Rickey Shoker, Et Ano v. Robert Mccann ( 2021 )


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  •   IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION ONE
    RICKY SHOKER,                    )              No. 80478-2-I
    )
    Appellant,   )
    )
    v.                        )
    )
    ROBERT MCCANN and JANE DOE,      )
    husband and wife and the marital )
    community composed thereof;      )
    SHUTTLE EXPRESS INC., a company )
    doing business in the State of   )
    Washington; and JOHN DOES 1      )
    through X,                       )
    )
    Respondents, )
    )              UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    PAVAN LAIL,                      )
    )
    Plaintiff.   )
    )
    VERELLEN, J. — When a driver is “suddenly stricken” by an “unforeseen loss
    of consciousness” the driver is not liable for negligence. But when a driver is
    aware he is suffering from some form of impairment and fails to pull over, there are
    questions whether any ultimate loss of consciousness was foreseeable.
    A driver struck a pedestrian who was walking on a sidewalk near the
    southeast corner of Fifth Avenue and Pine Street in downtown Seattle. The driver
    asserted he was not liable because he experienced a “sudden loss of
    No. 80478-2-I/2
    consciousness.” But the evidence submitted by the driver and the pedestrian on
    cross motions for summary judgment, viewed in a light most favorable to the
    pedestrian, established that there were genuine issues of material fact as to when
    and why the driver lost consciousness.
    Therefore, we reverse the trial court’s order granting the driver’s motion for
    summary judgment and remand for further proceedings. We also affirm the trial
    court’s order denying the pedestrian’s motion for partial summary judgment.
    FACTS
    On December 28, 2017, Robert McCann, a driver for Shuttle Express Inc.,
    picked up Margaret Fox from a hotel on Fifth Avenue. McCann, with Fox as his
    sole passenger, continued driving south on Fifth Avenue in the far left lane.
    After McCann drove through the intersection at Fifth Avenue and Olive
    Way, he felt a “blood-rushing” sensation and “lost awareness immediately.”1
    McCann next remembers being “up against the side of a building.”2
    But he has no recollection of continuing to drive a block past the
    intersection at Fifth and Olive, stopping at a red light at Fifth and Pine Street, and
    accelerating when the light turned green. McCann drove across the sidewalk at
    that intersection’s northeast corner, through the crosswalk, back onto the sidewalk
    at the southeast corner, and into multiple pedestrians, including Ricky Shoker.
    The vehicle came to rest when it hit the storefront wall of the Gap building.
    1
    Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 118-19.
    2
    CP at 119.
    2
    No. 80478-2-I/3
    Shoker and his wife, Pavan Lail, sued McCann and Shuttle Express Inc. for
    negligence, alleging theories of joint and several liability and vicarious liability.3
    The trial court dismissed Shuttle Express Inc. McCann argued that he was not
    liable because he experienced a sudden loss of consciousness.
    Shoker filed a motion for partial summary judgment, arguing that the court
    should strike McCann’s sudden loss of consciousness affirmative defense
    because there was not substantial evidence that McCann lost consciousness.
    McCann filed a cross motion for summary judgment, arguing he could not be liable
    because substantial evidence established he experienced an unforeseen loss of
    consciousness.
    In support of his affirmative defense, McCann provided declarations from
    three medical experts and Fox. In response, Shoker provided declarations from a
    medical expert, an accident reconstruction expert, the driver of the vehicle behind
    McCann, and another injured pedestrian. McCann and Shoker were also
    deposed. The trial court granted summary judgment for McCann, relying heavily
    on Fox’s declaration that McCann “slumped over” when he entered the Fifth and
    Pine intersection.
    Shoker appeals the order denying his motion for partial summary judgment
    and the order granting McCann’s motion for summary judgment.
    3
    Shoker filed an amended complaint on January 25, 2019, adding a claim
    against McCann for loss of consortium.
    3
    No. 80478-2-I/4
    ANALYSIS
    Shoker contends that the trial court improperly granted summary judgment
    in favor of McCann because there were genuine issues of material fact as to if,
    when, and why McCann lost consciousness.
    We review an order granting summary judgment de novo.4 Summary
    judgment is appropriate “‘only when there is no genuine issue of material fact and
    the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.’”5 We view the
    evidence in the “light most favorable to the nonmoving party.”6 If the party
    asserting the affirmative defense upholds his burden of production and is entitled
    to judgment as a matter of law, he will not be liable unless the nonmoving party
    sets “forth specific facts showing that there was a genuine issue [of material fact]
    for trial on the affirmative defense.”7 We will affirm summary judgment “only if,
    from all the evidence, reasonable persons could reach but one conclusion.”8
    McCann does not argue that he was not negligent, and, instead, contends
    that he cannot be liable for negligence because he was suddenly stricken by an
    unforeseeable loss of consciousness. Thus, the core issue is whether a defendant
    4
    Loeffelholz v. Univ. of Wash., 
    175 Wn.2d 264
    , 271, 
    285 P.3d 854
     (2012).
    5
    Bavand v. OneWest Bank, 
    196 Wn. App. 813
    , 824-25, 
    385 P.3d 233
    (2016) (quoting Scrivener v. Clark Coll., 
    181 Wn.2d 439
    , 444, 
    334 P.3d 541
    (2014)).
    6
    Loeffelholz, 
    175 Wn.2d at 271
    .
    7
    C.L. v. State Dep’t of Soc. & Health Servs., 
    200 Wn. App. 189
    , 203-04,
    
    402 P.3d 346
     (2017).
    8
    Petcu v. State, 
    121 Wn. App. 36
    , 55, 
    86 P.3d 1234
     (2004).
    4
    No. 80478-2-I/5
    can succeed on summary judgment asserting the sudden loss of consciousness
    affirmative defense when the point at which the defendant became unconscious is
    disputed and there is no explanation for why the defendant’s unconsciousness
    occurred.
    A “‘driver who becomes suddenly stricken by an unforeseen loss of
    consciousness, and is unable to control the vehicle, is not chargeable with
    negligence.’”9 The Restatement (Third) of Torts: Liability for Physical and
    Emotional Harm explains:
    Sudden incapacitation can be caused by a heart attack, a stroke, an
    epileptic seizure, diabetes, or other medical conditions. A typical
    case is sudden incapacitation that causes a driver to lose control of
    the car. This is distinctly dangerous and substandard driving which,
    absent incapacitation, would easily merit a finding of negligence.[10]
    This affirmative defense requires the party asserting it to prove by a
    preponderance of the evidence that the driver could not have foreseen his loss of
    consciousness.11 “Whether the reasonable-foreseeability standard is satisfied . . .
    depends on what information was available to the actor indicating that at some
    uncertain point in the future the actor might suffer an instance of incapacitation.”12
    9
    Courtright v. Youngberg, 
    4 Wn. App. 234
     n.2, 
    480 P.2d 522
     (1971)
    (quoting Kaiser v. Suburban Transp. Sys., 
    65 Wn.2d 461
    , 466, 
    398 P.2d 14
    (1965)).
    10
    RESTATEMENT (THIRD) OF TORTS: PHYS. & EMOT. HARM § 11 cmt. d (2010).
    11
    Braatz v. Braatz, 2 Wn. App. 2d 889, 898, 
    413 P.3d 612
     (2018)
    (preponderance of the evidence standard applies to affirmative defenses in civil
    matters) (citing Dep’t of Labor & Indus. v. Rowley, 
    185 Wn.2d 186
    , 208-09, 
    378 P.3d 139
     (2016)).
    12
    RESTATEMENT § 11 cmt. d. Evidence bearing on foreseeability includes:
    “the number and frequency of episodes of incapacitation in the past; the
    5
    No. 80478-2-I/6
    “If an actor has information indicating that an incident of incapacitation may be
    imminent or is likely to occur in the immediate future,” the actor will be unable to
    establish that his loss of consciousness was not foreseeable.13 Foreseeability of
    loss of consciousness generally is a question of fact for the jury.14
    Whether McCann’s loss of consciousness was “sudden” and “foreseeable”
    depends on when and why he lost consciousness.
    Here, there are genuine issues of material fact as to when McCann lost
    consciousness. Specifically, McCann stated that the “last thing” he remembered
    was driving through “the intersection at [Fifth Avenue and] Olive Way,” then he
    experienced a “blood-rushing” sensation and “lost awareness immediately.”15 He
    circumstances of those episodes, insofar as those circumstances bear on the
    likelihood of a reoccurrence; the extent to which medical treatment the actor is
    receiving can be expected to control the underlying medical problem; and
    whatever advice the actor’s physician has provided.” RESTATEMENT § 11 cmt. d.
    13
    RESTATEMENT § 11 cmt. d.
    14
    RESTATEMENT § 11 cmt. d. “In the assessment of reasonable
    foreseeability, a principal issue to be considered by the jury is whether the
    prospect of incapacitation is sufficiently foreseeable as to render the actor
    negligent for choosing to engage in a potentially dangerous activity such as
    driving.” RESTATEMENT § 11 cmt. d.
    15
    CP at 54. At oral argument, McCann’s counsel asserted that McCann
    was uncertain exactly where he was when he “lost awareness.” But the record on
    appeal establishes that McCann recalls driving through the intersection at Fifth
    and Olive and that he has no recollection “of driving from the intersection of Olive
    way to the traffic light at Pine Street” or “of being stopped at the red light.” CP at
    52. Therefore, the only uncertainty is exactly where in the block between Olive
    and Pine McCann “lost awareness immediately.” CP at 52-54. McCann also
    stated that he experienced two other similar incidents. In the first incident,
    McCann had the flu, took a shower and felt a “tunneling” sensation. CP at 129.
    And in the second incident, he slammed his finger in a car door and when he
    washed it off the “edges were starting to turn grey.” CP at 129. Upon
    6
    No. 80478-2-I/7
    said he had no “specific recollection” of driving from the intersection of Olive Way
    to the traffic light at Pine Street and did not remember being stopped at a red
    light.16 But Fox, McCann’s sole passenger, recalled that they were stopped at the
    red light at the intersection of Fifth Avenue and Pine, and it was not until the
    vehicle “had just begun to move forward again for the green light” that she saw
    McCann’s “head dip down” and he “sort of slumped over.”17 She said she then
    “braced” herself and closed her eyes.18
    Jeffrey Guptill, the driver of the vehicle behind McCann’s, stated that
    McCann was already stopped on Fifth Avenue approaching Pine Street and did
    not begin to move forward until the light turned green. When the light turned
    green, McCann “accelerated at normal pace.”19 Based on security camera
    footage, Darrin Richards, the accident reconstruction expert, determined that
    McCann’s vehicle “was the 4th vehicle back from the intersection of Pine Street.”20
    He explained that five seconds before McCann struck Shoker, the vehicle “was
    initially traveling at 9.9 [miles per hour (mph)]. It gradually increased to 18.6 mph
    examination, his doctor referred to these two events as “provoked” syncopes.
    CP at 166.
    16
    CP at 52. McCann also testified that the last thing he remembered “was
    going through Stewart and Olive.” CP at 51.
    17
    CP at 153.
    18
    CP at 153.
    19
    CP at 199.
    20
    CP at 203.
    7
    No. 80478-2-I/8
    before decreasing to 17.4 mph just before impact at the Gap Building.”21 Jarred
    Lee, another injured pedestrian, recalled that “[s]ix to ten seconds elapsed from
    the time [the vehicle struck him at the southeast corner of Fifth and Pine] as it
    passed until [he] was at the front of [the vehicle] looking at the driver. The driver’s
    eyes were open but appeared somewhat dazed.”22
    The above testimony supports the existence of genuine issues of material
    fact about when any lack of consciousness occurred. If McCann suffered a
    sudden loss of consciousness immediately after crossing Fifth and Olive, that
    would be inconsistent with his ability to drive a block, slow to stop for a red light,
    and then accelerate at a normal pace when the light turned green. If he lost
    consciousness only upon entering the intersection of Fifth and Pine, when Fox
    observed McCann’s “head dip down” and he “slumped over,” that leaves
    unexplained his lack of memory of slowing, stopping, and accelerating at the light.
    This tension in the evidence, when viewed in a light most favorable to Shoker,
    suggests unresolved questions of fact about the timing of any unconsciousness.
    There are also genuine issues of material fact as to why McCann lost
    consciousness. Dr. Gandis Mazeika, a sleep doctor, opined that McCann suffered
    from “mild sleep apnea” but stated that McCann’s “mild obstructive sleep apnea is
    21
    CP at 203. During this time, “the [gas] pedal was modulated [as a
    percentage of full throttle] by 15% up to 27% and finally down to 0% just before
    impact with the GAP building.” CP at 233. “In half second intervals the gas pedal
    position was 15%, 21%, 18%, 27%, 21%, 24%, 24%, 24%,6% and 0%.” CP at
    233.
    22
    CP at 197.
    8
    No. 80478-2-I/9
    not associated with daytime drowsiness.”23 As a result, she concluded that “[t]he
    objective and subjective evidence indicates that [McCann] suffered a sudden and
    unexpected loss of consciousness.”24 Dr. Simeon Rubenstein, a cardiologist,
    concluded that “there was no cardiac related cause” for McCann’s loss of
    consciousness and that he suffered from a “syncope episode.”25 And Dr. Kevin
    Kolostyak, a neurologist, found that McCann’s “arachnoid cyst did not cause [his]
    syncope episode.”26
    But Shoker’s medical expert, Dr. Harold Rappaport, a psychiatrist and
    neurologist, stated, “There remains no medical explanation for this sudden loss of
    consciousness in a person who is awake, alert, feeling well with no evidence for,
    seizures, syncope, ischemic attack/stroke or other likely ideology.”27 He reasoned
    that “Fox did not note any presyncopal symptoms such as light-headedness,
    dizziness, nausea etc. that would have preceded a syncopal event making this an
    23
    CP at 158.
    24
    CP at 158. Dr. Mazeika did not personally examine McCann; rather, she
    relied on the preaccident and postaccident reports in her opinion.
    25
    CP at 165. McCann’s doctors concluded that he suffered from an
    idiopathic syncope. “Idiopathic” is defined as “peculiar to the individual” and
    “arising spontaneously or from an obscure or unknown cause.” WEBSTER’S THIRD
    NEW INT’L DICTIONARY 1123 (3rd ed. 2002).
    26
    CP at 177.
    27
    CP at 195.
    9
    No. 80478-2-I/10
    unlikely scenario.”28 He concluded, “It seems just as plausible that [McCann] did
    not lose consciousness.”29
    Dr. Rappaport’s declaration is inconsistent with Dr. Mazeika’s conclusion
    that McCann suddenly became unconscious with no forewarning of an impairment.
    When viewed in a light most favorable to Shoker, there is a reasonable inference
    that McCann consciously suffered some form of impairment immediately after Fifth
    and Olive, continued to drive for a block before stopping at a red light, and then
    accelerating when the light turned green. Even if McCann suddenly became
    unconscious after he accelerated as Fox’s statement suggests, there is a
    reasonable inference he was aware of an impairment for several seconds before
    colliding with Shoker and did not pull over.
    McCann does not establish as a matter of law that he had no basis to
    foresee that he would suddenly suffer a complete loss of consciousness.
    Shoker also contends the trial court erred in denying his motion for partial
    summary judgment. Shoker argues that the present case is analogous to
    Courtright v. Youngberg because McCann’s sudden loss of consciousness was
    based upon “pure speculation.”30
    In Courtright, a driver drove through a flashing red light and hit the plaintiffs’
    vehicle.31 The driver did not remember what happened and was uncertain
    28
    CP at 189.
    29
    CP at 86.
    30
    
    4 Wn. App. 234
    , 236, 
    480 P.2d 522
     (1971).
    31
    Id. at 235.
    10
    No. 80478-2-I/11
    whether he lost consciousness.32 And there were no witnesses whose
    observations were consistent with the driver’s loss of consciousness.33 The
    appellate court held that the driver’s evidence of sudden loss of consciousness
    was insufficient to warrant an instruction on the affirmative defense because the
    evidence presented established only a “possibility that the failure to recall what
    happened was due to a loss of consciousness.”34
    But unlike the driver in Courtright, McCann provided more information about
    the circumstances surrounding his loss of consciousness, including Fox’s
    statement. Viewed in a light most favorable to McCann, and consistent with the
    trial court’s observations, Fox’s testimony that McCann “slumped over” when
    entering the Fifth and Pine intersection, together with all the other circumstances,
    could support a reasonable inference that he experienced a sudden loss of
    consciousness.35 Partial summary judgment in favor of Shoker is not warranted.
    32
    Id. at 236.
    33
    Id.
    34
    Id. at 236-37.
    35
    And the cases relied on by Shoker are not apt. See Hayes v. Gill, 
    216 Tenn. 39
    , 46, 
    390 S.W.2d 213
     (1965) (holding the fact that the driver was
    “slumped over” the wheel of the vehicle, without more, was insufficient to establish
    a sudden loss of consciousness); Reynolds v. Lewis, 
    419 F. Supp. 426
    , 429 (E.D.
    Tenn. 1976) (finding that the driver’s “dizzy spells” coupled with the driver’s
    inability to explain what happened was insufficient to establish a sudden loss of
    consciousness); Brannon v. Shelter Mut. Ins. Co., 
    507 So.2d 194
    , 197 (La. 1987)
    (holding that a sole witness’s testimony that the driver was “slumped over” the
    wheel was insufficient to establish a sudden loss of consciousness because the
    witness could not see the driver from where she was seated, and the two other
    passengers did not corroborate her account that the driver was unconscious).
    11
    No. 80478-2-I/12
    Because there are genuine issues of material fact about McCann’s
    affirmative defense, summary judgment in favor of McCann is not warranted.
    Therefore, we affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand for further
    proceedings.
    WE CONCUR:
    12