Wentworth Maynard v. Snapchat, Inc. ( 2020 )


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  •                              THIRD DIVISION
    MCFADDEN, C. J.,
    DOYLE, P. J., and HODGES, J.
    NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be
    physically received in our clerk’s office within ten
    days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed.
    https://www.gaappeals.us/rules
    DEADLINES ARE NO LONGER TOLLED IN THIS
    COURT. ALL FILINGS MUST BE SUBMITTED WITHIN
    THE TIMES SET BY OUR COURT RULES.
    October 30, 2020
    In the Court of Appeals of Georgia
    A20A1218. MAYNARD et al. v. SNAPCHAT, INC.                                  DO-044
    DOYLE, Presiding Judge.
    Wentworth and Karen Maynard sued Snapchat, Inc., and Christal McGee to
    recover damages for injuries sustained in an automobile collision that allegedly
    resulted from McGee’s use of the Speed Filter feature of Snapchat’s smartphone
    application.1 Following the grant of Snapchat’s motion to dismiss, the Wentworths
    now appeal, contending that the complaint sufficiently alleges Snapchat’s violation
    1
    This is the second interlocutory appeal filed by Wentworth and Karen
    Maynard in their action against Snapchat, Inc., and Christal McGee. In Maynard v.
    Snapchat, we held that Snapchat was not immune from liability under the federal
    Communications Decency Act, 47 USC § 230. We therefore reversed the trial court’s
    grant of Snapchat’s motion to dismiss on this ground and remanded the case for
    further proceedings in the trial court. Upon remand, the Maynards amended their
    complaint, asserting a single claim against Snapchat for negligence (as well as claims
    against McGee) and derivative claims for loss of consortium, litigation expenses, and
    punitive damages.
    of its duty to use reasonable care in designing the Speed Filter product. We affirm
    under the facts of this case because Snapchat, Inc., did not owe a duty to the plaintiffs
    to alter its product design to prevent the injuries allegedly caused by driver Christal
    McGee while she was using Snapchat’s Speed Filter application.
    A motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief
    may be granted should not be sustained unless (1) the allegations of the
    complaint disclose with certainty that the claimant would not be entitled
    to relief under any state of provable facts asserted in support thereof;
    and (2) the movant establishes that the claimant could not possibly
    introduce evidence within the framework of the complaint sufficient to
    warrant a grant of the relief sought. The appellate court reviews de novo
    the trial court’s ruling on the defendant[‘]s motion to dismiss, accepting
    as true all well-pled material allegations in the complaint and resolving
    any doubts in favor of the plaintiff[s].2
    Similarly, the appellate court “review[s] de novo the trial court’s decision on a motion
    for judgment on the pleadings, and . . . construe[s] the complaint in a light most
    favorable to the appellant[s], drawing all reasonable inferences in [their] favor.”3
    2
    (Citations and punctuation omitted.) Williams v. DeKalb County, 
    308 Ga. 265
    ,
    270 (2) (840 SE2d 423) (2020). See also OCGA § 9-11-12 (b) (6).
    3
    (Citation and punctuation omitted.) Reliance Equities, LLC v. Lanier 5, LLC,
    
    299 Ga. 891
    , 893 (1) (792 SE2d 680) (2016). See also OCGA § 9-11-12 (c).
    2
    The Maynards’ complaint, as amended, alleges that Snapchat is a social media
    company that makes products allowing users to create, upload, post, send, receive,
    share, and store digital photos and videos. Snapchat created and distributed a feature
    within its application, known as the Speed Filter, that allows Snapchat users to record
    their speed and overlay that speed onto a Snapchat photo or video. Snapchat users can
    then share on social media that photo or video with their speed as a “Snap,” which is
    Snapchat’s messaging product.
    The Maynards’ complaint further alleges that around 10:15 p.m. one evening,
    McGee was driving with three passengers in her family’s car. McGee began driving
    at an excessive rate of speed, attempting to reach 100 miles per hour so that she could
    capture that speed on a photograph using the Speed Filter. A passenger checked the
    Speed Filter on her own phone, and it registered a speed in excess of 100 miles per
    hour. Meanwhile, unbeknownst to McGee, Wentworth Maynard had entered the same
    highway some distance ahead of McGee. Due to her distraction and unsafe speed,
    McGee drove into the back of Maynard’s vehicle, injuring everyone involved.
    The Maynards sued McGee and Snapchat, seeking damages for negligence and
    loss of consortium, as well as litigation expenses and punitive damages. The
    Maynards alleged that McGee drove negligently and that Snapchat negligently
    3
    designed the Speed Filter, encouraging users to endanger themselves and others on
    the roadway. Snapchat moved to dismiss the complaint or for a judgment on the
    pleadings, and after a hearing, the trial court granted the motion. The trial court ruled
    that Snapchat “had no duty to alter the design of its mobile application to prevent
    McGee from driving recklessly or negligently.” We granted the Maynards’
    application for interlocutory appeal, and this appeal followed.
    The Maynards argue that Snapchat violated its duty to use reasonable care in
    designing the Speed Filter product. We disagree because, based on the facts of this
    case, the allegedly negligent design claim does not fall within Snapchat’s duty of care
    to the plaintiffs.
    In order to have a viable negligence action, a plaintiff must satisfy
    the elements of the tort, namely, the existence of a duty on the part of the
    defendant, a breach of that duty, causation of the alleged injury, and
    damages resulting from the alleged breach of the duty. Specifically, a
    “legal duty” is the obligation to conform to a standard of conduct under
    the law for the protection of others against unreasonable risks of harm.
    But the innocence of the plaintiff is immaterial to the existence of the
    legal duty on the part of the defendant in that the plaintiff will not be
    entitled to recover unless the defendant did something that it should not
    have done, i.e., an action, or failed to do something that it should have
    done, i.e., an omission, pursuant to the duty owed the plaintiff under the
    law.
    4
    And such a duty can arise either from a valid legislative
    enactment, that is, by statute, or be imposed by a common law principle
    recognized in the case law. Nevertheless, as the Supreme Court of
    Georgia has recently held, there is no general legal duty to all the world
    not to subject others to an unreasonable risk of harm.4
    The Maynards argue that they have sufficiently alleged a duty on the part of
    Snapchat to design the product differently to avoid the circumstances that caused the
    Maynards’ injuries. The dissent agrees, relying on the risk-utility balancing test
    identified in Banks v. Ici Adams, which it correctly identifies as the test for negligence
    in a design defect case such as this one.5 In that test, a trier of fact would “evaluate
    design defectiveness under a test balancing the risks inherent in a product design
    against the utility of the product so designed.”6 But the applicability of that test does
    4
    (Footnotes and punctuation omitted.) Graham Stanley v. Garrett, __Ga. App.
    __, ___ (1) (Case No. A20A0894, decided Sept. 17, 2020), citing Ga. Dept. of Labor
    v. McConnell, 
    305 Ga. 812
    , 816 (3) (a) (828 SE2d 352) (2019) (disapproving of
    Bradley Center v. Wessner, 
    250 Ga. 199
    , 201 (296 SE2d 693) (1982), to the extent
    that it created a general legal duty “to all the world not to subject [others] to an
    unreasonable risk of harm” (punctuation omitted)).
    5
    
    264 Ga. 732
    (450 SE2d 671) (1994).
    6
    Id. at 735 (1). 5
    not obviate the requirement to identify a legal duty, which presents a legal question
    for the court.7
    Here, the complaint alleges that the injury was caused by McGee’s conduct of
    mis-using the Speed Filter while driving at an excessive rate of speed. Thus, any
    liability on the part of Snapchat is predicated on McGee’s conduct. Under Georgia
    law, there is no “general legal duty to all the world not to subject others to an
    unreasonable risk of harm,”8 and
    [a]s a general rule, there is no duty to control the conduct of third
    persons to prevent them from causing physical harm to others. . . . [T]he
    two exceptions to this rule are when a special relationship exists
    between the actor and another imposing a duty on the actor to control
    such person’s conduct for the benefit of third persons, or a special
    relationship exists between the actor and another giving such person a
    right to protection.9
    No such special relationship is alleged here.
    7
    See Rasnick v. Krishna Hospitality., Inc., 
    289 Ga. 565
    , 567 (713 SE2d 835)
    (2011) (“The existence of a legal duty is a question of law for the court.”).
    8
    (Punctuation omitted.) 
    McConnell, 305 Ga. at 816
    (3).
    9
    (Footnotes and punctuation omitted.) Graham Stanley, __ Ga. App. at __.
    6
    Put simply, Georgia law does not impose a general duty to prevent people from
    committing torts while misusing a manufacturer’s product. Although manufacturers
    have “a duty to exercise reasonable care in manufacturing its products so as to make
    products that are reasonably safe for intended or foreseeable uses,”10 this duty does
    not extend to the intentional (not accidental) misuse of the product in a tortious way
    by a third party.11 The Maynards allege that Snapchat’s design contains an inherent
    incentive to engage in risky behavior, but they only point to the attractiveness of the
    product itself, not to any specific reward system or status ranking predicated on
    misusing it while driving or generating higher speeds.12 Further, as pointed out by the
    trial court, the Speed Filter function is use-neutral; it is equally functional when used
    while flying in an airplane, while riding as a passenger stuck in a traffic jam, or when
    10
    (Punctuation omitted.) Sheffield v. Conair Corp., 
    348 Ga. App. 6
    , 8-9 (1)
    (821 SE2d 93) (2018), quoting Chrysler Corp. v. Batten, 
    264 Ga. 723
    , 724 (1) (450
    SE2d 208) (1994).
    11
    Compare Jones v. NordicTrack, Inc., 
    274 Ga. 115
    , 118 (550 SE2d 101)
    (2001) (in a case addressing an accidental injury caused by falling into a Nordictrack,
    discussing the lack of a “use” or “misuse” requirement in Georgia’s product liability
    law).
    12
    Although this case was decided on the allegations in the complaint, it is
    undisputed that McGee’s use violated Snapchat’s user agreement and product
    warning, which warn users against engaging in the risky conduct alleged in this suit.
    7
    misused in a dangerous way — it is up to the user to avoid dangerously misusing the
    application. This is because “virtually any article is capable of causing an injury when
    put to particular uses or misuses,”13 and imposing a duty on Snapchat to control or
    avoid McGee’s allegedly tortious conduct extends the imposition of a legal duty
    beyond that which the law should recognize. “In fixing the bounds of duty, not only
    logic and science, but public policy play an important role.”14
    Instead of extending such a broad duty to manufacturers, Georgia has focused
    its public policy in this area on the conduct of drivers. For example, in an effort to
    stem a recent increase in roadway deaths and rising automobile insurance premiums,
    the Georgia General Assembly, after forming a committee to study the issue of
    distracted driving, passed in 2018 a new “hands-free law” that focuses on drivers’
    conduct and prohibits them from even “[p]hysically hold[ing] or support[ing]” a
    smartphone while driving.15 Despite the inherent appeal and distracting nature of
    13
    Greenway v. Peabody Intl. Corp., 
    163 Ga. App. 698
    , 699-700 (1) (294 SE2d
    541) (1982).
    14
    (Punctuation omitted.) CertainTeed Corp. v. Fletcher, 
    300 Ga. 327
    , 330 (2)
    (794 SE2d 641) (2016), quoting CSX Transp. v. Williams, 
    278 Ga. 888
    , 890 (608
    SE2d 208) (2005).
    15
    OCGA § 40-6-241 (c) (1). See Brandon M. Kopp & Caleb L. Swiney,
    MOTOR VEHICLES AND TRAFFIC: Uniform Rules of the Road, 35 Ga. St. U. L.
    8
    smartphone applications, Georgia thus far has not created a duty on the part of
    manufacturers to control third parties’ use of mobile phone applications while
    driving.
    In other jurisdictions, courts have held that cell phone manufacturers do not
    have a duty to prevent the misuse of applications — even in at least one case where
    the manufacturer understood the risk of misuse. In California, for example, the court
    of appeals addressed a suit against Apple, Inc., based on a negligent driver’s use of
    Apple’s FaceTime video communication application. Apple had applied for a patent
    for “lock-out” technology, which would prevent the use of the application while
    driving, noting in its patent application the increasing problem of driving while
    distracted by using a cell phone. The court ultimately held that Apple did not have a
    duty to control its users’ conduct while driving, stating that “even if it were
    foreseeable that cell phone use by drivers would result in accidents, foreseeability is
    not synonymous with duty; nor is it a substitute.”16
    Rev. 139, 141-143 (2018); Ga. L. 2018, p. 127 (stating that the purpose of “hands
    free” law is, in part, “to prohibit actions which distract a driver while operating a
    motor vehicle; to provide for the proper and safe use of wireless telecommunications
    devices and stand-alone electronic devices while driving”).
    16
    Modisette v. Apple Inc., 
    30 Cal. App. 5th 136
    , 144 (2018). We recognize that
    foreseeability can be implicated in a duty to warn case, see Suzuki Motor of America,
    9
    Likewise, with respect to enticement to engage in dangerous conduct, in a
    Texas case involving a crash during a mechanic’s test drive of a V-8 powered
    Cadillac El Dorado, the plaintiff, who was hit and killed in his front yard by the out-
    of-control vehicle, asserted negligence on the part of General Motors Company for
    designing a vehicle so capable of easily exceeding safe speeds. The plaintiff alleged
    that GM’s design was negligent and pointed to GM’s marketing material that, with
    a wink and a nod, implicitly invited drivers to test the full potential of the vehicle’s
    performance capability:
    You feel the surge of its 32-valve, 295-horsepower V8. As you reach 60
    mph in 7.5 seconds, the Road-Sensing Suspension is actually reading
    every inch of the road. The feedback from the Speed-Sensitive Steering
    grows progressively firmer as you quickly pass 100 mph. Of course, you
    Inc. v. Johns, 
    351 Ga. App. 186
    , 193 (2) (a) (830 SE2d 549) (2019), but there is no
    allegation that Snapchat failed to warn McGee of the danger of misuse, or that McGee
    did not appreciate the danger of misuse. Driving more than 100 miles per hour while
    using a cell phone is, of course, patently dangerous. Compare Davis v. John Crane,
    Inc., 
    353 Ga. App. 243
    , 248 (836 SE2d 577) (2019) (“[I]f in the normal functioning
    of the product as designed, such function creates a danger or peril that is not known
    to the user or bystander, then the manufacturer is liable for injuries proximately
    caused by such danger.”) (punctuation omitted; emphasis supplied). But see Ford
    Motor Co. v. Stubblefield, 
    171 Ga. App. 331
    , 335 (2) (319 SE2d 470) (1984) (“It is
    true that when the use to which a product was being put at the time of injury is not
    that originally intended by the manufacturer, liability of the manufacturer depends
    initially upon the foreseeability of that particular use.”).
    10
    wouldn’t really do this because you’re not a professionally [trained]
    driver on a closed track. But if you were, the full-range Traction Control
    assures maximum grip as you approach 150 mph.17
    The trial court granted summary judgment to GM, and the Texas Court of Appeals
    affirmed on the ground that “there is no legal duty to control the actions of third
    parties, absent some special relationship,” and GM had not created a special
    relationship by running the ad campaign.18
    Although the facts of this case are tragic and compelling, they should not create
    a duty where the law has not already recognized one. If we were to default to the risk-
    utility balancing test in this case without identifying a legal duty, it would eliminate
    the plaintiffs’ burden to assert the elements of a cognizable tort claim.19 Accordingly,
    we conclude that the trial court did not err by granting Snapchat’s motion to dismiss.
    Judgment affirmed. Hodges, J., concurs. McFadden, C.J., dissents.
    17
    (Punctuation omitted.) Ely v. GMC, 
    927 S.W.2d 774
    , 782 (Tex. App. 1996).
    18
    Id. at 782. 19
             See generally Johnson v. American Nat. Red Cross, 
    276 Ga. 270
    , 272 (1)
    (578 SE2d 106) (2003) (“It is well established that to recover for injuries caused by
    another’s negligence, a plaintiff must show four elements: a duty, a breach of that
    duty, causation and damages.”) (citation and punctuation omitted).
    11
    A20A1218. MAYNARD et al. v. SNAPCHAT, INC.
    MCFADDEN, Chief Judge, dissenting.
    I respectfully dissent. “At this time, it cannot be said that the allegations of the
    complaint disclose with certainty that [the Maynards] would not be entitled to relief
    under any state of provable facts asserted in support.” Austin v. Clark, 
    294 Ga. 773
    ,
    775 (755 SE2d 796) (2014) (emphasis in original). So I would reverse.
    The novelty of the technology and the circumstances at issue should not
    distract us. There is nothing novel about the legal questions before us. The Maynards’
    allegations fall squarely within the requirements for stating a claim for defective
    design implicating risk-utility analysis. See Banks v. ICI Americas, 
    264 Ga. 732
    (450
    SE2d 671) (1994). To establish such a claim, a plaintiff must demonstrate that the
    defendant is the manufacturer of a product that had a design defect at the time it was
    sold that proximately caused the plaintiff’s injury. OCGA § 51-1-11 (b) (1). See
    generally 
    Banks, supra
    (setting forth the appropriate test for design-defect claims
    based on theories of negligence as well as strict liability). Whether a particular design
    is defective is determined by balancing the risks inherent in the product design
    against the utility of the product so designed. 
    Banks, 264 Ga. at 734
    (1).
    The Maynards alleged that: 1) Snapchat created the Speed Filter; 2) Snapchat’s
    design choices rendered the Speed Filter unreasonably dangerous by encouraging its
    users to drive at excessive speeds; and 3) Wentworth Maynard was injured in a
    collision as a result of Christal McGee’s use of the Speed Filter, a use that was
    reasonably foreseeable. These allegations sufficiently gave Snapchat
    fair notice of the claim and a general indication of the type of litigation
    involved, so as to survive an OCGA § 9-11-12 (b) (6) motion to dismiss
    for failure to state a claim. We are unable to say with certainty that [the
    Maynards] would not be entitled to relief under any state of facts which
    could be proved in support of [their] general allegations.
    
    2 Walker v
    . Gowen Stores LLC, 
    322 Ga. App. 376
    , 378 (745 SE2d 287) (2013)
    (citations and punctuation omitted).
    So the allegations of the complaint do not disclose with certainty that the
    Maynards would not be entitled to relief under any state of provable facts because
    Snapchat owed no duty to the Maynards. Rather they set out a substantively
    conventional design-defect claim.
    The “heart” of a design[-]defect case is the reasonableness of selecting
    from among alternative product designs and adopting the safest feasible
    one. Consequently, the appropriate analysis does not depend on the use
    of the product, as that may be narrowly or broadly defined, but rather
    includes the consideration of whether the defendant failed to adopt a
    reasonable alternative design which would have reduced the foreseeable
    risks of harm presented by the product.
    Jones v. NordicTrack, 
    274 Ga. 115
    , 118 (550 SE2d 101) (2001) (citations,
    punctuation, and footnotes omitted). Snapchat’s “duty [is] to exercise reasonable care
    in [designing] its products so as to make products that are reasonably safe for
    intended or foreseeable uses[.]” Chrysler Corp. v. Batten, 
    264 Ga. 723
    , 724 (1) (450
    SE2d 208) (1994). Since the “appropriate analysis does not depend on the use of the
    product,” but instead includes “consideration of whether the defendant failed to adopt
    a reasonable alternative design which would have reduced the foreseeable risks of
    3
    harm,” 
    Jones, 274 Ga. at 118
    , the Maynards sufficiently alleged duty. See also OCGA
    § 51-1-11 (b) (1) (a defendant is liable in tort for design defect “irrespective of
    privity”). The Maynards’ allegations that Snapchat failed to adopt a reasonable
    design, leading to a foreseeable use or misuse of the Speed Filter, thus foreseeably
    causing their injuries, is sufficient to state a claim.
    The majority holds that the duty to adopt a reasonable design “does not extend
    to the intentional (not accidental) misuse of the product in a tortious way by a third
    party.” In so holding the majority creates new law. There is no support for it in the
    case cited. The majority cites — for comparison — 
    Jones, supra
    , 274 Ga. at 118. In
    Jones our Supreme Court, answering a certified question arising out of a case in
    which the plaintiff had tripped over an exercise machine and contended that its design
    had aggravated her injuries, held: “in a products liability action for defective design
    the focus is not on use of the product.”
    Id. at 115.
    Contrary to the majority’s new rule, the existing rule is that, “reasonably
    foreseeable product use or misuse is a factor in considering whether a manufacturer
    may be liable for a defective product which was a proximate cause of harm resulting
    from the failure to adopt a reasonable alternative design . . . to reduce the foreseeable
    4
    risks of harm posed by the product.” Woods v. A.R.E. Accessories, 
    345 Ga. App. 887
    ,
    891 (815 SE2d 205) (2018) (emphasis added).
    And application of the majority’s new rule drawing a crucial distinction
    between negligent and intentional misuse is problematic, at least to this case. The
    proper characterization of Christal McGee’s overall conduct is not self evident. Her
    misuse of the app was intentional. But the immediate proximate cause of the collision
    was her negligent driving.
    The majority invokes public policy in support of its new rule. But the “policy
    of Georgia [is] derived from its statutes and judicial decisions[.]” Pink v. A. A. A.
    Highway Express, 
    314 U.S. 201
    , 206 (62 SCt 241, 86 LE 152) (1941). See also Stills
    v. Johnson, 
    272 Ga. 645
    , 656 (3) (533 SE2d 695) (2000) (“The public policy of this
    [s]tate is created by our Constitution, our statutes, and our judicial decisions.”) (Sears,
    J., dissenting). And our Supreme Court has articulated the public policy of Georgia
    by explicitly delineating a manufacturer’s duty in the context of products liability, a
    duty that encompasses the foreseeable misuse of the product. Chrysler Corp., 
    supra, 264 Ga. at 724
    (1). The majority cites no case from our Supreme Court or this court
    that relieves manufacturers of that duty simply because a plaintiff’s injuries resulted
    from a third party’s intentional misuse of the product.
    5
    “At this time, it cannot be said that the allegations of the complaint disclose
    with certainty that [the Maynards] would not be entitled to relief under any state of
    provable facts asserted in support [of their complaint].” 
    Austin, 294 Ga. at 775
    (emphasis in original). So the trial court erred in granting Snapchat’s motion, and I
    would reverse.
    6