119 Wash. App. 1 | Wash. Ct. App. | 2003
A common carrier owes the highest degree of care to its passengers commensurate with the practical operation of its business at the time and place in question. But as a general rule, a common carrier is not required to take measures to protect its passengers from the unforeseen intentional misconduct or criminal acts of third persons. The decision of the trial court is affirmed.
FACTS
On November 27, 1998, Silas Cool boarded a Metro bus headed southbound to downtown Seattle. As the bus approached the Aurora Avenue Bridge, Cool approached the bus driver, shot and killed the driver, and then immediately shot himself in the head. The driverless bus plunged off the edge of the Aurora Avenue Bridge. As it fell, the bus hit trees and the roof of an apartment building beneath the bridge and landed on the ground some 50 feet below. Catherine Tortes was among the passengers on the bus who sustained injuries.
Tortes sued King County, including the Department of Transportation and the Municipality of Metropolitan Seattle (Metro), King County Executive Ron Sims, and the Director of the King County Transportation Department, Paul Tolliver, seeking damages for their alleged negligence and claimed federal civil rights violations. Following extensive discovery and argument, Metro’s motion for summary judgment was granted dismissing all claims. Tortes appeals. The usual standard for review of a summary judgment applies.
Negligence exists if a defendant breaches a duty owed to a plaintiff resulting in injury to that plaintiff, and there is a proximate cause between the breach and the injury.
Tortes claims the intentional criminal acts of Silas Cool were reasonably foreseeable and that Metro was negligent by breaching its duty to protect her from those acts.
“ ‘The general rule at common law is that a private person does not have a duty to protect others from the criminal acts of third parties.’ ”
The proximate cause of the accident resulting in Tortes’ injury was the act of violence by Cool, which Metro, in the exercise of the highest degree of care, could not have anticipated. There is no evidence that Metro knew of the excessively dangerous propensities of Cool, the individual responsible for the crime, and evidence does not support the fact that there were similar crimes on other Metro buses, only that simple assaults had occurred. Metro cannot be held liable for a sudden assault that occurs with no warning and that is “ ‘so highly extraordinary or improbable as to be wholly beyond the range of expectability.’ ”
Additionally, Tortes claims Metro should have provided a greater police presence on its buses; the buses should be equipped with driver enclosures; or that video surveillance cameras should be present on all Metro buses. However, Tortes does not establish a legal requirement that Metro must take these steps.
Moreover, in addition to establishing a duty, to sustain an action for negligence, a plaintiff must establish
Next, Tortes asserts a claim for civil rights violations against Metro, King County Executive Ron Sims, and Paul Tolliver, the Director of the King County Department of Transportation.
As to the claims against Metro and King County, Tortes argues that her injury was inflicted due to an inadequate policy, custom, or practice adopted by the county that reflects deliberate indifference to her constitutional rights. A plaintiff asserting a claim against a municipality or governmental agency under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 must establish four elements: (1) that he/she possessed a constitutional right of which he/she was deprived, (2) that the municipality had a policy or custom that was inadequate, (3) that this inadequacy resulted from a deliberate indifference to the plaintiff’s constitutional right, and (4) that the
Even if she could support the proposition, Tortes fails to prove a direct causal link between any Metro policy or custom and the alleged constitutional deprivation.
Further, Tortes would also necessarily have to demonstrate that, through deliberate conduct, Metro was the moving force behind the injury alleged. That is, a plaintiff must show that the municipal action was taken with the requisite degree of culpability and must demonstrate a direct causal link between the municipal action and the
Tortes’ claims against King County Executive Ron Sims and Director of the King County Department of Transportation Paul Toliver were also properly dismissed. These individual public officials are immune from personal liability under the doctrine of qualified immunity. It is preferred that a defendant’s entitlement to qualified immunity be decided as a matter of law on summary judgment.
The central purpose of qualified immunity is to protect public officials from interference with their duties and from potentially disabling threats of liability.
Here, Tortes’ unsupported, conjectural, and vague recitations to a right to due process or other constitutional right of personal safety and protection are insufficient to prove a clearly established right. Additionally, she fails to establish that the individual defendants here were personally involved in any alleged deprivation of federally or state protected constitutional rights. The trial court was correct in determining as a matter of law that Sims and Tolliver were entitled to dismissal from suit under the doctrine of qualified immunity.
Tortes claims the trial court erred by failing to admit evidence she submitted in opposition to summary judgment. Before the hearing, Metro moved to strike much of the material submitted by Tortes in opposition to summary judgment. The trial court denied most of the motion but granted the motion to strike selected statements of Tortes’ expert, Bob Wuorenma, as the statements were either outside his area of expertise or purely legal conclusions. The trial court also struck a 1993 article from the Seattle Weekly and a document allegedly from the Federal Transit Administration. The trial court also struck Tortes’ affidavit in response to the motion for summary judgment.
This court reviews trial court rulings on motions to strike for an abuse of discretion.
Further, although the question of foreseeability is usually one for the trier of fact, in this case the circumstances of the injury are so highly extraordinary and beyond the range of expectability that foreseeability is not correctly framed as an issue of fact. Rather, it is a conclusion of law. Under the facts of this case, foreseeability became the ultimate legal issue before the trial court at summary judgment. Because the statements of Wuorenma, struck by the trial court, consisted solely of legal conclusions the statements are not admissible and cannot by their nature create an issue of material fact when they contain only legal conclusions.
Tortes claims the trial court erred in striking exhibit 5 to the declaration of her attorney. This exhibit is from an October 1993 article in the Seattle Weekly entitled “Bullies on the Bus” which was proffered in support of her opposition to the motion for summary judgment. But the five-year-old article is of little relevance and does not tend
Tortes asserts the trial court erred in striking exhibit 23, a 1997 document published by the Transit Cooperative Research Program entitled “Improving Transit Security.” The program was established under the alleged sponsorship of the Federal Transit Administration. Tortes claims the document is admissible under ER 902(e) and is “self-authenticating” because it was issued by a public authority. Further, she claims it is an exception to the hearsay rule for learned treatises under ER 803(a)(18).
But upon review, we hold that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in striking the document on the grounds that it is not properly authenticated, that it is irrelevant to the facts of the case, and that it constitutes inadmissible hearsay.
Additionally, Tortes claims the trial court erred in striking her own affidavit reciting the injuries she sustained. But the affidavit is not relevant to the motion on summary judgment based on Tortes’ inability to prove the elements of
The decision of the trial court dismissing the claims of Catherine Tortes is affirmed.
The remainder of this opinion has no precedential value. Therefore, it will be filed for public record in accordance with the rules governing unpublished opinions.
Baker and Appelwick, JJ., concur.
Review denied at 151 Wn.2d 1010 (2004).
When reviewing an order of summary judgment brought under CR 56, this court engages in the same inquiry as the trial court. Wilson v. Steinbach, 98 Wn.2d 434, 437, 656 P.2d 1030 (1982). The reviewing court “must consider all facts submitted and all reasonable inferences from the facts in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.” Id.
In its summary judgment motion, “the moving party bears the initial burden of showing the absence of an issue of material fact.” If... the moving party is a defendant who meets the initial burden,
then the inquiry shifts to the party with the burden of proof at trial.... If... the [party] “fails to make a showing sufficient to establish the existence of an element essential to that party’s case, and on which that party will bear the burden of proof at trial”, then the trial court should grant the motion.
Right-Price Recreation, L.L.C. v. Connells Prairie Cmty. Council, 146 Wn.2d 370, 381-82, 46 P.3d 789 (2002) (quoting Young v. Key Pharms., Inc., 112 Wn.2d 216, 225, 770 P.2d 182 (1989) (quoting Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 322, 106 S. Ct. 2548, 91 L. Ed. 2d 265 (1986))).
Hutchins v. 1001 Fourth Ave. Assocs., 116 Wn.2d 217, 220, 802 P.2d 1360 (1991).
Folsom v. Burger King, 135 Wn.2d 658, 671, 958 P.2d 301 (1998) (citing Pedroza v. Bryant, 101 Wn.2d 226, 228, 677 P.2d 166 (1984)).
Nivens v. 7-11 Hoagy’s Corner, 133 Wn.2d 192, 199, 943 P.2d 286 (1997) (quoting Hutchins, 116 Wn.2d at 223).
Tinder v. Nordstrom, Inc., 84 Wn. App. 787, 796, 929 P.2d 1209 (1997) (quoting Houck v. Univ. of Wash., 60 Wn. App. 189, 194, 803 P.2d 47 (1991), and Rathvon v. Columbia Pac. Airlines, 30 Wn. App. 193, 202, 633 P.2d 122 (1981)).
Tinder, 84 Wn. App. at 796.
See Niece v. Elmview Group Home, 131 Wn.2d 39, 50, 929 P.2d 420 (1997) (“Intentional or criminal conduct may be foreseeable unless it is ‘so highly extraordinary or improbable as to be wholly beyond the range of expectability.’ ” (quoting Johnson v. State, 77 Wn. App. 934, 942, 894 P.2d 1366 (1995))).
Raider v. Greyhound Lines, 94 Wn. App. 816, 819, 975 P.2d 518 (1999) (quoting Niece, 131 Wn.2d at 50); see also Wilbert v. Metro. Park Dist. of Tacoma, 90 Wn. App. 304, 308-09, 950 P.2d 522 (1998).
See Nivens, 133 Wn.2d at 205; Brown v. Crescent Stores, Inc., 54 Wn. App. 861, 867-68, 776 P.2d 705 (1989).
Miller v. Likins, 109 Wn. App. 140, 144-45, 34 P.3d 835 (2001).
42 U.S.C. § 1983 provides:
Every person who, under color of any statute, ordinance, regulation, custom, or usage, of any State or Territory or the District of Columbia, subjects, or causes to be subjected, any citizen of the United States or other person within the jurisdiction thereof to the deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution and laws, shall be hable to the party injured in an action at law, suit in equity, or other proper proceeding for redress.
See City of Canton v. Harris, 489 U.S. 378, 109 S. Ct. 1197, 103 L. Ed. 2d 412 (1989); Van Ort v. Estate of Stanewich, 92 F.3d 831 (9th Cir. 1996).
Van Ort, 92 F.3d at 835.
Mission Springs, Inc. v. City of Spokane, 134 Wn.2d 947, 962, 954 P.2d 250 (1998).
Harris, 489 U.S. at 385.
Harris, 489 U.S. at 392.
Harris, 489 U.S. at 391; Estate of Lee v. City of Spokane, 101 Wn. App. 158, 168, 2 P.3d 979 (2000).
Bd. of County Comm’rs v. Brown, 520 U.S. 397, 404-05, 117 S. Ct. 1382, 137 L. Ed. 2d 626 (1997).
Wilson v. State, 84 Wn. App. 332, 349, 929 P.2d 448 (1996).
Staats v. Brown, 139 Wn.2d 757, 772, 991 P.2d 615 (2000).
Altshuler v. City of Seattle, 63 Wn. App. 389, 393, 819 P.2d 393 (1991) (quoting Harlow v. Fitzgerald, 457 U.S. 800, 818, 102 S. Ct. 2727, 73 L. Ed. 2d 396 (1982)), overruled on other grounds in Staats v. Brown, 139 Wn.2d 757.
Altshuler, 63 Wn. App. at 394; see also McDade v. West, 223 F.3d 1135, 1142 (9th Cir. 2000).
Altshuler, 63 Wn. App. at 395.
Stenger v. State, 104 Wn. App. 393, 407-08, 16 P.3d 655 (2001) (citing King County Fire Prot. Dist. No. 16 v. Hous. Auth., 123 Wn.2d 819, 826, 872 P.2d 516 (1994)).
Stenger, 104 Wn. App. at 407 (citing ER 704 cmt.; King County Fire Prot. Dist. No. 16, 123 Wn.2d at 826 n.14).
ER 701, 702; Reese v. Stroh, 128 Wn.2d 300, 305-06, 907 P.2d 282 (1995).
Wash. State Physicians Ins. Exch. & Ass’n v. Fisons Corp., 122 Wn.2d 299, 344, 858 P.2d 1054 (1993).
Stenger, 104 Wn. App. at 408-09.
ER 401, 402.
ER 802.
Even if we were to determine that the trial court erred in striking the document, the article does not assist Tortes and her claims of negligence or foreseeability. For the most part, the article concerns effective strategies toward a safer transit environment.