The issue in this case involves whether parking a disabled vehicle on a city street constitutes a mere condition or the proximate cause of a traffic accident that subsequently occurs. Because the facts are not in dispute, the question is whether summary judgment is proper. We find that more than one conclusion could reasonably be drawn from the facts, and therefore summary judgment is improper.
I. SUMMARY OF FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Shortly before midnight on February 3, 1993, the appellee, Scott Alan Mings, was driving his 1965 Ford pickup to work on Memorial Road in OHahoma City when he experienced engine trouble. The pickup coasted into the right hand lane and up against the curb. The pickup was not equipped with emergency flashers. Mings testified by deposition that the vehicle lights were not designed to work when the ignition is off and the keys are out. He took the keys with him to get into his place of employment, the grounds of which were only a few yards from where the vehicle came to rest. He went to summon the plant tow truck, which came within ten minutes.
The appellant, Jay E. Dirickson, was returning home in his car after playing pool with some friends at a nearby bar. He was following another car in the right-hand lane, headed west on Memorial Road between the Broadway Extension and Santa Fe. He testified by deposition that both he and the car in front of him were traveling between forty to forty-five miles per hour, when the other car suddenly swerved into the left lane. Dir-ickson did not remember seeing or striHng the parked pickup truck of Mings.
After Dirickson filed a lawsuit for negligence, Mings moved for summary judgment, which the district court granted. The court found that the negligence of Mings, if any, constituted a condition, and not a cause of the traffic accident. The Court of Appeals affirmed. Dirickson petitioned for certiorari, which this Court granted.
II. CONDITION VERSUS CAUSE
Before the district court and the Court of Appeals, Mings prevailed on his summary judgment argument that his parked pickup truck was neither the proximate cause of the accident, nor of Diriekson’s injuries. He argued that this Court has consistently held in similar factual situations that a disabled and/or illegally parked vehicle constitutes a mere condition, not a cause of an ensuing accident. He then cites seven OHahoma cases involving collisions with vehicles stopped on the roadway to support his argument. 1
The Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals has applied what it has called the OHahoma “Mere Condition Rule” to rear end collisions with negligently parked vehicles, and has sustained trial court rulings that as a matter of law, the act of negligent parking is non-actionable in view of the subsequent superseding act of the rear end collision.
John Long Trucking v. Greear,
“Parked car cases”
2
do not have special rules, but are controlled by the gener
Dirickson argued to the trial court that Mings failed to warn oncoming vehicles pursuant to 47 O.S.1991, § 11-1001,
3
and additionally failed to employ any warning device pursuant to 47 O.S.1991, § 12-408.
4
Although we do not decide whether either of the cited statutes were violated,
5
a violation of a statute or city ordinance constitutes actionable negligence only where the injury is the proximate result of the violation.
Woodward v. Kinchen,
After the initial requirement that Dirickson prove a violation of the duty of care by Mings, the law requires that Dirick-son prove that his injuries resulted directly and proximately from the violation of the duty of care.
Woodward,
To illustrate these principles, the facts and holdings of two cases among the parked car cases can be compared. The first case is
Sturdevant v. Kent,
By contrast, in the case of
England v. Kilcrease,
The
England
Court then contrasted the facts of that case with
Sturdevant.
After the Court’s observation that in
Sturdevant,
the plaintiffs own negligence through inattention was the proximate cause of the accident, the Court distinguished it from
England.
In
England
there was a conflict in the evidence as to the ability of the plaintiff to see the stalled vehicle in time to avoid it. There was evidence that the driver of the pickup immediately in front of the plaintiff first saw the defendant’s car at a distance of 350 feet but did not realize it was completely stopped on
The application to the case at bar of the contrast between the
Sturdevant
and
England
cases is obvious. The facts of the case at bar are nearer that of
England
than any of the cases cited by Mings. There is a fact question as to whether or not Dirickson’s ability to see Mings’ pickup was obscured by the vehicle in front of Diriekson. Because there is a fact question, with the potential for different inferences from the facts available, summary judgment is improper. Causation traditionally lies within the realm of fact, not law.
Atherton,
Notes
. They are
Thur v. Dunkley,
.
Atherton v. Devine,
. Title 47 O.S.1991, § 11-1001, entitled "Stopping, standing or parking outside of business or residence districts,” provides:
"(a) Upon any highway outside of a business or residence district no person shall stop, park or leave standing any vehicle, whether attended or unattended, upon the paved or main-traveled part of the highway when it is practicable to stop, park or so leave such vehicle off such part of said highway, but in eveiy event an unobstructed width of the highway opposite a standing vehicle shall be left for the free passage of other vehicles and a clear view of such stopped vehicles shall be available from a distance of two hundred (200) feet in each direction upon such highway.
“(b) This section shall not apply to the driver of any vehicle which is disabled while on the paved or main-traveled portion of a highway in such manner and to such extent that it is impossible to avoid stopping and temporarily leaving such disabled vehicle in such position.”
. Title 47 O.S.1991, § 12-408(a), entitled "Display of warning devices when vehicle disabled,” provides:
"(a) Whenever any motor truck, passenger bus, truck-tractor, trailer, semitrailer or pole trailer, or any motor vehicle towing a manufactured home, is disabled upon the traveled portion of any highway or the shoulder thereof outside of any municipality at any time when lighted lamps are required on vehicles the driver of such vehicle shall display the following warning devices upon the highway during the time the vehicle is so disabled on the highway except as provided in paragraph (b).... ”
. Because Mings claims that his vehicle was disabled, and he was unable to avoid stopping and leaving his pickup truck, proof of such would come under the defense to 47 O.S.1991, § 1001, found in subsection b. Additionally, it is questionable whether 47 O.S.1991, § 12-408 applies since the section requires motor trucks, passenger buses, truck-tractors, trailers, semitrailers, pole trailers, or any motor vehicle towing a manufactured home to display warning devices when the vehicle is disabled. Mings’ pickup truck does not appear to fit in any of these categories.
.
Jones v. Farmer,
