Aсcepting plaintiff s allegations as true, Jason Packard’s negligence caused his car to run off a highway in Topeka and into a tree some distance off the paved surface of the roadway and its shoulder area. Emergency workers arrived shortly after the accident, and traffic on the roadway began to back up. About 35 minutеs after Packard’s accident, another driver, Judy Brown, failed to respond quickly enough to the traffic congestion; Brown’s car struck the plaintiff s car from behind. Plaintiff, Mary Hale, now seeks to recover from Packard and his employer for the injuries she sustained when Brown’s car hit Hale’s. But liability for negligence is not unlimited — longstanding caselaw holds that liability fоr negligence arises only when the consequences of an act are probable under normal human experience, not a mere possibility. Applying this rule, we agree with the district court that Packard’s negligence is not sufficiently connected to Brown’s negligent driv *496 ing to allow Hale to recover from Packard or his employer for her injuries.
We assume the facts stated by the plaintiff are true because we must. Like the district court, on a motion to dismiss, we must accept the facts that the plaintiff has alleged; we must then determine whether those facts and any inferences reasonably drawn from them state a claim for relief under any possible legal theory.
Jones v. State,
Packard’s negligence, if indeed he was negligent, was most unfortunate. He felt lightheaded and considered pulling over but instead continued to drive along the highway toward his home. He soon passed out, drove off the road, and ran into a tree. The highway was 1-470 in Topeka; the accident occurred at 4:57 p.m. on a weekday. As might be expected at that time on a weekday, traffic backed up in the area once the police and an ambulance were on the scene. Judy Brown’s collision with plaintiff Hale’s сar occurred at about 5:35 p.m., and Hale was injured.
A valid negligence claim requires that a plaintiff meet four elements: the existence of a duty to the plaintiff, a breach of that duty, an injuiy, and proximate cause.
D.W. v. Bliss,
Just how likely a consequence must be for it to be considered a “natural and probable consequence” of an act has beеn stated in a number of ways. The most frequently cited standard in Kansas holds that “[a] defendant is not responsible for all
possible
consequences of his or her negligence, only those consequences which are
probable
according to ordinaiy and usual experience.” (Em
*497
phasis added.)
Aguirre v. Adams,
A viable argument can be made in this case for the plaintiff. The starting point for that case is the general rule that proximate cause is normally a question for the juiy.
Miller v. Zep Mfg. Co.,
Further, a Kansas Supreme Court case suggests that the class of cases that should be decided as a matter of law has been narrowed in recent decades by the adoption in Kansas of comparative fault principles in 1974.
Reynolds v. Kansas Dept. of Transportation,
As we understаnd it, that statement did not mean that proximate cause was no longer a requirement of a negligence claim in Kansas. The court separately recognized that “[p]roximate cause is not an obsolete concept in Kansas law,”
Consistent with this potentially diminished role for proximate cause, an example provided in the latest Restatement of Torts supports plaintiff s claim. The American Law Institute approved the Restatement (Third) of Torts: Liability for Physical Harm in 2005. Under section 29 of the Third Restatement, the black-letter rule for proximate cause (a term the Restatement avoids) is that “[a]n actor’s liability is limited to those physical harms that result from the risks that made the actor’s conduct tortious.” Restatement (Third) of Torts § 29, p. 575 (Proposed Final Draft No. 1, 2005). *499 The Restatement sets forth the view that the distraction arising around an accident scene is within the risks that should be аnticipated by a negligent driver:
“Tortious conduct may be wrongful because of a variety of risks to a number of different classes of persons. Thus, driving a vehicle negligently poses risks to persons and property who might foreseeably be harmed in a number of ways— by a collision with another vehicle or pedestrian, by the vehicle leaving the roаd, by the consequences of a narrowly averted collision, by the confusion and distraction of an accident scene, or by other consequences. Some of those risks may be more prominent than others, but all are relevant in determining whether the harm is within the scope of liability of the actor’s tortious conduct.” (Emphasis added.) Restatement (Third) of Torts § 29, comment d, p. 582.
The Restatement then providеs an example quite similar to the case now before us:
“[Illustration] 6. Parker’s automobile was run off a narrow, hilly road by Wilson, who was driving a semitrailer negligently. Because the accident scene involved an unusual configuration of the semitrailer and Parker’s vehicle, Deborah, who was driving by, stopped her car at the side of the road to observe the scene. While parked at the side of the road, Deborah was hit by another vehicle driven carelessly into Deborah’s car. Whether Deborah’s harm is within the scope of liability created by Wilson’s negligence in causing the accident with Parker is a question for the factfinder.” Restatement (Third) of Torts § 29, comment d, illus. 6.
Under the view of Third Restatement, then, a plaintiff injured in a follow-on accident apparently caused by the distraction of an earlier accident would be able to sue the negligent driver of the first accident and have that claim submitted to a jury.
Where to draw the fine under legal rules that lack bright-line clarity is a matter of judgment. We do not hide the existence of that judgment сall here by presenting only one side of the argument. Rut though we have sketched out some viable arguments for the plaintiff, we do not find them persuasive.
The Third Restatement view may one day gain acceptance, but even its authors concede that they have staked out a basis of analysis that is different than the one actually emplоyed by the courts today (or for the past 100 years for that matter). The Restatement reporters recognized that they have proposed a scope-of-risk analysis — rather tiran the standard foreseeability test applied in Kansas and most other states — for proximate cause. Restatement (Third) *500 of Torts § 29, comments d and j, pp. 579-81, 594-96 & Reporters’ Notes to commеnts d and j, pp. 610-14, 627-29 (Proposed Final Draft No. 1, 2005). And while they suggest that these different standards are “quite compatible,” Restatement (Third) of Torts § 29, Reporters’ Note to comment d, p. 610, they do not suggest they are the same.
Significantly, no case citation is provided as a basis for the Restatement’s Illustration 6. This is not because cases involving follow-on automоbile accidents are scarce — there were enough cases for a lengthy compilation limited to the proximate-cause issue in follow-on auto accidents back in 1958, and a supplement to that collection lists many cases since then. Annot.,
Negligence Causing Automobile Accident, or Negligence of Driver Subsequently Apрroaching Scene of Accident, as Proximate Cause of Injury by or to the Approaching Car or its Occupants,
The annotator correctly notes that it is difficult to wrest general rules from these fact-specific cases that will universally predict the results.
Two major factors seem to provide fault lines for the cases in the annotation. First, in the cases finding proximate cause, there generally was some debris from the first accident still blocking the rоadway, while there was not in the cases finding no proximate cause. Compare
Morrison v. Frito-Lay, Inc.,
*502
The two cases most prominently relied upon by Packard and his employer are fully in line with this analysis. One of the cases involved an initial one-car accident in which the car ran off the roadway, ending up in the untravelled median.
O’Connor v.
Nigg,
The district court also fairly concluded that the primary cases relied upon by plaintiff Hale were readily distinguishable. These cases generally involved disabled vehicles that remained in the road and were then directly involved in a second accident. See
Flaharty v. Reed,
One final consideration leads us to follow this existing caselaw rather than the new academic theory found in the Third Restatement. The adoption of a new theory that would subject large numbers of additional drivers to jury trials for follow-on accidents would have substantial real-world costs. Lawsuits are intrusive and expensive. Here, Packard would be subjected to interrogatories, requests for documents, and deposition. His medical records would be combed for signs thаt he should have anticipated blacking out while driving. And there would be no possibilities for resolution of the suit other than jury trial or settlement. Considering both these realities and existing caselaw, we believe that a plurality of the Texas Supreme Court got it right when they “decline[d] the invitation to abandon decades of case law” by adopting sectiоn 29 of the Third Restatement.
Dew v. Crown Derrick Erectors, Inc.,
We do not believe that the average Kansan whose negligence caused her own car to run completely off the roadway would expect to be fiable to someone injured 35 minutes later when a third driver was distracted by the commotion. Nor should she. Such an event is not sufficiently foreseeable for liability under traditional foreseeability analysis, which is fully consistent with commonsense expectations. The judgment of tíre district court granting defendants’ motion to dismiss is therefore affirmed.
