In this interlocutory appeal, we must determine whether a driver who signals the operator of another motor vehicle to proceed has undertaken a duty of care to other motorists on the roadway. Absent special circumstances, no such duty exists. The mere act of signaling does not, by itself, create a duty to insure the safety of other operators on the highway. However, if the signaling driver knows or should know of special circumstances which create, or could reasonably create, a foreseeable risk of harm to third-party operators on the roadway, then a legal duty to exercise reasonable care exists. For example, if the signaler knows, or in the exercise of
Upon review of the specific facts set forth in the pleadings, we find that in this case no special circumstances were pleaded. Therefore, we affirm the decision of the Superior Court (Arnold, J.) granting defendant Trudeau’s motion to dismiss count II of the plaintiff’s writ.
This action arises out of a daytime automobile accident at the intersection of South Willow Street and Upton Street in Manchester. Upton Street runs west to east and intersects at a “T” with South Willow Street, which runs north to south. Defendant Dennis O’Brien, who had been traveling in an easterly direction on Upton Street, had stopped and was waiting to make a left-hand turn onto South Willow Street. His co-worker, defendant Brenda Trudeau, traveling northbound on South Willow Street, had stopped in the left-hand travel lane at the intersection and was waiting to make a left-hand turn onto Upton Street. Trudeau signalled to O’Brien to make the left-hand turn onto South Willow Street in a northerly direction. At the same time, the plaintiff, Gerard Williams, was traveling southbound in the outer left travel lane of South Willow Street. As O’Brien drove his vehicle onto South Willow Street, he collided with Williams’ vehicle, causing it to slide on its roof into Trudeau’s vehicle. As a result of the accident, Williams was severely injured. Williams sued both defendants, alleging that Trudeau undertook a duty of care to him when she signaled O’Brien to proceed, and that she breached that duty by failing to make certain that South Willow Street was clear. Trudeau moved to dismiss Williams’ claim. The superior court granted the motion, concluding that Trudeau owed no duty to the plaintiff. A motion for reconsideration was denied, and the superior court subsequently approved this interlocutory appeal.
When reviewing the grant of a motion to dismiss, we must determine “whether the allegations [in the plaintiff’s pleadings] are reasonably susceptible of a construction that would permit recovery.” Rounds v. Standex International,
Williams contends that Trudeau owed a duty to other drivers to insure that the roadway was clear when she motioned to O’Brien to make the left-hand turn. Trudeau answers that, as a matter of law, a signaling driver owes no such duty simply because she gratuitously allowed another driver to proceed. Courts that have addressed this issue are split on whether a duty of care arises when signaling other drivers. See Kerfoot v. Waychoff,
This is not to say, however, that all hand signals create a duty of care on the part of the signaler. In Currier, the defendant signaled the plaintiff to pass on the left because the plaintiff’s view was obstructed by the defendant’s truck. The plaintiff therefore reasonably relied on the signal as an indication that “the way ahead was clear.” Id. at 160,
[i]t is possible that under certain conditions upon certain highways, such as hills or in the nighttime, a driver of a motor vehicle in signaling a car . . . might, by such a signal or conduct on the part of the driver, be responsible for an accident in which the person relying upon such signal to proceed became involved.
Giron v. Welch,
In a signaling case,
the determination of whether a duty should be recognized ... is based on a balancing of the societal interest involved, the severity of the risk, the burden upon the defendant, the likelihood of occurrence and the relationship between the parties.
Peka v. Boose,
Trudeau argues that even when a duty is found to exist, a signaling driver can only be liable to the signalee driver and not other motorists. However, we have recognized in other areas that a
We affirm the superior court’s order granting Trudeau’s motion to dismiss. While we recognize that under narrow circumstances a duty of care may exist on the part of the signaling driver, the plaintiff’s complaint fails to state any facts from which one could reasonably infer that a special circumstance existed. Williams did not allege that there were any'obstructions at the intersection that the signaler knew or should have known would have obstructed O’Brien’s view of Upton and South Willow streets. Although we assume the truth of the plaintiff’s allegations of fact and construe all reasonable inferences therefrom in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, Collectramatic, Inc. v. Kentucky Fried Chicken Corp.,
Affirmed.
