OPINION OF THE COURT
The sole issue before us on this appeal is whether defendant Drumm Family Farm, Inc., established its entitlement to summary judgment by demonstrating the absence of a material question of fact regarding whether its alleged negligence was a proximate cause of decedent’s death. We conclude that the Farm failed to meet its burden as the movant, and that proximate cause is, therefore, a question for the factfinder.
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Decedent, the wife of plaintiff, was struck and killed by a vehicle driven by one of the Jamison defendants as decedent was walking in the northbound lane of a rural road late one evening.
In support of its motion, the Farm proffered the driver’s deposition testimony explaining the circumstances of the collision. According to the driver, she was traveling north on the road in question, shortly after 10:00 p.m., when she slowed her vehicle to maneuver a curve in the road. As she came around the bend, she saw “very bright” headlights from a vehicle pulled over on the left, or southbound, side of the road. As the driver’s vision adjusted and she passed the stopped vehicle, she saw decedent in the road milliseconds before hitting her and what she thought, at the time, was a dog—but which she later learned was a calf.
The Farm also submitted portions of the deposition testimony of Daniel Drumm, the Farm’s owner, wherein he recounted that the calf involved in the accident had been born earlier that day. Drumm averred that he did not know how the calf escaped his property, and that he did not learn of the calfs escape until his stepdaughter alerted him to it at approximately 10:00 p.m. Drumm’s stepdaughter had, in turn, just learned that the calf was loose when another relative, who lived on the same property, telephoned to relay that, approximately 30 to 45 minutes earlier, a neighbor had seen the calf loose next to the road. Drumm testified that he immediately left his home to look for the calf, at which point he came upon the accident.
Plaintiff and the Jamison defendants opposed the Farm’s motion, arguing that a question of fact existed regarding whether decedent’s death was a foreseeable consequence of the Farm’s negligence. Proof offered in opposition to the Farm’s motion, including testimony from Drumm’s deposition and the affidavit of a neighboring property owner, indicated that the fence surrounding the farm was in poor condition and that, on prior occasions, cows had escaped and wandered near and into the roadway, although Drumm asserted that the fence was intact at the time of the accident.
The Jamison defendants sought leave to appeal the dismissal of their cross claims against the Farm; plaintiff did not move for leave to appeal. We granted the Jamison defendants leave to appeal (
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It is well settled that [e]vidence of negligence is not enough by itself to establish liability,” for it also must be proved that the negligence was a proximate, or legal, cause of the event that produced the harm sustained by the plaintiff (Sheehan v City of New York,
The overarching principle governing determinations of proximate cause is that a “defendant’s negligence qualifies as a proximate cause where it is ‘a substantial cause of the events
When a question of proximate cause involves an intervening act, “ ‘liability turns upon whether the intervening act is a normal or foreseeable consequence of the situation created by the defendant’s negligence’ ” (Mazella,
Although foreseeability and proximate cause are generally questions for the factfinder, there are instances in which proximate cause can be determined as a matter of law because “only one conclusion may be drawn from the established facts” (Derdiarian,
While the foregoing rules may be easily stated, they are not so handily applied. The line between those intervening acts which sever the chain of causation and those which do not cannot be drawn with precision. Proximate cause is, at its core, a uniquely fact-specific determination (see O’Neill v City of Port Jervis,
A review of our case law highlights the distinction between instances where proximate cause is a question for the jury and the rare cases in which it can be determined, as a matter of law, that a defendant’s negligence merely created the opportunity for, but did not cause, the event that resulted in harm. For example, in Derdiarian v Felix Contr. Corp., a driver careened into an excavation site that was poorly barricaded, and struck the plaintiff, a construction worker (see 51 NY2d at
By contrast, in Ventricelli v Kinney Sys. Rent A Car, we held that proximate cause was lacking, as a matter of law, because the defendant automobile lessor’s negligence merely furnished the occasion for the injury (
Cases holding that intervening acts break the chain of causation, as a matter of law, have one of two distinguishing features (see Mazella,
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Turning to the appeal at hand, the Farm concedes that the danger presented to motorists by a wandering farm animal is foreseeable insofar as a motorist’s vehicle may collide directly with the animal (see Hastings v Sauve,
In response, the Jamison defendants and plaintiff argue that decedent’s actions in exiting her vehicle were reasonably
Neither of the circumstances described above, in which proximaté cause may be deemed absent as a matter of law based on an intervening act, are present here. The very same risk that rendered negligent the Farm’s alleged failure to restrain or retrieve its farm animal—namely, that the wandering calf would enter a roadway and cause a collision—was, in fact, the risk that came to fruition (see Derdiarian,
A factfinder could reasonably conclude that decedent’s actions in exiting her vehicle and entering the roadway were an entirely “ ‘normal or foreseeable consequence of the situation created by the defendant’s negligence’ ” (Mazella,
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division, insofar as appealed from, should be reversed, with costs, and defendant Drumm Family Farm, Inc.’s motion for summary judgment dismissing the Jamison defendants’ claims against it should be denied.
Notes
. The other Jamison defendant was the owner of the vehicle.
. Although the Appellate Division order is nonfinal because the action remains pending as between plaintiff and the Jamison defendants, we elected to treat the Appellate Division order as final with respect to the Farm under the doctrine of party finality (see Arthur Karger, Powers of the New York Court of Appeals § 5:9 at 128-133 [3d ed rev 2005]).
. Our review of the Appellate Division order is “limited to those parts of the judgment that have been appealed and that aggrieve the appealing party,” and we generally may not grant affirmative relief to a nonappealing party (Hecht v City of New York,
