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                          2018 PA Super 125


JENNIFER M. STRAW AND THOMAS P.            IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
STRAW, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS CO-                   PENNSYLVANIA
ADMINISTRATORS OF THE ESTATE OF
ELIJAH C. STRAW, DECEASED; AND
ROWAN J. STRAW, A MINOR, BY AND
THROUGH HIS PARENTS AND NATURAL
GUARDIANS, JENNIFER M. STRAW AND
THOMAS P. STRAW

                  v.

KIRK A. FAIR AND GOLON MASONRY
RESTORATION, INC.

                  v.

PITTSBURGH LUBES, INC. D/B/A JIFFY
LUBE, TOWER AUTO SALES & SERVICE,
NATIONAL AUTOMOTIVE PARTS
ASSOCIATION-NAPA AUTO PARTS
T/D/B/A/ NAPA

                  v.

THOMAS P. STRAW

APPEAL OF: GOLON MASONRY
RESTORATION, INC.
                                                No. 742 WDA 2016


            Appeal from the Judgment Entered April 28, 2016
           In the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County
             Civil Division at No(s): G.D. NO. 2013-003294



JENNIFER M. STRAW AND THOMAS P.            IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
STRAW, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS CO-                   PENNSYLVANIA
ADMINISTRATORS OF THE ESTATE OF
ELIJAH C. STRAW, DECEASED; AND
ROWAN J. STRAW, A MINOR, BY AND
THROUGH HIS PARENTS AND NATURAL
J-A07012-17
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GUARDIANS, JENNIFER M. STRAW AND
THOMAS P. STRAW

                    v.

KIRK A. FAIR AND GOLON MASONRY
RESTORATION, INC.

                    v.

PITTSBURGH LUBES, INC. D/B/A JIFFY
LUBE, TOWER AUTO SALES & SERVICE,
NATIONAL AUTOMOTIVE PARTS
ASSOCIATION-NAPA AUTO PARTS
T/D/B/A/ NAPA

                    v.

THOMAS P. STRAW

APPEAL OF: KIRK A. FAIR
                                                          No. 743 WDA 2016


             Appeal from the Judgment Entered April 28, 2016
            In the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County
                Civil Division at No(s): G.D. NO. 13-003294


BEFORE: OLSON, STABILE and STRASSBURGER,* JJ.

OPINION BY OLSON, J.:                                      FILED MAY 11, 2018

     Appellants,   Kirk   A.   Fair    and     Golon   Masonry   Restoration,   Inc.

(hereinafter “Golon Masonry”), appeal from the judgment entered on April

28, 2016, in favor of Jennifer M. Straw and Thomas P. Straw, individually

and as co-administrators of the Estate of Elijah C. Straw, a deceased minor,

and Rowan J. Straw, a minor,          by and   through   his   parents and natural

____________________
* Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.




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guardians, Jennifer M. Straw and Thomas P. Straw (hereinafter, collectively,

“Plaintiffs”), and against Appellants, in the amount of $35,114,122.78. After

careful review of this tragic case, we are constrained to vacate the judgment

and remand.

                       I. Facts and Procedural History

      On February 21, 2013, Plaintiffs filed a complaint against Appellants.

The complaint sounded in negligence and, within the complaint, Plaintiffs

averred the following.

      At approximately 7:30 p.m. on May 1, 2012, Thomas Straw was

driving his Pontiac Vibe automobile north on State Route 28 (hereinafter

“Route 28”), in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, near the RIDC Drive exit.

Plaintiffs’ Complaint, 2/21/13, at ¶ 9. Jennifer Straw (Mr. Straw’s wife) and

the Straws’ two young sons, Elijah and Rowan, were passengers in the car.

Id. at ¶ 16. As the Straws were driving down the highway, their “vehicle

experienced a mechanical malfunction that caused Thomas Straw to reduce

his speed and . . . bring the vehicle to a controlled stop” in the middle lane

of the highway; Mr. Straw then turned on his hazard flashers. Id. at ¶¶ 11

and 14.

      At around the same time, Kirk Fair was driving behind the Straws, in a

2010 Ford F-250 truck that his employer, Golon Masonry, provided him to

use in his job. Id. at ¶¶ 6-7 and 10. Plaintiffs averred:

          At the time Thomas Straw was bringing his vehicle to a
          controlled stop, [Mr.] Fair . . . observed folders and binders
          that had been sitting on the front seat of the Ford truck

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         slide onto the floor of the truck.       Upon observing the
         aforementioned items slide to the floor, [Mr.] Fair reached
         for the items and “straightened” them up. As [Mr.] Fair was
         “straightening” the items, he was looking down at the floor
         of the vehicle, not at the highway in front of him. After
         “straightening” the items, [Mr.] Fair looked up and observed
         the Straw vehicle stopped in front of him with its hazard
         flashers blinking.

Id. at ¶¶ 12-13.

       Mr. Fair did not stop his truck in time and he crashed into the Straws’

stationary vehicle while traveling at a speed in excess of 60 miles per hour.

Id. at ¶¶ 14-15. The collision caused serious injuries to Thomas, Jennifer,

and Rowan Straw; horribly, the Straws’ six-year-old son, Elijah, died from

the injuries he received in the accident.1 Id. at ¶¶ 16-19.

       Plaintiffs’ ten-count complaint sought compensatory and punitive

damages against Appellants.           As Plaintiffs claimed:   at the time of the

accident, Mr. Fair was recklessly driving under the influence of narcotics;

even if Mr. Fair were not under the influence of narcotics, Mr. Fair’s conduct

was negligent and reckless; Golon Masonry was vicariously liable for Mr.

Fair’s conduct; and, Golon Masonry was independently negligent for

improperly hiring, training, and supervising Mr. Fair. Id. at ¶¶ 30-86.


____________________________________________


1 As will be explained below, Mr. Fair later pleaded guilty to multiple crimes
arising out of the May 1, 2012 accident. On February 18, 2014, the trial
court sentenced Mr. Fair to serve an aggregate term of six to 23 months in
jail, followed by ten years of probation, for his convictions. N.T. Guilty Plea
and Sentencing Hearing, 2/18/14, at 1-14.




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      On May 22, 2013, Appellants filed an answer, new matter, and

cross-claim. Amongst other things: the answer admitted that, “at the time

of the [] accident[, Mr. Fair] was an employee of [Golon Masonry], and Mr.

Fair was acting in the course and scope of his employment;” the new matter

alleged that Thomas Straw was comparatively negligent for his injuries; and,

the cross-claim, which Appellants asserted against Thomas Straw, alleged

that Mr. Straw was negligent in causing the accident and was, therefore,

directly liable to Jennifer Straw, Rowan Straw, and the Estate of Elijah

Straw, or liable over to Appellants for contribution or indemnity. Appellants’

Answer, New Matter, and Cross-Claim, 5/22/13, at ¶¶ 6 and 88 and Cross-

Claim ¶¶ 1-4.   Specifically, Appellants alleged in the cross-claim that Mr.

Straw stopped his vehicle on Route 28 because the hood of his vehicle

popped open while he was driving, thus obstructing his vision.       Further,

Appellants alleged, the hood opened because the hood latch failed.

According to Appellants, Mr. Straw was negligent because he knew that “the

hood and/or latching mechanism on the vehicle was not in good operating

condition” and, yet, “continu[ed] to travel and/or remain on the highway []

when it was hazardous and unsafe to do so.”      Id. at Cross-Claim ¶ 2. In

addition, Appellants claimed, Mr. Straw was negligent in failing to remove

his vehicle from the highway and in “allow[ing the vehicle] to remain in the

lane of travel when it was unsafe and hazardous to do so.” Id.

      Appellants also filed complaints to join three additional defendants:

Pittsburgh Lubes, Inc. d/b/a Jiffy Lube (hereinafter “Jiffy Lube”); Tower Auto

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Sales and Service (hereinafter “Tower Auto”); and, National Automotive

Parts Association – NAPA Auto Parts (hereinafter “NAPA Auto Parts”)2

(hereinafter, collectively, “Additional Defendants”). Within their complaints

to join, Appellants repeated their allegation that, immediately before the

accident, the hood latch failed on the Straws’ vehicle.     Appellants claimed

that, when the hood latch failed, the vehicle’s hood flew open and obstructed

Mr. Straw’s vision of the road, thus “result[ing] in him bringing his vehicle to

a complete stop in the middle of Route 28,” which caused the accident.

According to the complaints to join, the Additional Defendants negligently

performed work on the hood latch of the Straws’ vehicle or analyzed the

vehicle and assured the Straws that the hood latch was safe; therefore,

Appellants claimed that the Additional Defendants were all directly liable to

the Plaintiffs or liable over to Appellants for contribution and indemnity. See

Complaint to Join Additional Defendant Jiffy Lube, 6/26/13, at 1-7;

Complaint to Join Additional Defendants Tower Auto and NAPA Auto Parts,

9/11/13, at 1-10.



____________________________________________


2 Appellants incorrectly identified Fayette Parts Services, Inc. as “NAPA Auto
Parts” and, on January 22, 2014, the parties stipulated that the name NAPA
Auto Parts “shall be removed from the caption of the lawsuit in lieu of the
correct Additional Defendant Fayette Parts Services, Inc.”          Stipulation,
1/22/14, at 1. Nevertheless, the caption still employs the name “NAPA Auto
Parts” to refer to “Fayette Parts Services, Inc.”; therefore, this Court will
refer to the party as “NAPA Auto Parts.”




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     At the close of discovery, the Additional Defendants and Plaintiffs filed

motions for summary judgment. We summarize these motions below.

           I.A. Tower Auto’s Motion for Summary Judgment

     According to Tower Auto’s summary judgment motion, on September

27, 2011, Thomas Straw took his Pontiac Vibe automobile to Tower Auto for

its required annual state inspection. Tower Auto’s Brief in Support of Motion

for Summary Judgment, 8/10/15, at 6.          “In the course of the state

inspection, Tower’s owner, [John] Fanto, noticed after he pulled the handle

inside the vehicle to release the hood latch that the primary hood latch had

not sprung back into place. . . .   The secondary latch, which catches the

hood when the primary latch is released, functioned properly at all times

during the inspection, and did not require any service.”         Id. at 6-7.

According to Tower Auto, “[Mr. Fanto] serviced the primary hood latch by

spraying it with a lubricant, which flushed the debris from the latch, and

mov[ed] it back and forth with a screwdriver, so that the primary latch

functioned normally and moved freely again.”       Id. at 7.   Mr. Fanto then

closed the hood completely, issued Mr. Straw a certificate of inspection, and

the Straws did not bring the vehicle back to Tower Auto at any point after

the September 2011 state inspection. Id. at 7-9.

      Tower Auto claimed that it was entitled to summary judgment

because “there was no evidence that [it] breached any duty owed to the

Plaintiffs” and, relatedly, because, under the Pennsylvania Motor Vehicle

Code, it was entitled to “limited immunity from suit [for work done during]

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the required state inspection.”     Id. at 11-13; Tower Auto’s Motion for

Summary Judgment, 8/10/15, at ¶ 2; see also 75 Pa.C.S.A. § 4702.1.

            I.B. Jiffy Lube’s Motion for Summary Judgment

      Jiffy Lube’s summary judgment motion declared:

        In January 2012, [] Thomas Straw brought Plaintiffs’ car to
        Jiffy Lube for an oil change. Approximately one week after
        the January 2012 oil change, Plaintiffs began noticing that
        the hood latch was not closing completely. Plaintiffs allege
        that shortly thereafter, still in January of 2012, they went
        back to the same Jiffy Lube location and advised an
        employee of the hood not closing properly. Plaintiff[s]
        further allege that an employee of Jiffy Lube, free of charge,
        performed some sort of work on the hood and got it to close
        properly. Subsequent to the alleged second visit to Jiffy
        Lube in January [] 2012, Plaintiffs drove their car to Ohio on
        a family trip and experienced no problem with the hood.

        On March 16, 2012, Plaintiffs took their car to Additional
        Defendant, NAPA Auto Parts. . . . While at NAPA [Auto
        Parts,] Plaintiffs allege that they had the hood latch
        inspected once again and asked if it should be fixed or was
        safe to drive since they had an inspection upcoming and
        they intended to take another family trip to Ohio. Plaintiffs
        state that they were advised by NAPA [Auto Parts] that the
        hood latch was working properly and was safe to drive.
        Plaintiffs traveled to Ohio after the March 2012 visit to NAPA
        [Auto Parts] and drove hundreds of miles with no problems
        with the hood or hood latch until the accident on May 1,
        2012.

Jiffy Lube’s Motion for Summary Judgment, 6/29/15, at ¶¶ 12-18 (internal

paragraphing omitted).

      Jiffy Lube claimed that, under these facts: it owed no duty of care to

the Plaintiffs because it is not “in the business of fixing hoods or hood

latches of cars, particularly free of charge;” even if it owed Plaintiffs a duty


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of care, its negligence was not the proximate cause of the accident or

resulting injuries; Mr. Fair’s criminal conduct constituted a superseding

cause of Plaintiffs’ injuries, thus relieving Jiffy Lube of liability; the Straws’

“continued operation of the vehicle long after it was last at Jiffy Lube and

with actual knowledge that the hood was still not closing properly”

constituted a superseding cause of Plaintiffs’ injuries, thus relieving Jiffy

Lube of liability; “[t]he examination of the hood latch at NAPA [Auto Parts],

two months after it was last seen at Jiffy Lube, and the NAPA [Auto Parts’]

manager’s assurances that it was ‘absolutely’ safe to drive in its condition”

constituted a superseding cause of Plaintiffs’ injuries, thus relieving Jiffy

Lube   of    liability;   Appellants   “have   no    right   of   contribution   and/or

indemnification [] since Jiffy Lube and [Appellants] are not joint tortfeasors;”

and, Appellants “are not entitled to contribution and/or indemnity from Jiffy

Lube” because Appellants’ “conduct was reckless while, at best, Jiffy Lube’s

conduct is alleged to be negligent.”       Id. at ¶¶ 20-24; Jiffy Lube’s Brief in

Support of Motion for Summary Judgment, 6/29/15, at 4-13.

            I.C. NAPA Auto Parts’ Motion for Summary Judgment

       Within NAPA Auto Parts’ motion for summary judgment, NAPA Auto

Parts claimed that it “is not an automotive repair facility and does not

perform repairs on automobiles for the public.” NAPA Auto Parts’ Motion for

Summary Judgment, 6/26/15, at ¶ 8.                  According to NAPA Auto Parts,

Appellants’ cross-claim against it is based upon the allegation that, on March

16, 2012, Thomas Straw visited a particular NAPA Auto Parts store and

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purchased a tail light bulb for his car. NAPA Auto Parts claimed that, during

his visit, Mr. Straw “asked the cashier whether he would mind looking at the

latch as Mr. and Mrs. Straw were intending to travel to Ohio.” Id. at ¶ 9.

The cashier then “looked at the vehicle and indicated that the vehicle should

be able to be taken to Ohio, but that Mr. and Mrs. Straw should have the

latch fixed.” Id. at ¶ 10. According to NAPA Auto Parts, the Straws drove

the vehicle “for approximately six [] weeks and [] for between 500 to 600

miles prior to the accident with no incidents.” Id. at ¶¶ 11-13.

      According to NAPA Auto Parts, under this characterization of the facts,

it could not be held negligent because: it did not owe any duty of care to

any party; it did not breach any duty of care owed to any party; and, there

was no evidence that the latch was defective on March 16, 2012.        Id. at

¶¶ 14-15.   Further, NAPA Auto Parts claimed that it could not be a joint

tortfeasor with Appellants, as “[t]he conduct of [Appellants] was reckless

and the conduct of [NAPA Auto Parts] was [only] allegedly negligent.” Id. at

¶ 17; see also NAPA Auto Parts’ Brief in Support of Motion for Summary

Judgment, 6/26/15, at 4.

              I.D. Plaintiffs’ Motion for Summary Judgment

      Finally, Plaintiffs filed a motion for summary judgment, where they

requested that the trial court “dismiss the crossclaim [that Appellants] filed

against Plaintiff Thomas Straw.”   Plaintiffs’ Motion for Summary Judgment,

6/19/15, at “Wherefore” Clause (some internal capitalization omitted).     In

support of their motion, Plaintiffs attached a transcript from Mr. Fair’s

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February 18, 2014 guilty plea and sentencing hearing, where Mr. Fair

pleaded guilty to the following crimes arising out of the May 1, 2012

accident: four counts of recklessly endangering another person (hereinafter

“REAP”) (18 Pa.C.S.A. § 2705); three counts of aggravated assault by

vehicle (75 Pa.C.S.A. § 3732.1(a)); one count of homicide by vehicle (75

Pa.C.S.A.    § 3732(a));     and,   one   count   each   of   exceeding   the

55-miles-per-hour speed limit (by 16 miles per hour) (75 Pa.C.S.A.

§ 3362(a)(2)) and driving vehicle at safe speed (75 Pa.C.S.A. § 3361).

      During the guilty plea colloquy, the Commonwealth recited the factual

basis for Mr. Fair’s plea:

        Had the Commonwealth proceeded to trial on this case . . . ,
        the evidence would have shown that on May 1st of 2012 at
        approximately 7:30 p.m., Thomas Straw was driving on []
        Route 28 North, in a blue 2004 Pontiac Vibe. . . . The Vibe’s
        hood latch malfunctioned causing the Vibe’s hood to be
        released upwards. Mr. Straw could not see the road due to
        this obstruction. He brought the vehicle to a stop in the
        center lane of Route 28 northbound, just prior to Exit 10
        and activated his hazard lights.

        Thomas Straw would testify that as he brought the vehicle
        to a stop, he looked in his rear view mirror and there were
        no cars approaching. His wife, Jennifer Straw, was seated
        in the front seat. His son, Rowan Straw was seated in the
        back seat on the left side and his son Elijah Straw was
        seated in the back seat on the right side.

        The defendant Kirk Fair was driving North on [Route] 28 in
        a white F250 Ford truck. . . . At an impact point just prior
        to Exit 10 on northbound [] Route 28, Kirk Fair crashed into
        the rear of the Pontiac Vibe while traveling at a speed
        between 54 and 64 miles per hour as indicated by the Ford
        truck’s Powertrain Control Module. The impact of the crash
        resulted in the Pontiac Vibe being totaled. The crash also

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        caused severe injuries to Thomas, Jennifer and Rowan
        Straw, and caused the death of rear seated passenger Elijah
        Straw who was six years old at the time.

        Data obtained from the download of Fair’s Ford truck
        indicated that Fair was driving at approximately 71 miles
        per hour for 19 seconds prior to impact. Fair did not apply
        the brakes until .6 seconds prior to the impact with the
        Pontiac Vibe. The speed limit for this stretch of roadway is
        55 miles per hour. The defendant did admit to taking his
        eyes off the road while driving. He stated that when he
        looked up he noticed the blue Pontiac Vibe with its flashing
        lights on, but due to the weight of the truck he could not
        control the truck and avoid the collision. The truck that Fair
        was driving was weighted down with materials that he had
        just loaded for work.

        Based on a traffic crash reconstruction conducted by
        Corporal Gregory Brandt of the Pennsylvania State Police,
        who is an expert in the field of accident construction, Fair
        would have been able to see the victim’s vehicle
        approximately 2,058 feet prior to the impact if Fair was
        looking at the road. At a constant speed of 71 miles per
        hour, it would have taken Fair approximately 19 seconds for
        the Ford truck to travel that 2,058 feet and reach the rear
        end of the Vibe. At that speed, the defendant would have
        needed approximately between 6 to 7 seconds to perceive
        the victim’s vehicle, apply the brakes, and stop safely
        before striking the vehicle.     Therefore, Fair could have
        safely stopped his truck prior to striking the vehicle if he
        had observed the vehicle within the first 12 to 13 seconds of
        possible perception.    The result of his inattentiveness,
        driving reckless and gross[] negligen[ce] caused his vehicle
        to crash into the rear end of the Pontiac Vibe at a high rate
        of speed resulting in serious injuries for all four passengers
        and caus[ing] the death of Elijah Straw.

N.T. Guilty Plea and Sentencing Hearing, 2/18/14, at 6-9.

      At the conclusion of the factual recitation, Mr. Fair’s attorney declared

that he did not have “any additions or corrections” to the recitation. Id. at

9.   Mr. Fair then pleaded guilty to the above-mentioned crimes, the trial


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court accepted Mr. Fair’s plea, and the court sentenced Mr. Fair to serve an

aggregate term of six to 23 months in jail, followed by ten years of

probation. Id. at 9 and 12-13.

        Within Plaintiffs’ summary judgment motion, Plaintiffs noted that Mr.

Fair pleaded guilty to four counts of REAP, which requires a mens rea of

“recklessness.” Plaintiffs argued that Mr. Fair’s REAP convictions constitute

conclusive proof, in this civil proceeding, that Mr. Fair acted recklessly in

causing the May 1, 2012 accident and, thus, in causing all harm against

Plaintiffs.   Plaintiffs’ Motion for Summary Judgment, 6/19/15, at ¶ 15.

Confusing     Appellants’ cross-claim          against Mr.   Straw   with   Appellants’

affirmative defense pleaded in new matter that Mr. Straw was comparatively

negligent for his own injuries,3 Plaintiffs claimed that, since Appellants did

not allege reckless behavior on the part of Mr. Straw, Appellants’ cross-claim

against Mr. Straw must be dismissed. Specifically, Plaintiffs argued:

          a plaintiff’s contributory negligence cannot serve as a viable
          defense if the defendant is found to have acted in reckless
          disregard of the plaintiff’s safety. . . . Accordingly where, as
          here, [Mr.] Fair’s acts were reckless, while Mr. Straw’s acts
          have been alleged to be only ordinary negligence,
          comparative negligence principles are simply inapplicable
          under Pennsylvania law. . . . In light of [this, Appellants]
          cannot prove the elements of their crossclaim against
          Plaintiff Thomas Straw and as such Plaintiffs respectfully
          request that [the trial court] grant Plaintiffs’ motion for
          summary judgment and dismiss the crossclaim.

____________________________________________


3   See infra at **62-69.



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Id. at ¶¶ 15-17 (some internal capitalization omitted).

      I.E. Appellants’ Responses to the Summary Judgment Motions

       Appellants responded to the motions and argued that none of the

movants were entitled to summary judgment.                   Moreover, Appellants

attached deposition transcripts and documents to their responses that, they

argued, established genuine issues of material fact that precluded the entry

of summary judgment.          These transcripts and documents included:          the

deposition transcripts of Thomas Straw, Jennifer Straw, John Robert Fanto,

and    Pennsylvania   State    Police   Corporal   Gregory    Brant;   answers    to

interrogatories; a Pennsylvania State Police Crash Report Narrative; a

Pennsylvania State Police General Investigation Report; and, an expert

report authored by Edward M. Weber of Rimkus Consulting Group, Inc.

Viewed in the light most favorable to Appellants as the non-moving parties,

the attached transcripts and documents presented the following evidence in

opposition to the summary judgment motions.                  See Washington v.

Baxter, 719 A.2d 733, 737 (Pa. 1998) (“as with all summary judgment

cases, we must view the record in the light most favorable to the

non-moving party, and all doubts as to the existence of a genuine issue of

material fact must be resolved against the moving party”).

       The owner of Tower Auto, John Robert Fanto, testified that he

performed the September 27, 2011 state inspection on the Straws’ Pontiac




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Vibe automobile. Deposition of John Robert Fanto, 6/29/15, at 11-12.4 Mr.

Fanto testified:

         Immediately upon popping the hood . . . [I] determine[d]
         that there was a hood latch assembly issue. . . . I didn’t
         know what the problem was at that point, but when I
         reached down and I pulled the lever to open the hood, the
         little plastic lever did not return. That throws up, to me, a
         red flag. . . . At that point, I carried on with the rest of
         [the] inspection, finished all that, and as I was closing his
         hood, that’s when I serviced that hood latch.

Id. at 19 and 20-21.

       Mr. Fanto testified that he serviced the hood latch by “hos[ing] it down

with a penetrating oil and work[ing] the latch back and forth.”     Id. at 21.

Specifically, Mr. Fanto testified, he hosed the latch down with a penetrating

oil that was manufactured by a company called Zep; Mr. Fanto then used a

screwdriver to “work the latch back and forth just to get it moving and

operating correctly.” Id. at 22 and 26. Mr. Fanto testified that, after he did

this, he was able to successfully close the hood. Id. at 26. Mr. Fanto then

issued Mr. Straw a certificate of inspection for the vehicle and wrote, in the

service invoice, that he was charging Mr. Straw $21.00 for:       “repair hood

latch assembly, hood would not close, cable would not return.” Tower Auto

Service Invoice, 9/27/11, at 1.5 As Mr. Straw testified, it was at this time
____________________________________________


4 Appellants attached Mr. Fanto’s deposition transcript as “Exhibit G” to their
response in opposition to Tower Auto’s summary judgment motion.

5 Appellants attached the September 27, 2011 Tower Auto Service Invoice
as “Exhibit F” to all responses in opposition to summary judgment.
(Footnote Continued Next Page)


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that he first became aware that there was “an issue with the hood.”

Deposition of Thomas Straw, 5/13/15, at 29.6

      Mr. Straw testified that he next observed a problem with the Pontiac

Vibe’s hood in January 2012, following an oil change at Jiffy Lube. According

to Mr. Straw, after the oil change, he returned to the Jiffy Lube and told the

employees “I got an oil change here, and the next thing I know my hood

doesn’t close all the way.” Id. at 33. Mr. Straw testified that a Jiffy Lube

employee “just kind of grunted and went and got some tools, you know,

worked with it for a little bit, grunted some more, went and got some other

tools, worked with it, got it down and that was that.” Id. Upon completion,

Mr. Straw asked the Jiffy Lube employee, “is [this] safe to drive? It’s not

going to pop up on me?” Id. at 34 and 71. The employee responded by

telling Mr. Straw that the vehicle was indeed safe to drive. Id.

      The third time Mr. Straw addressed the problem with the Pontiac

Vibe’s hood was in March 2012, when he and his family were driving to Ohio.

In particular, Mr. Straw testified that he stopped his vehicle at a NAPA Auto

Parts store to purchase a tail light bulb for the vehicle.   Id. at 35. While

there, Mr. Straw asked an employee to “take a look at [the hood] and . . .

let me know if it’s all right, if it’s safe.” Id. at 36. Mr. Straw testified: “I

(Footnote Continued) _______________________


6 Appellants attached Mr. Straw’s deposition transcript as “Exhibit B” to all
responses in opposition to summary judgment.




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said I have a state inspection coming up in a couple months, is this going to

make it to the state inspection, is it safe[?] He said absolutely. He said it’s

metal on metal. They don’t call it a safety latch for nothing.” Id. at 36.

       Mr. Straw testified that he could not remember whether the NAPA Auto

Parts’ employee did “anything physically with the car,” but Mr. Straw

testified that he relied upon the employee’s assurances that the hood was

safe. Id. at 36-37. Mr. Straw also testified that he did not “recall opening

[the hood] up between the time [he] left NAPA [Auto Parts] and the [May 1,

2012] accident.” Id. at 39.

       Regarding the accident, Mr. Straw testified that the accident occurred

at around 7:00 p.m. on May 1, 2012 and that, at the time of the accident,

he was driving his Pontiac Vibe automobile with Jennifer, Elijah, and Rowan

Straw as his passengers. Id. at 40 and 44. Mr. Straw testified that he was

driving down the middle lane of Route 28, in daylight, with a clear sky, in

light traffic, and in an area that had a 55-mile-per-hour speed limit. Id. at

40-41.     As recounted in the Pennsylvania State Police Crash Report

Supplemental Narrative:7
____________________________________________


7  Appellants attached the Pennsylvania State Police Crash Report
Supplemental Narrative as Exhibits “E” and “G” to their responses in
opposition to the motions for summary judgment filed by Jiffy Lube, NAPA
Auto Parts, and Plaintiffs; Appellants attached the Pennsylvania State Police
Crash Report Supplemental Narrative as Exhibits “E” and “I” to their
response in opposition to the motion for summary judgment filed by Tower
Auto.




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         [Mr. Straw] said he was driving north and for a second or so
         before the hood popped he could hear some kind of noise
         under the hood. Then he said the hood popped and the
         hood blocked his view through the front so he [could not]
         see. He said his immediate priority was to bring the vehicle
         to a stop. He said he used his rearview and side mirrors to
         bring the vehicle to a complete stop.

         . . . He said that he activated his hazard lights once he was
         stopped. He said he also recalled his wife placing her hand
         on his lap and saying everything is going to be [OK]. He
         said he looked in the rearview mirror and the first thing he
         saw was the truck on the horizon line. He said for a brief
         second he thought to himself [it’s] a good thing he is back
         far enough to react. He said it seemed like an eternity at
         the time but it was probably something like 5 to 8 seconds
         minimum that the truck crashed into him. He said at no
         time was there any cars between him and the truck. In fact
         he said he didn’t recall any traffic in the area around him, or
         even southbound really at the time of this crash.

Pennsylvania State Police Crash Report Supplemental Narrative, 4/24/13, at

1.

       Pennsylvania State Police Corporal Gregory Brandt investigated the

accident for the Pennsylvania State Police.         Following the investigation,

Corporal Brandt issued a General Investigation Report, where he concluded

that “[a] mechanical problem with [the] hood latch [on the Straws’ Pontiac

Vibe automobile] resulted [in] its hood opening while [the vehicle] was

traveling” on Route 28.          Pennsylvania State Police General Investigation

Report, 1/22/13, at 21.8 Further, Corporal Brandt “concluded with [a] high

____________________________________________


8 Appellants attached the January 22, 2013 Pennsylvania State Police
General Investigation Report as “Exhibit K” to their responses in opposition
(Footnote Continued Next Page)


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level of certainty” that, prior to the accident, the hood latch on the Pontiac

Vibe had been damaged “for a substantial amount of time.”           Id. at 17.

Finally, Corporal Brandt wrote: “in a post-crash interview with investigators,

[Thomas Straw] related that he was aware of the faulty hood latch and

attempted to have the latch repaired one or two weeks prior.” Id. at 21.

      Appellants also relied upon an expert report authored by Edward M.

Weber, of Rimkus Consulting Group, Inc. (hereinafter “the Weber Report”),

to oppose Additional Defendants’ motions for summary judgment.9            The

Weber Report declared:

         The 2004 Pontiac Vibe Owner’s Manual states . . . that the
         hood latch should be lubricated with multi-purpose
         lubricant, GM part no 12346241, yearly.

         It is extremely rare that hood latches fail to lock. The most
         vulnerable areas are the latch release lever (on latch itself)
         and hood release cable.       When the hood latch is not
         lubricated at regular intervals, the original grease becomes
         hard and dries out.       It also becomes gritty with the
         accumulation of dirt, which causes the lever and latch to
         stick and bind. To properly repair the latch, a de-greasing
         solvent should be used to remove all of the old grease and
         dirt. The debris in the latch should be blown out using

(Footnote Continued) _______________________

to the motions for summary judgment filed by Plaintiffs and NAPA Auto Parts
and as “Exhibit J” to their response in opposition to the motion for summary
judgment filed by Jiffy Lube.

9Appellants attached the Weber Report as “Exhibit I” to their responses in
opposition to the motions for summary judgment filed by Jiffy Lube and
NAPA Auto Parts and as “Exhibit H” to their response in opposition to the
motion for summary judgment filed by Tower Auto.




                                         - 19 -
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        compressed air. Penetrating oil does not last and is not the
        proper lubricant for this application.

        When Mr. Fanto of Tower Auto sprayed the penetrating oil
        on the Pontiac’s hood latch, it was just a temporary fix. The
        penetrating oil eventually dried out, which reverted the
        latch back to its malfunctioning condition. After removing
        the old grease with the proper solvent, lithium, or white,
        grease should have been liberally applied. The thicker
        grease serves two purposes: it keeps the latch lubricated
        and prevents dirt and dust from entering the mechanism.

        The secondary hood latch should have been degreased and
        lubricated in the same manner. Because its return spring
        was ineffective, vibrations and movement of the hood
        allowed it to move away from the secondary striker plate,
        causing the hood to disengage from the secondary latch,
        which allowed the hood to swing open.

        There was not enough information to determine Jiffy Lube’s
        culpability other than it appears that the mechanic just
        manually moved the release lever back so the hood would
        latch. He should have advised Mr. Straw to have the hood
        latch repaired.

        [The NAPA Auto Parts] manager[] incorrectly advised Mr.
        Straw that the Pontiac was safe to drive. Although he did
        correctly advise Mr. Straw to have the vehicle fixed, he
        should have advised Mr. Straw to have the hood latch
        repaired as soon as possible.

Weber Report, 8/11/15, at 4.

   I.F. Trial Court’s Summary Judgment Rulings, the Trial, and the
                           Current Appeal

     On August 31, 2015, the trial court heard oral argument on the

summary judgment motions and, on November 10, 2015, the trial court

granted all four motions.      As the trial court later explained, it granted

Plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment because, first, it concluded that Mr.



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Straw’s conduct was not a proximate cause of the harm.                Trial Court

Opinion, 9/8/16, at 5 n.3.         Second, the trial court reasoned that Mr. Fair

pleaded guilty to REAP and Mr. Fair was, therefore, bound by his admission

that he acted recklessly in causing the accident. According to the trial court,

“[f]lowing from [the guilty plea] and the law that contributory negligence

cannot be weighed or applied to reckless conduct, the claims of contributory

negligence against Mr. Straw were improper and irrelevant to any contested

issue. As such, the [trial] court granted summary judgment on this issue.”10

Trial Court Opinion, 9/8/16, at 4-5. With respect to the summary judgment

motions filed by Tower Auto, Jiffy Lube, and NAPA Auto Parts, the trial court

declared that it granted the motions because: 1) the Additional Defendants

did not owe a duty to the Plaintiffs, and 2) “the conduct of [Appellants] was

not reasonably foreseeable . . . [and, therefore,] proximate cause could not

be established against the Additional Defendants.”         Id. at 7-9.   The trial

court thus dismissed the cross-claim Appellants filed against Mr. Straw and

the complaints to join that Appellants filed against Additional Defendants.



____________________________________________


10 On September 9, 2015, Appellants filed a motion for leave to file an
amended answer, new matter, and counterclaim, so that they could claim
that Thomas Straw acted recklessly at the time of the accident. Appellants’
Motion for Leave to Amend, 9/9/15, at ¶¶ 1-17.         According to Golon
Masonry, when the trial court granted Mr. Straw’s summary judgment
motion, “[t]he motion to amend filed by Golon [Masonry] and Mr. Fair was
thereby mooted.” Appellant Golon Masonry’s Brief at 8.




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      The case was called for trial and, on December 7, 2015, the trial court

issued a number of pre-trial rulings, including a ruling bifurcating the trial

into compensatory and punitive damages phases.            With respect to the

compensatory damages phase of the trial, on December 15, 2015, after six

days of trial, the jury found in favor of Plaintiffs and against Appellants in an

aggregate amount of $32,000,000.00. N.T. Trial, 12/15/15, at 1175-1180.

      Following the jury’s compensatory damages award, Plaintiffs withdrew

their punitive damages claim without prejudice to their right to reassert the

claim if the case were to be remanded after an appeal. Id. at 1201-1202.

The trial court denied Appellants’ timely post-trial motions and, on April 28,

2016, the prothonotary entered judgment in favor of Plaintiffs and against

Appellants in the amount of $35,114,122.78. Appellants filed timely notices

of appeal and now raise the following claims to this Court:

        I. Did the trial court err in granting summary judgment to
        Additional Defendants Tower [Auto], Jiffy Lube, and NAPA
        [Auto Parts], and Plaintiff/Cross-Claim Defendant Thomas
        Straw?

            A. Did the trial court err in granting summary judgment
            to Tower [Auto] where there was ample evidence from
            which the jury could have found that Tower [Auto] was
            both negligent and reckless?

            B. Did the trial court err in granting summary judgment
            to Jiffy Lube where there was ample evidence from
            which the jury could have found that Jiffy Lube was both
            negligent and reckless?

            C. Did the trial court err in granting summary judgment
            to NAPA [Auto Parts] where there was ample evidence


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            from which the jury could have found that NAPA [Auto
            Parts] was both negligent and reckless?

            D. Did the trial court err in granting summary judgment
            to Thomas Straw where there was ample evidence from
            which the jury could have found that Thomas Straw was
            both negligent and reckless?

Appellant Kirk Fair’s Brief at 5; see also Appellant Golon Masonry’s Brief at

5.

      In this appeal, Appellants also raise claims regarding the trial court’s

pre-trial, trial, and post-trial rulings. As Appellants’ claims on these rulings

differ somewhat from one another, we will independently quote the parties’

claims. Mr. Fair claims:

        II. Did the trial court err in refusing to award a new trial
        based on numerous improper and unfairly prejudicial rulings
        at trial?

            A. Did the trial court err in admitting irrelevant,
            inflammatory, and unfairly prejudicial evidence of prior
            convictions and pre-accident and post-accident drug use
            and treatment against Kirk Fair?

            B. Did the trial court err in denying [Appellants’] motions
            for a mistrial and permitting [Plaintiffs’] counsel to make
            a number of improper and unfairly prejudicial
            statements in his closing argument, which individually
            and collectively inflamed the jury and tainted the
            verdict?

            C. Did the trial court err in submitting a verdict sheet
            which shifted the burden to Appellants[] to disprove
            Decedent Elijah Straw’s claim for conscious pain and
            suffering and improperly directed a verdict against Kirk
            Fair on the issue of recklessness?

            D. Did the trial court err in precluding Kirk Fair from
            contesting that he had 19 seconds and 2058 feet of


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            distance in which to avoid the stopped Straw vehicle
            based on Kirk Fair’s criminal plea?

            E. Did the trial court err in refusing to grant judgment
            N.O.V., a new trial, or a substantial remittitur because
            the jury’s verdict was shocking, manifestly excessive,
            and unsupported by the trial evidence?

Appellant Kirk Fair’s Brief at 5.

      Golon Masonry claims:

        II. Did the trial court err in refusing to award a new trial
        based on numerous improper and prejudicial rulings at trial?

            A. Did the trial court err in permitting [Plaintiffs] to
            pursue a negligent entrustment claim against Golon
            [Masonry] without the requisite expert testimony to
            explain the applicable standard of care?

            B. Did the trial court err in admitting irrelevant,
            inflammatory, and highly prejudicial evidence regarding
            co-defendant Kirk Fair’s drug problems?

            C. Did the trial court err        in permitting [Plaintiffs’]
            counsel to make a number           of improper and highly
            prejudicial statements in his      closing argument, which
            individually and collectively      inflamed the jury and
            tainted the verdict?

            D. Did the trial court err in shifting to [Appellants] the
            burden to disprove decedent Elijah Straw’s claim for
            conscious pain and suffering?

            E. Did the trial court err in submitting a jury verdict
            sheet that diluted [Plaintiffs’] burden of proof, directed a
            verdict against Golon [Masonry] with respect to
            causation on the direct claim against it, failed to
            apportion liability between Golon [Masonry] and
            co-defendant Kirk Fair on the direct claims against them,
            and contained numerous other reversible errors?




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              F. Did the trial court err in refusing to grant a new trial
              or a substantial remittitur based on the excessiveness of
              the verdict?

Appellant Golon Masonry’s Brief at 5-6 (some internal capitalization

omitted).

       We conclude that the trial court erred when it granted summary

judgment to Additional Defendants and to Thomas Straw.            Therefore, we

must vacate the judgment and remand. 11


____________________________________________


11  As noted, after the jury found Appellants liable and announced its
compensatory damage award, Plaintiffs declared that they were withdrawing
their punitive damages claim “without prejudice” to their right to assert the
claim if the case were to be remanded following an appeal. See N.T. Trial,
12/15/15, at 1201-1202. Further, after Plaintiffs declared that they would
withdraw the claim, counsel for Golon Masonry declared: “[w]e would agree
to waive [the punitive damages claim] now and allow the [P]laintiffs to bring
it back up if the case is remanded. That’s fine.” Id. The trial court then
dismissed the jury. Id.

As this Court has held, even though Plaintiffs withdrew their punitive
damages claim “without prejudice,” the withdrawal of the claim means that
“[t]here are no outstanding claims remaining” in this case. Levitt v.
Patrick, 976 A.2d 581, 588 (Pa. Super. 2009). Moreover, the subsequent
denial of Appellants’ post-trial motions and entry of judgment upon the
verdict give this Court jurisdiction to consider this appeal. As the Levitt
Court explained:

         The key inquiry in any determination of finality is whether
         there is an outstanding claim. Pa.R.A.P. 341. . . . If any
         claim remains outstanding and has not been disposed of by
         the trial court, then it does not matter whether the claim is
         classified as a counterclaim or a bifurcated claim, for the
         result is the same: this Court lacks jurisdiction to entertain
         the appeal unless the appeal is interlocutory or we grant
         permission to appeal. Pa.R.A.P. 341.

(Footnote Continued Next Page)


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                                     II. Analysis

                            II.A. Standard of Review


(Footnote Continued) _______________________

         Similarly, if a claim was discontinued prior to trial, we do
         not inquire whether the discontinuance was with or without
         prejudice. The Pennsylvania Rules of Civil Procedure permit
         a party to “commence a second action upon the same cause
         of action” after a discontinuance. Pa.R.C.P. 231. This
         second action is considered a new action and not a
         continuation of the initial action. Because a party may
         initiate a new action upon a discontinued claim, it follows
         that a discontinued claim is not before the trial court for
         resolution.

         Instantly, the parties jointly agreed to discontinue Patrick's
         sole bifurcated counterclaim against Levitt. The parties
         further agreed that all issues that were not the subject of
         the trial of this matter have been disposed of.           The
         discontinuance constitutes a final judgment as a matter of
         law. Because our finality inquiry has always focused on the
         existence of an outstanding claim, we need not examine
         whether Patrick's bifurcated counterclaim was discontinued
         with or without prejudice. There are no outstanding claims
         remaining and thus we have jurisdiction to consider this
         matter.

Id. (some internal citations, quotations, and corrections omitted); see also
Bourne v. Temple Univ. Hosp., 932 A.2d 114, 115-116 (Pa. Super. 2007)
(the Bournes filed a medical malpractice complaint against Temple University
Hospital, Gail O. Berman, M.D., and three other defendants. However, the
Bournes failed to file a certificate of merit with their complaint and, thus,
Temple University Hospital and Dr. Berman filed a praecipe for entry of a
judgment of non pros. On February 6, 2006, the trial court denied the
Bournes’ petition to open the judgment of non pros and the Bournes
appealed. As this Court held: “[o]n April 24, 2006, the trial court approved
a stipulation withdrawing without prejudice the claims against [the three
other defendants], thereby rendering the trial court’s February 6, 2006 order
final for purposes of appeal. See Pa.R.A.P. 341”).




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     As this Court has stated:

        Our scope of review of a trial court’s order granting or
        denying summary judgment is plenary, and our standard of
        review is clear: the trial court’s order will be reversed only
        where it is established that the court committed an error of
        law or abused its discretion.

        Summary judgment is appropriate only when the record
        clearly shows that there is no genuine issue of material fact
        and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a
        matter of law. The reviewing court must view the record in
        the light most favorable to the nonmoving party and resolve
        all doubts as to the existence of a genuine issue of material
        fact against the moving party. Only when the facts are so
        clear that reasonable minds could not differ can a trial court
        properly enter summary judgment.

Englert v. Fazio Mech. Serv.’s, Inc., 932 A.2d 122, 124 (Pa. Super. 2007)

(internal citations omitted); see also Summers v. Certainteed Corp., 997

A.2d 1152, 1159 (Pa. 2010) (“an appellate court may reverse a grant of

summary judgment if there has been an error of law or an abuse of

discretion. But the issue as to whether there are no genuine issues as to

any material fact presents a question of law, and therefore, on that question

our standard of review is de novo.    This means we need not defer to the

determinations made by the lower tribunals”).

     II.B. Analysis Regarding the Trial Court’s Grant of Summary
                  Judgment to Additional Defendants

     We will first consider the trial court’s grant of summary judgment to

Additional Defendants.

     As the trial court explained, it granted summary judgment to

Additional Defendants because, it determined, Additional Defendants did not

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owe Plaintiffs a duty and because “the conduct of [Appellants] was not

reasonably foreseeable . . . [and, therefore,] proximate cause could not be

established against the Additional Defendants.” Trial Court Opinion, 9/8/16,

at 7-9. Respectfully, we conclude that the trial court erred.

II.B.1. Additional Defendants’ Duties and Breaches of their Duties to
                              Plaintiffs

      Our Supreme Court has explained:

        In Pennsylvania, the elements of a cause of action based on
        negligence are:

        (1) a duty or obligation recognized by the law requiring the
        defendant to conform to a certain standard of conduct for
        the protection of others against unreasonable risks;

        (2) defendant’s failure to conform to the standard required;

        (3) a causal connection between the conduct and the
        resulting injury;

        (4) actual loss or damage resulting to the plaintiff.

R.W. v. Manzek, 888 A.2d 740, 746 (Pa. 2005).

      As to the element of duty, “[i]t is a fundamental principle of tort law

[that] there cannot be a valid claim sounding in negligence unless there is a

duty upon the defendant in favor of the plaintiff which has been breached.”

Alumni Ass’n v. Sullivan, 572 A.2d 1209, 1210-1211 (Pa. 1990).          “The

existence of a duty is a question of law for the court to decide.” Manzek,

888 A.2d at 746; see also Restatement (Second) of Torts § 328B(a) and (b)

(“[i]n an action for negligence the court determines . . . (a) whether the

evidence as to the facts makes an issue upon which the jury may reasonably


                                    - 28 -
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find the existence or non-existence of such facts; (b) whether such facts

give rise to any legal duty on the part of the defendant”). However, “[t]he

determination of whether an act or failure to act constitutes negligence . . .

in view of all the evidence has always been particularly committed to

determination by a jury.” Snead v. SPCA, 929 A.2d 1169, 1183 (Pa. Super.

2007) (internal quotations and citations omitted).

      The Pennsylvania Supreme Court has held that Sections 323 and 324A

of the Second Restatement of Torts correctly state the law of this

Commonwealth. Section 323 provides:

        § 323 Negligent Performance of Undertaking to Render
        Services

        One who undertakes, gratuitously or for consideration, to
        render services to another which he should recognize as
        necessary for the protection of the other's person or things,
        is subject to liability to the other for physical harm resulting
        from his failure to exercise reasonable care to perform his
        undertaking, if

            (a) his failure to exercise such care increases the risk of
            such harm, or

            (b) the harm is suffered because of the other's reliance
            upon the undertaking.

Restatement (Second) of Torts § 323; Feld v. Merriam, 485 A.2d 742, 746

(Pa. 1984) (recognizing that the Supreme Court has “adopted [Restatement

(Second) of Torts § 323] as an accurate statement of the law in this

Commonwealth”).




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      Section 323 imposes liability “where a party assumes a duty, whether

gratuitously or for consideration, and so negligently performs that duty that

another suffers damage.” Feld, 485 A.2d at 746. It applies:

        to any undertaking to render services to another which the
        defendant should recognize as necessary for the protection
        of the other's person or things. It applies whether the harm
        to another or his things results from the defendant's
        negligent conduct in the manner of his performance of the
        undertaking, or from his failure to exercise reasonable care
        to complete it or to protect the other when he discontinues
        it.

Id., quoting Restatement (Second) of Torts § 323 cmt. a.

      The rule stated in Section 324A “parallels the one stated in § 323, as

to the liability of the actor to the one to whom he has undertaken to render

services. [Section 324A, however,] deals with the liability to third persons.”

Restatement (Second) of Torts § 324A cmt. a. Section 324A declares:

        § 324A Liability to Third Person for Negligent Performance
        of Undertaking

        One who undertakes, gratuitously or for consideration, to
        render services to another which he should recognize as
        necessary for the protection of a third person or his things,
        is subject to liability to the third person for physical harm
        resulting from his failure to exercise reasonable care to
        protect his undertaking, if

            (a) his failure to exercise reasonable care increases the
            risk of such harm, or

            (b) he has undertaken to perform a duty owed by the
            other to the third person, or

            (c) the harm is suffered because of reliance of the other
            or the third person upon the undertaking.


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Restatement (Second) of Torts § 324A; Cantwell v. Allegheny County,

483 A.2d 1350, 1353 (Pa. 1984) (recognizing that “the essential provisions

of [Restatement (Second) of Torts § 324A] have             been the      law   in

Pennsylvania for many years”).

       As the comments to the rule state:

         [Section 324A] applies to any undertaking to render
         services to another, where the actor's negligent conduct in
         the manner of performance of his undertaking, or his failure
         to exercise reasonable care to complete it, or to protect the
         third person when he discontinues it, results in physical
         harm to the third person or his things. It applies both to
         undertakings for consideration, and to those which are
         gratuitous.

Restatement (Second) of Torts § 324A cmt. b.

       Here, Appellants put forth evidence establishing a genuine issue of

material fact that Additional Defendants owed Plaintiffs duties under

Sections 323 and 324A of the Second Restatement – and that they breached

those duties.12
____________________________________________


12 In Althaus ex rel. Althaus v. Cohen, 756 A.2d 1166 (Pa. 2000), our
Supreme Court held that the issue of duty is “necessarily rooted in often
amorphous public policy considerations, which may include our perception of
history, morals, justice and society.” Id. at 1169. The Althaus Court held
that, to determine whether a duty exists in a particular case, a court must
weigh “several discrete factors,” including:

         (1) the relationship between the parties; (2) the social
         utility of the actor’s conduct; (3) the nature of the risk
         imposed and foreseeability of the harm incurred; (4) the
         consequences of imposing a duty upon the actor; and (5)
         the overall public interest in the proposed solution.

(Footnote Continued Next Page)


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II.B.1.a. Tower Auto’s Duties and Breaches of Its Duties to Plaintiffs

      First, with respect to Tower Auto, Appellants put forth evidence that,

viewed in the light most favorable to Appellants, tends to show the following.

      On September 27, 2011, Thomas Straw took his vehicle to Tower Auto

for a state inspection. During the inspection, the owner of Tower Auto, John

Fanto, noticed a problem with the hood latch assembly.        Mr. Fanto then

undertook to repair the hood latch assembly by “hos[ing] it down with a

penetrating oil and work[ing] the latch back and forth.” Deposition of John


(Footnote Continued) _______________________

Id.

However, as our Supreme Court later made clear, the weighing of the
Althaus factors is “more relevant to the creation of new duties than to the
vindication of existing ones.”    Alderwoods (Pennsylvania), Inc. v.
Duquesne Light Co., 106 A.3d 27, 40 (Pa. 2014). Thus, the Supreme
Court held:

         It is not necessary to conduct a full-blown public policy
         assessment in every instance in which a longstanding duty
         imposed on members of the public at large arises in a novel
         factual scenario.  Common-law duties stated in general
         terms are framed in such fashion for the very reason that
         they have broad-scale application.

Id. at 40-41; see also Scampone v. Highland Park Care Ctr., LLC, 57
A.3d 582, 586 (Pa. 2012) (holding that “reliance on the principle articulated
in Section 323 of the Restatement [(Second) of Torts] offered the functional
equivalent of an Althaus factor analysis”).

Here, we need not engage in an Althaus factor analysis because the instant
case concerns a straightforward application of Sections 323 and 324A of the
Second Restatement and the longstanding law of this Commonwealth.




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Robert Fanto, 6/29/15, at 21. Mr. Fanto issued Mr. Straw a state inspection

for the vehicle, billed Mr. Straw $21.00 for his work on the hood latch

assembly, and noted, on the service invoice, that he had “repair[ed the]

hood latch assembly.” Id. at 21-26; Tower Auto Service Invoice, 9/27/11,

at 1.

        However, as stated in the Weber Report, Mr. Fanto should not have

used penetrating oil to lubricate the hood latch because “[p]enetrating oil

does not last . . . [and will] eventually dr[y] out.” Weber Report, 8/11/15,

at 4. Instead, the Weber Report declared, Mr. Fanto should have: used a

“de-greasing solvent . . . to remove all of the old grease and dirt;” blown out

the debris in the latch using compressed air; and, “[a]fter removing the old

grease with the proper solvent, lithium, or white, grease should have been

liberally applied.” Id. Moreover, as implied by the Weber Report, when Mr.

Fanto serviced the hood latch with the penetrating oil, Mr. Fanto actually

masked the problem with the hood latch by creating a “temporary fix” and

making the hood latch appear to be properly operational. Id. According to

the Weber Report, when the penetrating oil “eventually dried out” it

“reverted the latch back to its malfunctioning condition;” specifically, the

hood latch became “gritty with the accumulation of dirt” and this “cause[d]

the lever and latch to stick and bind.” Id.

        Finally, Pennsylvania State Police Corporal Gregory Brandt concluded

that “[a] mechanical problem with [the] hood latch [on the Straws’ Pontiac

Vibe automobile] resulted [in] its hood opening while [the vehicle] was

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traveling” on Route 28.      Pennsylvania State Police General Investigation

Report, 1/22/13, at 21. Corporal Brandt also “concluded with [a] high level

of certainty” that, prior to the accident, the hood latch on the Pontiac Vibe

had been damaged “for a substantial amount of time.” Id. at 17.

      Viewing the above evidence in the light most favorable to Appellants

demonstrates that Tower Auto owed Mr. Straw a duty under Section 323 of

the Second Restatement and that Tower Auto owed Jennifer, Rowan, and

Elijah Straw duties under Section 324A of the Second Restatement. There is

also a genuine issue of material fact that Tower Auto breached its duties of

care to Plaintiffs. Specifically, there is a genuine issue of material fact that:

            Mr. Fanto “undert[ook], . . . for consideration, to render services

             to [Mr. Straw] which he should [have] recognize[d] as necessary

             for the protection of the other’s person” (Mr. Fanto undertook,

             for consideration, to repair the hood latch on Mr. Straw’s vehicle

             and then informed Mr. Straw that he had “repair[ed the] hood

             latch assembly;” further, Mr. Fanto should have recognized that

             his work and statements to Mr. Straw were necessary for the

             protection of Mr. Straw and Mr. Straw’s passengers because he

             should have recognized that, if the hood latch failed while Mr.

             Straw was driving, the hood would open and obscure the vision

             of Mr. Straw, thus risking harm to Mr. Straw and Mr. Straw’s

             passengers);




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          Mr. Fanto failed to exercise reasonable care in performing his

           work on the vehicle (according to the Weber Report, Mr. Fanto

           utilized the wrong lubricant on the hood latch assembly, which,

           in effect, concealed the problem with the hood latch and allowed

           the problem to manifest when the improper lubricant dried out;

           Mr. Fanto also informed Mr. Straw that he had “repair[ed the]

           hood latch assembly;” further, the hood latch on the vehicle

           failed on May 1, 2012 and, prior to that time, the hood latch had

           been damaged “for a substantial amount of time”);

          Mr. Fanto’s failure to exercise reasonable care increased the risk

           of physical harm to Mr. Straw and Mr. Straw’s passengers (the

           Weber Report, in effect, declared that when Mr. Fanto serviced

           the hood latch with penetrating oil, Mr. Fanto masked the

           problem with the hood latch and allowed the problem to

           manifest   when   the   improper   penetrating   oil   dried   out,

           conceivably depriving Mr. Straw of the possibility that Jiffy Lube

           and NAPA Auto Parts would discover the problem); and,

          the Straws suffered harm because of Mr. Straw’s reliance upon

           the undertaking (Mr. Fanto performed work on the hood latch

           and informed Mr. Straw that he had “repair[ed the] hood latch

           assembly;” Mr. Straw drove the vehicle in reliance upon Mr.

           Fanto’s undertaking; the Straws were later rear-ended when

           they were forced to stop, in the middle of Route 28, because the

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            hood on their vehicle unexpectedly popped open; and, the

            Straws all suffered grave harm as a result of the collision).

      Thus, a genuine issue of material fact exists that Tower Auto owed

Plaintiffs duties under Section 323(a) and (b) and Section 324A(a) and (c) of

the Second Restatement. There also exists a genuine issue of material fact

that Tower Auto breached its duties of care to Plaintiffs.

II.B.1.a.i. The Trial Court’s Rationale for Finding No Duty as to Tower
                           Auto was Mistaken

      According to the trial court, Tower Auto owed Plaintiffs no duty of care

because: “Tower Auto serviced the vehicle more than [seven] months prior

to the accident; Plaintiffs experienced no problems with the hood for [three]

months until after Jiffy Lube changed the vehicle’s oil; and Plaintiffs never

returned to Tower Auto after experiencing trouble with the hood latch.” Trial

Court Opinion, 9/8/16, at 7.

      The facts cited by the trial court do not negate the existence of the

duties Tower Auto owed to Plaintiffs.    This is especially true in light of the

Weber Report.     To be sure, according to the Weber Report, Mr. Fanto

incorrectly used penetrating oil to lubricate the hood latch. Weber Report,

8/11/15, at 4.    According to the Weber Report, servicing the latch with

penetrating oil was merely a “temporary fix.”      The Weber Report declared

that the oil “eventually dried out” and caused the latch to “revert[] . . . back

to its malfunctioning condition;” specifically, the hood latch became “gritty




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with the accumulation of dirt” and this “cause[d] the lever and latch to stick

and bind.” Id.

      Viewing the Weber Report in the light most favorable to Appellants

demonstrates that Tower Auto breached the duties it owed to Plaintiffs under

Sections 323 and 324A of the Second Restatement at the time it serviced

the hood latch. The trial court erred in concluding otherwise.

    II.B.1.a.ii. Tower Auto’s Arguments to this Court are Meritless

      Within Tower Auto’s appellate brief, Tower Auto claims that “there is

no evidence that it breached a duty to the Plaintiffs” because:           1) it is

entitled to limited immunity from suit under 75 Pa.C.S.A. § 4702.1 and, 2)

the Weber Report, upon which Appellants rely, “is entirely based off of a

misreading of the owner’s manual for the Straw vehicle” and must be

disregarded. Appellant’s Brief at 22-23. These claims fail.

      75 Pa.C.S.A. § 4702.1, entitled “limited liability of inspection station or

mechanic,” declares, in relevant part:

        (a) General rule.--An inspection conducted pursuant to
        section 4702(a) (relating to annual inspection) . . . shall not
        be construed as a guaranty of the safety of any vehicle and
        neither the official inspection station issuing the certificate
        of inspection nor the official inspection mechanic performing
        the inspection shall be liable to the owner or occupants of
        any inspected vehicle for any damages caused by the failure
        or malfunction of that vehicle or to the owner or occupants
        of any vehicle involved in an accident with that inspected
        vehicle or to any pedestrian injured in the accident unless
        it can be shown by a preponderance of the evidence
        that the failure was caused by the negligence of the
        inspection station or mechanic.



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75 Pa.C.S.A. § 4702.1 (emphasis added).

      This Section does not entitle Tower Auto to summary judgment

because, as explained above, there exists a genuine issue of material fact

that “the failure [of the hood latch] was caused by the negligence of the

inspection station or mechanic.” Id.

      Tower Auto also claims that this Court should “disregard” the Weber

Report because the Weber Report “is entirely based off of a misreading of

the owner’s manual for the Straw vehicle.” Appellant’s Brief at 22-23. This

argument plainly fails at the summary judgment stage, as it constitutes a

simple attack upon the credibility and weight of Appellants’ expert.

Summers, 997 A.2d at 1161 (“[i]t has long been Pennsylvania law that,

while conclusions recorded by experts may be disputed, the credibility and

weight attributed to those conclusions are not proper considerations at

summary judgment; rather, such determinations reside in the sole province

of the trier of fact”).

 II.B.1.b. Jiffy Lube’s Duties and Breaches of Its Duties to Plaintiffs

      Viewing the record in the light most favorable to Appellants, Appellants

produced the following evidence that Jiffy Lube owed duties of care to

Plaintiffs and that Jiffy Lube breached those duties.

      In January 2012, following an oil change at Jiffy Lube, Mr. Straw

returned to the Jiffy Lube and told the employees “I got an oil change here,

and the next thing I know my hood doesn’t close all the way.” Deposition of

Thomas Straw, 5/13/15, at 33.          Mr. Straw testified that a Jiffy Lube

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employee “just kind of grunted and went and got some tools, you know,

worked with it for a little bit, grunted some more, went and got some other

tools, worked with it, got it down and that was that.”          Id.   Mr. Straw

testified that, when the employee finished, Mr. Straw asked the employee “is

[this] safe to drive?    It’s not going to pop up on me?;” the employee

responded by declaring that the vehicle was safe to drive. Id. at 34 and 71.

      Nevertheless, on May 1, 2012, the hood latch failed on the Straws’

vehicle, resulting in the “hood opening while [the vehicle] was traveling” on

Route 28. Pennsylvania State Police General Investigation Report, 1/22/13,

at 21. Further, as Corporal Brandt concluded, the hood latch on the Straws’

vehicle had been damaged “for a substantial amount of time” prior to the

accident. Id. at 17.

      Viewing the record in the light most favorable to Appellants, Jiffy Lube

owed a duty to Mr. Straw under Section 323, and to Jennifer, Rowan, and

Elijah Straw under Section 324A, of the Second Restatement; there also

exists a genuine issue of material fact that Jiffy Lube breached its duties of

care to Plaintiffs. To be sure, the record demonstrates that:

            a Jiffy Lube employee “undert[ook], gratuitously . . . , to render

             services to [Mr. Straw] which he should [have] recognize[d] as

             necessary for the protection of [Mr. Straw’s] person” (the Jiffy

             Lube employee undertook to repair the hood latch on the Straws’

             vehicle and then assured Mr. Straw that the vehicle was “safe to

             drive;” further, the employee should have recognized that his

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           work and statements to Mr. Straw were necessary for the

           protection of Mr. Straw and Mr. Straw’s passengers because he

           should have recognized that, if the hood latch failed while Mr.

           Straw was driving, the hood would fly up and obscure the vision

           of   Mr.   Straw,   thus   risking   harm   to   Mr.   Straw   and   his

           passengers);

          the Jiffy Lube employee failed to exercise reasonable care in

           performing his work on the vehicle and in advising Mr. Straw as

           to the car’s safety (approximately three or four months after

           Jiffy Lube performed its work and assured Mr. Straw of the

           latch’s safety, the hood latch on the vehicle failed and, at the

           time of failure, the hood latch had been damaged “for a

           substantial amount of time”);

          the Jiffy Lube employee’s failure to exercise reasonable care

           increased the risk of physical harm to Mr. Straw and Mr. Straw’s

           passengers (the employee’s failure to perform the undertaking in

           a non-negligent manner and his assurances of safety to Mr.

           Straw caused Mr. Straw to believe the latch was safe and to,

           thus, not protect himself or his family against the risk of the

           hood opening while he was driving); and,

          the Straws suffered harm because of Mr. Straw’s reliance upon

           the undertaking (the Jiffy Lube employee purportedly repaired

           the hood latch and then assured Mr. Straw that the latch was

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              safe; Mr. Straw drove the vehicle; and, the Straws were later

              rear-ended when they were forced to stop, in the middle of

              Route 28, because the hood on their vehicle unexpectedly

              popped open).

       The record, as stated above, reveals a genuine issue of material fact

that Jiffy Lube owed Plaintiffs duties – and breached those duties – under

Section 323(a) and (b) and Section 324A(a) and (c) of the Second

Restatement.13

 II.B.1.b.i. The Trial Court’s Rationale for Finding No Duty as to Jiffy
                           Lube was Mistaken
____________________________________________


13 Our Supreme Court has not adopted the Restatement (Third) of Torts:
Liability for Physical Harm (Proposed Draft Number One), and although we
do not express any opinion as to the acceptance of this provision, we note
that comment f to Section 42 (“Duty Based on Undertaking”) explains:

         f. Increasing the risk of harm. The requirement that the
         actor increase the risk of harm means that the risk to the
         other person is increased beyond that which existed in the
         absence of the actor's undertaking.

         This requirement is often met because the plaintiff or
         another relied on the actor's performing the undertaking in
         a nonnegligent manner and declined to pursue an
         alternative means for protection. Although reliance is
         merely a specific manner of increasing the risk of harm for
         another, this Section retains reliance as a separate basis for
         imposing a duty because historically it has been treated
         separately.

Restatement (Third) of Torts: Liability for Physical Harm § 42 cmt. f (PFT
No. 1).




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        The trial court reasoned that Jiffy Lube did not owe Plaintiffs any duty

because:     “Jiffy Lube is in the business of changing oil not repairing hood

latches; Plaintiffs experienced no problems with the hood for a week after

the oil change; an employee attempted to aid Plaintiffs free of charge upon

their return; the employee never told Mr. Straw he fixed anything; Plaintiffs

did not experience any issues with the hood for several weeks later despite

driving to Ohio multiple times.”      Trial Court Opinion, 9/8/16, at 8.    We

conclude that the trial court’s reasoning is mistaken.

        First, as to the fact that “Plaintiffs experienced no problems with the

hood for a week after the oil change,” we conclude that this fact does not

bear upon the existence of Jiffy Lube’s duty. This is because the employee

performed the work on the hood latch, and assured Mr. Straw of the hood

latch’s safety, after the oil change had occurred.       Deposition of Thomas

Straw, 5/13/15, at 32-33 (Mr. Straw explained that he received an oil

change at Jiffy Lube and then, approximately one week later, he returned to

the Jiffy Lube because the hood of his car would not close all the way).

        Second, the trial court held that “an employee attempted to aid [Mr.

Straw] free of charge upon [his] return” negated the existence of Jiffy Lube’s

duty.     However, this fact does not negate the existence of a duty, as

Sections 323 and 324A impose a duty of reasonable care upon “[o]ne who

undertakes, gratuitously or for consideration, to render services to

another. . . .” Restatement (Second) of Torts §§ 323 and 324A (emphasis

added).

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      Third, the trial court reasoned, Jiffy Lube did not have a duty to

Plaintiffs because “Jiffy Lube is in the business of changing oil not repairing

hood latches.”    Trial Court Opinion, 9/8/16, at 8.          This reasoning fails

because the Jiffy Lube employee actually performed work on the hood latch

and, thus, “undert[ook] . . . to render services to [Mr. Straw] which he

should [have] recognize[d] as necessary for the protection of [Mr. Straw’s]

person.”     Restatement (Second) of Torts §§ 323 and 324A.                 Further,

although Jiffy Lube’s business specialty might create a factual issue

concerning    whether   Mr.   Straw   “relied”   upon   the    employee’s    safety

assurances, this factual issue cannot be resolved at the summary judgment

stage. See, e.g., Leach v. Phila. Sav. Fund Soc., 340 A.2d 491, 492 (Pa.

Super. 1975) (“[s]ummary judgment may be entered only in the clearest of

cases where there is not the slightest doubt as to the absence of an issue of

material fact. . . . The existence of [an] issue of material fact renders the

summary judgment procedure premature and inappropriate”). To be sure,

as explained in the comments to Section 323 of the Second Restatement:

        One who gratuitously gives transportation to another, or
        otherwise renders gratuitous services to him, is not subject
        to liability to him for his failure to have the competence or
        to exercise the skill normally required of persons doing such
        acts, if the other who accepts the services is aware, through
        information given by the actor or otherwise, of his
        incompetence. However, a contract to render services, or a
        gratuitous offer to render them, or even merely giving them
        at the other's request, may carry with it a profession or
        representation of some skill and competence; and if the
        actor realizes or should realize that his competence and skill
        are subnormal, he must exercise reasonable care to inform


                                      - 43 -
J-A07012-17
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          the other. If he does not do so, he is subject to liability for
          physical harm resulting from his deficiencies.

Restatement (Second) of Torts § 323 cmt. b.

        In the case at bar, there is no evidence: that the Jiffy Lube employee

possessed a “subnormal” skill or competence in general car repair or,

specifically, in fixing hood latches; that the employee informed Mr. Straw

that he possessed any such subnormal skill or competence; or, that Mr.

Straw    “realize[d]   or   should   [have]   realize[d]    that   [the   employees’]

competence and skill [was] subnormal.” Id. Therefore, the mere fact that

“Jiffy Lube is in the business of changing oil not repairing hood latches” does

not entitle Jiffy Lube to summary judgment.            See Trial Court Opinion,

9/8/16, at 8.

        Finally, the trial court reasoned that Jiffy Lube did not have a duty to

Plaintiffs because “the employee never told Mr. Straw he fixed anything” and

“Plaintiffs did not experience any issues with the hood for several weeks

later despite driving to Ohio multiple times.”        Id.    These reasons do not

support the trial court’s grant of summary judgment.

        Simply stated, the assertion that “the employee never told Mr. Straw

he fixed anything” fails to view the record in the light most favorable to

Appellants.     Certainly, under the proper standard of review, the record

reflects that the employee worked on the hood latch, was able to fully close

the hood, and then assured Mr. Straw that the hood latch was safe.

Deposition of Thomas Straw, 5/13/15, at 29-33. Viewing these facts in the

light most favorable to Appellants demonstrates that the Jiffy Lube employee

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endeavored to repair the hood latch and then, through his actions and

words, represented to Mr. Straw that he had repaired the hood latch and

that the latch was “safe.”

       Further, the fact that “Plaintiffs did not experience any issues with the

hood for several weeks [] despite driving to Ohio multiple times” does not

negate the existence of a duty upon Jiffy Lube because the hood latch failed

three to four months after its employee worked on the latch and assured Mr.

Straw that it was safe.       Moreover, following the accident, Corporal Brandt

concluded that the hood latch on the Straws’ vehicle had been damaged “for

a substantial amount of time” prior to the accident. Thus, there is evidence

that, although the employee manipulated the latch, he did not repair it and

unreasonably assured Mr. Straw that the latch was safe.         The trial court’s

conclusion to the contrary was in error.

     II.B.1.b.ii. Jiffy Lube’s Arguments to this Court are Meritless

       On appeal, Jiffy Lube primarily claims that it did not owe Plaintiffs any

duty because there was “[n]o evidence that [Jiffy Lube] was in the business

of fixing hoods or hood latches of cars, particularly free of charge.”       Jiffy

Lube’s Brief at 12. As explained above, this claim does not entitle Jiffy Lube

to summary judgment.14

____________________________________________


14  Within Jiffy Lube’s appellate brief to this Court, Jiffy Lube also claims that
it did not owe Plaintiffs any duty because the accident was not foreseeable.
Jiffy Lube’s Brief at 12. We will analyze the foreseeability of the accident
below.
(Footnote Continued Next Page)


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    II.B.1.c. NAPA Auto Parts’ Duties and Breaches of Its Duties to
                               Plaintiffs

      Viewing the record in the light most favorable to Appellants as the

non-moving parties, the evidence as to NAPA Auto Parts’ liability is as

follows.

      In March 2012, Mr. Straw and his family drove to Ohio. During their

trip, they stopped their Pontiac Vibe automobile at a NAPA Auto Parts store

to purchase a tail light bulb. Deposition of Thomas Straw, 5/13/15, at 35.

While there, Mr. Straw asked an employee to “take a look at [the hood] and

. . . let me know if it’s all right, if it’s safe.” Id. at 36. Mr. Straw testified:

“I said I have a state inspection coming up in a couple months, is this going

to make it to the state inspection, is it safe[?] He said absolutely. He said

it’s metal on metal. They don’t call it a safety latch for nothing.” Id. at 36.

      Mr. Straw testified that he could not remember whether the NAPA Auto

Parts’ employee did “anything physically with the car,” but Mr. Straw

testified that he relied upon the employee’s assurances that the hood was

safe. Id. at 36-37.

      Approximately six weeks later, the hood latch on the Straws’ Pontiac

Vibe failed, thus leading to the accident.            Further, Corporal Brandt

“concluded with [a] high level of certainty” that, prior to the accident, the

hood latch on the Pontiac Vibe had been damaged “for a substantial amount

(Footnote Continued) _______________________




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of time.” Pennsylvania State Police General Investigation Report, 1/22/13,

at 17.

         Viewing this evidence in the light most favorable to Appellants

establishes a prima facie case under Sections 323 and 324A of the Second

Restatement. It demonstrates that:

              a NAPA Auto Parts employee “undert[ook], gratuitously . . . , to

               render   services    to   [Mr.   Straw]   which   he   should   [have]

               recognize[d] as necessary for the protection of [Mr. Straw’s]

               person” (the NAPA Auto Parts employee undertook to analyze

               the hood latch on the Straws’ vehicle and then assured Mr.

               Straw that the vehicle was “safe;”15 further, the employee

               should have recognized that his work and statements to Mr.

               Straw were necessary for the protection of Mr. Straw and Mr.

               Straw’s passengers because he should have recognized that, if

               the hood latch failed while Mr. Straw was driving, the hood

               would fly up and obscure the vision of Mr. Straw, thus risking

               harm to Mr. Straw and Mr. Straw’s passengers);


____________________________________________


15 See Farabaugh v. Pa. Tpk. Comm’n, 911 A.2d 1264, 1284 (Pa. 2006)
(“the plain language of Section 324A merely requires an undertaking to
‘render services to another,’ which we find to encompass the rendering of
inspection services”); Shannon v. McNulty, 718 A.2d 828 (Pa. Super.
1998) (holding that, under Section 323, the plaintiffs established that the
defendant “render[ed] services” by issuing “telephonic advice”).




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           the NAPA Auto Parts employee failed to exercise reasonable care

            in performing his analysis on the vehicle and in advising Mr.

            Straw as to the car’s safety (approximately six weeks after the

            NAPA Auto Parts employee looked at the vehicle and assured Mr.

            Straw of the latch’s safety, the hood latch on the vehicle failed

            and, at the time of failure, the hood latch had been damaged

            “for a substantial amount of time”); and,

           the NAPA Auto Parts employee’s failure to exercise reasonable

            care increased the risk of physical harm to Mr. Straw and Mr.

            Straw’s passengers (the employee’s assurances of safety to Mr.

            Straw caused Mr. Straw to believe the latch was safe and to,

            thus, not protect himself or his family against the risk of the

            hood opening while he was driving); and,

           the Straws suffered harm because of Mr. Straw’s reliance upon

            the undertaking (the NAPA Auto Parts employee undertook to

            assure Mr. Straw that the latch was safe; Mr. Straw relied upon

            the advice and drove the vehicle; and, the Straws were later

            rear-ended when they were forced to stop, in the middle of

            Route 28, because the hood on their vehicle unexpectedly

            popped open).

     The record thus reveals a genuine issue of material fact that NAPA

Auto Parts owed Plaintiffs duties under Section 323(a) and (b) and Section




                                   - 48 -
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324A(a) and (c) of the Second Restatement and that NAPA Auto Parts

breached its duties of care to Plaintiffs.

II.B.1.c.i. The Trial Court’s Rationale for Finding No Duty as to NAPA
                        Auto Parts was Mistaken

      The trial court held that NAPA Auto Parts did not owe Plaintiffs any

duty because: “NAPA [Auto Parts] is an auto parts store not a repair shop;

the employee was asked to look at the hood latch and did so free of charge;

[six] weeks elapsed between the NAPA [Auto Parts] visit and the accident;

and between the NAPA [Auto Parts] visit and the accident, Plaintiffs drove

their car to Ohio and elsewhere putting hundreds of miles on the car.” Trial

Court Opinion, 9/8/16, at 8.

      This Court has already explained why the trial court’s rationale fails.

Nevertheless, we note:      there is no evidence that the NAPA Auto Parts’

employees’ skill and competence at car maintenance was subnormal or that

Mr. Straw “realize[d] or should [have] realize[d] that [the employees’]

competence and skill [was] subnormal” (thus, at the summary judgment

stage, it is immaterial that “NAPA [Auto Parts] is an auto parts store not a

repair shop”); Sections 323 and 324A impose a duty of reasonable care

upon “[o]ne who undertakes, gratuitously or for consideration, to render

services to another” (thus, at the summary judgment stage, it is irrelevant

that “the employee was asked to look at the hood latch and did so free of

charge”); and, six weeks after the NAPA Auto Parts’ employee declared the

Straws’ hood latch “safe,” “[a] mechanical problem with [the] hood latch [on


                                      - 49 -
J-A07012-17
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the Straws’ automobile] resulted [in] its hood opening while [the vehicle]

was traveling” on Route 28 and, at the time of failure, the hood latch had

been damaged “for a substantial amount of time” (therefore, summary

judgment is not proper merely because “[six] weeks elapsed between the

NAPA [Auto Parts] visit and the accident and . . . Plaintiffs drove their car to

Ohio and elsewhere putting hundreds of miles on the car”).

 II.B.1.c.ii. NAPA Auto Parts’ Arguments to this Court are Meritless

      Within its brief, NAPA Auto Parts claims that it had no duty to Plaintiffs

and, in support, repeats many of the same arguments that the trial court

made. NAPA Auto Parts’ Brief at 15-18. For the reasons set forth above, we

reject those arguments.

      NAPA Auto Parts also claims that its employee “could not possibly have

foreseen that his actions were necessary for the protection of Plaintiff[s]”

and that NAPA Auto Parts, thus, does not have any duty to Plaintiffs under

Sections 323 and 324A of the Second Restatement. Id. at 17. This claim

fails because, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to Appellants,

the employee undertook to analyze the Straws’ vehicle and undertook to

give Mr. Straw advice that the hood latch on the vehicle was “safe.”

Deposition of Thomas Straw, 5/13/15, at 36.         If the employee failed to

exercise reasonable care in this undertaking and improperly assured Mr.

Straw that the hood latch was safe, a direct and easily foreseeable result of

this improper advice would be that the hood would fly open while the vehicle

was in operation, thus endangering Mr. Straw and his passengers.

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Therefore, in this case, there exists a genuine issue of material fact that the

employee “should [have] recognized [that his services were] necessary for

the protection of” Mr. Straw and Mr. Straw’s passengers.           Restatement

(Second) of Torts §§ 323 and 324A. NAPA Auto Parts’ claim to the contrary

fails.

          II.B.1.d. Conclusion as to Duties and Breaches of Duties

         We have thus concluded that there are genuine issues of material fact

that Additional Defendants owed Plaintiffs duties under Sections 323 and

324A of the Second Restatement and that Additional Defendants breached

those duties. We will next address our conclusion that the trial court erred

in holding that “the conduct of [Appellants] was not reasonably foreseeable .

. . [and, therefore,] proximate cause could not be established against the

Additional Defendants.” Trial Court Opinion, 9/8/16, at 7-9.

                                II.B.2. Causation

     II.B.2.a. Additional Defendants’ Negligence and Factual Cause
                                Analysis

         To establish a prima facie case of negligence, a plaintiff must produce

sufficient facts to show that the defendant’s negligence was both the

cause-in-fact and the legal, or proximate, cause of her injuries.            In

Pennsylvania, a negligent act is a cause-in-fact of the plaintiff’s injuries “if

the harmful result would not have come about but for the negligent

conduct.”     First v. Zem Zem Temple, 686 A.2d 18, 21 n.2 (Pa. Super.

1996) (internal quotations and citations omitted).


                                      - 51 -
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       In this case, Appellants put forth sufficient evidence to create a jury

question that, but for Additional Defendants’ alleged negligence, Plaintiffs

would not have suffered harm.              Evidence exists that, if the Additional

Defendants had not been negligent, Plaintiffs would not have driven the car,

the hood on Plaintiffs’ car would never have opened, Plaintiffs would never

have stopped their vehicle on the highway, and Mr. Fair would never have

crashed into Plaintiffs’ vehicle. Hence, in this case, there is a genuine issue

of material fact that Additional Defendants’ negligence was a factual cause of

Plaintiffs’ harm.16

          II.B.2.b. Proximate Causation and Intervening Causes

       Regarding proximate cause, conduct is a proximate cause of the

plaintiff’s harm where the conduct “was a substantial factor in bringing about

the harm inflicted upon a plaintiff.” Jones v. Montefiore Hosp., 431 A.2d

920, 923 (Pa. 1981). As the Pennsylvania Supreme Court explained:

         At its root, the concept of legal cause . . . is an articulation
         of policy related to social and economic considerations.
         Dean Prosser has described proximate or legal causation as
         follows:

              Once it is established that the defendant's conduct has
              in fact been one of the causes of the plaintiff's injury,
              there remains the question whether the defendant
              should be legally responsible for what he has caused.
              Unlike the fact of causation, with which it is often
____________________________________________


16Further, on appeal, the Additional Defendants do not claim that factual
causation is lacking.




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          hopelessly confused, this is essentially a problem of law.
          It is sometimes said to be a question of whether the
          conduct has been so significant and important a cause
          that the defendant should be legally responsible. But
          both significance and importance turn upon conclusions
          in terms of legal policy, so that this becomes essentially
          a question of whether the policy of the law will extend
          the responsibility for the conduct to the consequences
          which have in fact occurred.

       Prosser, Law of Torts § 42 (4th ed.). . . . [The Pennsylvania
       Supreme] Court, in accord with Prosser, has stated: “the
       concept [of proximate cause], like that of negligence itself,
       was designed not only to permit recovery for a wrong but to
       place such limits upon liability as are deemed socially or
       economically desirable from time to time.”         Grainy v.
       Campbell, 425 A.2d 379, 382 (Pa. 1981). . . .

       As a general rule, however, in the absence of policy
       considerations which would limit liability, if an actor's
       negligence is the legal cause of damages sustained by
       another, the actor is liable for those damages. Under the
       analysis of “legal cause” set forth in the Restatement of
       Torts, Second and adopted by [the Pennsylvania Supreme]
       Court . . . , the question is whether the defendant's conduct
       was a “substantial factor” in producing the injury.
       Restatement (Second) of Torts § 431.

       As [the Pennsylvania Supreme] Court observed in Ford v.
       Jeffries, [379 A.2d 111 (Pa. 1977),] ordinarily the
       determination of whether the defendant's conduct was a
       substantial cause of the injuries complained of should not
       be taken from the jury if the jury may reasonably differ as
       to whether the conduct of the defendant has been a
       substantial factor in causing the harm.            See also
       Restatement (Second) of Torts § 434. If issues are raised
       on which a jury may not reasonably differ, it is proper for
       the trial court to decide them. If, on the other hand, a jury
       may reasonably differ on whether the defendant's conduct
       was a substantial factor in causing the injury, generally, the
       case must go to the jury on those issues.




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Vattimo v. Lower Bucks Hosp., Inc., 465 A.2d 1231, 1233-1234 (Pa.

1983) (plurality) (emphasis omitted) (some internal citations omitted).

     Section 433 of the Second Restatement of Torts sets forth three

“considerations [that are] important in determining whether negligent

conduct is [a] substantial factor in producing harm.” Restatement (Second)

of Torts § 433. The section declares:

        The following considerations are in themselves or in
        combination with one another important in determining
        whether the actor's conduct is a substantial factor in
        bringing about harm to another:

           (a) the number of other factors which contribute in
           producing the harm and the extent of the effect which
           they have in producing it;

           (b) whether the actor's conduct has created a force or
           series of forces which are in continuous and active
           operation up to the time of the harm, or has created a
           situation harmless unless acted upon by other forces for
           which the actor is not responsible;

           (c) lapse of time.

Restatement (Second) of Torts § 433; see also Betz v. Pneumo Abex,

LLC, 44 A.3d 27, 56 n.36 (Pa. 2012) (“th[e Pennsylvania Supreme] Court

has cited [Restatement (Second) of Torts §] 433 as consistent with

Pennsylvania law”).

     “Two or more causes may contribute to and thus be the legal or

proximate cause of an injury.”   Feeny v. Disston Manor Personal Care

Home, Inc., 849 A.2d 590, 595 (Pa. Super. 2004). Further, and relatedly,

where an act or force “actively operates in producing harm to [the plaintiff]


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after [the defendant’s] negligent act [] has been committed,” that

intervening force does not necessarily relieve the defendant of liability.

Restatement (Second) of Torts § 441.         Instead, for an act to break the

causal chain and relieve the defendant of liability, the act must be “so

extraordinary as not to have been reasonably foreseeable.” Von der Heide

v. Commonwealth, Dep’t of Transp., 718 A.2d 286, (Pa. 1998); Trude v.

Martin, 660 A.2d 626, 632 (Pa. Super. 1995).         In such a case, the act

constitutes a “superseding cause” and, “by its intervention, [the act]

prevents the [defendant] from being liable for harm to another which his

antecedent negligence is a substantial factor in bringing about.”    Von der

Heide, 718 A.2d at 288 (quoting Restatement (Second) of Torts § 440). “A

determination of whether an act is so extraordinary as to constitute a

superseding cause is normally one to be made by the jury.”          Powell v.

Drumheller, 653 A.2d 619, 624 (Pa. 1995).

      The Restatement lists a number of considerations that “are of

importance in determining whether an intervening force is a superseding

cause of harm to another.”     Restatement (Second) of Torts § 442.      The

listed considerations are:

        (a) the fact that its intervention brings about harm different
        in kind from that which would otherwise have resulted from
        the actor's negligence;

        (b) the fact that its operation or the consequences thereof
        appear after the event to be extraordinary rather than
        normal in view of the circumstances existing at the time of
        its operation;


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        (c) the fact that the intervening force is operating
        independently of any situation created by the actor's
        negligence, or, on the other hand, is or is not a normal
        result of such a situation;

        (d) the fact that the operation of the intervening force is
        due to a third person's act or to his failure to act;

        (e) the fact that the intervening force is due to an act of a
        third person which is wrongful toward the other and as such
        subjects the third person to liability to him;

        (f) the degree of culpability of a wrongful act of a third
        person which sets the intervening force in motion.

Id.

      The Restatement also declares:

        Where the negligent conduct of the actor creates or
        increases the risk of a particular harm and is a substantial
        factor in causing that harm, the fact that the harm is
        brought about through the intervention of another force
        does not relieve the actor of liability, except where the harm
        is intentionally caused by a third person and is not within
        the scope of the risk created by the actor's conduct.

Restatement (Second) of Torts § 442B; see also Ford, 379 A.2d at 115

(quoting comment b to Section 442B). And:

        If the likelihood that a third person may act in a particular
        manner is the hazard or one of the hazards which makes
        the actor negligent, such an act whether innocent,
        negligent, intentionally tortious, or criminal does not
        prevent the actor from being liable for harm caused
        thereby.

Restatement (Second) of Torts § 449.




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       In the case at bar, the trial court essentially held that Mr. Fair’s

reckless17 actions on May 1, 2012 constituted a superseding cause of

Plaintiffs’ harm as a matter of law – and that, as a result of Mr. Fair’s

criminal actions, the Additional Defendants were relieved of liability for their

alleged negligence. Respectfully, we conclude that this holding is incorrect.

     II.B.2.b.i. Appellants’ Conduct and Intervening Cause Analysis

       As summarized above, Appellants put forth evidence that the

Additional Defendants negligently: performed work on the hood latch of the

Straws’ vehicle and/or analyzed the vehicle and assured the Straws that the

hood latch was safe.        Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to

____________________________________________


17As was previously noted, Mr. Fair pleaded guilty to four counts of REAP.
18 Pa.C.S.A. § 2705 defines REAP in the following manner:

         A person commits a misdemeanor of the second degree if
         he recklessly engages in conduct which places or may place
         another person in danger of death or serious bodily injury.

18 Pa.C.S.A. § 2705.

REAP is a non-summary criminal offense and, as is evident in the crime’s
definition, a necessary element of REAP is the mens rea of “recklessness.”
Therefore, at least with respect to Mr. Fair and the vicarious liability of Golon
Masonry, Mr. Fair’s guilty plea to REAP constitutes “conclusive evidence,” in
this civil proceeding, that Mr. Fair acted recklessly on May 1, 2012. See
Folino v. Young, 568 A.2d 171, 172-173 (Pa. 1990) (“operative facts
necessary for non-summary criminal convictions [may] be admitted as
conclusive facts in civil suits arising from the same event”); Hurtt v.
Stirone, 206 A.2d 624, 625-627 (Pa. 1965) (holding that the civil
defendant’s prior conviction for extortion constituted “conclusive evidence of
the fact of the alleged extortion” in the later, civil trial).




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Appellants, at the time each Additional Defendant performed its services for

the Straws, the Additional Defendant knew or should have known that a

foreseeable consequence of any negligence with respect to the hood latch

would be that:   the Straws would drive their vehicle; the air speed at the

front of the Straws’ vehicle would increase as the Straws increased the

speed of their vehicle; the increasing air speed at the front of the vehicle

would increase the drag upon a partially raised, unsecured hood; and, as a

result of the increased drag upon the hood, the unsecured hood on the

vehicle would fly open while the Straws were driving. Further, the Additional

Defendants should have known that a foreseeable risk of their negligence

would be that the suddenly-raised hood would obscure Mr. Straw’s vision of

the road, leading to the foreseeable risk that Mr. Straw would hit an object

in front of him, lose control of his vehicle, or unexpectedly stop his vehicle

on the roadway and be hit, from behind, by another vehicle – all of which

could foreseeably cause grave injuries or death to Mr. Straw and his

passengers. To be sure, these are the precise risks that made the Additional

Defendants’ actions negligent in the first place.

      Moreover, Appellants put forth evidence that, as a result of Additional

Defendants’ negligence, Mr. Straw was driving the vehicle and the hood on

the Straws’ vehicle popped open while Mr. Straw was driving on a highway.

This led to Mr. Straw unexpectedly stopping his vehicle on the highway,

which led to Mr. Fair striking the Straws’ stationary vehicle from behind,

which led to the death of Elijah Straw and injuries to Thomas, Jennifer, and

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Rowan Straw.     In other words, Appellants have put forth evidence that

Additional Defendants’ conduct created the foreseeable risk of serious injury

or death to Mr. Straw and his passengers, because Mr. Straw would be

forced to unexpectedly stop his vehicle on the highway and be hit from

behind by another vehicle – and Plaintiffs were, in fact, harmed when Mr.

Straw was forced to unexpectedly stop his vehicle on the highway and was

hit from behind by Mr. Fair’s vehicle. As such, there is sufficient evidence to

demonstrate that Plaintiffs’ harm was within the scope of the original risk

that Additional Defendants’ negligence created.

      Undoubtedly, Mr. Fair’s conduct was criminal.         However, Plaintiffs

never claimed that Mr. Fair intentionally struck their vehicle and Mr. Fair’s

pleas of guilt only establish that he acted recklessly.      Moreover, as our

Supreme Court has held, “criminal conduct does not act as a per se

superseding force.” Powell, 653 A.2d at 624. Instead, the Supreme Court

held, the focus in every case is not upon the criminal nature of the act, but

upon “whether the act was so extraordinary as not to be reasonably

foreseeable” – and that question “is normally one to be made by the jury.”

Id. at 624-625 (holding: “[i]t is for the jury . . . to determine whether [one

defendant’s] actions in attempting to pass a car while under the influence of

alcohol thus crossing into [the plaintiff’s] lane were so extraordinary as to be

unforeseeable to [defendant] PENNDOT when designing the highway”);

Crowell v. City of Phila., 613 A.2d 1178, 1185 n.12 (Pa. 1992) (holding

that a defendant’s drunk driving conviction did not constitute a superseding

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cause and relieve the City of Philadelphia of liability for placing a dangerous

street sign because, among other reasons, the defendant’s criminal act of

drunk driving was foreseeable); Jones v. Chieffo, 700 A.2d 417 (Pa. 1997)

(plurality) (plaintiffs were struck by a car that was being pursued by the

Philadelphia police and the plaintiffs sued the City of Philadelphia; the

Supreme Court held that a jury must decide whether the criminal act of the

driver constituted a superseding cause, which would relieve the city of

liability).

       Finally, we note that ordinary human experience tells us that drivers

may commonly violate the posted speed limits, that they may occasionally

be inattentive to the road, that they may occasionally drive dangerously, and

that it may not be “extraordinary” for them to be intoxicated.       See also

Powell, 653 A.2d at 624-625 (holding: “[i]t is for the jury . . . to determine

whether [one defendant’s] actions in attempting to pass a car while under

the influence of alcohol thus crossing into [the plaintiff’s] lane were so

extraordinary as to be unforeseeable to [defendant] PENNDOT when

designing the highway”). Stated another way, ordinary human experience

tells us that drivers sometimes act criminally on the roads.     Therefore, in

accordance with our Supreme Court’s precedent, we conclude that a jury

must determine whether Mr. Fair’s criminal acts and particular combination

of speeding, inattentive driving, and (alleged) intoxication were “so

extraordinary as not to be reasonably foreseeable” to the Additional

Defendants and, relatedly, whether the case falls within Sections 442B or

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449 of the Second Restatement of Torts.                Powell, 653 A.2d at 624;

Restatement (Second) of Torts §§ 442B and 449; c.f. Ford, 379 A.2d at 115

(holding: “[i]f one engages in negligent conduct toward another, such as

unreasonably increasing the risk that that person will suffer a particular kind

of harm, it cannot be said, as a matter of law, that the actor is not liable

simply because the foreseeable plaintiff suffered the foreseeable harm in a

manner which was not foreseeable.              Appellee's conduct in this case could

have increased the risk that appellant's house would be damaged by fire.

Such harm in fact occurred. Given these circumstances, it was for the jury

to determine whether the appellee's conduct, if it was negligent, was

superseded by the intervening force”).             The trial court erred in holding

otherwise.18
____________________________________________


18  Within their briefs to this Court, Tower Auto and NAPA Auto Parts rely
upon our Supreme Court’s opinion in Ashworth v. Hannum, 32 A.2d 407
(Pa. 1943), to support their claims that Appellants’ conduct was a
superseding cause of Plaintiffs’ harm. However, Ashworth was based upon
a case and a legal doctrine that the Pennsylvania Supreme Court later
explicitly overruled.     To be sure, Ashworth was based upon the
Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s earlier opinion in Kline v. Moyer, 191 A. 43
(Pa. 1937) and upon the doctrine that, “[i]f the defendant has created only a
passive, static condition which made the damage possible, the defendant is
said not to be liable.” W. PAGE KEETON, ET AL., PROSSER AND KEETON ON THE LAW
OF TORTS § 42 (5th ed. 1984); Ashworth, 32 A.2d at 409 (“As we said in
Kline v. Moyer[]: ‘Where a second actor has become aware of the
existence of a potential danger created by the negligence of an original
tort-feasor, and thereafter, by an independent act or negligence, brings
about an accident, the first tort-feasor is relieved of liability, because the
condition created by him was merely a circumstance of the accident and not
its proximate cause.’ Thus, [the first actor’s] negligence in parking the truck
as he did was superseded by appellant's negligent and unforeseeable
(Footnote Continued Next Page)


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 II.B.2.b.ii. Additional Defendants’ Negligence and Proximate Cause
                                Analysis

      Further, and for many of the same reasons set forth above, we

conclude that a jury must determine whether Additional Defendants’

negligence was a substantial factor in causing Plaintiffs’ harm. Rabutino v.

Freedom St. Realty Co., 809 A.2d 933, 941 (Pa. Super. 2002) (“[w]hether

a defendant’s conduct has been a ‘substantial factor’ in causing plaintiff’s

harm is ordinarily a question of fact for the jury”).

      First, as explained above, there is sufficient evidence to demonstrate

that Plaintiffs’ harm was within the scope of the original risk that Additional

Defendants’ negligence created and that Plaintiffs’ harm was the natural and

foreseeable result of Additional Defendants’ separate negligence.

      Second, with respect to Additional Defendants, the evidence at the

summary judgment stage demonstrates that they each increased the risk of

physical harm to Mr. Straw and his passengers. See Restatement (Second)

of Torts §§ 323(a) and 324A(a); see also supra at **32-50.

      As our Supreme Court has held:
(Footnote Continued) _______________________

conduct and made a remote cause of the accident”). Our Supreme Court
later adopted Section 447 of the Second Restatement of Torts (and Section
447’s focus upon “foreseeability”) to deal with the issue of superseding
cause and, therefore, held: “to the extent that Kline and any cases
following Kline are in conflict with § 447 they are expressly overruled.”
Grainy v. Campbell, 425 A.2d 379, 382 (Pa. 1981). Ashworth followed
Kline and Ashworth is in direct conflict with Section 447 of the Second
Restatement. Therefore, Ashworth is not good law and neither Tower Auto
nor NAPA Auto Parts should have relied upon the case.



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         [O]nce a plaintiff has demonstrated that defendant's acts or
         omissions, in a situation to which Section 323(a) applies,
         have increased the risk of harm to another, such evidence
         furnishes a basis for the fact-finder to go further and find
         that such increased risk was in turn a substantial factor in
         bringing about the resultant harm; the necessary proximate
         case will have been made out if the jury sees fit to find
         cause in fact.

Jones v. Montefiore Hosp., 431 A.2d 920, 924 (Pa. 1981) (internal

quotations and citations omitted).

      Thus, the evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to Appellants,

demonstrates that Additional Defendants increased the risk of physical harm

to Mr. Straw and his passengers; as such, Appellants established a jury

question that Additional Defendants’ negligence was a substantial factor in

causing Plaintiffs’ injuries. Jones, 431 A.2d at 924.

      Finally, even though Tower Auto, Jiffy Lube, and NAPA Auto Parts

performed their services weeks or months prior to the accident, the mere

lapse of time does not take the proximate cause issue away from the jury.

Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to Appellants, a jury could

properly conclude that the hood latch had been damaged “for a substantial

amount of time” prior to the accident and that it merely took weeks or

months for the air speed and drag to finally, and foreseeably, open the

dangerously unsecured hood. See, e.g., W. PAGE KEETON,        ET AL.,   PROSSER   AND

KEETON   ON THE   LAW   OF   TORTS § 43 (5th ed. 1984) (“[r]emoteness in time or

space may give rise to the likelihood that other intervening causes have

taken over the responsibility. But when causation is found, and other factors


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are eliminated, it is not easy to discover any merit whatever in the

contention that such physical remoteness should of itself bar recovery. The

defendant who sets a bomb which explodes ten years later, or mails a box of

poisoned chocolates from California to Delaware, has caused the result, and

should obviously bear the consequences”).

      Hence, in the case at bar it is for a jury to determine whether

Additional Defendants’ negligence was a substantial factor in causing

Plaintiffs’ harm.

      We have thus determined that the trial court erred in granting

Additional Defendants’ motions for summary judgment. We next explain why

the trial court erred in dismissing Appellants’ cross-claim against Thomas

Straw.

   II.C. The Trial Court Erred in Dismissing Appellants’ Cross-Claim
                         Against Thomas Straw

      As explained above, Appellants filed a cross-claim against Mr. Straw

and alleged that Mr. Straw was directly liable to Jennifer Straw, Rowan

Straw, and the Estate of Elijah Straw, or liable over to Appellants for

contribution or indemnity. According to Appellants, Mr. Straw was negligent

for, among other things, driving his vehicle even though he knew that “the

hood and/or latching mechanism on the vehicle was not in good operating

condition” and for “allow[ing the vehicle] to remain in the lane of travel

when it was unsafe and hazardous to do so.”       Appellants’ Cross-Claim,

5/22/13, at ¶ 2.    The trial court granted Mr. Straw’s motion for summary


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judgment and dismissed the cross-claim against him because, it held:         1)

Mr. Straw’s conduct was not a proximate cause of the harm, and 2) Mr.

Straw’s alleged “contributory negligence cannot be weighed or applied to

[Mr. Fair’s] reckless conduct.” Trial Court Opinion, 9/8/16, at 4-5.

      Appellants claim that the trial court erred in dismissing their

cross-claim against Mr. Straw. We agree.

         II.C.1. Mr. Straw’s Conduct and Negligence Analysis

      At the outset, the trial court erred in concluding that summary

judgment was proper because “Mr. Straw’s conduct could not be found to be

the proximate cause of [the] harm.” Trial Court Opinion, 9/8/16, at 5 n.3.

      Given our earlier discussion in this opinion, we need not speak long on

the current issue. However, we note that, when the evidence is viewed in

the light most favorable to Appellants, there is a genuine issue of material

fact that Mr. Straw knew there was a problem with his hood latch and,

nevertheless, drove his wife and children on the day in question. See, e.g.,

Pennsylvania State Police General Investigation Report, 1/22/13, at 21 (“in a

post-crash interview with investigators, [Thomas Straw] related that he was

aware of the faulty hood latch and attempted to have the latch repaired one

or two weeks prior”); Weber Report, 8/11/15, at 1 (“Mr. and Mrs. Straw

knowingly operated the Pontiac with the hood not completely latched. The

Pontiac should not have been driven at higher speeds until the hood was

properly repaired and latched.”) (internal paragraphing omitted). Therefore,




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there is evidence that Mr. Straw violated his duty to his passengers by

acting unreasonably in light of the recognizable risk.

      Further, as explained above, it is for a jury to determine whether Mr.

Straw’s alleged breach of his duty to his occupants was the proximate cause

of the accident and whether Mr. Fair’s conduct constituted a superseding

cause of the harm. The trial court’s contrary holding was in error.

II.C.2. Apportionment of Liability and Contribution Between Reckless
                   and Negligent Co-Defendants

      The trial court also granted Mr. Straw’s summary judgment motion

because, it held, Mr. Straw’s alleged “contributory negligence cannot be

weighed or applied to [Mr. Fair’s] reckless conduct.”    Trial Court Opinion,

9/8/16, at 4-5. With respect, we conclude that this holding was in error.

      Initially, the trial court mistakenly confused Appellants’ cross-claim

against Mr. Straw with Appellants’ affirmative defense that Mr. Straw was

comparatively negligent for his own injuries. True, under the plain terms of

the Comparative Negligence Act, a defendant’s reckless conduct cannot be

compared to the plaintiff’s negligence. See Johnson v. City of Phila., 808

A.2d 978, 983 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2002) (“[u]nder the Comparative Negligence

Act, the only conduct that is statutorily authorized to be compared is

negligent conduct”) (emphasis in original). To be sure, Section 7102(a) of

the Comparative Negligence Act declares:

        (a) General rule.--In all actions brought to recover
        damages for negligence resulting in death or injury to
        person or property, the fact that the plaintiff may have been


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          guilty of contributory negligence shall not bar a recovery
          by the plaintiff or his legal representative where such
          negligence was not greater than the causal negligence
          of the defendant or defendants against whom recovery is
          sought, but any damages sustained by the plaintiff shall be
          diminished in proportion to the amount of negligence
          attributed to the plaintiff.

42 Pa.C.S.A. § 7102(a) (emphasis added); see also McMeekin v. Harry M.

Stevens, Inc., 530 A.2d 462, 464 (Pa. Super. 1987) (noting that Section

7102(a)    only   applies   to   “actions   brought    to   recover   damages   for

negligence”).

      However, with respect to Appellants’ cross-claim against Mr. Straw,

Appellants did not claim that Mr. Straw’s negligence should bar or diminish

Mr. Straw’s own recovery.            Rather, they claimed that Mr. Straw’s

negligence rendered him directly liable to Jennifer Straw, Rowan Straw, and

the Estate of Elijah Straw, or liable over to Appellants for contribution or

indemnity.    Under this theory, Mr. Straw was simply another defendant in

the action and, thus, the plain terms of Section 7102(a) have no application

to Appellants’ cross-claim against Mr. Straw.         See Pa.R.C.P. 1031.1 (“Any

party may set forth in the answer or reply under the heading “Cross-claim” a

cause of action against any other party to the action that the other party

may be (1) solely liable on the underlying cause of action or (2) liable to or

with the cross-claimant on any cause of action arising out of the transaction

or occurrence or series of transactions or occurrences upon which the

underlying cause of action is based”); Pa.R.C.P. 1031.1 cmt. (“[t]he claims

which may be asserted in a cross-claim are identical to those which serve as


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bases for joining an additional defendant”); BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY 404 (8th

ed. 2004) (defining a “cross-claim” as “[a] claim asserted between

codefendants or coplaintiffs in a case”).

      Moreover, nothing in Section 7102(a.1) or in the Uniform Contribution

Among Tortfeasors Act (UCATA) would prohibit apportionment of liability or

contribution between reckless and negligent co-defendants.                Section

7102(a.1) declares:

        (a.1)    Recovery           against      joint    defendant;
        contribution.—

        (1) Where recovery is allowed against more than one
        person, including actions for strict liability, and where
        liability is attributed to more than one defendant, each
        defendant shall be liable for that proportion of the total
        dollar amount awarded as damages in the ratio of the
        amount of that defendant's liability to the amount of liability
        attributed to all defendants and other persons to whom
        liability is apportioned under subsection (a.2).

        (2) Except as set forth in paragraph (3), a defendant's
        liability shall be several and not joint, and the court shall
        enter a separate and several judgment in favor of the
        plaintiff and against each defendant for the apportioned
        amount of that defendant's liability.

        (3) A defendant's liability in any of the following actions
        shall be joint and several, and the court shall enter a joint
        and several judgment in favor of the plaintiff and against
        the defendant for the total dollar amount awarded as
        damages:

                                         ...

            (ii) An intentional tort.




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              (iii) Where the defendant has been held liable for not
              less than 60% of the total liability apportioned to all
              parties.

                                           ...

         (4) Where a defendant has been held jointly and severally
         liable under this subsection and discharges by payment
         more than that defendant's proportionate share of the total
         liability, that defendant is entitled to recover contribution
         from defendants who have paid less than their
         proportionate share. . . .

42 Pa.C.S.A. § 7102(a.1).19

       Thus, unlike Section 7102(a), Section 7102(a.1) does not only apply to

claims sounding in negligence. To the contrary, Section 7102(a.1) expressly

permits apportionment and contribution between co-defendants in strict

liability actions.   42 Pa.C.S.A. § 7102(a.1)(1).   Further, Section 7102(a.1)

specifically declares that apportionment (and, potentially, contribution)

exists between co-defendants “[w]here recovery is allowed against more

than one person” and “where liability is attributed to more than one

defendant.”      These broad terms do not limit themselves to “negligent”

conduct – rather, the terms necessarily include “liability” for reckless and

negligent conduct.20
____________________________________________


19 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 7102(a.1) became effective on June 28, 2011. Since the
accident in this case occurred on May 1, 2012, Section 7102(a.1) applies to
this case.

20Again, Plaintiffs have never claimed that Mr. Fair acted intentionally in
causing the accident. Therefore, the case at bar does not concern any
potential apportionment or contribution between an intentional and a
negligent tortfeasor.



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     Likewise, the UCATA (42 Pa.C.S.A. § 8321 et seq.) “is not geared only

toward negligence situations.”   McMeekin, 530 A.2d at 465 (Pa. Super.

1987). Rather, as this Court explained:

        [Under the UCATA, “joint tortfeasors”] are defined as ‘two
        or more persons jointly or severally liable in tort for the
        same injury to persons or property.’ . . . The statutory
        language does not limit the right of contribution to
        tortfeasors who have been guilty of negligence.
        Contribution is available whenever two [or] more persons
        are jointly or severally liable in tort, irrespective of the
        theory by which tort liability is imposed.

                                     ...

        The Uniform Contribution Among Tort-feasors Act in
        Pennsylvania provides that a joint tortfeasor who has
        discharged more than his pro rata share of a common
        liability may seek contribution from any other tortfeasor
        who contributed to the loss. The doctrine of contribution is
        based on equity. Therefore, the Act must be examined with
        equity in mind.

        The focus of the Uniform Act is on the relationship existing
        between tortfeasors rather than the manner in which
        several tortfeasors have been held liable to an injured
        claimant. . . .       Thus, a tortfeasor's right to receive
        contribution from a joint tortfeasor derives not from his
        liability to the claimant but rather from the equitable
        principle that once the joint liability of several tortfeasors
        has been determined, it would be unfair to impose the
        financial burden of the plaintiff's loss on one tortfeasor to
        the exclusion of the other. It matters not on which theory a
        tortfeasor has been held responsible for the tort committed
        against the plaintiff. So long as the party seeking
        contribution has paid in excess of his or her share of
        liability, it would be inequitable under the Act to deny that
        party's right to contribution from a second tortfeasor who
        also contributed to the plaintiff's injury.




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McMeekin, 530 A.2d at 465 (quoting Svetz v. Land Tool Co., 513 A.2d

403 (Pa. Super. 1986)) (some internal quotations, citations, and corrections

omitted); see also Commonwealth, Dep’t of Transp. v. Popovich, 542

A.2d 1056, (Pa. Cmwlth. 1988), affirmed, 564 A.2d 159 (Pa. 1989) (holding

that a “reckless” co-defendant may seek contribution from a “negligent”

co-defendant).

        We conclude that the plain language of 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 7102(a.1) and

the UCATA permits apportionment and contribution between reckless and

negligent co-defendants.         Therefore, since Appellants’ cross-claim against

Mr. Straw rendered Mr. Straw a cross-claim defendant in the action – and,

since    Mr.   Fair’s   recklessness    does    not    preclude    apportionment     (or,

potentially,   contribution)     between       him    and   his   (allegedly)   negligent

co-defendants,21 including Mr. Straw – the trial court erred in dismissing

Appellants’ cross-claim against Mr. Straw.22
____________________________________________


21 Within its brief to this Court, Jiffy Lube contends that it was entitled to
summary judgment because it cannot be considered a joint tortfeasor with
Appellants. This argument fails because there is a genuine issue of material
fact that Plaintiffs suffered indivisible injuries as a result of Jiffy Lube’s
negligence and Mr. Fair’s conduct. Carrozza v. Greenbaum, 916 A.2d 553,
556 (Pa. 2007) (“[a]lthough joint and several liability requires an indivisible
injury for which two or more parties are partially responsible, it is the
indivisibility of the injury, rather than of culpability, that triggers joint
liability”). Therefore, at the summary judgment stage, it is too early to say
whether Jiffy Lube’s liability is joint and several or several only.         42
Pa.C.S.A. § 7102(a.1) (“A defendant's liability in any of the following actions
shall be joint and several . . . (iii) Where the defendant has been held liable
for not less than 60% of the total liability apportioned to all parties”).
Further, even if it becomes true that Jiffy Lube and Appellants are not jointly
(Footnote Continued Next Page)


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      Judgment vacated. Case remanded. Jurisdiction relinquished.

      Judge Strassburger files a Concurring and Dissenting Opinion.

      Judge Stabile files a Dissenting Opinion.

Judgment Entered.




Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary



Date: 5/11/2018




(Footnote Continued) _______________________

liable, this fact alone would not entitle Jiffy Lube to relief. See 42 Pa.C.S.A.
§ 7102(a.1) (regarding apportionment of liability).

22 Given our disposition, Appellants’ claims that the “the trial court err[ed] in
refusing to award a new trial based on numerous improper and prejudicial
rulings at trial” are moot. See Appellant Kirk Fair’s Brief at 5; Appellant
Golon Masonry’s Brief at 5-6 (some internal capitalization omitted);
Banohashim v. R.S. Enter’s., LLC, 77 A.3d 14, 27 n.6 (Pa. Super. 2013)
(“[t]he grant of a new trial wipes the slate clean of the former trial”),
quoting Commonwealth v. Oakes, 392 A.2d 1324, 1326 (Pa. 1978).
Further, reaching the other issues on appeal would be inappropriate in this
case, as we have vacated the grant of summary judgment to the Additional
Defendants and Mr. Straw; the Additional Defendants and Mr. Straw are
entitled to weigh in on the issues before the trial court, if the issues arise
again.




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