Order, Supreme Court, New York County (Edward Lehner, J.), entered October 25, 2001, which granted defendants’ motion and cross motions for summary judgment dismissing the complaint and all cross claims, unanimously reversed, on the law, without costs, the motion and cross motions denied, and the complaint and all cross claims reinstated.
Plaintiff visited a supermarket while a renovation project was underway. Upon arriving at the aisle he desired, plaintiff found his path obstructed by three renovation workers lying prone on the floor, with their heads under a counter and their legs extending nearly all the way across the aisle. Plaintiff successfully stepped over the legs of all three workers when he passed in one direction. When plaintiff returned in the other direction, he successfully stepped over two of the workers. While plaintiff was stepping over the third worker, however, the man raised his leg, causing plaintiff to trip and fall. In plaintiffs ensuing personal injury action against the owner of the supermarket and certain contractors involved in the renovation project, the IAS court granted defendants summary judgment dismissing the complaint on the ground that, in view of plaintiffs admitted awareness of the workers’ presence, the
We reverse. It is a question for the jury whether the supermarket or its contractors created an unreasonably dangerous condition by conducting the renovation work in question, which required the workers to extend their legs across an aisle, while the aisle was open to shoppers. Although there are cases where, based on undisputed facts, the risk that harm will arise from the condition at issue is so remote as to be unforeseeable as a matter of law (see e.g. Pinero v Rite Aid of N.Y.,
We point out that the question concerning defendants’ conduct to be answered at trial is whether defendants were negligent in creating or permitting the condition that led to plaintiffs injury, not whether they were negligent in failing to warn plaintiff of the existence of that condition. The Court of Appeals has recently made it clear that “a landowner has no duty to warn of an open and obvious danger” (Tagle v Jakob,
