David Blood v. Vh-1 Music First , 668 F.3d 543 ( 2012 )


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  •                               In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    No. 10-3729
    D AVID B LOOD ,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    VH-1 M USIC F IRST, et al.,
    Defendants-Appellees.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Illinois.
    No. 09-399—G. Patrick Murphy, Judge.
    A RGUED O CTOBER 18, 2011—D ECIDED F EBRUARY 9, 2012
    Before E ASTERBROOK, Chief Judge, and R IPPLE and
    K ANNE, Circuit Judges.
    K ANNE, Circuit Judge. Dennis Hernandez caused a
    severe automobile accident in Southern Illinois that
    closed northbound I-57 for several hours. The resulting
    traffic jam stretched at least four and one-half miles. With
    traffic still not moving four hours later, truck driver
    Milinko Cukovic rear-ended David Blood’s vehicle.
    Among others, Blood brought a personal-injury suit
    2                                               No. 10-3729
    against Hernandez and several related entities on the
    theory that Hernandez proximately caused the second
    accident. Unconvinced, the district court entered sum-
    mary judgment for Hernandez and the other defendants.
    We affirm.
    I. B ACKGROUND
    This case presents a remarkably simple, undisputed
    set of facts. At approximately 5:00 p.m. on September 26,
    2008, Dennis Hernandez, a commercial truck driver
    for MTV Networks, caused a three-car automobile
    collision after his truck crossed the center-median on I-57
    in Southern Illinois. Given the severity of the accident,
    the West Frankfort Fire Department closed I-57’s north-
    bound lanes for several hours, which created a four- or
    five-mile traffic jam stretching away from the original
    accident.
    Four hours later, traffic still was not moving because
    of the Hernandez accident. At 9:00 p.m., a car carrying
    brothers David and Paul Blood approached the end of
    the stalled northbound traffic without incident. Moments
    later, Milinko Cukovic, driving a truck for T.E.A.M.
    Logistics Systems, Inc., slammed into the Bloods’ vehicle.
    The collision killed Paul Blood and seriously injured
    David Blood.
    David Blood filed a personal-injury suit in Illinois state
    court against Cukovic and T.E.A.M. Logistics. Mary Blood,
    as Special Administrator for Paul Blood’s estate, filed a
    similar suit against the same defendants. Cukovic and
    T.E.A.M. Logistics removed both cases to the United
    No. 10-3729                                                  3
    States District Court for the Southern District of Illinois.
    Shortly thereafter, Cukovic and T.E.A.M. Logistics filed
    third-party complaints against Dennis Hernandez, MTV
    Networks, 51 Minds Entertainment, LLC, Endemol USA,
    Inc., and VH-1 Music First (collectively, the “Hernandez
    defendants”), alleging the Hernandez defendants’ negli-
    gence in causing the first accident was the proximate
    cause of the second accident between Cukovic
    and Blood. After the district court consolidated the
    David Blood and Mary Blood cases into one proceeding,
    the Bloods amended their complaints to add the
    Hernandez defendants as direct defendants.
    In August 2010, the district court acknowledged a
    settlement between David Blood and Cukovic and
    T.E.A.M. Logistics.1 That same month, the district court
    entered summary judgment in favor of the Hernandez
    defendants on the ground that David Blood could not
    prove the Hernandez defendants proximately caused the
    second accident. David Blood filed this timely appeal.
    II. A NALYSIS
    Summary judgment is appropriate only when “the
    movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to
    1
    Paul Blood’s estate did not settle any claims with Cukovic or
    T.E.A.M. Logistics. After the David Blood settlement, the
    district court severed the estate’s action from David Blood’s
    action. Thus, the estate’s claims against the Hernandez defen-
    dants are not a subject of this appeal.
    4                                               No. 10-3729
    any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment
    as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). We review
    grants of summary judgment de novo, Berry v. Chicago
    Transit Auth., 
    618 F.3d 688
    , 690 (7th Cir. 2010), viewing
    the record in the light most favorable to David Blood
    and drawing all reasonable inferences in his favor,
    McCann v. Iroquois Mem’l Hosp., 
    622 F.3d 745
    , 752 (7th
    Cir. 2010). Although we have previously cautioned
    against weighing evidence at summary judgment, Kodish
    v. Oakbrook Terrace Fire Prot. Dist., 
    604 F.3d 490
    , 507 (7th
    Cir. 2010), we have also said that “a factual dispute is
    ‘genuine’ only if a reasonable jury could find for either
    party,” SMS Demag Aktiengesellschaft v. Material Scis.
    Corp., 
    565 F.3d 365
    , 368 (7th Cir. 2009).
    Before continuing, we must first acknowledge that
    both parties accept Illinois substantive law as controlling
    this diversity case. That said, our job in interpreting
    state law is to “use our own best judgment to estimate
    how the [Illinois] Supreme Court would rule . . . .” Valerio
    v. Home Ins. Co., 
    80 F.3d 226
    , 228 (7th Cir. 1996). To the
    extent the Illinois Supreme Court has not spoken directly
    about our issue, we may give “proper regard” to the
    state’s lower courts. Comm’r v. Estate of Bosch, 
    387 U.S. 456
    , 465 (1967). In Illinois, a successful negligence claim
    requires David Blood to prove “that the defendant owed
    a duty to the plaintiff, that defendant breached that
    duty, and that the breach was the proximate cause of the
    plaintiff’s injuries.” First Springfield Bank & Trust v.
    Galman, 
    720 N.E.2d 1068
    , 1071 (Ill. 1999). Because the
    duty and breach elements are undisputed, we will focus
    squarely on proximate cause.
    No. 10-3729                                                 5
    Proximate cause encompasses both cause in fact and
    legal cause. Lee v. Chicago Transit Auth., 
    605 N.E.2d 493
    ,
    502 (Ill. 1992); Fitzgibbon v. Nat’l Broad. Co., 
    732 N.E.2d 64
    , 65 (Ill. App. Ct. 2000). To establish cause in fact, the
    plaintiff must show the defendant’s “conduct was a
    material element and a substantial factor in bringing
    about the injury.” Lee, 
    605 N.E.2d at 502
    . Legal cause on
    the other hand, “is essentially a question of foresee-
    ability,” 
    id. at 503
    , and we must determine “whether the
    injury is of a type that a reasonable person would see as
    a likely result of his or her conduct,” Galman, 
    720 N.E.2d at 1073
    . Ordinarily, proximate cause is a question for
    the trier of fact, Fitzgibbon, 
    732 N.E.2d at 65
    , but
    proximate cause may be found as a matter of law
    “when the facts are not only undisputed but are also
    such that there can be no difference in the judgment of
    reasonable men as to the inferences to be drawn from
    them,” Merlo v. Pub. Serv. Co. of N. Ill., 
    45 N.E.2d 665
    , 675
    (Ill. 1942). See also Harrison v. Hardin Cnty. Cmty. Unit Sch.
    Dist. No. 1, 
    758 N.E.2d 848
    , 854 (Ill. 2001) (Harrison, C.J.,
    specially concurring); see, e.g., Fitzgibbon, 
    732 N.E.2d at 65
    ; Galman, 
    720 N.E.2d at 1071
    . In cases involving succes-
    sive car accidents, proximate cause has been resolved as
    a matter of law based on the following considerations:
    “(a) lapse of time; (b) whether the force initiated by
    the original wrongdoer continued in active operation up
    to the injury . . . (c) whether the act of the intervenor can
    be considered extraordinary . . . and (d) whether the
    intervening act was a normal response to the situation
    created by the wrongdoer . . . .” Anderson v. Jones, 
    213 N.E.2d 627
    , 629-30 (Ill. App. Ct. 1966) (citing Restatement
    of Torts § 433, 442, 477 (1948 Supp.)); accord Knoblauch v.
    6                                               No. 10-3729
    DEF Express Corp., 
    86 F.3d 684
    , 687-89 (7th Cir. 1996)
    (applying Illinois law).
    In Anderson, the initial car accident involved defendant
    Jones and two other vehicles. Approximately five mi-
    nutes later, plaintiff Anderson appropriately stopped
    short of the Jones accident, but as she did so, a second
    car driven by defendant Zehr slammed into Anderson’s
    car. A jury accepted Anderson’s claim that Jones proxi-
    mately caused the second accident, but the Appellate
    Court of Illinois reversed. Anderson, 
    213 N.E.2d at 631
    .
    Applying the four proximate cause considerations, the
    court noted that three to ten minutes elapsed between
    the two accidents, the force of the first accident was
    spent before the second collision occurred, and Zehr
    “alone failed to follow the pattern of conduct all others
    followed after the force of the first collision came to a
    rest.” 
    Id. at 630
    . On these facts, the court concluded as
    a matter of law that Jones could not have proximately
    caused Anderson’s injuries.
    Two other Illinois Appellate Courts used the same
    four Anderson considerations when faced with similar
    successive car-crash facts, but those courts ultimately
    deferred to the factfinder. Cox v. Stutts, 
    474 N.E.2d 1382
    (Ill. App. Ct. 1985); Cherry v. McDonald, 
    531 N.E.2d 78
     (Ill.
    App. Ct. 1988). In Cox, blowing snow and poor visibility
    led to the initial car accident on I-57, which set off a
    chain reaction of intermittent automobile accidents
    that lasted for one hour. Approaching one of these acci-
    dents, defendant Heath was unable to stop her vehicle
    before striking the car in front of her. Plaintiff Cox’s car
    No. 10-3729                                               7
    followed Heath’s, but Cox properly stopped short of
    Heath’s car. As Cox exited her vehicle to check on
    Heath’s condition, yet another car slammed into the line
    of stopped vehicles culminating in Cox’s car striking and
    injuring Cox herself. Among others, Cox brought suit
    against Heath. The trial court entered summary judg-
    ment for the defendants, but the Appellate Court of
    Illinois reversed. In applying Anderson, the Appellate
    Court found that several vehicles in front of Heath
    could not avoid striking other vehicles because of the
    blowing snow. Cox, 
    474 N.E.2d at 1386
    . In other words,
    Heath’s reaction to the first accident was not extraordi-
    nary. Ultimately, proximate cause in Cox was too close
    a question for summary judgment, and thus, the jury
    was in the best position to resolve it. 
    Id.
    Similar to Cox, the court in Cherry refused to make a
    proximate cause finding as a matter of law. Cherry,
    
    531 N.E.2d at 84
    . There, a truck driven by defendant
    Thornton rear-ended an automobile driven by McDonald,
    a minor. Following the first collision, several cars passed
    Thornton’s stalled truck without incident. But, five or ten
    minutes after the first collision, plaintiff Cherry collided
    with Thornton’s truck. A third collision occurred shortly
    after that. Cherry brought a negligence claim against
    McDonald and his father, but the jury ultimately sided
    with the McDonalds. Relying on the Anderson factors,
    the Appellate Court of Illinois affirmed and declined to
    find as a matter of law that McDonald’s negligence
    in causing the first accident proximately caused the
    second accident between Cherry and Thornton. 
    Id.
     In
    finding the jury’s conclusion reasonable, the court noted
    8                                              No. 10-3729
    that several minutes passed between the two accidents
    and that several vehicles had successfully avoided the
    McDonald/Thornton collision. 
    Id.
     The evidence was
    such that reasonable jurors could have came down
    either way on proximate cause.
    David Blood asks us to consider one additional case,
    albeit one illustrating our interpretation of Illinois law
    rather than an Illinois court’s interpretation of its own
    law: Knoblauch v. DEF Express Corp., 
    86 F.3d at 684
    . Al-
    though the parties vigorously disputed the facts in
    Knoblauch, the basic premise involved two trucks that
    collided on the interstate. Following the accident, one
    driver pulled onto the shoulder and the other driver left
    his truck blocking a lane of traffic. Minutes later, a
    vehicle driven by Michael Knoblauch collided with the
    truck that was blocking the interstate, killing Knoblauch.
    Knoblauch’s wife brought suit against both truck drivers,
    arguing that the first accident proximately caused the
    second. The district court granted summary judgment
    to the defendants. We reversed primarily on the
    ground that the jury, not the district court, was best
    positioned to resolve the intense factual dispute be-
    tween the parties.
    All of that background on Illinois state law brings us
    to the instant case where we are presented with the
    question of whether reasonable jurors could find the
    Hernandez defendants liable for proximately causing
    David Blood’s injuries. See Merlo, 
    45 N.E.2d at 675
    .
    The undisputed facts in this case are closer to Anderson
    than to Cox, Cherry, or Knoblauch. Here, like Anderson, the
    No. 10-3729                                              9
    force of the first accident was spent long before the
    second accident occurred. Likewise, Anderson found that
    three to ten minutes between accidents was enough of a
    break in the causal chain to rule that Jones did not proxi-
    mately cause Anderson’s injuries. If a ten-minute gap
    between accidents broke the causal chain in Anderson,
    then certainly the four-hour difference between the
    Hernandez and Cukovic accidents similarly broke
    the causal chain here. Perhaps most damaging to David
    Blood is that Cukovic acted extraordinarily when com-
    pared to the other vehicles that approached the
    Hernandez accident. Cukovic, driving on a flat portion of
    I-57 at a time when the weather was clear, slammed
    into Blood’s stopped vehicle at nearly 55 miles-per-hour.
    (R. 63-9 at 126.) Unlike the multiple chain-reaction acci-
    dents in Cox, the record here offers no evidence of other
    accidents during the four hours following the Hernandez
    accident. Cukovic’s negligence, as contrasted to the
    other cars that properly stopped short of the Hernandez
    accident, clearly broke the causal link between
    Hernandez and Blood. Reasonable jurors could not con-
    clude otherwise.
    Cherry and Knoblauch also offer no help for Blood. Both
    cases, to differing degrees, defer to the factfinder on
    facts that reasonable jurors could have interpreted differ-
    ently. Knoblauch in particular involved parties that vigor-
    ously disputed the facts, including whether one of the
    truck drivers in the first accident placed warning signals
    behind his truck before the second accident occurred.
    Knoblauch, 
    86 F.3d at 686
    . We placed significant weight
    on this disputed fact in concluding that only a jury could
    10                                               No. 10-3729
    conclude whether Knoblauch acted reasonably. 
    Id. at 689
    . The facts before us are clearly different, in part
    because the parties do not dispute what happened.
    Namely, the Cukovic/Blood accident occurred four and
    one-half miles away and four hours after the Hernandez
    accident. Additionally, the record suggests that only
    Cukovic slammed into an idled car during the four-hour
    traffic jam. Reasonable minds cannot differ on whether
    the Hernandez accident proximately caused the Cukovic/
    Blood accident.
    We recognize, as did Justice Frankfurter in his Pearce
    v. Comm’r dissent, that “[i]n law as in life lines have to
    be drawn,” 
    315 U.S. 543
    , 558 (1942), and drawing a line
    for purposes of proximate cause is no different, see
    W. Page Keeton, et al., Prosser and Keeton on the Law of
    Torts § 41, p. 264 (5th ed. 1984) (“As a practical matter,
    legal responsibility must be limited to those causes
    which are so closely connected with the result and of
    such significance that the law is justified in imposing
    liability. Some boundary must be set to liability for the
    consequences of any act . . . .”). In Illinois, we duly recog-
    nize that drawing the line for proximate cause is usually
    a task for the factfinder. But, this case presents a set of
    facts nowhere near that line. To allow this case to
    continue beyond summary judgment opens the door to
    endless liability, such that the first wrongdoer in a high-
    way accident will forever be liable to all other drivers
    that follow. This is plainly a result that proximate
    cause analyses are designed to avoid. Thus, we find,
    as a matter of law, that the Hernandez defendants
    did not proximately cause Blood’s injuries and rea-
    No. 10-3729                                          11
    sonable jurors “could not differ as to the inferences to
    be drawn from those facts.” Harrison, 
    758 N.E.2d at 854
    .
    III. C ONCLUSION
    We hold that the Hernandez defendants did not proxi-
    mately cause David Blood’s injuries, and as such we
    A FFIRM the district court’s grant of summary judgment
    for the defendants.
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