IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
MATTHEW SHAW, )
)
Plaintiff, )
)
v. )
C.A. No. N19C-07-199 CLS
)
STATE OF DELAWARE, )
)
Defendant. )
)
Date Submitted: January 8, 2021
Date Decided: April 6, 2021
Upon Defendant State of Delaware’s Motion for Summary Judgment
GRANTED.
Upon Plaintiff Matthew Shaw’s Motion for Summary Judgment
DENIED.
ORDER
Rachel D. Allen, Esquire, Joel H. Fredricks, Esquire, and Gary S. Nitsche, Esquire,
Weik, Nitsche & Dougherty, Wilmington, Delaware, Attorney for Plaintiff.
Sarah A. Fruehauf, Esquire, Deputy Attorney General, Department of Justice,
Newark, Delaware, Attorney for Defendant.
SCOTT, J.
INTRODUCTION
Before the Court is Plaintiff Matthew Shaw’s (“Mr. Shaw”) and Defendant
State of Delaware’s (the “State”) Cross-Motions for Summary Judgment. In the
present case, it is disputed whether the State-owned vehicle was an “active
accessory” to the incident.
After careful consideration of both parties’ Motions and Responses, as well
as the record, Mr. Shaw’s Motion is DENIED and the State’s Motion is GRANTED
for the reasons that follow.
BACKGROUND
On March 15, 2017, Mr. Shaw sustained injuries while attempting to enter a
vehicle owned by the State (the “Vehicle”). On this day, Mr. Shaw was employed
by the Delaware Department of Corrections. At a deposition, Mr. Shaw testified that
he reported to work in response to an escaped inmate. As a result of this issue, Mr.
Shaw was required to travel to various locations in the Vehicle, riding as a passenger
in a minivan driven by Lieutenant James Herman, to interview witnesses. One
particular location was the Wood Acres Apartments. Mr. Shaw stated that he did not
have any issues exiting the Vehicle and did not notice any ice at that time. However,
as they left Wood Acres Apartments, Mr. Shaw slipped on ice as he attempted to re-
enter the Vehicle into the front passenger side of the Vehicle.
1
Mr. Shaw stated that he was wearing a bulletproof vest and full duty belt with
full gear on it. As a result of this gear, Mr. Shaw states that he had to position himself
in a specific way to enter the Vehicle. According to Mr. Shaw, as he re-entered the
Vehicle, his left hand grabbed the top handle inside the Vehicle and his right hand
was on the door. He put his left leg into the Vehicle and scooted his rear-end onto
the seat. However, as he pushed himself onto the seat with his right leg, his right leg
slipped out from under him and caused him to injure his right knee. At this point,
Mr. Shaw stated that he looked down and could see ice on the ground that he slipped
on.
As a result of the injuries incurred from this incident, on July 25, 2019, Mr.
Shaw filed a Complaint and alleged entitlement to personal injury protection (“PIP”)
benefits for medical bills and lost wages. The State has denied payment of PIP
benefits. Various depositions have taken place and the discovery record closed on
September 30, 2020. The State and Mr. Shaw have both moved for summary
judgment pursuant to Superior Court Civil Rule 56.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
Under Superior Court Civil Procedure Rule 56, summary judgment is proper
when there is no genuine issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to
2
judgment as a matter of law.1 Summary judgment will not be granted if material facts
are in dispute or if “it seems desirable to inquire more thoroughly into the facts to
clarify the application of the law to the circumstances.”2 This Court considers all of
the facts in a light most favorable to the non-moving party.3
In a motion for summary judgment, the moving party bears the initial burden
of showing that there are no material issues of fact.4 If the moving party makes this
showing, then the burden shifts to the nonmoving party to show that there are
material issues of fact.5
PARTIES’ ASSERTIONS
Mr. Shaw, in his Motion, argues that he is entitled to payment of the PIP
benefits because the Vehicle is an “active accessory” to the incident.
The State contends that it has properly denied payment of PIP benefits for the
reason that the Vehicle, the basis for Mr. Shaw’s claim for insurance benefits, was
not an “active accessory” to the incident under Kelty v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins.
Co.6
1
Super. Ct. Civ. R. 56(c).
2
Infante v. Horizon Servs., Inc., 2019 WL 3992101, at *1 (Del. Super. Aug. 23,
2019).
3
Id.
4
Moore v. Sizemore, 405 A.2d 679, 680 (Del. 1979).
5
Id. at 681.
6
73 A.3d 926, 932 (Del. 2013).
3
Here, the dispositive issue is whether or not the Vehicle was an “active
accessory” to the incident.
DISCUSSION
Under Delaware law, whether an individual is “eligible for PIP benefits is a
question of statutory interpretation.”7 Section 2118 of Title 21 of the Delaware Code
requires motor vehicle operators to carry minimum PIP coverage of $15,000 for any
one person and $30,000 for all persons injured in any one accident. 8 PIP benefits
apply “to each person occupying such motor vehicle and to any other person injured
in any accident involving such motor vehicle, other than the occupant of another
motor vehicle.”9
In order to determine if a claimant is eligible for PIP benefits under Section
2118, this Court must examine two tests. First, under the Fisher test, the Court must
“determine whether the plaintiff is an occupant” of the Vehicle.10 Second, under the
Kelty test, the Court must then “determine whether the accident involved a motor
vehicle.”11
7
Buckley v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 2015 WL 4515699, at *2 (Del. Super.
Ct. July 27, 2015), aff'd, 140 A.3d 431 (Del. 2016).
8
21 Del. C. Section 2118.
9
21 Del. C. Section 2118(a)(2)(c).
10
Nat’l Union Fire Ins. Co. of Pittsburg v. Fisher, 692 A.2d 892 (Del. 1997).
11
Kelty v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 73 A.2d 926, 932 (Del. 2013).
4
Since the State concedes that Mr. Shaw was an occupant of the Vehicle, thus
satisfying the Fisher test, the Court moves on to the Kelty test.
The Kelty test requires the Court to “analyze whether (1) the vehicle was an
active accessory in causing the injury” and whether “(2) there was an act of
independent significance that broke the causal link between the use of the vehicle
and the injuries inflicted.”12 The first prong of the test requires “something less than
proximate cause in the tort sense and something more than the vehicle being the
mere situs of the injury.”13
Both parties concede that the core issue in this matter is whether the Vehicle
was an “active accessory.” Mr. Shaw contends that the facts of this case is most
similar to Kelty and Buckley. The State disagrees and argues that this case is instead
most similar to Hatcher and Lesniczak.
Some Delaware Courts have found that a vehicle was an active accessory in
causing a plaintiff’s injuries in Kelty, Buckley, and Buckingham.
In Kelty, the plaintiff was assisting with the removal of tree branches. In an
attempt to prevent tree branches from hitting a nearby powerline, the plaintiff and
homeowner tied one end of a rope to a branch to be cut and the other end of the rope
12
Id. at 932.
13
Buckley v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 139 A.3d 845, 851 (Del. Super.
2015).
5
to a truck. Homeowner accelerated the truck to tighten the rope and permit plaintiff
to cut the branch. However, while plaintiff was attempting to cut a branch, the truck
accelerated too quickly and caused the rope to snap. The branch whipped backwards
and caused the plaintiff to fall out of the tree. The Delaware Supreme Court found
that the truck, or vehicle, involved in that incident was an active accessory in causing
plaintiff’s injuries “because the force it exerted on the rope and branch led to
plaintiff’s injuries.”14
In Buckley, a motor vehicle struck the plaintiff while she crossed the street to
board her school bus. Subsequently, the plaintiff sought PIP benefits from the bus
insurance policy. The Delaware Supreme court affirmed this Court’s determination
that plaintiff was entitled to PIP benefits because (1) school buses are different than
other vehicles, (2) the “relationship between the school bus’s proper operation in
safely picking up and discharging its student passengers, and (3) the driver of the
bus by law controlled the process by which the plaintiff entered and exited the bus,
and the accident occurred after the bus driver signaled her to proceed and she
followed that instruction. Therefore, the bus was an “active accessory” to the
accident and plaintiff was entitled to PIP benefits.15
14
Kelty, 73 A.3d at 933.
15
Buckley, 139 A.3d at 851 (Del. Super. 2015).
6
In Buckingham, another driver attacked the plaintiff in his vehicle. It was
noted that the plaintiff allegedly provoked the assailant by operating his car in a
manner that kicked up rocks that hit the assailant’s truck. The assailant, in an
apparent fit of road rage, followed the plaintiff to the stop light in his truck where he
struck the plaintiff with a tire iron. Thus, the Supreme Court concluded that the
vehicle was an “active accessory” to the incident provoking the attack that caused
plaintiff’s injuries.
However, some Delaware courts have found that a vehicle was not an active
accessory in causing a plaintiff’s injury in Hatcher, Lesniczak, Sanchez, Campbell,
and Jones.
In Hatcher,16 the plaintiff fell in a pothole after exiting her vehicle. This Court
determined the vehicle was not an active accessory because the plaintiff was not
“using” her vehicle because she had already parked, exited, and began to walk
towards her destination. Since the primary reason plaintiff fell was due to the
pothole, this Court determined that the vehicle was not more than the mere situs of
the injury.
16
Hatcher v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., C.A. No. N15C-12-011 CLS, (Del.
Super. Ct. Nov. 29, 2016).
7
In Lesniczak,17 plaintiff was injured from stepping into a drainage hole while
cleaning his vehicle at a self-serve car wash. This Court determined that the vehicle
was not an active accessory to plaintiff’s injury because the plaintiff was merely
cleaning his vehicle and no facts supported that he had to clean the vehicle in order
to continue using it. As a result, this Court decided that the vehicle was the mere
situs of the injury.
In Sanchez,18 the plaintiff was a passenger in his mother’s vehicle when he
was shot in the head by a stray bullet while his mother was driving through an
intersection. Plaintiff filed an action seeking PIP benefits from his mother’s motor
vehicle insurance provider. The Supreme Court agreed with the Superior Court’s
decision and denied the plaintiff’s claim. The Court found that the vehicle was not
an active accessory to the plaintiff’s injury, noting that no one intentionally shot or
targeted the vehicle. Nothing about plaintiff’s presence in the vehicle contributed to
the fact that he was shot; unfortunately, he was merely in the wrong place at the
wrong time.
Likewise, in Campbell, 19 the Court held that a vehicle was not an active
accessory to an injury when a garage door closed on the plaintiff. The Court reasoned
17
Lesniczak v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 2019 WL 4034351 (Aug. 26, 2019).
18
Sanchez v. American Independent Insurance¸ 2005 WL 2662960 (Del. 2005)
19
Campbell v. State Farm Automobile Insurance Co., 12 A.3d 1137 (Del. 2011).
8
that merely because the “device inside a vehicle was used to close the garage door,
which had been opened by a button a wall, does not transform the incident into an
‘automobile accident.’”
More recently in Jones, this Court issued an opinion affirming the Court of
Common Pleas’ holding that a vehicle was not an accessory to an injury where the
plaintiff was injured while using a vacuum cleaner attached to a DART bus. 20 The
plaintiff in Jones injured himself while he was cleaning a DART bus with a vacuum
attached to the bus. The plaintiff there argued that the bus was an active accessory
in causing the injury because, without the bus in the “factual scenario, there is no
way the injury could have occurred.”21 This Court held that, even assuming the
vacuum did not operate without the bus, it was not “enough under these
circumstances to conclude that the bus is more than the mere situs of the injury.”22
Here, Mr. Shaw lays blame due to the positioning of the Vehicle and the extra
equipment he was required to wear as a result of his employment, however neither
of these factors necessarily concern the Vehicle being an “active accessory” to his
injuries. Similar to Hatcher and Lesniczak, Mr. Shaw fell because of a patch of ice
in the parking lot and not the Vehicle.
20
Robert P. Jones v. Delaware Transit Corp., 2016 WL 5946494 (Del. Super. Ct.
Oct. 16, 2016)
21
Id. at *2.
22
Id. at *4.
9
Moreover, Buckley is inapposite to scenarios like Mr. Shaw’s. Mr. Shaw was
not directed to enter the Vehicle in that particular location nor was he directed to
enter the Vehicle in the manner that he did. Mr. Shaw willfully chose to enter the
Vehicle in the manner in which he did.
Last, despite Mr. Shaw’s statements concerning the precise manner in which
he held the door with he hands as he attempted to enter, the most recent decision by
this Court in Jones shows that the Vehicle is not an active accessory merely because
he touched or held onto the Vehicle as he fell.
Based on the facts of this case and Delaware case law, the Vehicle at issue in
this matter was not an active accessory in causing Mr. Shaw’s injuries. Mr. Shaw
argues that the positioning of the Vehicle and the specific manner of entry, due to
his equipment, caused his injury. The Vehicle did not cause Mr. Shaw’s injuries. As
such, Mr. Shaw’s claim does not meet the threshold to qualify for PIP benefits under
Section 2118 because the Vehicle is not more than a mere situs to his injury. Since
the Vehicle was not more than a mere situs to his injury, summary judgment is
appropriate.
10
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, Mr. Shaw’s Motion for Summary Judgment is
DENIED and the State’s Motion for Summary Judgment is GRANTED.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
/s/ Calvin L. Scott
The Honorable Calvin L. Scott, Jr.
11