delivered the opinion of the court:
Plaintiff Raymond J. Bonner filed a negligence action against defendant, the City of Chicago (City), seeking damages for injuries he sustained when he tripped on a light pole base on the sidewalk in the 3900 block of North Damen Avenue. The trial court granted defendant’s motion for summary judgment. Plaintiff appeals, claiming that summary judgment was improper because a jury should have decided whether plaintiffs injury was foreseeable and the City breached its duty of reasonable care. We affirm.
The pleadings, affidavits, depositions and photographs before the trial court established the following facts. On June 3, 1999, the 72-year-old plaintiff drove from the currency exchange he owned at 3536 West Armitage Avenue in Chicago to the Coras Bank branch at Irving Park and Lincoln Avenues. He was carrying $4,000 in cash in a paper bag and checks for depоsit at the bank. Plaintiff parked his car at a meter along the curb in the 3900 block of North Damen Avenue, exited the car, stepped on the sidewalk and began walking toward the bank. He immediately noticed that two men in their early twenties appeared to be staring at him from а bus stop about 70 feet away. Plaintiff became suspicious, fearing that the men might rob him. The men were standing still and looking in plaintiffs direction, but they did not speak or walk toward him. Plaintiff never took his eyes off the suspicious men, and he walked near the curb so he could quickly return to his car if the men approached him. After walking a short distance, plaintiff tripped over the light pole base, which consisted of a 12-inch-wide cluster of four bolts on a raised concrete foundation. Each bolt protruded about three inches from the surface of the sidеwalk. As a result of his fall, plaintiff suffered a fractured left shoulder which required surgery and physical therapy and limited his ability to work. He also fractured a bone in his right hand and sustained lacerations to his face requiring five sutures to close.
According to a bystander’s report, the trial сourt granted the City’s motion for summary judgment based on its finding that plaintiff’s distraction was not reasonably foreseeable.
On appeal, plaintiff contends that summary judgment was improper because a question of fact existed as to whether the City had a duty of reasonable сare because it was foreseeable that a pedestrian would be distracted and fail to see the open and obvious light pole base. Alternatively, plaintiff contends that even if the harm was not foreseeable, the City still had a duty of reasonable care because injury to pedestrians was likely and the burden on the City to protect pedestrians from the hazard was negligible. The City responds that summary judgment was proper because plaintiff did not dispute the fact that the condition was open and obvious and did not present а legally sufficient reason as to why the City should have foreseen that plaintiff would be distracted.
A cause of action for negligence requires the plaintiff to establish that the defendant owed a duty of care and breached that duty resulting in an injury proximately caused by the breach. Curatola v. Village of Niles,
Duty Based on Foreseeability
The Local Governmental and Governmental Employees Tort Immunity Act (Act) (745 ILCS 10/1 et seq. (West 2000)) governs the tort liability of municipalities. West v. Kirkham,
Parties who own or сontrol land are not required to foresee and protect against injuries if the potentially dangerous conditions are open and obvious. Bucheleres v. Chicago Park District,
There are two limited exceptions to the rule that a defendant has no duty to protect a plaintiff from an open and obvious condition. Ward v. K mart Corp.,
A defendant does not need to anticipate a plaintiff’s own negligence. Ward,
In this case, the issue is whether, as a matter of law, it was foreseeable that plaintiff would be distracted from an obvious condition by his fear of being robbed. The evidence before the court did not show that plaintiffs fear was anything other than subjective or that the City should have foreseеn that a reasonable person walking on the sidewalk would be so distracted by the threat of crime that he could not exercise reasonable care for his own safety. Accordingly, the distraction exception to the rule that there is no duty to protect a рlaintiff from an open and obvious condition does not apply in this case. Thus, the duty element necessary for a finding of negligence is absent.
Plaintiff attempts to distinguish the facts in Richardson from those in the present case by arguing that the amount of real estate coverеd during the plaintiff’s distraction affects foreseeability. Consequently, he contends, it was not foreseeable that the plaintiff in Richardson would run several yards while he was distracted, but it was foreseeable that the plaintiff in this case would walk a few steps while he was distracted. However, plaintiffs distinction is precluded by Richardson, where the court found that “the line between mere inattention and reasonably foreseeable distraction is not susceptible to mathematic precision and requires a careful focus upon the particular facts at hand.” Richardson,
In this case, the facts support the conclusion that plaintiffs brief distraction was no more foreseeable than the relatively longer distraction in Richardson, and therefore, the trial court’s conclusion was not inconsistent with the result in Richardsоn.
Plaintiff cites several cases to argue that the distraction exception must be applied, including: Ward,
In this case, the City did not create or contribute to the condition of two young men standing on a public sidewalk while plaintiff carried $4,000 in a paper bag which caused him to be distracted by his fear of being robbed. Accordingly, plaintiffs cases are factually distinguishable from the case at bar.
In an effort to show that plaintiffs fear of crime was a foreseeable distraction, plaintiff cites cases in which the court found that it was foreseeable that the plaintiff would be the victim of a crime on the defendant’s property. Neering v. Illinois Central R.R. Co.,
These cases do not support plaintiffs argument because they deal with the foreseeability of crime, not the foreseeability of the fear of crime. Furthermore, plaintiff fails to present an argument for extending the rationale of these cases with evidence that the area was, in the language of Neering, habitually infested with criminals. Plaintiffs conclusion that “criminal elements hang around banks” is not persuasive of his theory that the City should have foreseen plaintiffs distraction by fear of crime.
Duty Based on Likelihood, Burden
Plaintiff argues that even if his distraction and resulting injuries were not foreseeable, the City still owed him a duty of care because an injury was likely and the burden of guarding against the injury was slight, citing, inter alia, Deibert,
The City asserts that this argument is waived because it was not raised below. Arguments not raised in the circuit court are waived on аppeal. In re Liquidations of Reserve Insurance Co.,
Finally, where injury results from freakish, bizarre or fantastic circumstances, no duty exists and no negligence claim can be asserted for injuries that were not reasonably foreseeable. Washington v. City of Chicago,
Accordingly, we find that plaintiff failed to establish that the City owed him a duty of care in order to state a cause of action for negligence. Therefore, the trial court properly granted the City’s motion for summary judgment.
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
COHEN, EJ., and McNULTY, J., concur.
