Mitchell Kane v. City Of Seattle, Jonathon Hilton & Bethany Community Church ( 2017 )


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  •        IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON                                       CJ
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    MITCHELL KANE,                            )                                                                  .1
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    )   No. 74638-3-1                        1:;AP
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    Appellant,           )                                         N.)
    )   DIVISION ONE                                         7; 71 •
    v.                          )                                                   =
    )                                             •
    cf)
    CITY OF SEATTLE, a municipal              )                                                    C)
    corporation, JONATHON HILTON,             )                                            kr)
    )   UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    Defendants,          )
    )   FILED: March 27, 2017
    and                         )
    )
    BETHANY COMMUNITY CHURCH,                 )
    )
    Respondent.          )
    )
    BECKER, J. —Appellant Mitchell Kane was hit by a drunk driver at an
    intersection near Bethany Community Church. Kane sued Bethany for
    negligence, alleging that the stop sign at the intersection was obscured by
    branches on a tree belonging to the church. The trial court correctly dismissed
    the suit on summary judgment for lack of proof that the driver's failure to stop
    was caused by the obscuring branches.
    Summary judgment orders are reviewed de novo. Farmer v. Davis, 
    161 Wash. App. 420
    , 433, 
    250 P.3d 138
    , review denied, 
    172 Wash. 2d 1019
    (2011).
    Appellate courts engage in the same inquiry as the trial court. Hiqhline Sch. Dist.
    No. 401 v. Port of Seattle, 
    87 Wash. 2d 6
    , 15, 
    548 P.2d 1085
    (1976). Summary
    No. 74638-3-1/2
    judgment is proper when, viewing all evidence and available inferences in favor
    of the nonmoving party, there are no genuine issues of material fact. CR 56(c);
    
    Highline, 87 Wash. 2d at 15
    . If the plaintiff fails to establish an essential element of
    his case, the court should grant summary judgment; a complete failure of proof
    concerning an essential element renders all other facts immaterial. Little v.
    Countrywood Homes, Inc., 
    132 Wash. App. 777
    , 779-80, 
    133 P.3d 944
    , review
    denied, 
    158 Wash. 2d 1017
    (2006).
    Declarations and exhibits submitted to the trial court establish the
    underlying facts, which the parties do not dispute. Around 11:30 on a July night
    in 2014, Kane was driving his moped in the Green Lake neighborhood of Seattle.
    While crossing eastbound through the intersection of Stone Avenue North and
    North 80th Street where he had the right of way, Kane was struck by a car
    moving southbound. He suffered a broken leg and pelvis and injuries to his head
    and chest.
    The southbound driver, Jonathan Hilton, told police that he failed to stop at
    a stop sign before proceeding into the intersection. Hilton had a Breathalyzer
    reading of .116. He later pled guilty to vehicular assault.
    Bethany Community Church is located at the intersection where the
    accident occurred. Bethany owns a crabapple tree on Stone Avenue.
    Photographs show that at various points on Hilton's approach to the intersection,
    the tree's branches obscured the stop sign that faced him.
    Kane sued Bethany along with Hilton and the city of Seattle. Kane alleged
    that Bethany breached a duty to maintain the tree so that the branches did not
    2
    No. 74638-3-1/3
    interfere with the ability of drivers using the street to see the stop sign. Kane
    claimed that his damages were a direct and proximate result of Bethany's
    negligence.
    During discovery, the city directed an interrogatory to Hilton asking him to
    describe "any facts or circumstances you believe contributed to cause the
    incident." Hilton responded, in part, "I didn't see the stop sign until I got to it; 1
    remember trees being there but currently have no recollection of whether they
    obscured my vision."
    Hilton's testimony at a deposition taken on July 28, 2015, was consistent
    with this response. He said, "So as you are coming up to the stop sign, I didn't
    see it as I got up to it." He explained that his passenger "pointed out that there is
    a stop sign. So that's when I looked over and saw it and went to go slam on my
    brakes and then that's when the accident happened." Hilton testified that his
    front tires were already past the stop sign when he looked up and saw it.
    During another deposition on August 18, 2015, counsel for Kane asked
    Hilton to review a photograph of the accident scene. Hilton acknowledged that
    based on the photograph, it appeared that a tree branch would have blocked his
    view of the stop sign at a certain point. But later on in the deposition, he testified
    that the stop sign is visible "once you get closer to it." Counsel for Bethany
    asked Hilton, "is it fair to say as we sit here today, you don't know why you
    missed the stop sign on July 9, 2014?" He responded, "Yeah. I would say it's
    safe to say that I don't know why." When asked "you cannot testify with any
    degree of certainty. . . that there were branches or trees or foliage of any sort
    3
    No. 74638-3-1/4
    obstructing the stop sign leading you to not stop, is that a correct statement?," he
    answered "Well, yeah, I would say it's a correct statement."
    Bethany moved for summary judgment in September 2015, arguing in part
    that Kane lacked proof of causation. Bethany maintained that the sole proximate
    cause of the accident was Hilton's failure to abide by the rules of the road. Kane
    responded that the obscuring branches "eliminated the opportunity for Hilton to
    see and react to the sign in time to stop." The trial court granted the motion
    based on Hilton's testimony that "he didn't know if the trees obstructed his vision
    and he had no clear memory that they did, in fact, obstruct his vision." Kane
    appeals.
    One element of a negligence claim is causation. Marshall v. Bally's
    Pacwest, Inc., 
    94 Wash. App. 372
    , 378, 
    972 P.2d 475
    (1999); 
    Little, 132 Wash. App. at 780
    . The plaintiff must establish that he would not have suffered harm but for
    the defendant's negligent conduct. 
    Little, 132 Wash. App. at 780
    .
    Whether the plaintiff has shown cause in fact is usually a question for the
    jury. 
    Little, 132 Wash. App. at 780
    . "But factual causation may become a question
    of law for the court if the facts, and inferences from them, are plain and not
    subject to reasonable doubt or a difference of opinion." 
    Little, 132 Wash. App. at 780
    , citing Daugert v. Pappas, 
    104 Wash. 2d 254
    , 257, 
    704 P.2d 600
    (1985).
    As evidence that the obscuring branches caused the accident, Kane
    submits the following: Hilton said that he did not see the sign in time to stop;
    Hilton's passenger stated that the tree blocked the sign; an expert witness
    presented by Kane said that the sign was not visible from the distance at which
    4
    No. 74638-3-1/5
    Hilton would have needed to brake to avoid the collision; another expert's
    measurements showed that an emergency stop was necessary to stop within
    sight distance. There was evidence that Hilton, notwithstanding his intoxication,
    had just successfully driven over 15 miles through a mix of residential and
    commercial streets and on the freeway and had stopped at all stop signs,
    including one just 2 blocks before the accident intersection.
    This evidence is not proof that the reason Hilton failed to stop at the stop
    sign on 80th was that he could not see it. Hilton repeatedly testified that he does
    not know why he did not stop.
    Kane contends that in the deposition on August 18, 2015, when Hilton was
    shown photos of the intersection taken the day after the accident, he "identified
    the tree branches as the reason he did not see the sign in time to stop." Actually,
    Hilton said that in the photo, the tree was obscuring the view of the stop sign "to
    where I wouldn't be able to see it."
    [HILTON] Seen from right here, it definitely, you know, looks like it
    is obstructing the view. So yes.
    [PLAINTIFF'S COUNSEL] Could you clarify what you mean by,
    "it's obstructing the view?"
    [HILTON] Yeah. It is obstructing the view of the stop sign to
    where I wouldn't be able to see it.
    [PLAINTIFF'S COUNSEL] When you say it's obscuring my view of
    the stop sign, what are you referring to?
    ..
    [HILTON] I am referring to the tree.
    Hilton's subjunctive observation ("I wouldn't be able to see it") does not
    establish causation. It is not evidence that the tree prevented him from seeing
    the sign in time to stop. To say that the tree would have obscured the stop sign
    5
    No. 74638-3-1/6
    at the vantage point shown in a photograph is not inconsistent with, and does not
    overcome, Hilton's unequivocal testimony that he does not know why he failed to
    stop. Maybe he would have noticed the stop sign earlier if the branches had
    been properly trimmed, and maybe he would have stopped before he got to the
    intersection. But speculation does not create an issue of material fact. Seven
    Gables Corp. v. MGM/UA Entm't Co., 
    106 Wash. 2d 1
    , 12, 721 P.2d 1(1986). The
    nonmoving party may not rely on speculation or argumentative assertions that
    unresolved factual issues remain. 
    Little, 132 Wash. App. at 780
    ; Marshall, 94 Wn.
    App. at 377.
    A comparable case is Kristianson v. City of Seattle, 
    25 Wash. App. 324
    , 
    606 P.2d 283
    (1980). The plaintiff sustained injuries in a car crash. 
    Kristjanson, 25 Wash. App. at 324
    . The other driver, who was impaired, was rendered
    unconscious by the collision and had no recollection of it. The plaintiff sued the
    city for failing to provide adequate sight distance and adequate signage on the
    road where the accident occurred. 
    Kristjanson, 25 Wash. App. at 324
    . A curve
    warning sign facing the impaired driver was partially obscured by foliage and an
    advisory speed sign was totally obscured by foliage. 
    Kristianson, 25 Wash. App. at 326
    . This court affirmed the order dismissing the suit on summary judgment for
    lack of proof of causation. "At most, Kristjanson's contentions are that, given
    additional sight distance, he might have reacted in a way which could have
    avoided the collision" and the other driver "might have heeded warning signs to
    drive carefully." 
    Kristianson, 25 Wash. App. at 326
    . Such contentions can only be
    characterized as "speculation and conjecture." 
    Kristianson, 25 Wash. App. at 326
    .
    6
    No. 74638-3-1/7
    Recovery cannot be based on a claim of what might have happened.
    
    Krislanson, 25 Wash. App. at 326
    .
    Kane does not show how his case is materially different from Kristanson.
    Another analogous case is Little, 
    132 Wash. App. 777
    . The plaintiff was injured on
    a job site. 
    Little, 132 Wash. App. at 778
    . The circumstances suggested that he
    had fallen off a ladder, but he had no memory of what happened and no one
    witnessed the accident. 
    Little, 132 Wash. App. at 778
    . He sued Countrywood, the
    company he had been working for. 
    Little, 132 Wash. App. at 779
    . Summary
    judgment in favor of the company was affirmed for lack of proof that the accident
    was more probably than not caused by Countrywood's violations of safety
    standards. Although it was possible to "speculate that the ladder was not
    properly secured at the top or that the ground was unstable," no one, including
    Little, knew how he was injured. 
    Little 132 Wash. App. at 782
    .
    Under Little and Kristjanson, the evidence that Kane relies on is
    inadequate to establish causation. Assuming that Bethany was negligent for
    failing to trim the tree, all we know is that an intoxicated driver failed to stop at an
    intersection where the tree branches made it difficult to see the stop sign. We do
    not know that the diminished visibility of the stop sign was a contributing cause of
    Hilton's failure to stop. Kane's negligence claim fails in the absence of proof that
    the alleged breach caused his damages.
    When Bethany moved for summary judgment, Kane moved to amend his
    complaint to add a nuisance claim against Bethany. The court denied the
    motion, and Kane assigns error to this decision as well.
    7
    No. 74638-3-1/8
    In deciding whether to permit an amendment, a court may consider the
    probable merit or futility of the requested amendments. Doyle v. Planned
    Parenthood of Seattle-King County, 
    31 Wash. App. 126
    , 131, 
    639 P.2d 240
    (1982).
    If an alleged nuisance results from allegedly negligent conduct, rules of
    negligence apply. Hostetler v. Ward, 
    41 Wash. App. 343
    , 360, 
    704 P.2d 1193
    (1985), review denied, 
    106 Wash. 2d 1
    004 (1986). A court need not consider
    separately a "negligence claim presented in the garb of nuisance." 
    Hostetler, 41 Wash. App. at 360
    ; see also Atherton Condo. Apartment-Owners Ass'n Bd. of Dirs.
    v. Blume Dev. Co., 
    115 Wash. 2d 506
    , 527, 
    799 P.2d 250
    (1990).
    Kane asserts that Bethany's failure to trim its trees created a public
    nuisance. This is the same conduct offered to support the claim that Bethany
    was negligent. The court did not abuse its discretion in denying Kane's request
    to add the nuisance claim because it was futile.
    Affirmed.
    WE CONCUR:
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