Lela Ciciora slipped on ice outside the Burrito Jalisco restaurant and sued the defendants CCAA, Inc., doing business as Burrito Jalisco (“Burrito Jalisco”), and Bridgeview Bank Group, Trust 13137 (“Bridgeview”), for her resulting injuries. Bridgeview owns the prеmises on which Ciciora fell, and Burrito Jalisco leases the property from Bridgeview. According to that lease, Bridgeview was responsible for the maintenance of the parking lot, driveway, and sidewalk, including snow and ice removal. The district court granted summary judgment to the defendants, and Ciciora appeals. We affirm.
The essential details of the incident are not in dispute. The incident occurred on Deсember 13, 2005, outside Burrito Jalisco which is located near Chicago. The day prior, approximately 0.06 inches of precipitation had fallen in the area, but December 13 was overcast with no precipitation. Ciciora had ordered lunch at Burrito Jalisco, and left work to pick it up at approximately 10:30 a.m. She parked in the restaurant’s parking lot, and exited her car, stepping onto the sidewalk. The sidewalk had been cleared of snow and the owner *482 stated that a Burrito Jalisco employee, Juan Herrera, had salted the sidewalk at 9:00 a.m. that morning. Ciciora did not observe any ice on the sidewalk when she began walking on it. After only a few steps, and still about 20 steps from the door, Ciciora’s foot slipped on ice and she fell, fracturing her ankle. Ciciora described the icy area as about 8 inches wide, and her son who later visited the scene described it as an icy area of about 2-3 square feet.
Ciciora relies on a number of legal theories to support her claim for damages. Shе asserts that Burrito Jalisco failed to provide a reasonably safe means of ingress into its property, and that it was negligent in the voluntary undertaking of snow and ice removal at its place of business. As to defendant Bridgeview, Ciciora argues that Bridgeview was contractually obligated to remove snow and ice according to its lease with Burrito Jalisco, and that it negligently performed that duty and negligently delegated that duty to another party. We note that Ciciora also appeals the district court’s refusal to strike Burrito Jalisco’s summary judgment motion as untimely and improperly filed, but we find no abuse of discretion in that dеcision and turn to the propriety of the grant of summary judgment.
In order to state a cause of action for negligence, Ciciora must allege facts sufficient to demonstrate the existence of a duty, a breach of that duty, and injury that was proximately caused by that breach.
Flight v. American Community Management,
Ciciora produced evidence that Burrito Jalisco voluntarily undertook the removal of snow and ice on a regular basis. In fact, the parties agree that there was an informal, unwritten agreement that Burrito Jalisco would shovel and salt the sidewalks and that a contractor hired by Bridgeview would plow the parking lot. A defendant who voluntarily undertakes the removal of snow and ice can be liable where the actions resulted in an unnatural accumulation of snow or ice, or added to an existing hazаrd, and caused injury to the plaintiff.
Judge-Zeit,
Illinois courts have rejected cases with far more evidence than that vague speculation. For instance, in
Madeo,
the plaintiff set forth evidence that the snow was piled at the high point of a sloped lot, and argued that the downward pitch of the lot would cause the melting snow to flow through the lot and refreeze.
Madeo,
Ciciora seeks to hold Bridgeview liable for the snow removal by virtue of the lease between Burrito Jalisco and Bridge-view under which Bridgeview agreed to be resрonsible for the maintenance of the parking lot, driveways and sidewalks, including snow and ice removal. Although Ciciora was not a party to that contract, that is not dispositive because the parties do not dispute that Illinois courts have allowed third-party invitees to rely on such contracts in establishing a duty. Even if Ciciora could rely on the lease to establish a duty in her negligence action, however, she hаd to demonstrate that Bridgeview failed to exercise reasonable care in fulfilling that duty and that the breach of duty proximately caused her injuries. Ciciora acknowledges that Bridgeview and Burrito Jaliscо had an informal agreement under which Burrito Jalisco’s employee would clear snow and ice from the sidewalk. She has provided no evidence that the Burrito Jalisco employee failed to еxercise reasonable care in performing that duty. Although snow had fallen the previous day, the sidewalk was shoveled and clear of snow, and no ice was visible as Ciciora began walking on it. Ciciora аnd her son both acknowledge that the sidewalk was
*484
also dry with the exception of isolated icy patches. Ciciora stated that the patch of ice she slipped on was approximately 8 inches wide, and her son stated that it was approximately 2-3 square feet. By either account, then, the patch was a relatively small one on a sidewalk that appeared to have been cleared and that was dry. Ciciora essentially relies only on the mere existence of some ice on the sidewalk as evidence that reasonable care was not exercised, but Illinois courts havе made clear that “[t]he mere presence of snow and ice does not demonstrate negligence.”
Tressler v. Winfield, Village Co-op., Inc.,
All that remains is the claim that Burrito Jalisco failed to maintain a safe means of ingress and egress. Illinois courts have made clear that “[t]he duty to provide a safe egress is not abrogated by the presence of the natural accumulation of snow and ice.”
Judge-Zeit,
