This case stems from a summary judgment entered in favor of Marjorie Johnson, one of the defendants involved in a multiple-car rear-end collision. The driver of the leading car, Mary S. Tolan, and her son, Danny Garza, filed negligence suits against the driver of each of the cars behind them, i.e., Johnson, the driver of the car immediately behind Tolan; Coviello, the driver of the car behind Johnson; and Jaworski, the driver of the car behind Coviello. Johnson, the driver of the car immediately behind Tolan, asserted that the undisputed evidence established she brought her car to a stop behind Tolan and was then herself rear-ended and pushed into Tolan, and, thus, there was no negligence on her part that was a cause of the accident. Because there was record evidence that Johnson was negligent in placing her car abruptly between the Tolan and Coviello vehicles immediately prior to impact, we reverse the summary judgment entered in her favor.
Summary judgment is proper only where “[t]he facts ... [are] ‘so crystallized that nothing remains but questions of law’ ” and, in ruling on a motion for summary judgment, “ ‘the court must draw every possible inference in favor of the non-moving party.’ ”
Cohen v. Cooper,
Reversed and Remanded.
