COOPER TIRE & RUBBER COMPANY v. KOCH et al.
A16A1219
Court of Appeals of Georgia
November 9, 2016
793 SE2d 564 | 339 Ga. App. 357
McMILLIAN, Judge.
Sean J. Lowe, for appellant. Herbert E. Franklin, Jr., District Attorney, Alan C. Norton, Assistant District Attorney, for appellee.
The facts pertinent to this appeal are largely undisputed. On April 24, 2012, Gerald Koch was driving eastbound on Interstate 16 in his 2001 Ford Explorer when the tread on his left rear tire detached. According to the State of Georgia Traffic Crash Report, the Explorer then swerved out of control and traveled approximately 79 feet before striking a guardrail. The vehicle continued to travel in an easterly direction for approximately 134 feet, overturning several times before coming to an uncontrolled final rest in the eastbound ditch facing west.
Mr. Koch suffered serious injuries in the accident and was transported by emergency vehicle to the Medical Center of Central
The Ford Explorer was towed from the accident scene by Brown‘s Wrecker Service (Wrecker Service), where it was placed in a storage yard. Sometime after the accident but before Mr. Koch died, Plaintiff talked to the owner of the Wrecker Service, Edwin Brown, who explained to her that she was being charged a daily storage fee for the vehicle. Plaintiff told Brown she could not afford to pay the storage costs, and he told her that he would not bill her for storage costs if she would transfer the title to him so he could sell the vehicle to a salvage yard where it would be crushed for scrap. Plaintiff said that she did not see any reason to keep the vehicle since it was totaled, so she agreed to transfer the title instead of paying for the vehicle to be stored. However, at some point prior to transferring the title, Plaintiff talked it over with her husband, who told her to tell the Wrecker Service to save the tires.1 After instructing Brown to save the left rear tire, Plaintiff relinquished control of the vehicle. Brown then stored the tire,2 and the vehicle and companion tires were crushed for scrap.
Several weeks after Mr. Koch died, his daughter contacted an attorney in her home state of Missouri. The Missouri attorney contacted the Wrecker Service concerning the preservation of the tire and also recommended the daughter contact an attorney in Georgia. Shortly thereafter, Plaintiff retained Georgia counsel, and her attorney retrieved the tire from the Wrecker Service on or about September 26, 2012.
Plaintiff filed suit on March 6, 2014, alleging that Cooper Tire‘s defectively designed and/or manufactured tire caused the fatal crash. Cooper Tire subsequently moved to dismiss the complaint or, in the alternative, to bar Plaintiff from presenting evidence to rebut its
[v]iewing the evidence from the perspective of the party having control over the subject vehicle, this Court does not find that the facts and circumstances give rise to litigation being reasonably foreseeable or that it should have been reasonably contemplated by the Plaintiff so as to trigger the duty to preserve the subject vehicle.
On appeal, Cooper Tire argues that the trial court erred by focusing on whether the Plaintiff subjectively knew that litigation was likely at the time she allowed the vehicle and companion tires to be destroyed and instead should have applied the objective standard established by our Supreme Court in Phillips v. Harmon, 297 Ga. 386, 397 (II) (774 SE2d 596) (2015) to determine whether, applying the factors listed in Phillips, Plaintiff knew or should have known that the evidence should be preserved for litigation. Cooper Tire consequently argues that because the trial court applied the wrong legal standard in determining Plaintiff‘s duty in this case, we must review its decision under a de novo standard of review, rather than the abuse of discretion standard generally applicable to trial court rulings on spoliation issues.
The standard of review on appeal is well settled. A trial court has wide discretion in resolving spoliation issues, and such discretion will not be disturbed absent abuse. Phillips, 297 Ga. at 397 (II). However, an appellate court cannot affirm a trial court‘s reasoning which is based upon an erroneous legal theory. Id. Thus, this Court must first consider the proper analysis to be used in determining whether Plaintiff spoliated and then whether the trial court correctly applied the analysis.
Spoliation refers to the destruction, failure to preserve, or material alteration of evidence that is relevant to contemplated or pending litigation. Phillips, 297 Ga. at 393 (II); Silman v. Assoc. Bellemeade, 286 Ga. 27, 28 (685 SE2d 277) (2009). Because the spoliation of evidence may give rise to sanctions against the spoliator, including dismissal of the complaint, an initial determination must be made that the spoliator had a duty to preserve the evidence at the time it was destroyed. Whitfield v. Tequila Mexican Restaurant No. 1, 323 Ga. App. 801, 807 (6) (748 SE2d 281) (2013) (A spoliation claim cannot be pursued unless the spoliating party was under a duty to
Logically, the duty to preserve relevant evidence must be viewed from the perspective of the party with control of the evidence and is triggered not only when litigation is pending but when it is reasonably foreseeable to that party. See Graff v. Baja Marine Corp., 310 Fed. Appx. 298, 301 (11th Cir. 2009); West v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., 167 F3d 776, 779 (2d Cir. 1999).
Phillips, 297 Ga. at 396 (II).
In Phillips, our Supreme Court overruled a long line of precedent from this Court in which we had held that a defendant‘s duty to preserve arises only when the plaintiff‘s actions have provided the defendant with actual or express notice that the plaintiff is contemplating litigation. Phillips enunciated two concepts on the issue of notice: (1) notice may be actual or constructive and (2) the defendant‘s actions may be relevant to that determination because such activity may be an expression by the defendant that it was acting in anticipation of litigation. (Footnote omitted; emphasis supplied.) Phillips, 297 Ga. at 396-97 (II). Additionally, the Court went on to point to other circumstances from which
[n]otice that the plaintiff is contemplating litigation may also be derived from, i.e., litigation may be reasonably foreseeable to the defendant based on, . . . the type and extent of the injury; the extent to which fault for the injury is clear; the potential financial exposure if faced with a finding of liability; the relationship and course of conduct between the parties[;] and the frequency with which litigation occurs in similar circumstances.
However, and understandably since it was only the defendant hospital‘s duty that was at issue, the Court in Phillips did not dwell on a plaintiff‘s duty, stating only that [i]n regard to the injured party, usually the plaintiff, the duty arises when that party contemplates litigation, inasmuch as litigation is obviously foreseeable to the plaintiff at that point and generally that the duty to preserve relevant evidence arises when litigation is reasonably foreseeable to the party in control of that evidence. 297 Ga. at 396, 397 (II). Thus, as Cooper Tire acknowledges, the Court in Phillips did not expressly address how the objective reasonably foreseeable test set out in
As an initial matter, we do not agree that the Court in Phillips intended that the list of factors from which it might be derived that a party constructively knew it should anticipate a lawsuit was intended to be applied in every case to either party. Rather, the Court made it clear that as a general rule, the duty to preserve relevant evidence arises when litigation is reasonably foreseeable to the party in control of the evidence, no matter whether that party is the plaintiff or defendant. Phillips, 297 Ga. at 396, 397 (II). With respect to plaintiffs, the Court further noted that the duty arises when that party actually contemplates litigation because litigation is obviously foreseeable to the plaintiff at that point. Id. at 396 (II). On the other hand, opposing parties have the duty to preserve evidence when they know or reasonably should know that the injured party is in fact contemplating litigation, which the Phillips court noted has generally been referred to in terms of notice to the defendant. Id. It is in the context of how to determine notice to the defendant that the Court elucidated the factors that Cooper Tire now asks the Court to apply to the question of whether litigation is reasonably foreseeable to the plaintiff. But the issue of whether litigation was reasonably foreseeable to the plaintiff is separate and distinct from whether a defendant actually or reasonably should have foreseen litigation by the plaintiff, and thus we do not believe that the Supreme Court intended those specific factors to apply in determining whether litigation was reasonably foreseeable to the plaintiff.
That is not to say, however, that the test is a subjective one for an allegedly spoliating plaintiff. To the contrary, the Supreme Court made it clear that reasonable foreseeability is the touchstone for determining whether a plaintiff was contemplating litigation, and
Having determined the appropriate analysis for an allegedly spoliating injured party, we now turn to whether the trial court applied the correct legal concepts in denying Cooper Tire‘s spoliation motion. We first note that the trial court explicitly relied on Phillips and set out the principles enunciated therein. Cooper Tire takes issue with the trial court‘s subsequent analysis of the facts, including its reliance on testimony from Plaintiff about what Mr. Koch intended when he asked her to save the left rear tire and why she decided to transfer the vehicle to Brown, asserting that it is improper under Phillips for the trial court to have viewed Plaintiff‘s testimony from her perspective, instead of a wholly objective reasonable person. We discern no error, however, in considering this testimony in determining whether Plaintiff was actually contemplating litigation or whether litigation was reasonably foreseeable to someone in Plaintiff‘s position at the time. And it is clear that the trial court considered and found that under the facts and circumstances of the case, litigation was not reasonably foreseeable or that it should have been reasonably contemplated by the Plaintiff so as to trigger the duty to preserve the subject vehicle.
Judgment affirmed. McFadden, J., concurs. Miller, P. J., concurs in judgment only.
McMILLIAN
Judge
