Bishop appeals the grant of summary judgment to Mangal Bhai Enterprises, Inc., d/b/a Passport Inn, and the denial of his motion for summary judgment. Bishop’s motion dealt solely with his status, whether invitee or licensee, which was also at issue in Mangal’s motion.
1. Inn owner Patel’s deposition was filed of record before the order was entered, although it was not ordered unsealed until later, for delivery to this court. The order granting summary judgment stated that it was entered “after careful review of the record and all briefs and affidavits submitted.” The Supreme Court set the policy that: “If a trial court indicates in his order granting a motion for summary judgment that the motion is being granted after a review of the record, this court will not hold that he failed to review the relevant portions of a deposition simply because the original of the deposition on file in the case remained sealed and was not opened until after the order granting the motion was entered.”
General Motors v. Walker,
The deposition of Bishop, referred to by both parties, could not have been considered by the trial court. It was not filed with the court below and ordered unsealed until after the grant of summary judgment. It may be considered here, however, to determine whether there remains an issue of material fact for determination below.
Miller Grading &c. v. Ga. Fed. &c. Assn.,
2. As to the grant of summary judgment to Mangal, the evidence is viewed with all inferences and reasonable doubts in favor of Bishop.
Eiberger v. West,
Bishop was manager of the Country Cupboard Restaurant adjacent to the Passport Inn. The restaurant premises were leased from Patel and were connected to the lobby. On March 26, 1987, Hutton was the clerk at the Passport Inn at the Locust Grove exit on 1-75. She had been in training for two weeks and had come on duty that night at 10:00 p.m. Bishop came to the lobby to inquire about a package for the restaurant which had been delivered to the motel and signed for by Hutton. After discussing this, Hutton asked Bishop to bring her a soft drink from the restaurant. After 11:00 p.m., a man walked into the lobby and asked for a room. As she turned to get the key, a second man entered the lobby just as Bishop was approaching with the soft drink. The second man directed Bishop to crawl over the counter. As he was doing so, the man, a robber, shot him in the back with a shotgun.
Patel, one of the two stockholders in Mangal, lived on the premises and oversaw the motel business, including hiring all employees. Hutton had asked him what to do in the event of a robbery but had never been given any instructions. She had not been told to lock the front doors to the lobby at night, nor how to use the night window. It had been installed to preclude robbers’ access to the lobby after the doors were locked but still allow the transaction of business with customers.
Patel had worked in the motel business since 1983, owning and operating other motels, including the Locust Grove Scottish Inn, before buying the Passport Inn. He knew many motel owners on 1-75 and was aware that there had been armed robberies at some of them. The practice in the industry is to lock the lobby at 11:00 p.m. and use the night window to protect against robberies. There had been, robberies in 1983 at the Passport Inn when it was a Holiday Inn before Patel bought it, and there had been robberies at the Scottish Inn and Red Carpet Inn in the same area, although Patel disclaimed knowledge of them.
Defendant’s motion was premised on Bishop’s being a mere licensee at the time of the injury. His status would be determinative of the *876 standard of care owed him by defendant. An owner/occupier has the duty to an invitee to exercise ordinary care to keep premises safe. OCGA § 51-3-1. As to a licensee, however, there is liability only for wilful or wanton injury. OCGA § 51-3-2.
“The accepted test to determine whether one is an invitee or a licensee is whether the party coming onto the business premises had present business relations with the owner or occupier which would render his presence of mutual benefit to both, or whether his presence was for his own convenience, or was for business with one other than the owner or occupier. [Cits.]”
Savage v. Flagler Co.,
Plaintiff Bishop’s status is an issue of disputed material fact, making denial of
his
motion for summary judgment appropriate.
Phillips v. Lindsey,
3. Defendant Mangal’s motion contained alternative bases. The court’s order granting summary judgment does not show the ground upon which it was based and the second ground must be addressed.
Hill v. Century 21 &c.,
“ ‘It is the duty of a proprietor to protect an invitee from injury caused by the misconduct of employees, customers and third persons if there is any reasonable apprehension of danger from the conduct of said persons or if injury could be prevented by the proprietor through the exercise of ordinary care and diligence.’
Ga. Bowling Enterprises v. Robbins,
Patel, an owner, acknowledged awareness of the danger of robbery from motel lobbies and of the night window’s purpose, to provide protection to employees and invitees in the lobby. He also was *877 aware of similar robberies at other motels along 1-75 owned by friends.
“It is important to the resolution of this case that it does
not
involve a factual situation wherein, at the time and place of the criminal occurrence, there was a
failure
to provide any security to hotel patrons [and other invitees.] Compare
McClendon v. C & S Nat. Bank,
Defendant knew of the risk of robbery in a motel lobby late at night. He averred that he had instructed Hutton concerning locking lobby doors and use of the night window which had been installed as a security device and could have averted the robber’s entry into the motel. She swore that he had not and that her question of what to do during a robbery had never been answered. Compare
Grandma’s Biscuits v. Baisden,
The question of reasonable foreseeability and the statutory duty to exercise reasonable care to protect the plaintiff in the circumstances of this case is for a jury’s determination rather than summary adjudication by the court.
Lay v. Munford, Inc.,
Judgment reversed.
