Lead Opinion
[¶ 1.] This appeal arises out of a single vehicle automobile accident in which Leon Shuck (Leon) was severely injured on a rural gravel road in Perkins County, South Dakota. Leon died approximately one year after the accident due to complications related to his injuries. Summary judgment was granted in favor of defendants. Leon’s estate and his heirs now appeal. We affirm.
FACTS AND PROCEDURE
[¶ 2.] On September 26,1994, Leon, a rural mail carrier in Perkins County, was traveling north on Perkins County Road C-l (road) when he lost control of his vehicle. The vehicle slid off the shoulder of the gravel road and rolled once, ejecting him from the vehicle. Leon suffered serious injuries, including a broken neck, that rendered him a quadriplegic prior to his death. Leon claimed that he was trying to avoid cattle that were straying in the middle of the gravel road. Other than Leon, there were no witnesses to the accident.
[¶ 3.] William M. Simpson (Simpson) owned the grazing land on both sides of the road where the accident occurred. A fence existed on the western side of the roadway, but the eastern side was not fenced. Fencing is present on both sides of the road in certain places to the north and south of Simpson’s land. The road going through Simpson’s pasture is owned and maintained by Perkins County.
[¶ 4.] Leon brought suit on April 5, 1995, alleging that Perkins County (County) was negligent in failing to properly and adequately maintain the gravel road under SDCL 31-12-19, that both the County and Simpson were negligent in creation of a dangerous condition by permitting cattle to stray onto the road, and for failure to warn. Leon’s wife, Teresa, joined in Leon’s suit claiming loss of consortium. Both the County and Simpson claimed that Leon was contribu-torily negligent, more than slight, and had assumed the risk.
[¶5.] Leon died approximately one year after the accident due to complications related to the quadriplegia. On January 12,1996, after Leon’s death, Teresa, as personal representative of Leon’s estate and guardian of the three minor children (collectively referred to as the Shucks), amended the initial complaint to include a wrongful death claim. On June 13, 1997, the circuit court granted summary judgment in favor of defendants
STANDARD OF REVIEW
[¶ 6.] The standard of review applied to the grant or denial of a summary judgment motion in lawsuits involving tort claims is well settled. At we stated in Julson v. Federated Mutual Insurance Company:
Summary judgment is authorized “if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact, and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” SDCL 15-6 — 56(c). We will affirm only when there are no genuine issues of material fact and the legal questions have been correctly decided. Bego v. Gordon,407 N.W.2d 801 , 804 (S.D.1987). All reasonable inferences drawn from the facte must be viewed in favor of the non-moving party. Morgan v. Baldwin,450 N.W.2d 783 , 785 (S.D.1990). The burden is on the moving party to clearly show an absence of any genuine issue of material fact and an entitlement to judgment as a matter of law. Wilson v. Great N. Ry. Co.,83 S.D. 207 , 212,157 N.W.2d 19 , 21 (1968).
ANALYSIS AND DECISION
[¶ 7.] 1. Whether summary judgment in favor of Simpson was proper.
[¶ 8.] While negligence actions are generally not suited for summary judgment, such a result is proper when the duty question is resolved in the defendant’s favor. Bland v. Davison County,
[¶ 9.] Initially, we observe that in reviewing summary judgment decisions, we accept all reasonable inferences that may be drawn from the facts in favor of the nonmov-ing party. Morgan,
[¶ 10.] Nevertheless, under the present facts, we hold summary judgment proper. Shuck’s contend that Simpson was negligent in allowing his cattle to enter upon the gravel road which created a dangerous condition to travelers and in failing to use reasonable care to warn travelers of the danger. There exists no statute in South Dakota which imposes civil liability upon landowners who permit their cattle to run at large upon our highways.
[¶ 12.] In Eixenberger v. Belle Fourche Livestock Exchange,
At common law an owner of a domestic animal is under no legal obligation to restrain it from being at large on the highway unattended, and he is not liable for damages for an injury resulting from its being so at large unless he has knowledge of vicious propensities of the animal or unless he should reasonably have anticipated that injury would result from its being so at large on the highway.
(quoting 2 Am.Jur. Animals § 60) (emphasis added). In Hitzel v. Clark,
[¶ 13.] Simpson argues that he owed no duty to Shuck because the accident occurred on his “open range” grazing area.
[¶ 14.] The circuit court properly considered the relevant characteristics of the road and Simpson’s adjoining land. A cattle guard is located in the road at the entry to the Simpson land, placing travelers on notice that cattle are likely to be roaming across the road that runs through the grazing land.
[¶ 15.] In concluding that Leon’s injury did not arise from a breach of duty by Simpson, the circuit court noted that the road is an
[¶ 16.] 2. Whether summary judgment in favor of Perkins County was proper.
[¶ 17.] The Shucks have made two claims against the County. First, the Shucks claim the County created a hazardous condition when it knowingly permitted Simpson to pasture his cattle on its highway and did not require him to fence his pasture. This argument is disposed of as Shucks cite to no statutory authority whereby the County could force Simpson to construct such a fence.
[¶ 18.] The circuit court found that SDCL 31-12-19 imposed no duty upon the County to install fences to restrain cattle from roaming upon the road in open range country. We agree. At the time this matter arose, SDCL 31-12-19 provided in part, “It shall be the duty of the board of county commissioners to maintain properly and adequately the county highway system within the county....”
[¶ 19.] In Bland,
[¶20.] Mandating that the County install fences adjoining every mile of roads bordered by open range area in this state would necessarily result in the elimination of open range grazing. The legislature has seen fit
[¶21.] The final claim is that the County was negligent in maintaining the gravel road by allowing loose gravel to remain on the road, causing Leon to lose control of his vehicle ultimately rolling it. Other than the mere presence of gravel, Shucks cite to no factual evidence that the road was either in a defective condition or out of repair. There is no evidence the County was negligent in the placement or maintenance of the road. Additionally, Shucks cite no statutory or case law authority that loose gravel, by itself, is not an inherent part of a gravel road. Obviously there can be no duty or negligent breach thereof concerning a condition which is inherent to that subject matter. Fritz v. Howard Township,
[¶ 22.] Moreover, the record is barren of any evidence that the County prior to the accident possessed “ample time and notice to correct the condition” as required by Bland.
[¶ 23.] Affirmed.
Notes
. Civil liability may be imposed upon a livestock owner where his animals trespass upon the land of another. SDCL 40-28-4. However, there is no allegation that Simpson's animals ever left his ranch. SDCL 40-28-3. See also Hitzel v. Clark,
. In Eixenberger, this Court surmised that the lack of legislative action on this subject stemmed not from oversight or inaction but from an inability to draft a statute that would rationally fit the multitude of circumstances and types of roads that exist in South Dakota:
This state has hundreds of miles of each of these types of road, with all kinds between. All these roads are equally 'highways’ under the law; all are subject to the same rules. Yet what would be dangerous on one road, may be perfectly safe on another; what would be legalnegligence in one case, might be no evidence of want of care in another. These diverse conditions may account for the fact that the legislature has enacted no uniform statute to control in every case.
. The repeal of the “open range” statutes did not repeal the cOmmon-law concerning open range. SDCL ch. 40-24 repealed, 1972 S.D.Sess.L. ch. 217, § 3; 1980 S.D.Sess.L. ch. 278 §§ 1-8. The repealed statutes dealt with trespass by cattle and liability for mixing herds.
. Approximately 13,000 miles of open range country in South Dakota has been recorded with the South Dakota Department of Transportation. The court in Culpepper v. Rachal,
.Livestock guards are authorized to be placed on county highways such as this one by SDCL 31-25-4 to "prevent the passage of livestock.”
. Cf. Pexa v. Clark,
. SDCL 31-12-19 now provides;
The board of county commissioners shall properly and adequately maintain the full maintenance roads on the county highway system within the county by contract or day labor on all or different portions of the system as the board of county commissioners deem expedient. The board shall maintain any federal-aid system highways according to any agreement made by it in consideration of federal aid received for construction and improvement of such highways. The board shall, at its first meeting each year, designate which county roads are full maintenance roads and which are minimum maintenance roads. The board of county commissioners may not designate any county road as minimum maintenance if such road is a school route or mail route.
. Further indication of legislative approval of unfenced open range adjoining county highways is found in SDCL 31-25-9 which was enacted in 1983 well after our decision in Eixenberger. That statute allows permissive placement of a sign to notify the public of open grazing. However the statute does not make the placement of such a sign mandatory. It is optional both with the landowner and the county commission. In the case now before us, the public already had received such open range notice by the cattle guard in the highway and accompanying cattle guard sign.
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring in result in part and dissenting in part).
[¶ 26.] I agree that summary judgment was properly granted to County because there is no genuine issue as to any material fact whether County failed to properly and adequately maintain the gravel road. SDCL 15-6-56(e). Nor is there a genuine issue as to any material fact that the road had fallen “out of repair” or that County had notice of the defect. See generally Fritz v. Howard Township,
[¶ 27.] I dissent from the affirmance of summary judgment to Simpson because whether he “should reasonably have anticipated that injury would result from [his livestock] being so at large on the highway” (¶ 12) is a disputed factual issue which should be determined by a jury. Certainly, reasonable minds could differ whether under these circumstances this accident was foreseeable. Cf. Musch v. H-D Coop., Inc.,
[T]he harm suffered must be found to be a foreseeable consequence of the act complained of. This does not mean, of course, that the precise events which occurred could, themselves, have been foreseen as they actually occurred; only that the events were within the scope of the'foreseeable risk. [I]t must appear that the injury was the natural and probable consequence of the negligence or wrongful act, and that it ought to have been foreseen in the light of the attending circumstances.
In 1981, this court embraced the concept of foreseeability as a requirement of proximate cause in Leslie v. City of Bonesteel,303 N.W.2d 117 (S.D.1981). While that case was tried before the trial court without a jury, we reversed, finding the trial court had improperly used a “but for” standard to determine the proximate cause issue. We held that the trial court must apply the “substantial factor” test. In that case, we went on to state:
[T]o support a recovery in negligence the defendant’s act must have proximately caused the plaintiffs injury. As this Court stated in Goff v. Wang,296 N.W.2d 729 , 730 (S.D.1980), “[t]he issues of whether defendant owed a duty to the plaintiff and whether the defendant’s conduct proximately caused the plaintiffs injury are, in effect, so interrelated that they are generally treated as one in the same.”
(Other citations omitted); see also Thompson v. Summers,
Reasonable minds might very well have drawn different conclusions from the evidence as to whether the defendants should have reasonably anticipated the hazard of horses running at large in the vicinity of this highway at the time and under the circumstances shown by the evidence.
Id. at 9,
