OPINION
Opinion by
In this аppeal from a defense summary judgment, we are called on to revisit the recurring question of how attenuated the link can be between an allegedly negligent behavior and damage allegedly caused by that behavior, before the actor is no longer legally responsible for the damage. Simplifying this appeal, most of the defendants previously involved in this case are not before us: we аre focused on the alleged negligence of an actor at the very beginning of a rather involved chain of alleged causation.
The allegedly negligent behavior was Gwendolyn Daigle’s production of an ultrasound image of Ebeny Givens’ uterus revealing the unborn Toni Wright — and Toni’s unborn sibling — as well as Givens’ cervix. Onto this allegedly substandard ultrasound image, Daigle had superimposed her apparently incorrect mеasurement of Givens’ cervix, indicating the cervix was significantly longer than it really was. In a prior pregnancy, Givens had been diagnosed with a short cervix 1 and given a cervical cerclage — sutures around the cervix to strengthen a short or incompetent cervix 2 — allowing her to successful *737 ly cany a former pregnancy to term. Givens was not given a cerclage in this case.
The prematurely born Toni remained hospitalized for months after her birth, during which time Toni fell prey to a congestive lung condition and Givens incurred large medical expenses for Toni’s care, both of which are problems often associated with premature births. Toni’s lung condition continued after she was released to go home, where she continued to need a breathing tube and where her care was assisted by a home healthcare agency. The sаd end to this part of Toni’s story occurred later at her home, when her breathing tube clogged — a blockage not easily or quickly cleared — temporarily denying Toni oxygen and leaving her with severe brain damage. In this case, we consider the attenuation between Daigle’s allegedly negligent behavior and two types of damage: (1) the medical expenses incurred during Toni’s initial hospitalization and (2) Toni’s brain damage.
Daigle and her codefendants filed a joint motion for summary judgment in which they alleged that their evidence conclusively negated an essential element of Givens’ case: proximate cause. Alternatively, they asserted that Givens had presented no summary judgment evidence that any act or omission by Daigle was a proximate cause of the damages. The trial court granted the mоtion. We affirm the summary judgment because, based on the summary judgment evidence, as a matter of law, Daigle’s alleged negligence is too attenuated from either type of damage alleged.
Standard of Review
In this case, we determine whether the summary judgment evidence presented to the trial court contained any evidence showing Daigle’s actions were a proximate cause of the damages, or аlternatively, if the series of events shown by that evidence showed, as a matter of law, that Daigle’s actions were not a proximate cause of the damages.
In a traditional motion for summary judgment, the party moving for summary judgment carries the burden of establishing that no genuine issue of material fact exists and that it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
See
Tex.R. Civ. P. 166a(c);
Rhone-Poulenc, Inc. v. Steel,
A no-evidence summary judgment is essentially a pretrial directed verdict. We, therefore, apply the same legal sufficiency standard in reviewing a no-evidence summary judgment as we apply in reviewing a directed verdict.
Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Rodriguez,
Proximate Cause and Attenuation
Proximate cause consists of both cause in fact and foreseeability. Read v. Scott Fetzer Co., 990 S.W.2d 732, 737 (Tex.1998). Because, in this case, the motion for summary judgment asserts there is no evidence Daigle’s alleged negligence was a cause in fact of the injury, we address only that element.
Cause in fact is established when an act or omission was a substantial factor in bringing about the harm, and, without it, the harm would not have occurred.
Id.; Doe v. Boys Clubs of Greater Dallas, Inc.,
While the Texas Supreme Court has repeatedly addressed attenuation between conduct and liability, there remains a challenge on where to draw the line. Lear Siegler and Mason looked to the Restatement (Second) of Torts for clarification on this issue:
a. Distinction between substantial cause and cause in the philosophic sense. In order to be a legal cause of another’s harm, it is not enough that the harm would not have occurred had the actor not been negligent. Except as stated in § 432(2), this is necessary, but it is not of itself sufficient. The negligence must also be a substantial factor in bringing about the plaintiffs harm. The word “substantial” is used to denote the fact that the defendant’s conduct has such an effect in producing the harm as to lead reasonable men to regard it as a cause, using that word in the popular sense, in which there always lurks the idea of responsibility, rather than in the so-called “philosophic sensе,” which includes every one of the great number of events without which any happening would not have occurred. Each of these events is a cause in the so-called “philosophic sense, ” yet the effect of many of them is so insignificant that no ordinary mind would think of them as causes.
Restatement (Second) of ToRts § 431 cmt. a (1965) (emphasis added). This comment reinforces the necessity of a reasonablе, significant causal connection between the *739 conduct and the harm, but still does not specify where to draw the line.
In addressing attenuation between conduct and liability, the Texas Supreme Court has addressed scenarios similar to the one before us.
See, e.g., Mason,
In Bell, three individuals were hit by a car while removing debris from an earlier car accident.434 S.W.2d at 118 . Two of the men were killed, and the third suffered serious injuries. Id. We held that thе initial accident was not the proximate cause of the deaths and injuries because it only created the condition that attracted the three men to the scene and did not actively contribute to the injuries resulting from the second accident. Id. at 122. Where the initial act of negligence was not the active and efficient cause of plaintiffs’ injuries, but merely created the condition by which the second act of negligence could occur, the resulting harm is too attenuated from the defendants’ conduct to constitute the cause in fact of plaintiffs’ injuries.
Mason,
Our precedents establish that merely creating the condition that makes harm possible falls short as a matter of law of satisfying the substantial factor test.
Id. at 800.
In
Taylor v. Carley,
a summary judgment case, a patient’s primary physician’s negligent conduct was held to be too attenuated, as a matter of law, from injuries caused by decisions of a subsequent physician.
3
Taylor,
The Summary Judgment Evidence
In effect, Givens alleges this chain of causation:
1.Daigle’s substandard ultrasound image and inaccurate cervical measurement caused the radiologist, Gregory Godwin, to prepare and transmit to Givens’ obstetrician, Robert A. West-brook, an inaccurate or incomplete ultrasound report, which did not report Givens’ unduly short cervix.
2. That report caused Westbrook to miss, or not appreciate, the risk posed by Givens’ short cervix.
3. Westbrook, therefore, failed to give Givens a cervical cerclage.
4. Because Givens had no cerclage, Toni and her sibling were born prematurely.
5. Toni’s premature birth created a рropensity for Toni to have an extended hospitalization and to contract a congestive lung disease.
6. Toni contracted such a disease while she was hospitalized.
7. Toni’s lung disease extended her hospitalization and required her to have a breathing tube.
8. Some time after Toni went home, her breathing tube occluded.
9. The breathing tube occlusion was not easily or quickly cleared.
10. Therеfore, Toni was deprived of oxygen to her brain for a period of time.
11. Toni sustained serious brain damage. 5
*741 As presented, in this case the summary judgment evidence shows that Daigle conducted an ultrasound on Givens during the course of her pregnancy. There was conflicting evidence as to whether the ultrasound was done properly, and about the quality of the result. The radiologist, God-win, testified by deposition that he did an independent review оf the films taken by Daigle, that the cervix was well visualized, that he did not rely on her measurements of the cervix in making his report, and that he did not report on the cervical length to Givens’ obstetrician.
We have before us what is essentially an undisputed sequence of events, with conflict concerning whether Daigle negligently used the ultrasound machine in obtaining an image. The question is, under this state of the evidence, has Dаigle conclusively proven that any such negligence was not a cause in fact of the damages alleged, or has Givens failed to present any evidence of such a causal connection.
Application to the Damages Sought
The easier attenuation issue relates to Toni’s clogged tube: the link between Daigle’s ultrasound and Toni’s brain damage is far too attenuated to support liability. When all acts and omissions have run thеir course and are complete, the alleged negligence cannot actively contribute in any way to the injuries involved in this suit.
Bell,
Because there are not as many intervening factors, it is not as clear that Daigle’s conduct in performing the ultrasound is too attenuated from Toni’s premature birth and the accompanying medical bills to support liability.
But Givens has not shown that Godwin’s failure to report to Westbrook on Givens’ cervix length in any way flowed from Dai-gle’s ultrasound services. Godwin stated that he did not rely on the cervix measurements collected by Daigle and that Givens’ cervix was “well visualized” in the ultrasound images. The evidence does not raise a genuine issue of material fact as to whether her acts wеre concurrent with any subsequent negligence, which would be necessary to avoid a conclusion that they were attenuated as a matter of law.
Providence Health Ctr. v. Dowell
also relied on the holdings in
Mason
and
Union Pump Co.
to decipher whether a hospital could be held liable for the suicide of a recently released patient.
Providence Health Ctr. v. Dowell,
The Waco Court of Appeals interpreted the opinions in
Mason, Union Pump,
and
Lear Siegler
as saying that a court may, as a question of law, weigh competing policy considerations and define the limits of legal causation by “fixing the line between immediate results and remote results” of wrongful acts.
Dowell,
Daigle’s factors are analogous, yet we see Daigle’s actions as being significantly more attenuated: (1) Godwin did not rely on Daigle’s ultrasound when issuing his report, (2) Godwin made his own assessment of the cervical length, (3) Godwin deemed the ultrasound imagеs sufficient for his purposes, (4) other examinations occurred between the ultrasound and the birth, and (5) a review of Givens’ medical records would have shown her being administered a cervical cerclage in the past. Collectively, these factors impose an impressive array of intervening factors such that Daigle’s actions were too remotely connected to Toni’s premature birth.
In this case, while Daigle’s alleged negligence may have contributed to the premature birth, her actions could not and did not control over the ultimate medical decisions by Givens’ doctors. The evidence shows that there were other assessments and opportunities where the shortened cervix should have been discovered and dealt with. Daigle’s acts, although arguably contributory, are too attenuаted and remote from the premature birth to be deemed a cause in fact, and, as such, these defendants were properly granted summary judgment.
We affirm the judgment of the trial court.
Notes
. An unduly short cervix is considered a factor in premature births. According to the evidence, the cervical length is important because when the cervix is too short there is a likelihood of premature delivery.
. Dorland’s Illustrated Medical Dictionary 335 (30th ed.2003). When a cervix is unduly *737 short or incompetent, an appropriate action is to install a cervical cerclage, or other appropriate medical intervention, to help the pregnancy extend as close to full-term as possible.
. Taylor had consulted first with psychologist Dr. Carley with complaints of anxiety and problems in her marriage.
Taylor v. Carley,
. In
Martin,
the court held that a supplier of materials for smelting could not be held liable for the pollutants created in the smelting process.
Martin,
. For want of a nail the shoe was lost.
For want of a shoe the horse was lost.
For want of a horse the rider was lost.
For want of a rider the battle was lost.
For want of a battle the kingdom was lost.
And all for the want of a horseshoe nail.
The earliest known written version of the rhyme is in John Gower’s Confesio Amantis dated approximately 1390.
