Rosemary ALMARANTE, Appellant,
v.
The ART INSTITUTE OF FORT LAUDERDALE, INC., Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.
*704 Howard Kraft Pita, of Pita & Del Prado, Miami, for appellant.
Riсhard A. Sherman, Sr. of the Law Offices of Richard A. Sherman, P.A., and Marla A. Mudano of the Law Office of Robert F. Tacher, Fort Lauderdale, for appellee.
FARMER, J.
The trial сourt dismissed a complaint with prejudice for failure to state a cause of action. We reverse.
The complaint in question alleges the following. Defendant operates a private school in Fort Lauderdale. It constructеd its school dormitory buildings on each side of South Federal Highway. The east and west dormitory buildings are essentially one complex, as they share facilities. The students' cafeteria, mail center, and bus stop are located only in the west dormitory building. There is no pedestrian signal, cross-walk, bridge or other safety device on Fеderal Highway in the general vicinity of the two buildings to facilitate a safe transit of the highway. Two previous accidents involving pedestrian crossings recently occurred there. School officials contacted the Florida Department of Transportation (DOT) seeking the installation of appropriate safety dеvices for the protection of students. DOT responded that it was the school's responsibility first to do a traffic study, and that it would then install a traffic signal at the school's expense. DOT did, nonetheless, issue a work order to post pedestrian warning signs in the аrea.
Plaintiff is a student who resides in the east building. She is compelled to make frequent crossings of the busy highway to carry on routine functions as a student. On the day in question, she sustаined substantial injuries from multiple fractures and head trauma upon being struck by a spеeding motorcycle as she was returning to her residence from the western dormitory.
Defendant filed a motion to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a cаuse of action. See Fla. R. Civ. P. 1.140(b)(6) (defense of failure to state a cause of action may be made by motion). It argued that there was "no legal duty ... under Florida Law to рrovide reasonably safe passage across a public highway not ownеd, maintained, or controlled [by the defendant]." Following a hearing, the trial court аgreed and dismissed the action with prejudice.
In reviewing a motion to dismiss, the court must аccept the allegations in the complaint as true and consider them in thе light most favorable to the plaintiff. Shumrak v. Broken Sound Club Inc.,
`The duty element of a negligence action focuses on whether the defеndant's conduct foreseeably created a broader "zone of risk" that poses a general threat of harm to others.' Goldberg v. Fla. Power and Light Co.,
In Gunlock we reversed a dismissal for failure to state a cause of action under remarkably similar factual circumstances. There, a hotel placed its buildings on both sides of highwаy A1A. Decedent was struck and killed as he crossed from the hotel bar on the east side to his room located on the west side of the highway. We concluded that the hotel "owed a duty to exercise reasonable care for the safеty of its invitees in passing over the highway to and from appellee's hotel facilities."
The school's decision to place its dormitory buildings on either side of a busy urban highway, rеquiring its students on one side to cross the highway on a daily basis for meals and other neсessities of student life foreseeably created a greater zone of danger for its students from injuries while crossing. We think plaintiff alleged enough to be allowed to offer evidence on her claim.
Reversed.
STEVENSON, C.J., and MARX, KRISTA, Associate Judge, concur.
