ORDER
Thе plaintiff, Mamie Cortez, has sued University Mall Shopping Center, a partnership, alleging the defendant was liable for her injuries from an assault by a stranger against Cortez when she was kidnapped from the University Mall and transported to a seсluded area and abused. Jurisdiction is based on diversity of citizenship, 28 U.S.C. § 1332. The plaintiff alleges, defendant failed to provide adequate lighting, security and policing to protect the tenants of the mall. The plaintiffs claim is based on negligеnce and also as a third party beneficiary to a lease agreement. 1 The defendant has denied liability.
The defendant University Mall has made a motion to have included in the apportionment of fault, under the Utah Liability Reform Act, the conduct of plaintiffs unknown assailant. Plaintiff contends that the apportionment is improper where the act of assailant in this cáse was an intentional tort. Plaintiff also asserts there should be no apportionment where the defendant had the duty to prеvent the very conduct that defendant seeks to use as an apportionment factor. Both parties agree the Utah Supreme Court has not resolved the issue.
To the-extent that the Utah, Supreme Court has not addressed the issue in defendant’s motion, this court must, in a diversity ease under 28 U.S.C. § 1332, try to determine how the Utah Supreme Court would resolve the issue.
2
Adams-Arapahoe School Dist. No. 28-J v. GAF Corp.,
The Utah comparative fault statute, Utah Code Ann. § 78-27-37 et seq., is somewhat unique to Utah. It contains no specific statemеnt as to whether there can be a comparison of intentional tort with that of negligence. 3 Utah Code Ann. § 78-27-38 provides: -
(1) The fault of a person seeking recovery shall not alone bar recovery by that person.
(2) A person seeking recovery mаy recover from any defendant or group of defendants whose fault, combined with the fault of persons immune from suit, exceeds the fault of the person seeking recovery prior to any reallocation of fault made under Subsection 78-27-39(2).
(3) No defendant is liable to any person seeking recovery for any amount in- excess of the proportion of fault attributed to that defendant under Section 78-27-39.
(4) (a) In determining the proportionate fault attributable to each defendant, the fact finder may, and when requested by a party shall, consider the conduct of any person who contributed to the alleged injury regardless of whether the person is a person immune from suit or a defendant in the action and may allocate fault to each person seeking recovery, to each defendant, and to any person immune from suit who contributed to the alleged injury. (Emphasis added).
(b) Any fault allocated to a person immune from suit is considered only to accurately determine the fault of the person seeking recovery and a defendant and may not subject the person immune from suit to any liability, based on the allocation of fault, in this or any other action.
The defеndant contends this provision is an absolute comparative fault statute. Both parties agree that under
Sullivan v. Scoular Grain Co. of Utah,
Defendant’s position is that the Utah statute is one of absolute comparative fault and contends for that position based on holdings of other jurisdictions that have allowed comparison of actor negligence against actor intentiоnal tortious conduct.
Reichert v. Atler,
The plaintiff has cited eases refusing to compare the fault of negligent and intentional
tortfeasors. Fitzgerald v. Young,
The split of authority among the jurisdictions indicates differing statutory constructions and policy positions. The cited cases therefore do not clearly answer the issue in this case. In this case, this court should attempt to construe the statute in accord with the Utah legislative intent.
Sullivan,
supra;
Harmon City v. Nielsen & Senior,
*1100 Utah Code Ann. § 78-27-37(2) defines “fault”, which is what must be compared. It provides:
“Fault” means any actionable breаch of legal duty, act, or omission proximately causing or contributing to injury or damages sustained by a person seeking recovery, including negligence in all its degrees, contributory negligence, assumption of risk, strict liability, breach of express or implied warranty of a product, products liability, and misuse, modification or abuse of a product.
Nothing is said in the definition of fault about comparison of intentional torts. Although the initial language of the definition states any “actionable breach of legal duty” it is' apparent the legal duty is illustrated by the included references to traditional tort conduct exclusive of intentional torts. 7 Intentional tort forms of conduct were apparently not intended to be within the concept of “fault” or were not contemplated by the Utah Legislature.
The axiom of statutory constructions of
noscitur a sociis
is that the general terms of a statute are to take meaning from the terms of the more- specific language in a statute and are to be associated together.
OSI Industries, Inc. v. Utah State Tax Com’n, Auditing Div.,
Therefore, for twо reasons it is concluded the defendant’s motion to allocate fault between defendants and plaintiffs unknown assailant should be denied.. First, because the intent of the Utah Legislature as expressed in the definition of the term “fault” in the Liаbility Reform Act does not contemplate comparison of negligence or similar conduct, with intentional conduct. Second, because in this case defendant’s duty is secondary to the assailant’s conduct and derives from a failure to protect plaintiff from the assailant’s conduct. Defendant’s fault is independent of the assailant’s wrongdoing and comparison under such circumstances is not rational. Therefore,
IT IS HEREBY ORDERED the motion of defendant University Mall Shоpping Center to apportion the fault for plaintiffs injury between defendant and the plaintiffs unknown assailant is denied.
Notes
. The later basis of liability is not before the court in this motion.
. Neither party has requested this court to certify the matter to the Utah Supreme Court for resolution. The defendant called to this court’s attention the fact that Judge Timothy Hansen, Third District Court,- State of Utah, had ruled, in what counsel said was a similar case, that apportionment was proper. However, counsel has not provided to the court the opinion of Judge Hanson or the facts of the case involved so that it can be determined if the circumstances are similar. Although, this court must follow the decision of Utah's highest сourt and intermediate appellate court rulings on Utah law,
Weiss v. United States,
. To this extent thе defendant's reference to the Uniform Comparative Fault act § 1 Comment, 12 U.L.A. 44 (1979) is not determinative or authoritative.
. The Utah statute was amended in 1994 to make changes in apportionment of fault not important to this case Nixon, supra p. 266.
. In
Kansas State Bank v. Specialized Transportation Services, Inc.,
. Except for Utah Code Arm. § 78-27-38(4) the Utah statute would appear to be limited to comparison of the proportion, of fault to defendants and рersons "immune” from suit. See § 78-27-39. ' The Liability Reform Act statute is poorly drafted because its terminology and language usage is not completely internally consistent.
. This comports with the general observation made by the Utah Supreme Court in Randle v. Allen, supra, differentiating negligent fault from intentional tort.
