Foreseeability in Maryland Tort Cases
Hartford Ins. Co. v. Manor Inn. 335 Md.
135, 642 A.2d 219 (1994).
Background
Foreseeability is often a key issue
for a plaintiff's Maryland personal injury lawyer in making a
case for liability in a vehicle accident or medical malpractice case. Under Maryland law, if a defendant could not
reasonably have foreseen that someone might be hurt by his or
her actions, then there is no liability in negligence (as opposed
to strict liability). If the defendant's negligence caused injury,
he is liable for plaintiff's injuries if "general field of
danger" was foreseeable, not necessarily the specific kind
of harm to which the injured party would be subjected as a result
of the defendant's negligence. In other words, in the automobile
accident context, the exact type of physical injury does not have
to be foreseeable but the fact that a physical injury could occur
from the defendant's conduct would be the more appropriate question.
The Restatement (Second) of Torts
§ 435. Foreseeability of Harm or Manner of Its Occurrence,
which has been adopted by the Maryland Court of Appeals, defines
foreseeability:
(1) If the actor's conduct is a substantial factor in bringing about harm to another, the fact that the actor neither foresaw nor should have foreseen the extent of the harm or the manner in which it occurred does not prevent him from being liable.
(2) The actor's conduct may be held not to be a legal cause of harm to another where after the event and looking back from the harm to the actor's negligent conduct, it appears to the court highly extraordinary that it should have brought about the harm.
Both plaintiffs' accident and medical malpractice lawyers
and defense lawyers stretch the arguments as to what is foreseeable.
Defense lawyers argue that Maryland personal injury lawyers engage
in hindsight bias when we argue the defendants knew it all along.
When we were defense lawyers, we often analogized this to "having
the answer to the math problem in the back of the book."
In other words, these lawyers contend that this bias occurs when
knowledge of what happened causes overestimation of how certain
the outcome actually was.
Maryland attorneys, of
course, will attempt to minimize the arguably unforeseeable details
and focus on the general principle that, whether the question
of foreseeability is treated as a problem of duty or proximate
cause, it was not necessary that the defendant might or should
have expected the likelihood of the particular injury or harm,
or the way in which the harm occurred. Instead, these lawyers
argue that it was only necessary that defendant should have reasonably
anticipated that some injury might result from his conduct. Injury
lawyers fighting on behalf of injured victims correctly point
out that consequences of all negligence is, on some level, foreseeable.
Accordingly, it makes more sense that the wrongdoer should bear
the liability instead of the innocent victim.
Summary of Hartford Ins. Co. v. Manor Inn
This was a personal injury auto
accident case in Sykesville, Carroll County, Maryland. In this
case, a mental patient in the state's custody escaped, stole a
vehicle, and negligently crashed into the Plaintiff, who hired
a Maryland personal injury lawyer to bring a lawsuit against the
state. The state conceded that a special relationship existed
between it and the patient while he was in its custody and that
the state had a duty to prevent the patient from harming others.
But the Maryland Court of Appeals found that the foreseeable consequences
of the patient's mental problems did not involve stealing and
crashing automobiles.
Because the patient stole a state
truck where the keys had been left in the vehicle, the Plaintiff's
Maryland accident lawyer also argued that the negligence of state
was a proximate foreseeable cause of Plaintiff's injuries in the
car accident. The court agreed that leaving the keys in the car
was negligent and that it was foreseeable that the car would be
stolen. But the court disagreed with the Plaintiff's lawyer's
assertion that a car accident was a foreseeable consequence of
this negligence. Accordingly, the court affirmed the trial judge's
ruling in favor of the defendant.
Take Home Message for the Maryland Personal Injury Lawyer
and the Accident Victim
Our attorneys recently
had a similar type of auto accident with State Farm. A group of
friends were leaving a meeting and one gentleman got his car,
drove in front of the building were the meeting occurred, and
ran in the building to get a soft drink. His friend, playing a
practical joke, jumped into the car to hide it from his friend
so that he would think it was stolen. Of course, he did it quickly
and ran over our client who suffered a herniated
disc in her neck. Like the personal injury lawyer in that
case, we brought a claim against both the driver and the man who
left his keys in the car. Although foreseeability was arguable,
after we filed suit, State Farm settled the case anyway for the
policy limits.
Maryland lawyers must
be on the look out for defense lawyers who are manufacturing a
"scope of liability" problem where one does not exist
by claiming that the type of injury was not foreseeable. Citing
the principles articulated by the court in this case would defeat
such an effort in Maryland. If a case is a true "scope of
liability" problem, however, a plaintiff's injury lawyer
must show that plaintiff was a member of a class of persons entitled
to protection from the defendant's negligent conduct. Stating
the problem in terms of the elements
of negligence, a plaintiff's auto accident or medical malpractice lawyer, assuming
an absence of affirmative defenses such as assumption of the risk
or contributory negligence, must effectively argue that (1) there
was a duty not to cause the alleged negligent action, (2) breach
of the duty, (3) a causal relationship between the negligent driver's
conduct and the injuries suffered in the vehicle accident, and
actual injury.
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