Uber Technologies Inc. and a California driver must face a negligence suit filed by a garbage truck worker who was injured when a passenger opened their door into the truck, a state appellate court said Friday.
William Mason said he was standing on the back of a garbage truck in downtown San Francisco in 2017 when a passenger opened the door of an Uber parked along the street and hit him, causing him to fall and suffer injuries.
The Uber driver had parked in the street in front of the passenger’s destination, a hotel, rather than in the hotel’s driveway, Mason said. He sued Uber and the driver for negligence.
A trial court granted summary judgment against Mason, finding the driver didn’t owe a legal duty to control the conduct of his passenger or warn her the garbage truck was approaching. And Uber didn’t owe a heightened duty of care as a common carrier, because any such duty was owed to passengers, not third parties like Mason, the court said.
The California Court of Appeal, First District, revived Mason’s lawsuit, finding that ride share drivers owe other vehicles a duty of ordinary care in choosing where and how to offload passengers.