Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court:
Plаintiff, Leona Bledsoe, was a 59-year-old woman who fell while entering the Hill Arcade Building in Galesburg. Plaintiff filed a negligence action against defendants, owners of the building. The trial court granted defendants’ motion for summary judgment. Plaintiff appeals. On appeal, we address the issue of whether defendants were entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
FACTS
In her complaint, plaintiff alleges that defendants were negligent because they failed to maintain the entryway to their building in a safe condition. The Hill Arcade Building is a privately owned commerсial building. The entryway is a large, covered corridor open on the end extending to the outside of the building. The record, which includes photographs, indicates that the marble slab flooring of the entryway has a crack running across it.
Plaintiff alleged that she suffered injury in a fall as a result of the crack in the marble slabs. Plaintiff identified the crack as the location where she fell but could not remember which leg became caught or other specifics. Photographs and deposition testimony in the record indicate that the crack was approximately three-eighths of an inch in deviation.
Defendant Kelly stated that defendants knew for quite some time about thе crack in the entryway, perhaps since the time of purchase in 1977. Kelly stated that defendants were concerned about the crack for reasons of appearance, but no one had complained of the crack and no one, to his knowledge, had stumbled because of the crack. The trial court determined that the defect was de minimus and granted summary judgment for the defendants, citing in its order Hartung v. Maple Investment & Development Corp.,
ANALYSIS
In addressing injury claims based on differences in elevations of adjoining municipal sidewalk slabs, Illinois courts have used the well-recognized de minimus rule. The rule states that minor municipal sidewalk defects are generally not actionаble. Wagner v. City of Chicago,
Application of the de minimus rule has recently been extended by the Appellate Court, Second District, to an outdoor, privately owned sidewalk. In Hartung v. Maple Investment & Development Corp.,
The court reasoned that, like municipаlities, owners of shopping centers should not be required to maintain perfect outdoor sidewalks because of the large area involved and the extreme and changeable weather conditions in Illinois. The court noted that sidewalks are constructеd in slabs for the very reason that they must be allowed to expand and contract with changes in temperature. Hartung,
In contrast to thе factual situation in Hartung, the case at bar involves cracked marble slabs located in a partially enclosed entryway. As thе Hartung court observed, indoor flooring is not exposed to the weather and can be more easily monitored for defects. Hаrtung,
In the instant case, the location of the defect is in an entryway to a commercial building that contains shops and businesses. These shops and businesses can be expected to draw patrons using this entryway. In addition, the threshold of the entryway is sloped near the alleged defect, creating a potentially added danger. Also, as we have indicated, monitoring an area such as this entryway is not a burden equivalent to monitoring an expanse of sidewalks. Consequently, we decline to extend the ruling of Hartung to the facts of this cаse.
In reviewing a motion for summary judgment, this court is limited to the record in determining whether any genuine issue of material fact exists and whether thе moving party was entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Bryant v. Glen Oaks Medical Center,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the circuit court of Knox County is reversed and the case is remanded for furthеr proceedings consistent with this order.
Reversed and remanded.
McCUSKEY, J., concurs.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
I respectfully dissent. I would hold that the trial court was correct in granting summary judgment based upon the hоlding of Hartung v. Maple Investment & Development Corp.,
As in Hartung, the defective surface at issue in the matter sub judice was exposed to the elements. I see no reason to hold, as the majority does, that the application of the de minimus rule depends upon the degree of exрosure to the elements. I would prefer the certainty of a bright-line test that seems to have developed in the case law intеrpreting the de minimus rule: Where the surface is exposed to the elements, the public or private owner of the surface should not be liable for injuries resulting from slight surface deviations.
For the reasons discussed, I respectfully dissent.
