The plaintiff Cleber Coleta Dos Santos was injured when he unsuccessfully attempted to flip into an inflatable pool from a trampoline that had been set up directly adjacent to it in the backyard of a property he was renting from the defendants, Maria A. and Jose T. Coleta.
1. Evidence at trial. In the summer of 2005, the plaintiff lived with his wife and son in one unit of a two-family home in Framingham that he rented from the defendants. The defendants and their children lived in the other unit before moving to South Carolina on July 31, 2005. On or about June 18, 2005, the defendants’ son received a trampoline as a birthday gift. Jose set up the trampoline immediately adjacent to an inflatable vinyl swimming pool that he had set up in the backyard earlier
During the summer of 2005, the plaintiff’s and defendants’ children and visitors to the home frequently used the pool and trampoline, and the defendants were aware that people were jumping from the trampoline into the pool. Maria testified that she told her children not to jump from the trampoline into the pool and that she knew that it was dangerous to do so. However, neither defendant stopped the children from using the trampoline and pool in this manner or took any steps, such as moving the trampoline and pool apart, to discourage or prevent anyone from jumping from the trampoline into the pool.
Although the defendants moved to South Carolina on July 31, they maintained ownership of the home and continued to rent the other unit to the plaintiff and his family. The defendants left the pool and trampoline in the backyard and understood that both items would continue to be used by their friends and family.
On the evening of August 2, 2005, the plaintiff, who had never before used the trampoline, came home from work and decided to play with his son on the trampoline while his wife recorded a video of them to send to their extended family in Brazil. The plaintiff decided to entertain his son by flipping into the pool. The plaintiff testified that he was trying to “flip over and sit on [his] butt in the water.” The video recording, a portion of which was shown to the jury at trial, shows the plaintiff attempting to perform a front flip into the pool. The plaintiff severely underrotated the flip, entered the water headfirst, and struck his head on the bottom of the pool. As a result of the impact, the plaintiff sustained a burst fracture of his C-5 vertebrae, and is permanently paralyzed from the upper chest down.
The plaintiff was hospitalized for an extended period of time following the accident, and in the years since, he has been hospitalized at various facilities for medical conditions related to his quadriplegia. His medical bills and related expenses exceeded $700,000 at the time of trial.
2. Request for jury instructions. Although he instructed the jury on the “open and obvious danger” doctrine, the trial judge declined to give the plaintiff’s requested instruction based on the Restatement (Second) of Torts, supra at § 343A(1) & comment f, which contemplates that a landowner may in certain circumstances be liable for injuries resulting from open and obvious dangers.
“[A] landowner’s duty to protect lawful visitors against dangerous conditions on his property ordinarily does not extend to dangers that would be obvious to persons of average intelligence. This is often referred to as the open and obvious danger rule. If the particular dangers inherent*153 in a particular condition would be open and obvious to a person of average intelligence, then the landowner does not have a duty to warn the visitor to avoid encountering the danger. The standard is an objective one, that is, would a reasonable person of average intelligence be aware of the open and obvious danger of the condition?”
The jury were further instructed:
“In the present case, it is undisputed that defendants had a trampoline and inflatable pool in their backyard. At the time of the accident, August 2nd, 2005, the pool and the trampoline were next to one another. In deciding whether the defendants, Maria and Jose, owed a duty to [the plaintiff], you must decide whether the dangerous condition that he encountered and which caused his injury was open and obvious to a person of average intelligence, having in mind the particular activity in which [the plaintiff] was engaged at the time of the accident. Whether other people may have engaged in this activity may be considered by you, but the question that you must decide is whether the danger of injury from engaging in this activity with the trampoline and the pool was open and obvious to a person of average intelligence. Apply this analysis in answering the first question on the verdict form. If your answer is yes, your work is done. Date and sign the form. If your answer is no, then you go to the next question which involves negligence.” (Emphasis added.)
The judge then instructed the jury on negligence, including instructions on foreseeability. The first question on the verdict slip, special question no. 1, asked: “Was the dangerousness of the condition that [the plaintiff] encountered on the defendant’s property and that caused his injury open and obvious to a person of average intelligence, having in mind the particular activity in which he was engaged at the time of the accident?” The jury answered, “Yes,” in response to special question no. 1, and the court entered judgment for the defendants.
3. Discussion, a. Standard of review. “We review objections to jury instructions to determine if there was any error, and, if so, whether the error affected the substantial rights of the object
b. The “open and obvious danger” rule. “Before liability for negligence can be imposed, there must first be a legal duty owed by the defendant to the plaintiff, and a breach of that duty proximately resulting in the injury.” Davis v. Westwood Group,
Today, we consider the scope of a landowner’s duty to remedy an open and obvious danger as contemplated in § 343A and most recently discussed by this court in Papadopoulos, supra. As an initial matter, it is clear that at least in some circumstances
Having established that the existence of an open and obvious danger will not necessarily relieve a landowner of all duties to lawful entrants with regard to that danger, we set out to answer the following principal question: where the duty to warn has been negated, in what circumstances will the duty to remedy nevertheless exist — or, in other words, in what circumstances “can and should [a landowner] anticipate that the dangerous condition will cause physical harm to the [lawful entrant] notwithstanding its known or obvious danger”? Papadopoulos, supra, quoting Soederberg, supra. Section 343A states in relevant part:
“Such reason to expect harm to the [lawful entrant] from known or obvious dangers may arise, for example, where the [landowner] has reason to expect that the [lawful entrant’s] attention may be distracted, so that he will not discover what is obvious, or will forget what he has discovered, or fail to protect himself against it. Such reason may also arise where the [landowner] has reason to expect that the [lawful entrant] will proceed to encounter the known or obvious danger because to a reasonable man in his position the advantages of doing so would outweigh the apparent risk.” (Emphasis added.)
Restatement (Second) of Torts, supra at § 343A comment f. As the defendants assert, reported cases in the Commonwealth applying § 343A have generally rested their conclusion that a landowner can and should anticipate a particular harm on a
Critically, however, by its own language, application of § 343A is not limited to situations where the plaintiff encounters the danger only after concluding the benefit of doing so outweighs the risk. See Quinn, supra at 50-52, 54-55 & n.7. The illustrations accompanying § 343A comment f are clearly meant to be illustrative, not exhaustive. See Restatement (Second) of Torts, supra at § 343A comment f & illustrations 2-5. The main text of § 343A merely states that a landowner is not liable for injuries caused by open and obvious dangers “unless the [landowner] should anticipate the harm despite such knowledge or obviousness.” Restatement (Second) of Torts, supra at § 343A(l). As the illustrations accompanying § 343A comment f indicate, § 343A contemplates that a lawful entrant’s encounter with an open or obvious hazard may in some instances be a result of the entrant’s own negligence. See Restatement (Second) of Torts, supra at § 343A illustrations 2-4 (explaining landowner has a duty to remedy open and obvious dangers that he can reasonably anticipate lawful entrants will nonetheless encounter due to their being distracted, failing to look, or initially observ
Section 343A thus instructs that although a duty to warn of an open and obvious danger would be superfluous because an open and obvious danger provides its own warning, a landowner
In affirming judgment for the defendants, the Appeals Court essentially concluded that the O ’Sullivan case controlled because it effectively established a per se rule of nonliability in “shallow diving” cases. See Dos Santos, supra at 6. Additionally, in addressing the effect, if any, of the Papadopoulos and Soederberg line of cases on O’Sullivan, the Appeals Court further reasoned that those cases are distinguishable from “shallow diving” cases, including the present case, on the grounds that a “property owner would have no reason to anticipate that a reasonable person of average intelligence would conclude that the advantage of performing the maneuver [i.e., a flip or dive] outweighed the risk of serious injury.” Dos Santos, supra. The
First, as previously discussed, application of § 343A is not limited to situations where the plaintiff chooses to encounter the danger only after conducting a favorable “cost-benefit” analysis. A plaintiff’s own negligence in encountering the danger does not relieve the landowner of a duty to remedy that danger where the plaintiff’s negligent act can and should be anticipated by the landowner. Second, as the defendants’ own testimony made quite clear, Jose set up the trampoline next to the pool with the specific intent to enable the type of use that resulted in the plaintiff’s injury, and both defendants knew that the trampoline and pool were in fact being used in this manner and that this use was dangerous. Therefore, it is simply incorrect to say the defendants did not anticipate the risk of injury.
Because the trial judge relied so heavily on the O’Sullivan case — stating that the present case is “very much, if not on all fours with O’Sullivan” — in declining to give the plaintiff’s requested instruction and instead instructing the jury to cease deliberations if they concluded the danger was open and obvious, we turn now to that case. In O’Sullivan, supra at 201-202, this court affirmed a grant of summary judgment for the defendant homeowners on claims that they “were negligent in allowing visitors to dive into the shallow end of [an in-ground] pool and in failing to warn of the danger associated with this activity.” In addition to the obvious fact that both cases involve injuries sustained by jumping or diving into shallow pools, the trial judge relied on O’Sullivan presumably for its statement that “the open and obvious danger rule . . . operates to negate the existence of a duty of care,” and its citation to a long line of cases from across the country holding landowners not liable for injuries caused by shallow diving on the grounds that the danger posed by such activity is open and obvious. Id. at 206, 207-208.
A close reading of O’Sullivan, supra at 201-202, 206-208, suggests that while the court may have used the terms “duty to warn” and “duty of care” interchangeably, it is relatively clear that the only question presented to the court in that case was whether the defendants could be held liable for failing to warn the plaintiff not to dive into the shallow end of an in-ground swimming pool. See Quinn, supra at 54-55; Martins vs. Healy, supra (“in O’Sullivan, the plaintiff did not allege that the pool was defective for having a shallow end; the sole basis there for claiming that the landowners had failed to maintain the pool in a reasonably safe condition was the failure to warn”). There was no suggestion in O’Sullivan that there was anything unusual or unsafe about the design, installation, or maintenance of the pool.
“While the open and obvious doctrine may relieve the defendant of its duty to warn, the doctrine does not mean that the defendant can maintain its property ‘in an unreasonably unsafe condition as long as the unsafe condition is open and obvious.’ ” Godsoe vs. Maple Park Props., Inc., supra, quoting Martins vs. Healy, supra. Here, Jose set up a trampoline immediately adjacent to a two-foot-deep pool, with a ladder leading directly from the pool to the trampoline, for the very purpose of enabling people to jump from the trampoline into the pool. He knew that the pool warned against jumping of any kind, and he knew that the setup was dangerous
On these facts, a jury were entitled to conclude that the defendants owed a duty of care — specifically a duty to remedy — despite the open and obvious nature of the danger. Accordingly, the judge erred in instructing the jury to cease deliberations if they concluded that the danger was open and obvious, and should have further instructed the jury that a landowner is not “relieved from remedying open and obvious dangers where he [or she] ‘can or should anticipate that the dangerous condition will cause physical harm to the [lawful entrant] notwithstanding its known or obvious danger.’ ” Soederberg, supra at 338, quoting Restatement (Second) of Torts, supra at § 343A comment f.
c. Requested special question. Having established that the jury’s determination that the danger created by the trampoline and pool was open and obvious was not dispositive of the defendants’ duty of care, and that the judge should have further instructed the jury regarding the duty to remedy, the judge should have posed a special question to the jury directing them to determine whether, as a matter of fact, the defendants reasonably could and should have anticipated that someone would be injured as a result of jumping from the trampoline into the pool. Therefore, while there was nothing wrong with special question no. 1 as posed by the judge in that it asked the jury to determine whether the danger was open and obvious, the judge should have posed some form of the plaintiff’s requested special question, see supra at note 9, as special question no. 2, allowing the jury next to determine whether the defendants reasonably could and should have anticipated that lawful entrants would jump from the trampoline to the pool causing injury despite the open and obvious danger of doing so.
4. Conclusion. Based on the foregoing analysis, we conclude that the trial judge’s failure to give the plaintiff’s requested instruction affected his substantial rights.
So ordered.
Notes
Jose T. Coleta is the plaintiff’s half-brother, and Maria A. Coleta is Jose’s wife and the plaintiff’s sister-in-law. Because they share a surname, we refer to the Coletas individually by their first names.
Dos Santos’s wife, Keila Coleta, and son, Bryan Coleta, joined in the suit, claiming loss of consortium resulting from Dos Santos’s injury. For the sake of clarity, except where noted, we refer to a single plaintiff in the discussion that follows.
We acknowledge the amicus brief of the Massachusetts Academy of Trial Attorneys.
Citing this piece of testimony, the defendants suggest in their brief that the plaintiff was attempting a dive when he was injured. Because the closing arguments are not included in the record, it is unknown whether the defendants made this argument to the jury. In light of the other evidence adduced at trial, the jury may well have concluded that the plaintiff’s statement to Officer Krishtal that he “dove” was consistent with the fact that his failed attempt at a flip ultimately resembled a dive, or that, given the circumstances, the plaintiff conveyed only basic information to Officer Krishtal regarding the mechanism of his injury. Ultimately, for reasons explained below, whether the plaintiff was attempting a flip or dive is irrelevant to the issue before us on appeal.
Restatement (Second) of Torts § 343A(1), at 220 (1965), provides:
“A possessor of land is not liable to his invitees for physical harm caused to them by any activity or condition on the land whose danger is known or obvious to them, unless the possessor should anticipate the harm despite such knowledge or obviousness.”
Comment f further expands on this doctrine, providing:
“There are, however, cases in which the possessor of land can and*152 should anticipate that the dangerous condition will cause physical harm to the invitee notwithstanding its known or obvious danger. In such cases the possessor is not relieved of the duty of reasonable care which he owes to the invitee for his protection. This duty may require him to warn the invitee, or to take other reasonable steps to protect him, against the known or obvious condition or activity, if the possessor has reason to expect that the invitee will nevertheless suffer physical harm.
“Such reason to expect harm to the visitor from known or obvious dangers may arise, for example, where the possessor has reason to expect that the invitee’s attention may be distracted, so that he will not discover what is obvious, or will forget what he has discovered, or fail to protect himself against it. Such reason may also arise where the possessor has reason to expect that the invitee will proceed to encounter the known or obvious danger because to a reasonable man in his position the advantages of doing so would outweigh the apparent risk. In such cases the fact that the danger is known, or is obvious, is important in determining whether the invitee is to be charged with contributory negligence, or assumption of risk .... It is not, however, conclusive in determining the duty of the possessor, or whether he has acted reasonably under the circumstances.”
The plaintiff requested the following instructions be given to the jury:
“The duty of a property owner to exercise reasonable care ‘includes an obligation to maintain the “property in a reasonably safe condition in view of all the circumstances, including the likelihood of injury to others, the seriousness of the injury, and the burden of avoiding the risk.” ’ Quinn v. Morganelli,73 Mass. App. Ct. 50 , 52 (2008)[.]”
“A property owner is not ‘relieved from remedying open and obvious dangers where he [or she] “can and should anticipate that the dangerous condition will cause physical harm to [someone lawfully on the premises] notwithstanding its known or obvious danger.” ’ Soederberg v. Concord Greene Condominium Ass’n,76 Mass. App. Ct. 333 , 338 (2010)[.]”
The plaintiff also requested the following corresponding special question: “Was it foreseeable that someone would be injured as a result of jumping from the trampoline into the swimming pool that the defendants set up and maintained on their property?”
As the Appeals Court noted and the defendants assert, the court in O’Sullivan v. Shaw,
“That many people might engage in objectively hazardous conduct on the basis of a belief that it can be done safely does not affect our analysis of a defendant’s duty of care under this standard if, in light of the obvious risks entailed by the activity, the belief in question, however prevalent it may be, must nonetheless fairly be judged unreasonable, if not foolhardy.”
First, as will be discussed infra, O’Sullivan addressed only whether there existed a duty to warn; it did not address any potential duty to remedy as none was alleged or supportable on the facts of that case. See id. at 201-203, 206-208. Second, to the extent this statement from O’Sullivan appears in any way inconsistent with our ruling today, we have stated much more recently in Papadopoulos v. Target Corp.,
We acknowledge that the text of § 343A comment f states that where a landowner can and should anticipate that a lawful entrant will encounter an open and obvious danger, he owes a duty to that entrant, and that “[t]his duty may require him to warn the [entrant], or to take other reasonable steps to protect him, against the known or obvious condition or activity ...” (emphasis added). Restatement (Second) of Torts, supra at § 343A comment f. To the extent that § 343A thus contemplates that the residual duty owed by a landowner in regard to open and obvious dangers may include a duty to warn (as opposed to a duty to remedy), it is contrary to our holding in this case and the established law of the Commonwealth. See Papadopoulos, supra at 379; O’Sullivan, supra at 204; Quinn v. Morganelli,
Our decision in Papadopoulos was released on July 26, 2010, ten days after judgment entered on the jury verdict in this case.
It is for substantially the same reasons that the defendants’ citation to Thorson v. Mandell,
The court noted the absence of markers indicating the depth of the pool, but given the various characterizations throughout the opinion of the plaintiff’s theory of negligence, this fact is best understood as being advanced in support of the plaintiff’s duty to warn claim. See O’Sullivan, supra at 202.
Maria also knew that the setup was dangerous.
The defendants’ testimony on this point was generally that Jose set up the trampoline next to the pool for the purposes of enabling people to “jump” from the trampoline to the pool, and that both defendants observed persons “jumping” from the trampoline into the pool and knew the setup was being used in this manner despite the danger. There was no testimony regarding what exactly the defendants meant by “jumping” or whether they believed persons would attempt to flip or dive into the pool, but it is clear that the defendants knew that persons were propelling themselves from the trampoline into the pool and that they knew this activity was dangerous. The plaintiff, however, testified that he specifically observed multiple people “flipping]” into the pool.
Although the cited cases and section from the Restatement (Second) of Torts discuss foreseeability of the precise manner or extent of an injury in terms of establishing proximate cause, not duty, the concept is equally applicable here, where the existence of a duty turns on whether the defendant can and should anticipate physical harm resulting from the open and obvious danger. See Quinn, supra at 55 n.6, citing Whittaker v. Saraceno,
It has been suggested that there is no fundamental difference between jumping off the trampoline and landing feetfirst on the ground, and jumping off the trampoline and landing feetfirst in two feet of water. We disagree. As an initial matter, there was no evidence adduced at trial regarding whether the trampoline manufacturer warned against jumping (or, more accurately, bouncing) directly from the trampoline onto the ground, and the jury were not asked to consider the reasonableness of doing so. However, Jose did testify that he disregarded the advice of the person who gifted the trampoline to his son, who told Jose that he should purchase a safety net designed to surround the trampoline. Such a safety net presumably would have prevented anyone from jumping off the trampoline, whether it be into the pool or onto the ground. In any event, regardless of the propriety or advisability of jumping from the trampoline with the intention of landing feetfirst on the ground, there is a discernible difference between that activity and the act of jumping feetfirst into a vinyl pool filled with two feet of water that specifically warned its users against jumping of any kind.
The defendants do not dispute that any error was indeed prejudicial to the plaintiff.
The liability analysis does not end here. Even if, on remand, the defendants are found to have owed and committed a breach of a duty of care, the plaintiff’s damages would be reduced by his comparative negligence and his recovery would be barred altogether if he were found to be more than fifty per cent at fault. G. L. c. 231, § 85. However, Bryan Coleta and Keila Coleta would still be entitled to recover for any loss of consortium. See Morgan v. Lalumiere,
