Angelina Boyrie sued appellees, claiming that she fell and was injured as a result of appellees’ negligence in failing to remove ice and snow from property they owned and managed. The trial court granted summary judgment for appellees, concluding that Ms. Boyrie was a trespasser at the time of her fall and that appellees
I.
The parties do not dispute the following facts. Ms. Boyrie’s friend Edward Sturgis arranged to have his friend Harold Roger repair Ms. Boyrie’s broken television. Some months later, Ms. Boyrie and Mr. Sturgis decided to check on the status of the repairs, by going together to Mr. Roger’s apartment building, which is owned and managed by appellees. Ms. Boyrie and Mr. Sturgis did not notify Mr. Roger that they were coming.
When Ms. Boyrie and Mr. Sturgis arrived, they went to the front door of the apartment building and rang the doorbell. Receiving no response, they walked onto a sidewalk running right next to the building and stood there as Mr. Sturgis called out to get Mr. Roger’s attention. Again receiving no response, they left the sidewalk and walked to a dark and unlit area behind the building. The area was paved with concrete and resembled a parking lot. There was no entrance to the apartment building from the area. Mr. Sturgis continued to call out for Mr. Roger as Ms. Boyrie stood on the edge of the area. After a few minutes, Ms. Boyrie decided to leave. As she began walking towards the front of the building, she slipped and fell, fracturing her ankle.
Ms. Boyrie sued appellees, alleging that her injury was the result of their negligent failure to remove ice and snow from the property. The trial court granted summary judgment, concluding that undisputed facts established that Ms. Boyrie was trespassing at the time of her injury, and that appellees therefore did not owe Ms. Boyrie a duty of reasonable care.
II.
To prevail on a motion for summary judgment, a party “must demonstrate that there is no genuine issue of material fact and that [it] is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Murphy v. Schwankhaus,
III.
At common law, the nature of a landowner’s duty to persons on the landowner’s premises turned significantly on distinctions between invitees and licensees. See, e.g., Cedar Hill Cemetery v. Ball,
A trespasser is a person “who enters or remains upon land in the posses
Ms. Boyrie conceded that she was on appellees’ property without express invitation, either from appellees or from the resident she and her companion hoped to visit. It does not follow, however, that Ms. Boyrie necessarily was a trespasser when she walked onto the paved area adjacent to the sidewalk. Ms. Boyrie would be a trespasser only if she could not reasonably have believed that appellees had implicitly permitted, or acquiesced in, her entry onto the paved area. We conclude that the undisputed facts do not establish as a matter of law that Ms. Boyrie was a trespasser.
Although the paved area was unlit, it appeared to be a parking lot, was immediately behind an apartment building, and was adjacent to a public sidewalk. The record does not indicate that access to the area was restricted in any way. As far as the current record reveals, a reasonable person could have concluded that the paved area was open, perhaps to the public generally, but at a minimum to someone seeking to contact a resident in the apartment building. We find some support for that conclusion in Daisey v. Colonial Parking, Inc.,
IV.
Because the undisputed facts on the current record do not establish as a matter of law that Ms. Boyrie was a trespasser, ap-pellees were not entitled to summary judgment.
So ordered.
Notes
. Courts in other jurisdictions have reached conflicting conclusions in comparable circumstances. Compare, e.g., Cochran v. Burger King Corp.,
. Ms. Boyrie has not contended in this court that on the current record she as a matter of law was not a trespasser, instead arguing only that the trial court erred by determining as a matter of law that she was a trespasser. The court therefore decides only the latter issue, and does not address the former.
