Anthony GEORGE, Individually and by Berry Ann George, as
Legal Guardian and next friend, Plaintiffs/Appellants.
v.
BRANDYCHASE LIMITED PARTNERSHIP, A Georgia Limited
Partnership, and Jason Property Management Company
of Atlanta, Defendants/Appellees.
No. 87-8052.
United States Court of Appeals,
Eleventh Circuit.
April 6, 1988.
Andrew M. Scherffius, Tamara McDowell Ayres, Atlanta, Ga., for plaintiffs/appellants.
Richard K. Hines, V, Neely Y Player, Atlanta, Ga., for defendants/appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia.
Before FAY and KRAVITCH, Circuit Judges, and ATKINS*, Senior District Judge.
ATKINS, Senior District Judge:
The plaintiffs appealed from an order of the district court granting summary judgment to the defendants Brandychase Limited Partnership and Jason Property Management Company of Atlanta. We find that the evidence was sufficient to form an issue of fact to be presented to a jury and accordingly REVERSE.
On June 27, 1982, the plaintiff Anthony George met with friends at his apartment in the Brandychase complex. The evidence shows that, over the course of the evening, Mr. George consumed at least two cans of beer. Although the complex pool closed at 10 p.m., Mr. George and a friend left the apartment in the early morning hours of June 28, intending to swim. Mr. George made a running dive into the shallow end of the pool and struck his head on the bottom.
The pool, access to which was by a gate off the adjoining parking lot, was built in a boot shape, the shallow end closest to the entrance. At either side of the shallow end of the pool was a set of concrete steps bisected by a railing. The toe of the boot, farthest from the entrance, held the diving board and was the deepest portion of the pool. The sides of the pool were marked with depth indicators beginning with a marking of "3" indicating a three foot depth. When the pool closed for the evening, the underwater lights were automatically extinguished and the entrance gate was locked. On the night in question, however, the gate had been left open and the area left partially lit; two of the four underwater lights were lit and some of the deck area lights remained on creating a "shadow effect" on the pool surface.
Although a sign mounted on the gate listed the pool's operating hours and warned that use was at the swimmer's risk, opinion testimony of an aquatic expert stated that industry standards would place the sign elsewhere than on a gate which might open and obscure the message intended for those entering. Additional expert testimony opined that pool signs should include warnings against diving into shallow water and prohibitions against night swimming, neither of which was contained in the Brandychase pool message.
Finally, though the plaintiff had lived in the apartment complex for greater than a year, there was a dispute about whether he had ever frequented the pool before the night of his injury. He did not attempt to familiarize himself with the strange surroundings on that night but it is not evident that had he done so he would have been able to see the three foot mark given the absence of two of four underwater lights.
The district judge found that, though Mr. George did not have an appreciation of the pool, as did plaintiffs against whom summary judgment has been granted in past cases, see, e.g., Sims v. Willoughby,
"Proximate cause" is the negligent act that actively aids in producing the injury as a direct and existing cause. See Cain v. Vontz,
The facts of the instant case are not "susceptible of but one inference" and therefore the negligent conduct is not a question of law for a court to determine but one of fact for a jury. See Smith v. American Oil Co.,
Notes
Honorable C. Clyde Atkins, Senior U.S. District Judge for the Southern District of Florida, sitting by designation
