Plaintiff brought the underlying negligence action after defendant’s truck collided with her stalled automobile. The jury found for defendant, and plaintiff appeals the ensuing judgment. We reverse and remand for a new trial.
Plaintiff complains that the trial court erred in refusing to grant her motion for a new trial, arguing that the jury’s verdict is contrary to the evidence, contrary to the court’s instructions, and contrary to the law of negligence. She also maintains that the trial court failed to charge the jury properly.
On a snowy evening in December of 1982, plaintiff was turning into her driveway when her automobile stalled, blocking the southbound lane of Route 5 in Springfield, Vermont. Approximately five minutes later, defendant’s pickup truck collided with the stalled vehicle, and plaintiff incurred personal injuries. At trial, there was conflicting testimony as to whether plaintiff had extinguished her vehicle’s headlights prior to the collision, and whether defendant should have seen plaintiff’s car in time to avoid hitting it. The court submitted a series of interrogatories to the jury, which found that defendant was negligent but that her negligence was not a proximate cause of plaintiff’s injuries.
On appeal, plaintiff contends that the jury’s responses to the interrogatories reveal a basic misunderstanding of the evidence and/or the court’s instructions. She argues that the facts of this case required a finding of proximate cause once defendant’s negligence was established. The question of proximate cause is ordinarily left to the jury, and a finding on this issue will stand “ ‘unless the proof is so clear that reasonable minds cannot draw different conclusions or where all reasonable minds would construe the facts and circumstances one way.’ ”
Roberts
v.
State,
*530
A finding of proximate cause depends upon a showing that a negligent act or omission was a cause-in-fact of the alleged injury.
Rivers
v.
State,
133 Vt.11, 14,
It is important to note, however, that more than one act of negligence, each a proximate cause, may combine to produce an injury.
Roberts
v.
State,
Reversed and remanded for a new trial.
