You Can't Sue Google If You Get Hit By A Car While Following Google Walking Directions

from the in-case-you-were-wondering dept

Last year, we had the bizarre story of a woman who sued Google after she got hit by a car, while following Google’s (beta) walking directions feature. The directions put her on a rural highway with no sidewalk or crosswalk, and as she crossed the street, she got hit. She sued both the driver and Google, but the Google part was what got the attention. The woman’s lawyer tried to defend the lawsuit in the face of a lot of mocking, by claiming that Google somehow had responsibility here. When this case got attention, Danny Sullivan did a bang up job pulling images of the intersection from Google Street View, which suggest that this intersection was pretty obviously not designed for pedestrian crossing:



Thankfully, it appears that the court agreed with most of the folks around here who were left shaking our heads that this woman couldn’t take responsibility for her own actions of crossing a street. The court dismissed the lawsuit against Google. While Google had raised some First Amendment issues, the court doesn’t even get that far in the discussion. Instead it just looks at the simple question of whether or not Google owed a duty to the woman, and found the answer to be pretty clear: hell no, it didn’t:

In order to assert a claim for negligence against Google Rosenberg had to show that Google owed her a duty. The court applies a four factor test to determine whether Google owes Rosenberg a duty and concludes that Google does not owe a duty. Rosenberg did not have a special relationship with Google. Rosenberg argued that in other cases courts have held service providers liable for negligently providing services to customers, but the court says that this duty is minimal or non-existent when a publisher or other information provider “publishes information to the general public.”

The court also notes that the fact that an injury is unlikely to occur counsels against finding a duty. Although Rosenberg alleged that an accident is more likely to occur along a rural highway such as the one she was on, the court says that an accident involving a pedestrian likely involves the pedestrian’s own breach of their duty to yield to cars on the road

It’s always nice to see a court agree with what basic common sense tells you.

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Comments on “You Can't Sue Google If You Get Hit By A Car While Following Google Walking Directions”

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10 Comments
Anonymous Coward says:

Other Products?

Rosenberg argued that in other cases courts have held service providers liable for negligently providing services to customers, but the court says that this duty is minimal or non-existent when a publisher or other information provider “publishes information to the general public.”

I wonder if this reasoning could be applied to other products as well, such that “duty is minimal or non-existent when a producer or other product provider “provides the product to the general public.”

weneedhelp (profile) says:

Again

“which suggest that this intersection was pretty obviously not designed for pedestrian crossing”

http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20100602/0259499654.shtml

While I agree this woman did not use common sense, the excuse that there were no crosswalks or sidewalks is a straw man argument.

Most of rural Pa, western Pa, Lancaster county, to be exact (The link above has my comments from when I lived in the Pottstown area of Pa.) have no crosswalks or sidewalks. So what, people cant travel by foot? What about horse and buggy?

Also go to google maps and do a 180 from the view of the stop sign. It is quite obvious that there is a community that uses these roads for pedestrian traffic. Look at the two guys walking down the street.

http://maps.google.com/maps?f=d&source=s_d&saddr=96+Daly+Street,+Park+City,+Utah&daddr=1710+Prospector+Avenue,+Park+City,+Utah&hl=en&geocode=FZ0WbAId07Za-SkHMelxv3JShzEhedu1VMYxdw%3BFRNzbAIdCqha-SklNRqTXW1ShzFgleT-h7NYoQ&mra=ls&dirflg=w&sll=40.64968,-111.498914&sspn=0.02836,0.052314&ie=UTF8&ll=40.648953,-111.498203&spn=0,0.001635&t=h&z=20&layer=c&cbll=40.648896,-111.498289&panoid=BVFG5vvK8yfVi1TcqM8MXw&cbp=12,40.32,,0,5

DCX2 says:

Re: Again

So what, people cant travel by foot?

How funny that your first sentence bashes Mike’s “straw man”, and then you go right ahead and propose your own straw man.

As someone else who grew up in rural PA who would sometimes walk or ride a bicycle to his friends’ houses, I can tell you that when I walked on the road, I made sure to get the hell out of the way of cars.

Anonymous Coward says:

Old times:

Kid: “Mom! Can I go skate at Dead Man’s Canyon?”
Mom: “No, It’s way too dangerous!”
Kid: “But Mom! All my friends are doing it!”
Mom: “If all of your friends jumped off a bridge, would you jump too?”
— Kid goes to his bedroom, grumbling.

Current times:

Kid: “Mom! Can I go skate at Dead Man’s Canyon?”
Mom: “No, It’s way too dangerous!”
Kid: “But Mom! All my friends are doing it!”
Mom: “If all of your friends jumped off a bridge, would you jump too?”
Kid: “Yes! And then I’d sue them for leading me there, even though the dangers were very clear to me and there were signs saying “Danger: Do not jump!””

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