‘s seat belt was defective or that a seat belt failure caused Christensen‘s injuries. The superior court granted summary judgment to Alaska Sales & Service. Christensen and Scott filed a motion to reconsider; the superior court denied reconsideration and set out its reasons for granting summary judgment to Alaska Sales & Service. The court described the evidence presented, including the absence of the original seat belts, and concluded that “no reasonable jury could find that [Christensen and Scott] have proven that the seat belt ... was defective.” Christensen and Scott appeal.
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review grants of summary judgment de novo.1
IV. DISCUSSION
A. The Summary Judgment Standard In Alaska
The superior court dismissed Christensen and Scott‘s case on the ground that “no reasonable jury could find that [Christensen and Scott] have proven that the seat belt ... was defective.” Christensen and Scott argue that to survive the motion for summary judgment, they only had to show they could present admissible evidence to raise a genuine issue of material fact for trial. Alaska Sales & Service responds that the correct summary judgment test is whether “even if everything [Christensen and Scott] said was true ... a reasonable jury ... could find in their favor,” and that the superior court actually meant and used this standard. (Emphasis in original.) Christensen and Scott are more correct: a non-moving party does not need to prove anything to defeat summary judgment. But a non-moving party cannot create a genuine issue of material fact merely by offering admissible evidence—the offered evidence must not be too conclusory, too speculative, or too incredible to be believed, and it must directly contradict the moving party‘s evidence. We take this opportunity
We affirmed the superior court‘s decision because the hotel owner had not pointed to any evidence actually disputing the city comptroller‘s testimony.7 We noted the hotel owner‘s assertion that he ” ‘could have lost some checks in the fire’ ” was contradicted by the physical evidence: “All of the checks produced ... plainly indicated that his utility bills were not fully paid.... From the cancelled checks produced for every month preceding the fire, and including the month of the fire, the fair inference was that no checks were lost.”8 And during his deposition, when the city‘s lawyer asked the hotel owner whether an audit of his checks would show an unpaid utility bill balance, the hotel owner refused to answer.9 That question “went to the very heart of the issue—where an unequivocal straightforward answer might well have raised an issue of fact.”10 The city had met its summary judgment burden of putting forth evidence showing the lack of genuine issues of material fact, and the hotel owner had failed to “clearly stat[e] his defense of payment and [show] the court how he planned to support that defense with facts which would be admissible in evidence at the trial.”11 We affirmed the grant of summary judgment on the ground that no genuine issue of material fact remained for trial.12
Gilbertson exemplifies the summary judgment standard we consistently have followed. “[A] party seeking summary judgment has the initial burden of proving, through admissible evidence, that there are no [genuine] disputed issues of material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”13 Once the moving party has made that showing, the burden shifts to the non-moving party “to set forth specific facts showing that he could produce evidence reasonably tending to dispute or contradict the movant‘s evidence and thus demonstrate that a material issue of fact exists.”14
In Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc. a citizens group filed libel claims against a magazine and its publisher for portraying the group‘s members as racists.19 The magazine moved for summary judgment in federal district court, submitting a reporter‘s affidavit stating that he believed the information published about the group was true.20 If accepted as true, the reporter‘s statement would have negated an essential element of the group‘s libel claim.21 The group responded with allegations that the reporter had relied on clearly unbelievable sources—allegations the group claimed disputed the reporter‘s statement of belief that the information was true.22 The group argued that it had raised a genuine issue of material fact, but the federal district court disagreed and granted summary judgment to the magazine.23
The U.S. Supreme Court‘s analysis began with a discussion of summary judgment standards and the appropriate weight to give conflicting evidentiary claims.24 The Court clarified the meaning of
The Liberty Lobby Court equated summary judgment with the existing standard for deciding directed verdict motions under
In Moffatt v. Brown we considered whether to follow Liberty Lobby‘s new approach to summary judgment, but ultimately rejected it.31 In that case, a physician sued a newsletter publisher for defamation related to allegedly false statements about the physician‘s abortion procedures.32 The publisher moved for summary judgment, arguing that the superior court should apply the Liberty Lobby test for summary judgment and determine there was not sufficient evidence to raise a genuine issue of material fact because no reasonable jury would find for the physician.33 The superior court denied the publisher‘s motion.34
We affirmed the denial of summary judgment, concluding that
Since Moffatt we consistently have interpreted Rule 56 to require only ” ‘a showing that a genuine issue of material fact exists to be litigated, and not a showing that a party will ultimately prevail’ ” at trial.38 There are two important aspects to this requirement. First, a material fact is one upon which resolution of an issue turns.39 Second, because the existence of a dispute over a material fact is a question of law,40 the determination is objectively based and employs a reasonableness standard.41 Although we occasionally have described the reasonableness standard as whether “reasonable jurors could
Alaska‘s summary judgment standard does not allow trial courts, on the limited evidence presented at the summary judgment stage, to make trial-like credibility determinations, conduct trial-like evidence weighing,47 or decide whether a non-moving party has proved its case. Although a trial court initially must determine whether the evidence could be believed by a reasonable person, that decision is not based on whether the court actually believes the evidence or whether it believes the moving party has better evidence.48 The trier of fact ultimately may find against the non-moving party after evaluating credibility and applying the substantive evidentiary standards of proof at trial. But the only questions to be answered at the summary judgment stage are whether a reasonable person could believe the non-moving party‘s assertions and whether a reasonable person could conclude those assertions create a genuine dispute as to a material fact.49
We reiterate that ours is a “lenient standard for withstanding summary judgment.”50
B. Genuine Issues Of Material Fact Precluded Summary Judgment.
To prevail on their design-defect claim of strict liability, Christensen and Scott ultimately must prove at trial that the Buick‘s seat belt was defective and that the defect caused Christensen some compensable injury.52 The superior court granted summary judgment on the issue of defect, but Alaska Sales & Service also argues that there is no evidence for causation, presumably as an alternative ground for upholding summary judgment. Construing all of the evidence in the light most favorable to Christensen and Scott and making all reasonable factual inferences in their favor, we conclude that there are genuine issues of material fact with respect to both the seat belt defect and causation.
1. Evidence exists reasonably suggesting a defect in the seat belt.
Christensen and Scott presented evidence that is not too incredible to be believed and, taking all reasonable inferences in their favor, raises a discernible dispute whether the driver‘s seat belt was defective at the time of the accident. Christensen and Scott produced evidence indicating an unbroken chain of custody of the Buick and that the seat belts as originally sold had not been altered in any way. Scott stated that before the accident he tested the seat belts by quickly pulling them forward and that sometimes the mechanism would not lock or retract the belts. After the accident the seat belts were replaced but, according to Scott, the new seat belts failed in the same manner as the previous belts. Scott testified that the new seat belts would also sometimes not lock in place following a sudden forward movement. This evidence supports the inference that the driver‘s seat belt may not have worked as intended in the accident.
Christensen said she always wears her seat belt and was wearing it at the time of the accident. Christensen also said that after hitting the moose she was not pinned against her seat and that she had no bruising or marks on her body other than a red mark on her forehead. The absence of bruising from the seat belt supports an inference that it did not restrain Christensen during the collision, and the forehead marking supports the inference that her body went forward far enough to contact something in the car; both support the inference that the seat belt may not have restrained her as intended.
Alaska Sales & Service points to the lack of specific pieces of evidence in the record supporting a seat belt defect. According to Alaska Sales & Service, summary judgment was warranted because Christensen and Scott could not produce the seat belts in question, a description of the seat belt‘s performance during the crash, evidence of occupant contact marks within the vehicle, or any
2. Evidence exists reasonably suggesting Christensen‘s injury was caused by the seat belt defect.
Christensen and Scott also produced evidence that is not too incredible to be believed and, taking all reasonable inferences in their favor, raises a discernible dispute whether the allegedly defective seat belt caused her injury. Christensen and Scott said that after the accident Christensen had a mark on her forehead. Christensen said she could not remember some of the events immediately before, during, or after the collision. Christensen‘s ongoing post-accident symptoms include dizziness, impaired speech, and difficulty walking.
Christensen and Scott presented evidence from medical specialists diagnosing a “closed head injury” and “bilateral frontal damage” to her brain. A neurologist noted that Christensen‘s symptoms “started after the accident,” and although none of the treating physicians could yet conclude with certainty that the accident caused Christensen‘s brain injury, the neurologist stated that “there is no other explanation.”
Alaska Sales & Service argues that Christensen and Scott cannot establish causation without an expert who can examine the seat belt and link Christensen‘s brain injury to the seat belt defect. But the evidence and reasonable inferences that can be drawn from it support Christensen and Scott‘s allegation that Christensen suffered a head injury. The mark on Christensen‘s head and her memory loss support an inference that she hit her head during the accident hard enough to lose consciousness. Christensen‘s and Scott‘s testimony about symptom onset, along with the neurologist‘s statements describing Christensen‘s symptoms as beginning after the accident and noting “there is no other explanation,” support an inference that her symptoms resulted from the accident.53
3. Summary judgment was inappropriate.
Christensen and Scott raised genuine issues of material fact with respect to both seat belt defect and causation. The evidence they presented goes well beyond assumption and speculation, is not too incredible to be believed, and relates directly to the material issues in the case. Taking all reasonable inferences from that evidence in their favor, genuine factual disputes as to defect and causation are reasonably discernable. Whether Christensen and Scott ultimately will prevail at trial under the appropriate evidentiary standard is irrelevant—at the summary judgment stage courts do not weigh evidence or predict how a jury will decide the case. Christensen and Scott were not required to “prove” their case; rather, they were required to and did demonstrate the existence of genuine issues of material fact to be litigated at trial. Thus, it was error to grant summary judgment.
V. CONCLUSION
We REVERSE the superior court‘s grant of summary judgment to Alaska Sales & Service and REMAND for further proceedings.
