ORDER
The following matter is before the court on defendant Ford Motor Company’s (“Ford”) motion for summary judgment. For the following reasons, the court grants in part and denies in part Ford’s motion.
I. BACKGROUND
On February 3, 2011, decedent John Harley Wickersham, Jr. (“Wickersham”) was involved' in a single car accident while driving a 2010 Ford Escape. Wickersham suffered numerous permanent injuries from the crash, which produced continuous, extreme pain. Wickersham committed suicide on July 21, 2012. Plaintiff alleges that WiCkersham’s suicide was caused by the pain he suffered as a result of the accident.
Wickersham worked as a pharmacist and consultant. His career began in the pharmacy department at Roper Hospital in 1982. Pl. Depo. 22:20-25. Around 2003, Wickersham left his full-time position at Roper Hospital to work for InfuScience. Id. at 24:19-25:19. In 2008, Wickersham left InfuScience and took a full-time position at Beaufort Memorial Hospital on a two-year contract. Id. at 26:8-23, 27:16-28:1. During that time, Wickersham would work in Beaufort for seven days and then return to Charleston for seven days. Id. at 38:15-20. While in Charleston, Wick-ersham continued to perform consulting work for Roper Hospital. Id. at 42. When his contract with Beaufort Memorial ended, Wickersham worked on an “as needed” basis at Beaufort Memorial in addition to his consulting work for Roper Hospital. Id. at 28:2-25. Wickersham briefly took a position at the Medical University of South Carolina, but left after a week due to disagreements with some of the Medical University’s policies. Id. at 29:2-5, 30:6-7. After that, Wickersham looked for full-time work in the Charleston area, but could not find any. Id. at 30:20-23. Wickersham then continued to work on a contract and consulting basis for Roper Hospital, Beaufort Memorial, and other medical practices until the time of the accident. Id. at 31-32.
The accident occurred on the night of February 3, 2011. While attempting to make a left turn, Wickersham’s car went through an intersection and hit a tree on the front passenger side. Wickersham was taken to the Medical University of South Carolina for treatment. Wickersham suffered a variety of injuries in the accident, including a broken rib, a broken upper jaw, broken cheek bones around his left eye, a fractured skull, and a ruptured left eye. Pl’s Depo. 211-14. Wickersham required numerous surgeries and treatments during his initial hospitalization and in the months that followed. Id. at 230:7-12, 233:20-234:20. Most significantly, Wickers-ham experienced extreme pain as a result of his injuries, which drove him to seek relief from pain specialists, pain medication, and a nerve block. Id. at 236-238. Unfortunately, these treatments were largely ineffective. Id at 237:18-19, 239:23-240:1. The pain not only affected Wickersham’s body, but also his ability to work, and consequently, his family’s finances. Id. at 240: 9-24. Wickersham eventually lost his left eye in November 2011, which resulted in further emotional trauma. Id, at 230:13-231:7, 244:16-25.
In April 2012, Wickersham was admitted to Roper Hospital for suicidal thoughts. Id. at 246:12-20. At the time, Wickersham told plaintiff that “[she] need[ed] to put [him] somewhere or [he was] going to hurt [him
After Wickersham was released from the hospital, plaintiff regularly asked him whether he had any suicidal thoughts. Id at 250:24-251:11. Wickersham told plaintiff that he occasionally had such thoughts, but he was not on the vetge of committing suicide. Id. On July 21, 2012, however, Wickersham committed suicide by overdosing on prescription pain medication.
Plaintiff filed two actions, one individually and one as personal representative of Wickersham’s estate, bringing claims for negligence, strict liability, and breach of warranty. Plaintiff contends that Wickers-ham’s injuries and eventual suicide were caused by a defective airbag restraint system in the 2010 Ford Escape, which deployed the airbag too late. Pl.’s Response 23-24. On November 24, 2015, Ford filed the instant motion for summary judgment. On December 29, 2015, plaintiff filed a response, and on January 8, 2016, Ford filed a reply. The court held a hearing on the matter on May 12, 2016, and the matter is now ripe for the court’s review.
II. STANDARD
Summary judgment shall be granted “if the pleadings, the discovery and disclosure materials on file, and any affidavits show that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and that the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c). “By its very terms, this standard provides that the mere existence of some alleged factual dispute between the parties will not defeat an otherwise properly supported motion for summary judgment; the requirement is that there be no genuine issue of material fact.” Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
“[A]t the summary judgment stage the judge’s function is not himself to weigh the evidence and determine the truth of the matter but to determine whether there is a genuine issue for trial.” Id. at 249,
III. DISCUSSION
Ford seeks summary judgment on three grounds, arguing that: (i) plaintiff cannot recover under any theory of liability because plaintiff cannot show the existence of a feasible alternative design; (ii) suicide necessarily constitutes an independent act which breaks the causal chain between the defendant’s actions and the decedent’s
A. Feasible Alternative Design
Ford first argues that plaintiff has failed to present evidence of a feasible alternative design. Under South Carolina law, “the exclusive test in a products liability design case is the risk-utility test with its requirement of showing a feasible alternative design.” Branham v. Ford Motor Co.,
Plaintiff contends that Wickers-ham’s injuries were caused by the 146-millisecond delay between the vehicle’s initial impact with the pole, which activated the seatbelt pretensioners and the deployment of the airbag. Pl.’s Resp. Ex. 5, Caruso Report 13; Pl.’s Resp. Ex. 12, Caruso Depo. 81:7-13. This delay allowed Wickers-ham to “move forward into.. .the deployment zone of the airbag while it was inflating,” causing an impact between his body and the airbag. Pl.’s Resp. Ex. 6, Kennet Report 5-6. The airbag system and seat-belt pretensioners are controlled by the Restraint Control Module (“RCM”). The RCM receives crash data from sensors located in the vehicle and processes that data through an algorithm, which then determines whether to activate the seatbelt pretensioners, deploy the airbags, or both. Caruso Report 5. This algorithm is developed and calibrated using crash testing data. Plaintiffs engineering expert, Christopher Caruso (“Caruso”), contends that the, 2010 Ford Escape’s RCM was defective because its algorithm was not calibrated to account for the type of crash Wick-ersham experienced — namely, an offset pole crash. Id. 17-18. Caruso further opines that this defect could have been avoided had Ford conducted more thorough testing and calibrated the RCM algorithm to account for such a crash. Caruso Report 18-19. Though plaintiff seems to suggest that the RCM algorithm could have been better calibrated in a number of different ways, Caruso specifically states that Ford could have programmed the RCM to raise the mile-per-hour threshold for airbag deployment in low speed crashes in which the airbag has not deployed more than 50 milliseconds after activating the seatbelt pretensioners (hereinafter, the “raised threshold approach”).
To the extent Ford argues that plaintiff can only prevail if it provides an actual algorithm that Ford could have used in the 2010 Escape, Ford seeks to impose an evidentiary burden well above any sensible interpretation of Branham. The Branham court relied on the Restatement (Third) of Torts in adopting the risk-utility test for design defects. See Branham,
does not [ ] require the plaintiff to produce a prototype in order to make out a prima facie case. Thus, qualified expert testimony on the issue suffices, even though the expert has produced no prototype, if it reasonably supports the conclusion that a reasonable alternative design could have been practically adopted at the time of sale.
Restatement (Third) of Torts: Prod. Liab. § 2, cmt. d (Am. Law Inst. 1998).
The fact that other manufacturers successfully implemented the raised threshold approach provides more than a reasonable basis for concluding that Ford could have done the same here. Other courts in this district have adopted a similar analysis in applying South Carolina .law. See, e.g., Quinton v. Toyota Motor Corp., No. 1:10-cv-02187,
Ford highlights the case of Holland ex rel. Knox v. Morbark, Inc., in which the South Carolina Court of Appeals stated that “a conceptual design is insufficient to establish a reasonable alternative design.”
The Holland case is distinguishable from the case at hand for at least two reasons. First, as discussed above, there is evidence that the raised threshold approach has been implemented by other manufacturers in the industry, Caruso Depo. 137:19-138:24. Thus, unlike in Holland, plaintiff has presented more than a purely speculative assertion of feasibility. Second, Ford’s attempt to apply Holland to Caruso’s proposal depends on a semantic dispute over the term “design.” Ford clearly regards the RCM algorithm as the “design,” and because Caruso cannot present the actual algorithm that would be used for a 2010 Escape, Ford argues that plaintiff has only set forth a strategy for producing an alternative design, but has not produced the “design” itself. While the algorithm might be considered the design in some sense, the court thinks that the algorithm is better understood as the product, or at least, a component thereof. The algorithm is used to perform a function — namely, manage the airbag deployment and activation of the seatbelt pretensioners. It is a system of information, much like a physical product may be a system of tubes, iron, wires, etc. When viewed in this light,, it becomes clear that a plaintiff seeking to introduce an alternative design of the algorithm need not produce the actual algorithm, as this would constitute the production of a prototype, which is clearly not required in other instances. See Restatement (Third) of Torts: Prod. Liab. § 2, cmt. d (Am. Law Inst. 1998) (“[Qualified expert testimony on the issue suffices, even though the expert has produced no prototype.”). Where, as here, the plaintiff is able to identify a specific design approach ' that has been implemented elsewhere in the industry and has specifically explained how that approach would be implemented into the algorithm at issue, the plaintiff has presented sufficient evidence of a feasible alternative design to survive summary judgment.
Therefore, the court denies Ford’s motion to the extent it depends on plaintiffs failure to present a feasible alternative design.
B. Suicide Precludes Wrongful Death Recovery
Ford next argues that plaintiff cannot recover on her wrongful death claim because Wickersham’s suicide precludes any showing of proximate cause as a matter of law. Def’s Mot 6-9. Plaintiff argues that Wickersham’s suicide falls within a recognized exception to the general rule that suicide precludes any showing of proximate cause. Pl.’s Resp. 10-23.
To prevail on a wrongful death claim in South Carolina, a plaintiff must establish causation. Land v. Green Tree Servicing, LLC,
Nevertheless, South Carolina does appear to recognize that, in some instances, a decedent’s suicide will not preclude a wrongful death action. In Scott v. Greenville Pharmacy, the only case in which the Supreme Court of South Carolina explored the subject, a plaintiff-executrix brought a wrongful death action against a pharmacy that allegedly sold the decedent barbiturates in violation of state law.
Over forty years later, the South Carolina Court of Appeals relied on the Scott decision to grant summary judgment in favor of a bartender who allegedly sold alcohol to an intoxicated patron in violation of state law. Crolley v. Hutchins,
Most recently, another court in this district addressed the issue in Watson v. Adams and concluded as follows:
South Carolina law reflects the majority rule. ‘Where an action is brought under a wrongful death statute the general rule is that suicide constitutes an intervening. force which breaks the line of causation from the wrongful act to the death and therefore the wrongful act does not render defendant civilly liable[.]’
Watson,
Each of these cases is most sensibly read to provide that, under normal circumstances, a decedent’s suicide will constitute an intervening event which defeats any showing of causation. However, each court also seemed to recognize that this general rule cannot be applied in every case. Though the general rule may establish a default position that no proximate cause exists in suicide cases, the court still finds occasion in this case to apply the aforementioned “uncontrollable impulse” exception. See id. at *6 (“The first exception involves cases where a tortious act is found to have caused a mental condition in the decedent that proximately resulted in an uncontrollable impulse to commit suicide, or prevented the decedent from realizing the nature of his act,” (quoting McLaughlin v. Sullivan,
While Ford argues that the uncontrollable impulse exception has not been recognized in South Carolina, Def.’s Reply 4, the court disagrees. First, the Supreme Court of South Carolina suggested in Scott that a plaintiff might recover where “[the decedent is] no' longer a free agent incapable of controlling his own conduct, and [is] bent upon suicide.”
Ford next argues that, even if the uncontrollable impulse exception exists, the requisite “impulse” must be caused by some form of “insanity.” Def.’s Reply 3-5. Ford cites an American Jurisprudence formulation of the rule, as well as the Restatement (Second) of Torts § 455, which appear to impose such a requirement. 22A Am. Jur. 2d Death § 42 (2016); Restate
Liability is imposed upon a defendant for another’s suicide when the defendant’s negligent conduct causes the insanity of another and...the insanity makes it impossible to resist an uncontrollable impulse that deprives the person of the capacity to govern the person’s own conduct in a reasonable manner.
22A Am. Jur. 2d Death § 42 (emphasis added). Similarly, the Restatement (Second) of Torts states that an actor may be liable for negligent conduct which
brings about the delirium or insanity of another as to make the actor liable for it, the actor is also liable for harm done by the other to himself while delirious or insane, if his delirium or insanity[:]
(b) makes it impossible for him to resist an impulse caused by his insanity which deprives him of his capacity to govern his conduct in accordance with reason.
Restatement (Second) of Torts § 455 (emphasis added).
Notably, however, courts applying South Carolina law have not given any indication that any such a requirement exists. The Watson court’s formulation of the rule speaks in general terms of a “mental condition” that causes an “irresistible impulse,” without any mention of “delirium” or “insanity.”
The Scott decision provides even less support for Ford’s posited “insanity” requirement. Like the Watson court, the Scott court discussed the uncontrollable impulse concept in general terms without any mention of insanity or delirium. Scott,
Moreover, cases applying the uncontrollable impulse exception have been far from uniform in imposing the insanity requirement. For instance, Ford notes two cases applying Maryland law that might be read to equate “insanity” with “psychosis.” See Young v. Swiney,
More importantly, a number of courts have recognized the entire concept of “insanity” or “delirium” tends to place too much emphasis on a decedent’s particular mental state, and too little emphasis on the more important question of whether the defendant’s actions can be considered the proximate cause of the decedent’s suicide. As California’s First District Court of Appeal stated in Tate v. Canonica:
Some cases speak of ‘insanity,’ and of ‘delirium or frenzy,’ and take the view that if the decedent knew what he was doing, the suicide is an independent intervening cause. We think, in the light of modern knowledge as to mental illness, that this view is too narrow. It should not make any difference that the decedent ‘knew what he was doing’. If defendant is to avoid liability, the decedent’s act must be voluntary, not in that sense but in the sense that he could, in spite of his mental illness, have decided against suicide and refrained from killing himself.
The court finds this approach persuasive. As the New York Court of Appeals recognized in 1974, “[a] suicide is a strange act and no rationalistic approach can fit the act into neat categories of rationality or irrationality.” Fuller,
Here, plaintiff has offered an affidavit from her psychiatric expert, Dr. Donna Schwartz-Watts, in which Dr. Schwatrz-Watts opines that the accident diminished Wickersham’s ability to control his impulses and that Wickersham’s suicide occurred because of this lack of control. Pl.’s Resp. Ex. 15, Schwartz-Watts Aff. ¶¶ 1, 2, 4. Ford objects to plaintiffs reliance on Dr. Schwatz-Watts’s affidavit, arguing that it offers previously undisclosed opinions in violation of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(b)(4) and constitutes a “sham affidavit” because it contradicts Dr. Schwartz-Watts’s prior testimony. Def.’s Reply 8. Ford specifically argues that Dr.. Schwartz-Watts stated she did not know whether Wickersham’s decision to commit suicide was impulsive and refused to opine as to whether it was impulsive or not.
A party “cannot create a dispute about a fact that is contained in deposition testimony by referring to a subsequent affidavit of the deponent contradicting the deponent’s prior testimony, for ‘it is well established that a genuine issue of fact is not created where the only issue of fact is to determine which of the two conflicting versions of a party’s testimony is correct.’” In re Family Dollar FLSA Litig.,
The testimony at issue reads as follows: Q. [The suicide] wasn’t an impulsive decision?
A. I don’t know.
Q. Okay.
A. It-depends on how long an impulse is. You know, he might have said in one minute, I’m dying, let me write a note and then done it. We don’t know- We won’t know.
Q. You won’t offer an opinion on that either way?
A. No.
Q. Either way?
A. No.
Q. Okay. The impulse and — you know, the impulsive behavior that he had, it wasn’t caused from the accident? I mean, I guess what I asked you earlier about the accident not causing his mood disorder. His mood disorder is kind of what causes his compulsive behavior.
A. I would — I don’t have any evidence to indicate the contrary. I would have been concerned, because anytime you have an airbag injury enough to enucleate your eye, you would be concerned. But I didn’t see any evidence anywhere where he had any neuropsychological testing or anything. I certainly would have recommended — had he come to me post-accident, I probably would have referred him. But I don’t have any evidence that that’s the case.
Q. And I’m afraid you may have misunderstood where my — or maybe I didn’t ask the right question. Just — and we talked about the impulsive [] behavior during manic episodes as well as the bipolar—
A. Yes.
Q. —making poor decisions or things like that. Those — you know, he had that — to the extend he acted impulsively during those times, that would be the same as after the accident or during those same kind of manic episodes?
A. Oh, I see what you’re saying. I don’t think there was any history that his mania was worsened after the accident.
Schwatz-Watts Depo. 164:6—165:22. When the testimony is read in full, it shows that Dr. Schwartz-Watts’s understood the word “impulse” to describe the time it took Wickersham to decide to commit suicide. See id. at 164:9 (“It depends how long an impulse is.”). Dr. Schwartz-Watts also used this definition earlier in the deposition. See id. at 161:5-7 (“When I say plan, I think of an impulsive act which is very quick, no, no, just doing something impulsively.” (emphasis added)). After establishing this definition of “impulse,” Dr. Schwartz-Watts was asked: “[T]he impulsive behavior that [Wickersham] had, it wasn’t caused from the accident?” Id. at 164:19-20. However, before allowing Dr. Schwartz-Watts to answer, Ford’s counsel then referred to a previous question about whether Wickersham’s “mood disorder” was caused by the accident and stated that the mood disorder “is kind of what causes [Wickersham’s] compulsive behavior.” Id at 164:20-23. Thus, when Dr. Schwartz-Watts eventually stated that she had no evidence to indicate “the contrary,” id. at 164:24-25, it was unclear what she was referring to — the question about the cause of Wickersham’s impulsive behavior, a previous question about the cause of Wickers-ham’s mood disorder, or the assertion that the mood disorder caused Wickersham’s “compulsive behavior.” Id, at 164:20-25. Indeed, Ford’s counsel even recognized this question was confusing, and after the confusion was removed, Dr. Schwartz-Watts simply stated that there is no “history” — which the court takes to mean evidence — “that [Wickersham’s] mania was worsened after the accident.” Id at 165:20-22.
As explained above, the court holds that Wickersham’s suicidal “impulse” need not have been brought on by his bipolar disorder, or any other specific mental condition, for it to be considered “uncontrollable” within the meaning of the exception. See Kivland,
It is clear that Dr. Schwartz-Watts’s deposition testimony regarding “impulsive” — i.e. quick — decisions and their connection to Wickersham’s mood disorder did not preclude the possibility that Wick-ersham’s mind was overtaken by the type of force recognized under the uncontrollable impulse exception. Thus, Dr. Schwartz-Watts’s deposition testimony and her subsequently filed affidavit did not create a bona fide inconsistency. When read in the light most favorable to plaintiff, portions of Dr. Schwartz-Watts’s testimony actually Support her affidavit's conclusion that “[Wickersham] was unable to control his conduct and suicidal thoughts on the day of his death due to his diminished capacity caused by the collision.” Schwartz-Watts Aff. ¶ 4. For instance, Dr. Schwartz-Watts testified that the accident caused a significant decrease “in all levels of Wickers-ham’s functioning,” Schwartz-Watts Depo. 98:4-10, and highlighted the fact'that, in previous instances, Wickersham had been able to manage his suicidal ideations. Id. at 107:6-11, 152:9-153:18. Therefore, the court finds that Dr. Schwartz-Watts’s affidavit may be considered in connection with the instant motion, and that this- affidavit, as well as Dr. Scwartz-Watts’s deposition testimony, create a genuine issue of material fact as to whether Wickersham’s suicide was caused by an uncontrollable impulse.
Accordingly, the court denies Ford’s motion for summary judgment as it relates to the issue of proximate cause.
C. Punitive Damages
Ford next argues that plaintiff cannot recover punitive damages because there is no evidence that Ford acted with the requisite mental state and any recovery of punitive damages would violate Ford’s due process rights. Def.’s Mot. 13. Plaintiff argues that, when the evidence is viewed in the light most favorable to her, there is evidence that Ford recklessly failed to account for the type of collision at issue in this case in designing the 2010 Ford Escape’s RCM. Pl.’s Resp. 36.
Punitive damages are available when “the defendant’s conduct was so reckless, willful, wanton, or malicious that the defendant should be punished and deterred by requiring him or her to pay money to the plaintiff.” Clark v, Cantrell,
Plaintiff contends that the record contains evidence of Ford’s culpable mental state based on deposition testimony from Caruso and Ford’s own expert, Ram Krishnaswami (“Krishnaswami”), indicating Ford was aware that a delay of nearly 150 milliseconds between the activation of the seatbelt pretensioners and airbag deployment was unsafe, and it knew other manufacturers conducted tests and calibrated their RCM. systems to avoid.such delays. Pl.’s Response 37. Krishnaswami conceded that if Wickersham’s accident occurred as plaintiffs expert opined, then the late airbag deployment increased the risk of injury to - Wickersham. Pl.’s Response Ex. 13, Krishnaswami Depo. 37:14-38:17. In fact, Krishnaswami indicated that, under such circumstances, a 150 millisecond delay in airbag deployment would go against Ford’s own specifications in the
Ford contends that this evidence is insufficient to support punitive damages because it merely goes to the existence of a defect, not a culpable mental state. Def.’s Reply 13-14. Ford supports this proposition by citing a section in Branham distinguishing strict-liability claims, which do not require proof of a “fault-based element,” from negligence claims, which do. Branham,
Ford also argues that this case presents, at most, a reasonable disagreement about the existence of a defect, and that where reasonable minds may disagree on the existence of a defect, punitive damages are unavailable.
Moreover, the cases Ford cites do not clearly support the categorical approach it proposes. The Eleventh Circuit opinion in Ivy v. Ford Motor Co.,
Of course, this court is not governed by Eleventh or Fifth Circuit law, so even if these courts did hold that punitive damages were categorically unavailable where there is a “reasonable dispute” over the existence of a defect, these holdings would not be controlling. Ford cites two cases applying South Carolina law in discussing this issue, Myrick v. Prime Ins. Syndicate, Inc.,
Ultimately, the eases cited by Ford are simply insufficient to support the application of a per se bar against punitive damages in cases where there is a genuine dispute as to the existence of a defect. The few cases that provide support for this approach are from courts outside of this circuit. Even those cases contain some indication that the court must account for evidence addressing the defendant’s mental state. Meanwhile, the cases applying South Carolina law simply provide no support for Ford’s position.
The court finds the Southern District of West Virginia’s treatment of this issue in In re C.R, Bard.
Here, there is evidence that Ford understood the risks posed by a delayed airbag deployment and was aware of the raised threshold approach in designing the RCM algorithm. Though Krishnaswami appears to believe the raised threshold approach was used in the 2010 Ford Escape, he is admittedly unable to confirm that belief, Krishnaswami Depo. at 42:3-25, and Caruso has offered his own testimony disputing it.
However, this does not end the punitive damages inquiry. Ford also contends that if it is possible to impose punitive
Ford’s argument confuses the issue. In a negligence case, whether a defendant was “on notice” that its conduct was unsafe is precisely what determines whether a defect exists — i.e., whether the conduct was prohibited at all. That is the question of reasonableness or ordinary care. The question of punitive damages then turns on a defendant’s actual awareness and understanding of that risk — more specifically, the defendant’s awareness of whether the risk was unreasonable. See Taylor,
Therefore, the court finds that South Carolina’s punitive damages law is not unconstitutionally vague and denies Ford’s motion for summary judgment on the issue of punitive damages.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the court GRANTS Ford’s motion with respect to plaintiffs failure to warn claim, and DENIES the remainder of Ford’s motion for summary judgment.
AND IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The following facts are presented in the light most favorable to the plaintiff and are not meant to represent conclusive findings.
. Ford also argues that there is no evidence supporting plaintiffs failure to warn claim, which plaintiff concedes. Pl.’s Response 2 n.1.
. Plaintiff, at times, characterizes its alternative design theory in terms of more testing or a more complete data set. Pl.’s Resp. 23, This appears to have caused a considerable amount of confusion on the issue. Nevertheless, the "raised threshold” approach described above provides at least one example of how additional testing would have been used to produce a differently calibrated RCM. The court does not mean to suggest that plaintiff’s case is bound to this theory. If there are other examples of how the RCM could have been recalibrated to avoid the accident — for instance, lowering the airbag threshold in low speed crashes so that the airbag deploys before the driver enters the deployment zone — plaintiff may advance those theories as well. At this point, however, the court focuses on the raised threshold theory because it was the theory most thoroughly discussed by the parties.
. Notably, the Watson court cites to an American Law Reports article to set forth its formulation of the general rule that suicide constitutes a break in the chain of causation. See Watson,
. The court notes that this narrow reading is by no means the only available interpretation. First, the Sindler court recognized that the uncontrollable impulse exception can apply when the decedent "[is] insane or otherwise [ ] in a mental state such that she... [has] an uncontrollable impulse.”
. Notably, the Kivland court saw fit to do away with the "general rule” and "uncontrollable impulse” exception entirely and simply evaluate each case under an ordinary proximate cause analysis. Kivland,
The test, [ ] by which the negligent conduct of the original wrongdoer is to be insulated as a matter of law by the independent negligent act of another, is whether the intervening act and the injury resulting therefrom are of such character that the author of the primary negligence should have reasonably foreseen and anticipated them in the light of attendant circumstances.
Nevertheless, the court recognizes that Scott can also be read to set forth the general rule framework outlined above. See Watson,
. Even if the court were inclined to assess Wickersham’s mental condition,'there is evidence that the pain from the accident caused a "decline in functioning.. .that certainly made his depression worse.” Scwartz-Watts Depo. 153:14-9.
. Ford also argues that the affidavit is inconsistent with Dr. Scwartz-Watts’s prior testimony because she testified that Wickersham was not "insane” and that his bipolar disorder was not worsened by the accident. Def.'s Reply 7. However, the affidavit does not specifically address either topic and is only “inconsistent” with the prior testimony if one believes that an uncontrollable impulse must be connected to some specific form of "insanity.” Given the court's determination that the uncontrollable impulse exception does not depend on a finding of "insanity” or any other specific mental disorder, the court does not find the affidavit to be inconsistent at all in this regard, and even if it were, such inconsistencies would be entirely irrelevant.
. Ford also notes that the court can look to its compliance with industry standards to find that punitive damages are not warranted. Def.’s Mot 14-15. While the court has no doubt that compliance with industry standards is probative of Ford's mental state, the court fails to see how it is dispositive of the issue.
. Ford points out that many of Caruso’s statements suggest that Ford was barely negligent and certainly not aware that it was subjecting drivers and passengers to unreasonable risks when it designed the RCM system. Def.’s Mot. 15-16 (listing statements from Caruso's deposition). The court has no doubt that plaintiff will have to answer for these statements at trial, but the court does not find that these statements completely undermine any showing of willfulness or recklessness on Ford’s part. Importantly, the court notes that much of the evidence concerning Ford's awareness of the risks comes from Ford’s own witness, Krishnaswami, not Caruso.
. In some instances, the inquiry may be more complicated, such as where "the wrongdoer does not actually realize that he is invading the rights of another, [but] the act is committed in such a manner that a person of ordinary prudence would say that it was a recldess disregard of another’s rights.” Atlas Food Sys. & Servs. v. Crane Nat'l Vendors,
