Karine L. Maier v. Faustino Jimenez ( 2021 )


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  •          USCA11 Case: 19-11966      Date Filed: 02/05/2021   Page: 1 of 23
    [DO NOT PUBLISH]
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
    ________________________
    No. 18-10557
    ________________________
    D.C. Docket No. 4:09-cv-00172-WTM-GRS
    KARINE MAIER,
    as surviving spouse of James R. Maier,
    and as Executrix of the Estate of James R. Maier,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    versus
    GREEN EYES USA, INC.,
    FAUSTINO JIMENEZ, et al,
    Defendants-Appellees.
    ________________________
    No. 19-11966
    ________________________
    D.C. Docket No. 4:09-cv-00172-WTM-GRS
    KARINE L. MAIER,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    USCA11 Case: 19-11966          Date Filed: 02/05/2021      Page: 2 of 23
    versus
    FAUSTINO JIMENEZ,
    Defendant-Appellee.
    ________________________
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Georgia
    ________________________
    (February 5, 2021)
    Before BRANCH, LUCK, and ED CARNES, Circuit Judges.
    PER CURIAM:
    James Maier was standing on the shoulder of Interstate 95 beside his disabled
    car when a semi-truck struck and killed him. The truck was driven by Faustino
    Jimenez, an employee of a trucking company called Green Eyes USA, Inc. Karine
    Maier,1 James’ widow and the executrix of his estate, sued Green Eyes, Jimenez,
    and a number of insurers, including Canal Insurance Company and Shelly,
    Middlebrooks & O’Leary, Inc., for James’ wrongful death.
    This case has a complex procedural history but presents three straightforward
    legal issues. First, whether we have appellate jurisdiction over the district court’s
    interlocutory grant of summary judgment to Canal and Shelly. Second, whether the
    district court erred in finding Jimenez was a citizen of Florida, in which case there
    1
    For clarity, we refer to Karine Maier as “Maier” and to James Maier as “James.”
    2
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    is a lack of complete diversity and a lack subject matter jurisdiction. And third,
    assuming we have appellate jurisdiction and that there is subject matter jurisdiction,
    whether the district court’s grant of summary judgment was proper. Maier contends
    that we have appellate jurisdiction but that subject matter jurisdiction is lacking and
    asks us to order the case remanded to state court. We will not do that because we
    have appellate jurisdiction and there is subject matter jurisdiction. The district
    court’s grant of summary judgment is due to be affirmed.
    I.    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    Because this case took a long and winding road to us, we start by explaining
    how it got here.
    A. The Accident and Maier’s Lawsuit
    In October 2008 James was driving north on I-95 near Savannah when car
    problems forced him to pull to the side of the road. He was standing in the
    emergency lane next to his disabled car when a semi-tractor-trailer truck crossed
    into his lane, striking and killing him. Jimenez was driving the truck, which Green
    Eyes owned.
    Maier filed a wrongful death lawsuit against Green Eyes and Jimenez in
    Georgia state court in February 2009. She amended her complaint in October 2009
    to add four new defendants, including Canal, which had insured Green Eyes until
    six months before the accident, and Shelly, Canal’s agent. The amended complaint
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    alleged that Jimenez was a resident of Florida, that he was not competent to safely
    operate a tractor trailer as evidenced by his history of traffic violations, that Canal
    and Shelly knew or should have known Jimenez wasn’t competent because they
    undertook to perform driving record inquiries for Green Eyes, and that Canal and
    Shelly were liable for James’ wrongful death pursuant to Restatement (Second) of
    Torts § 324A(a), (c).
    Canal and Shelly removed the case to the Southern District of Georgia in
    November 2009, alleging that Maier was a citizen of Georgia, Jimenez was a
    resident of Florida, and diversity jurisdiction applied. After Maier amended her
    complaint a second time in February 2010 to add three new defendants, one of those
    defendants filed for bankruptcy, which stayed the case until May 2010. Maier
    joined a tenth defendant in September 2010.
    Canal and Shelly moved for summary judgment in January 2011, arguing that
    Maier’s Restatement § 324A(a) claim failed because their actions — labeling
    potential Green Eyes drivers as “acceptable,” “unacceptable,” or “acceptable with a
    surcharge” — did not increase any risk of harm to James, and that her § 324A(c)
    claim failed because she had not shown that Green Eyes changed its position by
    neglecting or reducing its own safety program in reliance on those actions. The
    district court granted that motion in September 2011.
    The next month, Maier, Canal, and Shelly all filed motions asking the district
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    court to certify the grant of summary judgment as a final judgment under Federal
    Rule of Civil Procedure 54(b). The court denied those motions in August 2012,
    noting that final judgment under Rule 54(b) generally “is proper only after rights
    and liabilities of all parties to an action have been adjudicated.” Eleven days later
    the district court stayed the case again after learning that another defendant had
    filed for bankruptcy. The court noted that its order staying the case did not prevent
    Maier from dismissing her claims against any defendant, including those in
    bankruptcy.
    The case had been stayed for two years when Maier moved in September
    2014 to dismiss all six of the remaining defendants under Federal Rule of Civil
    Procedure 41(a)(2). She also requested that the district court enter a final judgment
    under Rule 54 as to Canal and Shelly so that she could appeal the grant of summary
    judgment in their favor. The court dismissed her remaining claims without
    prejudice under Rule 41(a)(2) in September 2015. Although the court did not
    address Maier’s Rule 54 request regarding Canal and Shelly, it did express its view
    that its earlier order granting summary judgment to Canal and Shelly had
    “effectively become[] the . . . final judgment in this case.”
    B. Maier’s First Appeal and Attempts to Secure a Final Judgment
    Maier appealed the district court’s order granting summary judgment to
    Canal and Shelly “as made the final judgment” by the court’s September 2015 order
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    dismissing her remaining claims under Rule 41(a)(2). We issued jurisdictional
    questions asking the parties “under what theory” the September 2015 order was
    final or appealable and also whether the record established the parties’ citizenship
    for purposes of diversity jurisdiction.
    After the parties briefed the issue, we dismissed Maier’s appeal for lack of
    jurisdiction in February 2016, concluding that the September 2015 order dismissing
    her remaining claims under Rule 41(a)(2) was “not a final, appealable order.” We
    did not address the citizenship question.
    Maier, in search of a path to appellate review, tried three times to have the
    district court enter a final, appealable order. First, in June 2016, she moved the
    court to amend the September 2015 order under either Rule 54(b) or Rule 60(b).
    The court denied that motion because it lacked jurisdiction to enter a Rule 54(b)
    order retroactively and it could not use Rule 60(b) to amend a non-final order.
    Second, in December 2016, Maier moved the district court to reopen the
    case, reinstate the claims it had dismissed without prejudice, dismiss those claims
    with prejudice, reaffirm its grant of summary judgment to Canal and Shelly, and re-
    close the case for purposes of appeal. The district court denied that motion, stating
    that it could not reinstate any claims until Maier provided more information about
    the status of the bankruptcies that had required the earlier stays.
    Third, in June 2017, Maier for a second time moved to reopen, explaining
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    that the bankruptcy proceedings were closed and that her claims had been disposed
    of in those proceedings. She asked the court to reinstate her claims against the non-
    bankrupt defendants and to dismiss those claims with prejudice “so that she may
    have a final, appealable judgment.” In each of her three attempts to convince the
    district court to convert the dismissals without prejudice into dismissals with
    prejudice, Maier also asked the court to reaffirm its grant of summary judgment
    against Canal and Shelly or to enter a final judgment as to them.
    In January 2018, the district court denied Maier’s second motion to reopen,
    the one she had filed in June 2017. Citing the former Fifth Circuit’s decision in
    Ryan v. Occidental Petroleum Corp., 
    577 F.2d 298
    , 303 (5th Cir. 1978), the court
    noted that “a partial entry of summary judgment followed by a voluntary dismissal
    of all remaining claims without prejudice does not create an appealable final
    judgment.” Although it acknowledged the “finality trap” Maier had fallen into, the
    court found there was no mechanism under either the Rules of Civil Procedure or
    our precedent that allowed it to reopen her claims and dismiss them with prejudice.
    The court concluded that it had relinquished jurisdiction over the claims once they
    were voluntarily dismissed under Rule 41(a) and couldn’t revive them “simply at
    [Maier]’s request.”
    C. Maier’s Second Appeal, Our Remand to District Court, and Her Third Appeal
    Maier appealed the district court’s January 2018 order denying her second
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    motion to reopen. That was her second appeal to us, and in it we reissued the
    jurisdictional question that went unanswered during her first appeal: whether the
    record established Jimenez’s citizenship so as to invoke diversity jurisdiction.
    Following the parties’ responses, we concluded that the pleadings did not
    adequately allege either Jimenez’s or James’ citizenship and that the record was
    insufficient to show Jimenez’s citizenship. We remanded to the district court to
    make factual determinations about Jimenez’s citizenship at the time of removal and
    James’ citizenship at the time of his death. We authorized the district court to
    permit discovery and hold hearings as appropriate and asked it to return the
    supplemented record to us.
    On remand, the district court found that the existing record established that
    James was domiciled in Georgia at the time of his death, but it was insufficient to
    establish Jimenez’s citizenship. After allowing limited discovery and briefing, the
    court reiterated in a May 2019 order that James was a citizen of Georgia, and it
    found that Jimenez was domiciled in Florida at the time of removal. Maier
    appealed the May 2019 order, which was her third appeal to us. We consolidated
    Maier’s second and third appeals, and we consider them both now.
    II.   OUR JURISDICTION
    In her third appeal, Maier challenges our subject matter jurisdiction on the
    basis that the parties lack complete diversity. But before we can address that
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    challenge, we have to decide whether we have appellate jurisdiction. We must start
    with that because if we do not have appellate jurisdiction, “we cannot review
    whether a judgment is defective, not even where the asserted defect is that the
    district court lacked jurisdiction.” United States v. Machado, 
    465 F.3d 1301
    , 1306
    (11th Cir. 2006).
    A. Appellate Jurisdiction
    
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
     gives us “jurisdiction of appeals from all final decisions of
    the district courts of the United States.” That “is the basis for the final judgment
    rule, which ordinarily requires that all claims and issues in a case be adjudicated
    before appeal.” State Treasurer v. Barry, 
    168 F.3d 8
    , 11 (11th Cir. 1999).
    This is not the first time we have considered whether we have appellate
    jurisdiction over the order Maier appeals from. Last time we dismissed Maier’s
    appeal for lack of jurisdiction because we concluded that the order she appealed
    from — her Rule 41(a)(2) voluntary dismissal of her remaining claims after the
    district court’s interlocutory grant of summary judgment to Canal and Shelly —
    was not final and appealable. Nothing has changed in the facts or procedural
    history of this case since that time, so common sense might suggest that we still
    lack appellate jurisdiction. But common sense doesn’t account for new precedent,
    and new precedent is precisely what we have in this case.
    A month after oral argument in this case, a panel of this Court issued a
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    decision holding that “an order granting a motion to voluntarily dismiss the
    remainder of a complaint under Rule 41(a)(2) ‘qualifies as a final judgment for
    purposes of appeal.’” Corley v. Long-Lewis, Inc., 
    965 F.3d 1222
    , 1231 (11th Cir.
    2020) (quoting McGregor v. Bd. of Comm’rs, 
    956 F.2d 1017
    , 1020 (11th Cir.
    1992)). Applying Corley, it would appear that we now have jurisdiction to review
    the denial of Maier’s second motion to reopen, which was her third attempt to
    convince the district court to convert her Rule 41(a)(2) voluntary dismissal without
    prejudice into a dismissal with prejudice and final judgment.
    But Canal and Shelly contend that we are “jurisdictionally limited” for
    another reason. They argue that even if we have appellate jurisdiction to review the
    denial of her motion to reopen, we lack jurisdiction to review the district court’s
    earlier grant of summary judgment because Maier’s second notice of appeal
    mentioned only the denial of the motion to reopen and not the summary judgment
    order. And under Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 3(c)(1)(B), the appellant’s
    notice of appeal must “designate the judgment, order, or part thereof being
    appealed.”
    That argument takes too constrictive a view. The Supreme Court has told us
    it is “entirely contrary to the spirit of the Federal Rules” to avoid deciding the
    merits of an appeal because of defects in appellate materials, which the Court called
    “mere technicalities.” Foman v. Davis, 
    371 U.S. 178
    , 181 (1962). Instead, we
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    should give effect to an appellant’s “manifest” intention and review whatever order
    she meant to challenge unless doing so would “mislead or prejudice” the appellee.
    
    Id.
    As we’ve noted, this is Maier’s second appeal. Canal and Shelly were parties
    to her first appeal; they’ve been along for the whole ride. And the entire time
    Maier’s “intention to seek review of” the summary judgment order has been
    “manifest.” 
    Id.
     Canal and Shelly were not misled or prejudiced by her second
    notice of appeal’s failure to mention that order by name.2 See 
    id.
    Because Maier’s second motion to reopen asked the district court to modify
    Maier’s Rule 41(a)(2) voluntary dismissals without prejudice to create a final
    judgment, we have jurisdiction to review the court’s denial of that motion. See
    Corley, 965 F.3d at 1231. And because “the appeal from a final judgment draws in
    question all prior non-final orders and rulings which produced the judgment,”
    Barfield v. Brierton, 
    883 F.2d 923
    , 930 (11th Cir. 1989), we also have jurisdiction
    to review the court’s interlocutory grant of summary judgment to Canal and Shelly.
    B. Subject Matter Jurisdiction
    Now that Maier has succeeded in invoking our appellate jurisdiction, she
    questions subject matter jurisdiction. She contends that Canal and Shelly, who
    removed her lawsuit to federal court, failed to establish Jimenez’s citizenship, so
    2
    Canal and Shelly’s motion to dismiss Maier’s second appeal is DENIED.
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    the case must be remanded to state court because the parties are not completely
    diverse. We disagree. 3
    “A party removing a case to federal court based on diversity of citizenship
    bears the burden of establishing the citizenship of the parties.” Rolling Greens
    MHP, L.P. v. Comcast SCH Holdings L.L.C., 
    374 F.3d 1020
    , 1022 (11th Cir.
    2004). “Citizenship, not residence, is the key fact that must be alleged in the
    complaint to establish diversity for a natural person.” Taylor v. Appleton, 
    30 F.3d 1365
    , 1367 (11th Cir. 1994). “Citizenship is equivalent to ‘domicile’ for purposes
    of diversity jurisdiction.” McCormick v. Aderholt, 
    293 F.3d 1254
    , 1257 (11th Cir.
    2002). “And domicile requires both residence in a state and an intention to remain
    there indefinitely.” Travaglio v. Am. Express Co., 
    735 F.3d 1266
    , 1269 (11th Cir.
    2013) (quotation marks omitted). We review a district court’s “jurisdictional
    factfindings” only for clear error, 
    id.,
     and we will not disturb a domicile finding
    unless we are “left with the definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been
    committed,” Scoggins v. Pollock, 
    727 F.2d 1025
    , 1027 (11th Cir. 1984) (quotation
    marks omitted).
    As mentioned, we remanded Maier’s second appeal to the district court to
    3
    And in her first appeal, Maier disagreed too. She told us in her response to our
    jurisdictional questions in that appeal that Jimenez was domiciled in and a citizen of Florida,
    making him diverse from her. She also told us that she consented to Canal and Shelly’s motion to
    amend their pleadings to allege that Jimenez was domiciled in and thus a citizen of Florida. And
    she also told us that there “is absolutely no evidence in the record that Jimenez has ever resided
    outside the state of Florida, or for that matter Miami.” How things (and minds) change.
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    make factual determinations about diversity of citizenship. The district court found
    that James was a citizen of Georgia at the time of his death and, after limited
    discovery, it found that Jimenez was a citizen of Florida at the time of removal.
    The record showed that Jimenez had a Florida driver’s license that was renewed in
    2006; he listed a Florida address when he applied for a job with Green Eyes; and he
    worked for Green Eyes, which listed his home terminal as being in Florida. In
    addition to that, Jimenez’s daughter gave a sworn declaration stating that at the time
    Jimenez had “resided continuously in Florida since” 1999, had “never taken up
    residence outside of Florida,” had not “indicated an intent to reside anywhere
    outside of Florida,” still resided in Florida, and had recently suffered a stroke that
    “affected his ability to communicate.”
    In her third appeal, Maier argues that Jimenez’s direct testimony is necessary
    to establish his intent to remain at a certain residence, that his daughter’s
    declaration is unauthenticated and insufficient, and that Jimenez may have been in a
    Georgia jail at the time of removal.
    Those arguments fail. A party is not required to testify directly about his
    citizenship. In fact, “[c]ourts generally give little weight to a party’s profession of
    domicile; they do so because these declarations are often self-serving.” Molinos
    Valle Del Cibao, C. por A. v. Lama, 
    633 F.3d 1330
    , 1342 (11th Cir. 2011). As to
    the declaration of Jimenez’s daughter, the district court found “no legitimate reason
    13
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    to doubt its authenticity” because it was “given under penalty of perjury,” and the
    court credited the declaration’s statement that it was based on the daughter’s
    personal knowledge. Because we “do not re-weigh or re-examine the credibility
    choices made by the fact finder,” Kelliher v. Veneman, 
    313 F.3d 1270
    , 1277 (11th
    Cir. 2002), we defer to the district court’s finding that the statements in the
    declaration were credible. As for Jimenez’s possible incarceration in Georgia at the
    time of removal, even assuming that’s true, a prisoner is a citizen of the state where
    he was domiciled before incarceration, which would have been Florida. See
    Mitchell v. Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp., 
    294 F.3d 1309
    , 1314 (11th Cir.
    2002).
    We are not left with the definite and firm conviction that a mistake was
    committed by the district court in finding that Jimenez was a citizen of Florida at
    the time of removal. Scoggins, 
    727 F.2d at 1027
    . There was complete diversity.4
    See Travaglio, 735 F.3d at 1269; McCormick, 
    293 F.3d at 1257
    . Federal subject
    matter jurisdiction exists.
    III.    THE SUMMARY JUDGMENT DECISION
    Maier contends that the district court erred in granting summary judgment to
    Canal and Shelly on her claims against them. She argues that Canal and Shelly
    owed her a duty under the Restatement (Second) of Torts § 324A, which Georgia
    4
    Canal and Shelly’s motion to dismiss Jimenez as a dispensable party is DENIED.
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    courts have adopted, and that they are liable under subsections (a) and (c) of that
    section.
    We review de novo summary judgment orders, drawing all factual inferences
    and viewing all evidence in the light most favorable to the non-moving party. Craig
    v. Floyd Cnty., 
    643 F.3d 1306
    , 1309 (11th Cir. 2011). “Summary judgment is
    appropriate ‘if the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material
    fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.’” 
    Id.
     (quoting Fed.
    R. Civ. P. 56(a)).
    Under § 324A, which is sometimes known as the Good Samaritan doctrine:
    One who undertakes, gratuitously or for consideration, to render
    services to another which he should recognize as necessary for the
    protection of a third person or his things, is subject to liability to the
    third person for physical harm resulting from his failure to exercise
    reasonable care to protect his undertaking, if (a) his failure to exercise
    reasonable care increases the risk of such harm, or (b) he has undertaken
    to perform a duty owed by the other to the third person, or (c) the harm
    is suffered because of reliance of the other or the third person upon the
    undertaking.
    Huggins v. Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co., 
    264 S.E.2d 191
    , 192 (Ga. 1980); see also Howell
    v. United States, 
    932 F.2d 915
    , 918 (11th Cir. 1991).
    For purposes of § 324A(a), a risk is increased only “when a nonhazardous
    condition is made hazardous through the negligence of a person who changed its
    condition or caused it to be changed.” Howell, 
    932 F.2d at 919
     (quotation marks
    omitted). “[F]ailing to take all possible actions to prevent an occurrence is not the
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    same as increasing the risk of the occurrence.” Dale v. Keith Built Homes, Inc.,
    
    620 S.E.2d 455
    , 456 (Ga. App. 2005). And for purposes of § 324A(c), Georgia law
    requires that reliance be shown by a change in position. Phillips v. Liberty Mut.
    Ins. Co., 
    813 F.2d 1173
    , 1175 (11th Cir. 1987). Evidence that a company has
    “neglected or reduced its safety practices” because of a third party’s actions can
    show such a change in position. 
    Id.
    A. Restatement § 324A(a): Increased Risk of Harm
    Maier argues that Canal and Shelly are liable under § 324A(a) for increasing
    the risk of harm to James by failing to exercise reasonable care in reviewing
    Jimenez’s driving record and in approving him as a driver for Green Eyes. She
    asserts that they ignored Green Eyes’ hiring criteria during their review and allowed
    Jimenez to be hired with motor vehicle violations that, had the criteria been applied,
    would have disqualified him. The obstacle to recovery for Maier is that, under
    Georgia law, a defendant is not liable simply because he could have prevented an
    accident but did not.
    Both our own decisions and those of the Georgia state courts bear that out. In
    Howell, an FAA inspector learned that a plane’s fuel was contaminated but did
    nothing to stop the plane from flying. 
    932 F.2d at 917
    . The plane crashed two days
    later because of the bad fuel. 
    Id.
     We held that the inspector’s “failure to ground the
    plane, issue a notice, or initiate an investigation did not increase the risk of harm”
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    for purposes of § 324A because he had not changed the condition of the plane or the
    fuel. Id. at 918–19. And in Dale, a company was sued after one of its employees
    drank on its job site, drove under the influence of alcohol, and struck a child. 
    620 S.E.2d at 456
    . The plaintiffs argued that the company’s failure to enforce its no-
    drinking policy increased the risk of harm. 
    Id.
     The Georgia Court of Appeals
    rejected that argument:
    The plaintiffs essentially argue that it was incumbent upon [the
    company] to decrease the risk of harm to others by enforcing its no-
    drinking policy. This, however, is not the law; failing to take all possible
    actions to prevent an occurrence is not the same as increasing the risk of
    the occurrence.
    
    Id.
     at 456–57 (quotation marks omitted).
    As Howell and Dale make clear, Canal and Shelly did not have a duty to
    decrease the risk of harm to others in their review of motor vehicle records for
    Green Eyes. Canal and Shelly’s knowledge of Jimenez’s violations, like the
    inspector’s knowledge of the bad fuel in Howell, did not trigger an obligation to act.
    Their review of the motor vehicle records changed nothing about Jimenez’s
    violation history, and it did not make a nonhazardous condition into a hazardous
    one. See Howell, 
    932 F.2d at 919
    . The district court’s grant of summary judgment
    to Canal and Shelly on Maier’s § 324A(a) claim was appropriate.
    B. Restatement § 324A(c): Reliance
    Maier argues that Canal and Shelly are liable under § 324A(c) because Green
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    Eyes relied on their evaluation of Jimenez’s motor vehicle records when it decided
    to hire him. She argues it “can be inferred that Green Eyes, in reliance on Shelly
    and Canal obtaining and evaluating drivers’ [motor vehicle records], changed its
    position and/or otherwise failed to follow its safety program” in three ways: (1) by
    changing its hiring practices after purchasing the Canal insurance policy; (2) by
    failing to request drivers’ motor vehicle records, including for Jimenez, to evaluate
    them according to its hiring criteria; and (3) by failing to send Jimenez to its
    separate compliance company for processing, despite repeated notices from that
    compliance company to do so before James was killed.
    1. Change in Green Eyes’ Hiring Practices After Purchasing Canal Policy
    In support of her contention that Green Eyes changed its hiring practices,
    Maier points to a series of communications between Shelly, Canal, and Green Eyes’
    CEO in October 2007. After Shelly sent Canal an email asking if they needed to
    charge for a Green Eyes’ employee’s accident, Canal responded: “It appears that the
    insured’s hiring practices have changed. If he continues in this trend, [Canal] will
    have to re-evaluate.” Shelly then alerted another agent that Canal might have to
    “reevaluate this risk.” Green Eyes’ CEO responded to Canal by assuring it that he
    would “not allow any[]more drivers with at fault accidents, [m]ajor speeding or
    more than 2 minor violation[s] on [his] policy” and that he wanted to “work
    together with [Canal] to be a claim free Company with an excellent safety Record.”
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    Maier argues that these communications are “evidence that Green Eyes’ hiring
    practices changed after obtaining coverage through Canal.”
    It’s true those communications suggest that Canal thought Green Eyes’ hiring
    practices may have changed. But they do not disclose how or why they changed,
    and Maier points to no other evidence that does either. She has not explained what
    Green Eyes’ hiring practices were before it contracted with Canal and Shelly, so we
    cannot determine whether or why those practices changed after it contracted with
    Canal and Shelly.
    If anything, the record evidence indicates that the change in Green Eyes’
    hiring practices, if there was any, was unrelated to its contract with Canal and
    Shelly. First, Green Eyes filed its articles of incorporation on August 8, 2007 and
    purchased its policy with Canal 21 days later. So it is unclear whether Green Eyes
    even had an established hiring practice before it contracted with Canal and Shelly.
    And Maier points to no evidence that it did. The record contains no motor vehicle
    reports produced before Green Eyes contracted with Canal and Shelly, and there is
    no other evidence that Green Eyes conducted any investigation at all into the safety
    records of its drivers during those first 21 days of its existence.
    Second, Jimenez began driving for Green Eyes before Canal and Shelly
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    approved him as a driver for insurance purposes. 5 So there is evidence that Green
    Eyes made its hiring decisions without regard to what Canal and Shelly did with the
    motor vehicle records and that Canal’s and Shelly’s review of those records was
    only to determine whether they were willing to insure Green Eyes’ proposed
    drivers.
    Third, on March 17, 2008 — two days before Canal approved Jimenez, three
    days before Shelly approved him, and a month before the contract between Green
    Eyes, Canal, and Shelly ended — Green Eyes hired a different company to ensure
    its compliance with Department of Transportation regulations, which includes
    driver safety standards. So there is evidence that Green Eyes was undertaking its
    own hiring related safety initiatives independent of Canal and Shelly’s evaluation of
    its drivers’ motor vehicle records.
    With that record evidence (or lack thereof) in mind, the communications
    between Shelly, Canal, and Green Eyes referencing Green Eyes’ hiring practices
    appear to be nothing more than an insurance agency warning one of its clients that it
    was hiring risky drivers and that the client needed to tighten its standards, and the
    5
    The Green Eyes employee who was “in charge of processing truck drivers who were
    applying for employment” swore in her affidavit that when she requested insurance approval for
    Jimenez on the morning of March 19, 2008, Green Eyes “had already been using Mr. Jimenez as
    a truck driver prior to seeking coverage for him.” He was approved as an insured driver by Canal
    on March 19 and by Shelly on March 20.
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    client in response, attempting to save its insurance policy, saying that it would be
    more careful about the drivers it hired. Even viewed in the light most favorable to
    Maier, there is no genuine issue of material fact about whether Green Eyes changed
    its hiring process in reliance on Canal’s and Shelly’s services after purchasing the
    Canal policy — there is not a single piece of evidence that it did. And if Green
    Eyes did not change its position, there is no § 324A(c) liability. See Phillips, 
    813 F.2d at
    1174–75.
    2. Green Eyes’ Failure to Request and Evaluate Motor
    Vehicle Records After Hiring Canal and Shelly
    Maier next argues that it “can be inferred from the evidence that Green Eyes
    was sending drivers with more violations on their driving records to Canal and
    Shelly for review because Green Eyes had stopped evaluating tractor-trailer drivers’
    [motor vehicle records], in reliance upon Canal and Shelly doing so.” But Maier
    points to nothing in the record to support that inference. Her brief contains no
    citations to anywhere in the record showing that Green Eyes ever obtained a motor
    vehicle record for an employee before its contract with Canal and Shelly, and she
    doesn’t even argue that it did.
    Instead, Maier argues only that Green Eyes failed to request and evaluate
    driver motor vehicle records according to its hiring criteria. But if Green Eyes did
    not request and evaluate its drivers’ motor vehicle records before it contracted with
    Canal and Shelly, then it did not change its position by continuing that practice after
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    it contracted with Canal and Shelly. And again, if Green Eyes did not change its
    position, there is no § 324A(c) liability. See Phillips, 
    813 F.2d at
    1174–75.
    3. Green Eyes’ Failure to Have Jimenez Processed
    By Its Separate Compliance Company
    Finally, Maier argues “a jury could conclude that Green Eyes changed its
    position and reduced its safety activities[] by not sending Jimenez to [its separate
    compliance company] to be evaluated, in reliance upon Shelly and Canal having
    already evaluated and approved him.” But again, she points to no evidence a jury
    could use to reach that conclusion. She does not cite a record document in which
    Green Eyes indicates to the compliance company that it is not sending Jimenez for
    an evaluation, despite the company’s “repeated notices” that he needed to be
    evaluated, because Canal and Shelly had already reviewed his motor vehicle record.
    Nor does Maier identify any evidence that Green Eyes failed to have a driver’s
    records checked by the compliance company because they had already been
    checked by Canal and Shelly.
    The record does show that Green Eyes hired the separate compliance
    company to ensure its compliance with DOT regulations, including driver safety
    standards, after Green Eyes had contracted with Canal and Shelly and before its
    contract with Canal and Shelly ended. That Green Eyes — while it was still
    covered by Canal and Shelly — hired a separate company to evaluate its drivers’
    motor vehicle records for safety indicates that it was not relying on Canal and
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    Shelly to perform that task. Because nothing in the record shows that Green Eyes’
    failure to have Jimenez evaluated by its compliance company had anything to do
    with Canal and Shelly, there is no genuine issue of material fact that Green Eyes
    changed its position or reduced its safety activities in reliance on them. No change
    in position equals no § 324A(c) liability. See Phillips, 
    813 F.2d at
    1174–75.
    IV.    CONCLUSION
    Because we have both appellate and subject matter jurisdiction, we can
    decide whether the district court’s erred in granting summary judgment to Canal
    and Shelly. It didn’t. As the district court determined, the evidence establishes
    without genuine issue that “Green Eyes’ safety program was lacking from the very
    beginning”; it was always “poor and noncompliant” and “continued to be
    substandard before, during, and after” Green Eyes’ business relationship with Canal
    and Shelly. As a result, the district court was correct in its conclusion that Canal
    and Shelly did not increase the risk of harm to James and that Green Eyes did not
    change its position in reliance on Canal and Shelly.
    AFFIRMED.
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