INTRODUCTION
1 We granted certiorari on the question of whether the district court's denial of a pretrial motion for summary judgment is appealable after the trial has concluded and the jury has rendered its verdiet and, if so, whether the party appealing the denial of the motion for summary judgement is required to reraise the basis for the motion during trial in order to preserve it for appeal. Regardless of whether the issue on which summary judgment was denied was reraised during trial, we hold that a party may appeal a denial of a motion for summary judgment so long as the basis for the motion was purely legal. We accordingly reverse the decision of the court of appeals.
FACTS & PROCEDURAL HISTORY
12 Mr. Normandeau, a tow truck driver, was killed as he prepared a Ryder rental truck for towing. A faulty repair to the *155 truck's hydraulic hose caused torque to build up in the driveline. As a result, when Mr. Normandeau disconnected the driveline in preparation for towing, a portion of the rear differential broke loose and struck his head, killing him instantly. His heirs (the "Nor-mandeaus") sued Hanson Equipment ("Hanson"), the company that had performed repairs to the hydraulic hose shortly before the accident.
3 Prior to trial, Hanson moved for summary judgment, claiming that it owed no duty to Mr. Normandeau as a matter of law and that its prior repair of the truck was not the proximate cause of Mr. Normandeau's death. At the summary judgment hearing, the Normandeaus argued that the question of duty could be decided as a matter of law, and neither Hanson nor the judge disputed this assertion. Hanson claimed that it was not foreseeable that the built up tension in the driveline would kill a potential tow truck driver. Because there was a question of fact about whether the faulty repair was a foreseeable cause of Mr. Normandeau's death, the district court denied summary judgment. Although the district court was not clear during the summary judgment hearing or in its subsequent written order about whether the foreseeability question went to both duty and proximate cause or just proximate cause, the parties apparently understood that any disputed factual issues went to the question of causation rather than duty. 1 At trial, the parties disputed whether Hanson's repair to the truck was a proximate cause of Mr. Nor-mandeau's injuries but did not raise the issue of whether Hanson owed Mr. Normandeau a duty. The jury found for the Normandeaus and assigned Hanson all of the lability.
T4 Hanson appealed the district court's denial of their pretrial summary judgment motion on the issue of duty. The court of appeals held that it could not review the ruling because Hanson did not litigate the issue at trial and failed to make a rule 50(b) motion for directed verdict on the issue. Normandeau v. Hanson Equip. Inc.,
ISSUES & STANDARD OF REVIEW
15 We granted certiorari to address two questions: (1) whether the court of appeals erred in its construction and application of the rules governing appellate consideration of challenges to denials of summary judgment on direct appeal following entry of final judgment and (2) whether the court of appeals erred in its assessment of the effect of Hanson's failure to explicitly raise the issue of duty of care at trial after denial of its motion for summary judgment on that issue.
$6 "'On certiorari, we review the court of appeals' decision for correctness, focusing on whether that court correctly reviewed the trial court's decision under the appropriate standard of review'" Pratt v. Nelson,
ANALYSIS
I. THE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED IN HOLDING THAT IT COULD NOT REVIEW THE DISTRICT COURTS DENIAL OF HANSON®S PRETRIAL SUMMARY JUDGMENT MOTION
T7 Appellate courts may review the denial of a pretrial summary judgment motion if the motion was decided on purely legal grounds. We previously have held that "[in appealing a summary judgment ruling, only facts and legal theories that were foreclosed from being addressed at trial may be heard on appeal." Wayment v. Howard,
T8 Given the lack of clarity in our prior case law, we first examine what standard the court of appeals should have applied in determining whether to review the denial of Hanson's summary judgment motion. We then apply the standard to the issue of duty in this case.
A. Appellate Courts May Review Pretrial Denials of Summary Judgment Motions After Final Judgment Has Issued If the District Court Denied Summary Judgment on Purely Legal Grounds
19 On appeal, we will review a district court's denial of a summary judgment motion when the district court makes a legal ruling based on undisputed facts that do not materially change at trial. See Estate Landscape & Snow Removal Specialists, Inc. v. Mountain States Tel. & Tel. Co.,
10 This potential difficulty leads the Nor-mandeaus to argue that this court should abandon our prior rulings allowing us to review pretrial denials of summary judgment in favor of a bright line rule precluding all appellate review of such motions unless they are renewed at the conclusion of trial. Specifically, they argue that by allowing losing parties to appeal pretrial denials of summary judgment motions, appellate courts allow the summary judgment motion to become "a bomb planted within the litigation at its early stages and exploded on appeal." Holley v. Northrop Worldwide Aircraft Servs., Inc.,
1 11 Although some jurisdictions have chosen to implement this bright line rule, others recognize that "[a] critical distinction exists between 'summary judgment motions raising the sufficiency of the evidence to create a fact question for the jury and those raising a question of law that the court must decide." Wilson v. Union Pac. R.R. Co.,
112 In Estate Landscape, we reviewed a pretrial denial of a summary judgment motion when the pretrial judge made a legal
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ruling regarding accord and satisfaction that the trial judge declined to reconsider.
113 Similarly, in Prince, Yeates & Geld-zgahier we reversed a jury verdict based on an improper denial of summary judgment even though the legal issue decided by the court denying the motion was not specifically foreclosed from being litigated at trial.
" 14 Purely legal issues are not decided by a trier of fact. Therefore, while we have stated that we review "only facts and legal theories that were foreclosed from being addressed at trial," Wayment,
T15 We therefore hold that when a court denies a motion for summary judgment on a purely legal basis, that is where the court denies the motion based on the undisputed facts, rather than because of the existence of a disputed material fact, the party denied summary judgment may challenge that denial on appeal. Any time "that reasonable minds could not differ as to the conclusion to draw from the evidence or that the evidence adduced was simply insufficient to sustain the legal claim, then the trial court should rule on the issue as a matter of law." AMS Salt Indus. Inc. v. Magnesium Corp. of Am.,
'I 16 Because we hold that we may review a district court's denial of a summary judgment motion if the denial was based on a purely legal issue, we now analyze whether the district court's denial of Hanson's summary judgment motion is reviewable.
B. The District Court Made a Legal Ruling Based on Undisputed Facts When It Denied Haonson's Summary Judgment Motion on the Issue of Whether Hanson Owed, Mr. Normandeau a Duty of Care
117 Because duty is a purely legal issue for the court to decide, the court of
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appeals erred when it determined that it could not review the pretrial denial of Hanson's summary judgment motion. The court of appeals held that it could not review the denial because duty of care is "heavily fact sengitive and is intertwined with the issue of foreseeability." Normandeau v. Hanson Equip.,
{18 In contrast to the court of appeals' assertion that duty was submitted to the jury in the form of questions surrounding foreseeability, appellate courts have consistently held that "[the determination of whether a legal duty exists falls to the court." Yazd v. Woodside Homes Corp.,
119 "'A duty, in negligence cases, may be defined as an obligation, to which the law will give recognition and effect, to conform to a particular standard of conduct toward another"" AMS Salt Indus.,
120 Foreseeability as a factor in determining duty does not relate to the specifics of the alleged tortious conduct but rather to the general relationship between the alleged tortfeasor and the victim. "Whether a harm was foreseeable in the context of determining duty depends on the general foreseeability of such harm, not whether the specific mechanism of the harm could be foreseen." Lee v. Farmer's Rural Elec. Coop. Corp.,
{21 At times, factual issues may bear on the issue of foreseeability as it relates to duty, but this is not such a case. The Nor-mandeaus argue that the district court denied Hanson's motion for summary judgment on the issue of duty based on the extensive disputed material facts, relying on several Utah cases that have allowed the issue of foreseeability as it relates to duty to proceed to the jury. See Cruz v. Middlekauff Lin
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coln-Mercury, Inc.,
122 In this case, the parties did not dispute that Hanson repaired the moving truck's hydraulic line, that the hydraulic line failed, that Mr. Normandeau was called to tow the truck, and that he was then killed when the driveline hit him in the head. By denying summary judgment, the district court implicitly found that Hanson had a duty to avoid creating a hazardous situation for a tow truck driver. The intertwined questions of fact did not go to the question of whether Hanson owed a duty to Mr. Nor-mandeau, but rather to whether the repair to the driveline was the proximate cause of his death. Thus, like the losing parties in Estate Landscape and Prince Yeates, Hanson would not have benefitted from reraising the issue of duty at trial. The jury could not decide the issue as the court had already made a purely legal determination based on the undisputed material facts. And no new evidence was offered at trial to undermine the basis for the court's initial determination.
II. ONCE A PARTY HAS PROPERLY PRESERVED A PURELY LEGAL ISSUE THROUGH A PRETRIAL MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT, IT IS NOT REQUIRED TO RERAISE THAT ISSUE AT TRIAL IN ORDER TO PRESERVE IT FOR APPELLATE REVIEW
123 Because the district court ruled on summary judgment that Hanson owed Mr. Normandeau a duty of care, Hanson was not required to reraise the duty issue in a motion for directed verdict in order to preserve its appellate rights. "[In order to preserve an issue for appeal the issue must be presented to the trial court in such a way that the trial court has an opportunity to rule on that issue." Brookside Mobile Home Park, Ltd. v. Peebles,
124 The Normandeaus argue that we should require parties to reraise legal issues decided on summary judgment to give the court a chance to reconsider them in light of the facts presented and decided at trial. It is true that "the interlocutory nature of a partial summary judgment leaves [determinations made in such motions] subject to modification by the trial court up until the entry of final judgment." Wayment v. How
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ard,
CONCLUSION
T25 The court of appeals erred in determining that it lacked jurisdiction to consider Hanson's appeal of the district court's denial of its summary judgment motion on the issue of duty. Hanson was not required to reraise the duty issue at the close of trial in order to preserve its right to appeal the district court's decision. We therefore reverse the decision of the court of appeals and remand this matter to the court of appeals to consider whether the district court properly ruled that Hanson owed Mr. Normandeau a duty of care.
Notes
. Indeed, our precedent is clear that the question of duty is a purely legal issue. See discussion infra Part LB.
. In Rees, we stated that when there is a dispute about the foreseeability of an injury occurring, "the questions relating to negligence and proximate cause are generally for the fact-trier, court or jury, to determine." Rees,
