Pope v. Pinkerton-Hays Lumber Co., PINKERTON-HAYS
Decision Date | 29 April 1960 |
Docket Number | PINKERTON-HAYS,No. B-271,B-271 |
Citation | 120 So.2d 227 |
Parties | Doyle POPE, Appellant, v.LUMBER CO., Inc., Appellee. |
Court | Florida District Court of Appeals |
Horne & Rhodes, Tallahassee, Marks, Gray, Yates, Conroy & Gibbs, Jacksonville, and Ausley, Ausley & McMullen, Tallahassee, for appellant.
Keen, O'Kelley & Spitz, Tallahassee, for appellee.
Defendant has appealed from an adverse verdict and judgment rendered in a tort action brought for the recovery of property damages suffered by plaintiff as a result of defendant's negligence. The question on which our decision must turn involves the law of proximate cause.
Plaintiff owned and operated a sawmill located one-half mile outside the corporate limits of the City of Perry. Defendant is a contractor who was engaged in a road construction job inside Perry. One of defendant's employees, while in the performance of his duties, negligently operated a bulldozer in such manner as to sever a telephone cable which connected the telephone located in plaintiff's sawmill with the switchboard of the telephone company. In the early hours of the morning following the severance of the telephone cable on the preceding afternoon, a fire occurred on the premises where plaintiff's sawmill was located. Because the night watchman at the sawmill was unable to communicate by telephone with the Perry Fire Department, the fire spread to the sawmill causing considerable damage before it could be extinguished. The evidence shows that on several prior occasions fires had occurred in a similar fashion at plaintiff's sawmill, but in each instance the local fire department was summoned by telephone and arrived at the mill in time to extinguish the blaze before any material damage was suffered.
The principal thrust of appellant's position is that the evidence fails to establish that its negligent act in severing the telephone cable was the proximate cause of the fire damage suffered by plaintiff.
Our Supreme Court has consistently recognized that liability for negligence depends upon a showing that the injury suffered by a plaintiff was caused by the alleged wrongful act or omission of the defendant. 1 In short, the courts have reasoned that the connection must be such that the law regards the negligent act as the proximate cause of the injury. 2 The proximate cause of an injury is that cause which, in natural and continuous sequence, unbroken by any efficient intervening cause, produces the injury, and without which the result would not have occurred. 3 The Florida courts, as well as a great majority of other jurisdictions, have incorporated into their definitions of proximate cause certain modifying factors or tests which have been formulated to help determine whether proximate cause or legal cause is present in a particular case. 4 The principal tests are the following: (a) 'Foreseeability', by which, even though the defendant has been negligent there can be no recovery for an injury that was not a reasonably foreseeable consequence of his negligence, although according to the decisions from some jurisdictions the particular injury or the manner in which the hazard operated need not have been clearly foreseeable 5; (b) 'Natural and probable consequences', by which the actor is liable for all of the natural and probable consequences of his negligence 6; (c) 'Substantial factor', by which the actor is liable if his negligence was a substantial factor in producing the injury complained of 7; (d) The view that if it is established that the defendant was negligent, he is liable for any injury actually and naturally resulting from his act, whether such injury was foreseeable or probable or not. 8 This latter view appears to ignore any test that would limit liability once causation is established, and is not recognized in Florida.
It is noted that the Florida Supreme Court has applied the foreseeability test to the independent intervening cause and has reasoned that the intervention of independent intervening causes does not break the causal connection if the intervention of such forces was itself probable or foreseeable. 11
As indicated by most writers, the subject of proximate cause, with all of its superimposed tests, is more difficult of application than of definition in general terms. Thus, in brief summary, we will review the rules of law controlling proximate cause in this jurisdiction, and then attempt to apply them to the case at bar. At the outset, Florida has recognized that liability for negligence must be predicated on a causal connection between the alleged negligence and the injury of which complaint is made. 12 Furthermore, this jurisdiction has reasoned that to constitute proximate cause there must be such a natural, direct, and continuous sequence between the negligent act and the injury that it can reasonably be said that but for the act the injury would not have occurred. 13 It is an accepted principle that natural and probable consequences are those that a person by prudent human foresight can anticipate as likely to result from an act, because they happen so frequently from the commission of such an act that in the filed of human experience they may be expected to happen again. 14 Justice Sebring states the rule thusly in the Cone case:
The defendant here is not charged with having negligently burned the mill. He is charged with having negligently severed the cable which connected the telephone at the mill with the telephone at the fire department. It was the severing of the cable that constitutes the negligent act with which the defendant is charged. Under the definition adopted by the Supreme Court in the Cone case, the defendant could be liable only if the proof showed that in the past the mill had frequently caught on fire, and that a loss had been suffered because of interrupted telephone service between the mill and the fire department. Had this been the case, the defendant could have reasonably foreseen that by his negligent act of severing the cable and thus interrupting telephone service, the loss was likely to happen again because losses under similar circumstances had frequently happened in the past. There are no allegations in the complaint, nor proof in the evidence, that the plaintiff's mill ever suffered a loss by fire in the past by reason of interrupted telephone service to the fire department. This being so, the facts in this case do not come within the rule of proximate cause as defined by the Supreme...
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