delivered the opinion of the court:
Plaintiffs, Hilda-Anne and Edgar G. Crane (the Cranes), appeal after the trial court granted summary judgment in favor of defendants, Triangle Plaza, Inc., and West Chicago Ward Lumber Company (collectively referred to as Triangle) and Arthur J. Lootens & Son, Inc. (Lootens), in a “slip and fall” action. The Cranes contend on appeal that the trial court erred in grаnting summary judgment because there was evidence establishing duty, breach and proximate cause on the part of defendants. We affirm.
At approximately 6:15 a.m. on December 22, 1987, Hilda-Anne parked her car in a parking lot adjacent to the West Chicago train station in West Chicago, Illinois. The parking lot was owned by Triangle. Triangle charged a fee for patrons to park in the lot.
Hilda-Anne had backed her car into a space so that the back end of the car abutted a snow pile encircling the perimeter of the lot. Hilda-Anne exited the car holding her briefcase and a purse in her right hand and a cup of coffee in her left hand. As she walked in front of her car tоward the train station, her right foot slipped, and she fell in front of the left headlight of her car. Hilda-Anne stated at her deposition that she was looking straight ahead at the time she fell.
While on the ground, Hilda-Anne felt around and determined that she was lying on an ice patch approximately two feet by four feet in diameter. The ice, as well as thе entire lot, was covered by a “dusting” of snow. The snow cover obscured the ice patch beneath it. Hilda-Anne sustained a broken right leg, among other injuries.
Edgar viewed the area of the accident approximately three hours after the accident. He described the area as uneven and full of holes, some shallower than othеrs, containing ice. Hilda-Anne stated that some of the depressions were up to one inch deep. Edgar had to clear the light snow to view the ground. Although Edgar described the gravel parking lot as uneven, he stated that it was generally level, with no incline.
The parking lot in question was comprised of gravel, sand and dirt. Lootens provided snow removаl and regrading services pursuant to an oral contract with Triangle. The lot had last been plowed on December 16, 1987, six days before the accident, after approximately an eight-inch snowfall. Warren VanWallingham, an employee with Lootens, stated in his deposition that the plowing blade dragged along the gravel as snow was removеd from the lot. VanWallingham also stated that some snow would remain after plowing.
The temperature in the area in the few days before the accident had fluctuated above and below the freezing mark. Approximately an inch of rain fell on December 20, 1987. The night before the accident, a light “dusting” of snow fell. Hilda-Anne stated the day beforе she fell there was no ice on the parking lot, but there were areas containing packed snow, melted snow and puddles of water. Hilda-Anne also stated that she was “99 and 99/100%” sure that the snow melted, collected in the depressions and froze.
The Cranes filed their original complaint on August 23, 1989. Hilda-Anne sought damages of a personal, peсuniary and permanent nature. Edgar sought damages for loss of society, companionship, conjugal relations and services. Defendants filed motions for summary judgment. Lootens claimed that it owed no duty to the Cranes because it contracted with Triangle to remove snow, not ice. Triangle claimed that the Cranes could not establish any аct on its part that proximately caused Hilda-Anne’s injuries. The trial court granted summary judgment for defendants. The Cranes filed a timely notice of appeal.
The Cranes contend that there was evidence creating a genuine issue of material fact as to whether Lootens owed a duty to Hilda-Anne, whether each defendant breaсhed a duty, and whether each breach was the proximate cause of her injuries. Lootens contends that the undisputed facts show that it owed no duty to plaintiffs. Lootens also contends that the Cranes have failed to present evidence that any act on its part created an unnatural accumulation of ice or snow. Finally, Lootens contends that the Cranes failed to demonstrate that any act of Lootens proximately caused Hilda-Anne’s injuries. Triangle’s contentions are restatements of Lootens’ contentions as to the unnatural accumulation of ice or snow, and proximate cause. Triangle also contends that plaintiffs failed to present evidence to show that Triangle had actual or constructive notice of the condition.
Summary judgment is a drastic means of disposing of litigation and should be allowed only when the right of the moving party to summary judgment is clear and free from doubt. (Mitchell v. Jewel Food Stores (1990),
In an action based on negligence, the plaintiff must set out sufficient facts establishing a duty owed by defendants to the plaintiff, a breach of the duty and that the injury was proximately caused by the breach. (Vesey,
We note that Trianglе does not claim that it owed no duty to Hilda-Anne, and therefore we choose not to address that issue. Thus, we first address whether Lootens owed a duty to Hilda-Anne in this situation. The Cranes argue that Lootens had a common-law duty to perform a voluntary undertaking in a nonnegligent manner, relying on Eichler v. Plitt Theatres, Inc. (1988),
Lootens argues that its duty under the oral contract with Triangle extended only to removing snow, not ice. Lootens also relies on Eichler, where the court granted summary judgment for the snоw removal contractor because the contract did not call for the removal of ice. Eichler,
We find that Eichler is instructive here. As Eichler states, the snow removal contractor owes no duty to an injured party for injuries caused by a fall on the ice where the ice formed naturally. The plaintiffs in Eichler conceded that there was no unnatural accumulation of snow or ice at the time of the fall. (Eichler,
Both Lootens and Triangle сontend that the Cranes may not argue that the snow piles caused the ice formation as they did not rely on this theory in responding to the motions for summary judgment. Triangle relies on Schuman v. Pekin House Restaurant & Lounge (1981),
Although we found the Eichler case distinguishable on its facts concerning the unnatural acсumulation of snow or ice, the case is helpful in addressing the Cranes’ argument that Lootens had a duty to remove all the snow on the parking lot. The Eichler court relied on Burke v. City of Chicago (1987),
The Cranes’ reliance on McCarthy to support the argument that Lootens’ duty was to remove all snow is misplaced. In McCarthy, the plaintiff slipped and fell on an embankment of snow and ice on a portion of the driveway. Evidence was presented that the embankment extended 6 to 12 inches into the driveway. (McCarthy,
Lootens did not owe a duty to Hilda-Anne to remove ice caused by the natural accumulation of snow. (Eichler,
We next determine whether a breach has occurred. To raise properly the issue of breach, the Cranes must show that the exposed ice upon which Hilda-Anne allegedly slipped and fell was an unnatural accumulation caused by the defendants. (Eichler,
Lootens and Triangle argue that the Cranes have not presented any evidence to support their assertion that the ice Hilda-Anne allegedly slipped and fell on was created by the unnaturally accumulated snow piles on the periphery of the parking lot. They claim that Hilda-Anne’s statement that she was “99 and 99/100%” sure that the ice was unnaturally created has no factual basis.
We find that the Cranes have failed to present a factual basis to support their assertion that the ice was created by an unnatural accumulation of snow. Thus, the trial court did not err in granting summary judgment for all defendants. “A finding of an unnatural or aggravated natural condition must be based upon an identifiable cause of the ice formation.” (Emphаsis added.) (Gilberg v. Toys “R” Us, Inc. (1984),
The cases relied upon by the Cranes present no question as to the factual nexus between the unnatural accumulation of snow and the ice that was allegedly crеated by the run-off from that unnatural accumulation of snow. In Gilberg, summary judgment was upheld because the plaintiff presented no evidence as to the source of the ice. (Gilberg,
In Johnson v. Sears, Roebuck & Co. (1989),
Both Sims v. Block (1968),
Even the mere existenсe of a slope in the lot is not enough to defeat a motion for summary judgment. In Wells v. Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co. (1988),
“When a plaintiff alleges that the design of a sloping surface created an unnatural accumulation of ice. there must be evidence presented of the dangerous nature of the slope, that the slope was the proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injuries and that the landowner had notice of the defect. [Citation.] Once such evidence has been produced, the issue of whether the slope was a dangerous condition which created an unnatural accumulation of ice is a question of fact.” (Wells,171 Ill. App. 3d at 1015-16 .)
Here, not only are the other allegations relаting to the slope of the lot missing, but the Cranes do not claim that the parking lot was sloped. Edgar stated in his deposition that the lot was generally level with no incline. Hilda-Anne also stated that the area of the parking lot where she fell was “comparatively flat.” Thus, the issue of whether the lot was sloped is not disputed. Without such evidence, we have no link between the snow piles and the ice upon which Hilda-Anne allegedly slipped and fell.
Finally, the Cranes rely on Hankla v. Burger Chef Systems, Inc. (1981),
We do not expect, nor does the law require, that plaintiffs prove their case at a summary judgment hearing, but they must present some facts tо show that the ice was unnatural or caused by defendant. (Gilberg,
Because summary judgment is upheld on the issue of breach, we choose not to address the issues of whether Triangle had actual or constructive notice of the condition and whether proximate cause was adequately alleged.
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the circuit court of Du Page County is affirmed.
Affirmed.
UNVERZAGT and NICKELS, JJ., concur.
