OPINION
This is an appeal from a summary judgment granted for appellee Oshman’s Sporting Goods, Inc. [Oshman’s] in a negligence and wrongful death and survival action brought against Oshman’s and others. The lawsuit alleged negligence on the part of Oshman’s in the sale of a handgun to Marvin Wiley Deberry, Jr., which Deberry used to shoot and kill Clyde Peek. Appellants, plaintiffs below, are Peek’s heirs. This cause of action was severed from the causes against the other defendants.
A defendant who moves for summary judgment has the burden to show as a matter of law that no material issue of fact exists as to the plaintiffs cause of action and movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
Griffin v. Rowden,
The action in the trial court was a negligence action. It was essential to the claim under the wrongful death statute to advance an underlying negligence theory against Oshman’s. See TEX.CIV.PRAC. & REM.CODE ANN. §§ 71.002(b), 71.003(a) (Vernon 1986). Accordingly, in summary judgment proceedings, Oshman’s assumed the burden of showing as a matter of law that there was no genuine issue of material fact as to one of the constituent elements of negligence which plaintiffs must prove at trial.
The trial court’s order indicated the bases of its opinion:
The Court, after considering the pleadings, discovery, affidavits and depositions on file and having considered Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment, Plaintiff’s Response to Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment, Plaintiff’s Supplemental Response to Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment ... and having heard the arguments of counsel, is of the opinion that Defendant’s Motion is well taken and should be granted.
The question before the trial court was whether there were genuine issues of fact with regard to the elements of duty, breach of duty and causation, which were essential to appellants’ negligence cause of action. Whether there was a genuine issue of fact as to violation of any statute constituting negligence per se was also contested.
Plaintiffs did not specifically allege a violation of any statute on the part of Oshman’s which might establish a claim of negligence per se. 1 There is no dispute *844 that prior to sale of the firearm, Oshman’s required Deberry to complete the transferee’s portion of the federal Treasury form ATF 4473 Part 1 (Firearms Transaction Record) mandated by federal law. However, on appeal, plaintiffs specifically refer to the federal statute, 18 U.S.C. § 922(d) and the regulation at 27 C.F.R. § 178.99(c), which prohibit licensed dealers from selling firearms or ammunition to a person whom the dealer knows or has reasonable cause to believe has been adjudicated mentally defective or has been committed to any mental institution. Plaintiffs’ petition appears to follow the language of these federal laws, without specifically referring to them or, more important, alleging that any law had been violated in the sale of a firearm by Oshman’s to Deberry. Thus it appears the argument on appeal is that Oshman’s sold a firearm and ammunition “in spite of ... federal firearms regulations.” However, there is no pleading in their petition to support a case of negligence per se.
We agree that Oshman’s has not been shown to have committed any statutory violation which could constitute negligence per se. Our conclusion, however, is not based upon an absence of specific pleading of a statute upon which a claim of negligence per se might be based. In
Ellsworth v. Bishop Jewelry and Loan Co.,
(d) It shall be unlawful for any person to sell or otherwise dispose of any firearm or ammunition to any person knowing or having reasonable cause to believe that such person
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(4) has been adjudicated as a mental defective or has been committed to any mental institution.
In
Ellsworth, supra,
which was not a summary judgment case, the issue whether or not the defendant knew or had reasonable cause to believe that the purchaser/assailant was a person who had been committed to a mental institution went to the jury, which answered “no.”
Unlike Ellsworth, in this case, as a matter of law, the summary judgment evidence presented no genuine issue of fact whether Oshman’s personnel sold a firearm or ammunition to Deberry in violation of 18 U.S. G. § 922(d), that is, knowing or having reasonable cause to believe that Deberry had been adjudicated a mental defective or had been committed to any mental institution. Plaintiffs’ second amended petition alleged:
At the time of the completion of the Department of Treasury firearms form ATF F4473, the defendant Oshman’s Sporting Goods, Inc. either knew or should have known that the defendant Marvin Wiley Deberry, Jr. was incapable of acting in a mentally responsible manner and should have realized that he at least, if he had been adjudicated mentally defective or had ever been committed to a mental institution, that at the time of this attempt to purchase the pistol in question was insane by reason of a disease, mental defect, or illness....
Nowhere in the pleadings is it specifically alleged, nor in the summary judgment evidence does it clearly appear, that Deber-ry was adjudicated mentally defective or had ever been committed to a mental institution prior to Deberry’s purchase of a weapon from Oshman’s. Clearly, any determination of Deberry’s mental condition made subsequent to the shooting (i.e., during Deberry’s murder trial) would be irrelevant to Oshman’s statutory duty at the time of sale. There is only vague reference in the deposition testimony of Ann *845 Nelson, who witnessed Deberry in the process of purchasing the pistol, to Nelson’s knowledge, at the time of purchase, of De-berry’s “past mental problems.”
Oshman’s points to the evidence that when Deberry filled out form ATF 4473, he answered question 8(e) in the negative. Question 8(e) inquires, “Have you ever been adjudicated mentally defective or have you ever been committed to a mental institution?” We note Oshman’s argument that because it required Deberry to fill out federal form ATF 4473, and Deberry answered the questions on that form concerning his mental condition in the negative, Oshman’s, having complied with regulations, could not, as a matter of law, have violated a statutory duty toward Peek. We reject that argument since regardless of a purchaser’s answers on the form, a seller might know or have reasonable cause to believe that the purchaser has been adjudicated as a mental defective, or had been committed to any mental institution. Osh-man’s also maintains, however, that while Deberry was purchasing the firearm, or filling out the form, he did nothing to lead the sales clerk to believe that he was lying on the form.
The lynchpin of plaintiffs’ argument that there is a genuine issue of fact as to violation of federal law, and thus as to breach of duty, is the testimony of Ann Nelson, an Oshman’s customer who observed Deberry in the process of purchasing the firearm which he used to shoot Clyde Peek. Plaintiffs submitted as summary judgment evidence, testimony of Nelson at Deberry’s murder trial, deposition testimony of Nelson, and an affidavit of Nelson. Nelson stated that when she conversed with and observed Deberry while Deberry was purchasing a firearm in Oshman’s, he appeared to be nervous, uptight and in a hurry. This testimony is controverted to some extent by the deposition testimony of Tommy Urbanczyk, the sales clerk who sold the firearm to Deberry. We find, however, that Nelson’s testimony does not, as a matter of law, raise a genuine issue of fact whether Oshman’s personnel sold any firearm or ammunition to Deberry
knowing
or
having reasonable cause to believe
that Deberry had been
adjudicated as a mental defective
or had been
committed to any mental institution.
Testimony of Nelson that Deberry appeared to her to be merely nervous or in a hurry simply cannot support such a factual question, as a matter of law. To the- extent that we here recognize a standard of care imposed by statute, we are not regulating the sale of firearms, but rather acknowledging possible civil liability for failure to follow a statutory standard.
See El Chico Corp. v. Poole,
Also contested in the summary judgment proceedings was whether Oshman’s breached the standard of care in the sale of a firearm to Deberry which would constitute Oshman’s duty to Clyde Peek in a simple negligence action. Additionally, Oshman’s contested whether any duty is owed to a third party similarly situated to Clyde Peek. In our discussion of a statutory duty of the firearms seller as based upon 18 U.S.C. § 922(d), we have rejected Osh-man’s suggestion that no duty or liability of a firearms seller to injured third parties can arise unless the firearm sold is defective. It is true that Texas statutory law imposes no duty on the seller of a gun to make a determination of the purchaser’s mental fitness. However, we also reject any suggestion that either the existence of the federal statute, or the nonexistence of a Texas statute, forecloses the further possibility of a common law negligence action brought by a third party against a seller of firearms, if in that instance there exists a duty upon which such negligence may be based.
The essential elements of actionable negligence are the existence of a legal duty owed by one person to another; a breach of that duty; and injury to a person to whom the duty is owed as a proximate result of the breach.
See El Chico Corp. v. Poole,
In
Hulsebosch v. Ramsey,
We note that the court in Hulsebosch, supra, also offered the following analysis:
But in an action by the injured third party against the sellers of a rifle, when a parent had permitted the sale of the rifle to the sixteen-year old minor as a Christmas gift to his father, no liability for damages can arise on the part of the sellers in the absence of a statute creating such liability. Texas has no such statute.435 S.W.2d at 163 .
We believe Oshman’s incorrectly interprets and extrapolates this language in Hulse-bosch to mean that there can be no liability of a seller of a firearm to a third party in Texas unless Texas so provides by statute. Reading the opinion as a whole, the above quoted sentence from Hulsebosch would appear to mean that in the particular circumstances of that case, no liability could attach under negligence principles unless there had been a statute, which statute might establish liability, if violated.
The most salient aspect of
Hulsebosch
was the court’s statement that “[ujnder these circumstances we cannot hold ... that appellees [firearms sellers] failed to exercise ordinary care in the sale of the rifle and ammunition,” taken together with
*847
the court’s specific holding that “appellees exercised ordinary care as a matter of law under the circumstances.”
We agree with this aspect of Hulse-bosch, and we find an appropriate analogy between the duty assumed in that case and the duty owed to third persons in the instance of firearms sales to mentally imbalanced persons. Specifically, with regard to the sale of a firearm to a manifestly irrational or mentally imbalanced person, we would impose a duty of ordinary care upon the seller because such a sale could forseeably result in irresponsible use of the firearm by the purchaser with accompanying forseeable injury to a third party.
Some courts in other states have held liability supportable under common law negligence principles where the prospective purchaser’s manifest behavior or comportment have put the seller on notice that the purchaser, if possessed of a firearm, would forseeably pose a danger to third persons.
See Phillips v. Roy,
In the case at hand, however, there is nothing in the summary judgment evidence to indicate that the purchaser was manifestly insane, irrational, mentally incompetent or mentally impaired. The extent of the evidence was that the purchaser appeared to one witness to be nervous, uptight and in a hurry, and that witness, although aware of past mental problems of the purchaser, did not alert the sales clerk to those problems. We also note that although the witness Nelson stated that De-berry appeared nervous to her, there appears to be no description by her of the physical manifestations of this nervousness. No evidence before the trial court indicated that the alleged nervousness of Deberry at the time of sale was observably on a scale such that a mental disorder might be inferred by the ordinary observer. Nor is there any evidence of reasonably observable manifestations at the time of sale of agitation, instability, incompetence, recklessness or intent to commit a crime.
The summary judgment evidence considered by the trial court shows that during the course of the sales clerk’s contact with Deberry, which lasted for more than twenty minutes, and during which the sales clerk observed Deberry, Deberry did nothing which would have led a reasonable person to believe that Deberry was mentally impaired or otherwise irresponsible with regard to the handling of firearms. Therefore, as a matter of law, the summary judgment proof establishes that there is no genuine issue of fact regarding the essential element of the plaintiffs’ cause of action whether Oshmans’s breached its duty of reasonable care toward any third party with respect to this particular sale.
Plaintiffs argue that Oshman’s violated its own normal procedure or protocol of asking the customer what his purpose is in buying a gun. There is no testimony as to the aim of such procedure. The inquiry here, however, is not whether some internal store policy was followed. The question is whether Oshman’s acted unreasonably in selling a firearm to Deberry. Negligence rests primarily upon the existence of reason to anticipate injury and failure to perform the duty arising on account of that anticipation, and if the actor could not have reasonably foreseen the resultant injury, or injuries similar in character, he is not to be held responsible therefor.
Armstrong v. Missouri-Kansas-Texas-R. Co. of Texas,
Since we hold that, as a matter of law, Oshman’s did not breach its duty of reasonable care toward Clyde Peek in the circum *848 stances here involved, and thus Oshman’s acts complained of were non-negligent, we have no occasion to further inquire into a question of proximate cause. Appellant’s point of error is overruled.
The judgment is affirmed.
Notes
. Unexcused violation of a statute setting an applicable standard of care constitutes negligence as a matter of law if the statute is designed to prevent an injury to that class of persons to which the injured party belongs.
El Chico Corp. v. Poole,
