Lead Opinion
Plаintiff Milton Draughon, Sr., ("Plaintiff") appeals from an order granting summary judgment in favor of Defendant/Third-Party Plaintiff Evening Star Holiness Church of Dunn (the "Church") on Plaintiff's negligence claims. Plaintiff argues that summary judgment was improper, asserting a genuine issue of material fact existed as to: (1) the presence of a legal duty owed to him by the Church; and (2) his contributory negligence in falling on a set of stairs leading into the Church while carrying a casket. After careful review, we reverse the ruling of the trial cоurt.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
The record below indicates the following:
Plaintiff attended a funeral at the Church, located at Sampson Avenue in Dunn, North Carolina, on a sunny day in February of 2015. Before the service started, Plaintiff entered the Church sanctuary through an entrance facing Sampson Avenue. As Plaintiff and a church deacon were speaking, the minister who would be conducting the service approached and asked Plaintiff if he would be willing to help carry the deceased's casket into the sanctuary. Plaintiff declinеd. Some time later, an employee of the funeral home, Third-Party Defendant Dafford Funeral Home, Inc. ("Dafford"),
Plaintiff followed the Dafford employee out of the sanctuary through a door facing U.S. Route 421, different than the doоr Plaintiff had entered earlier, and descended a set of concrete and brick stairs. Once outside, Plaintiff walked approximately 25 to 30 feet to the hearse containing the casket. Plaintiff joined three other men at the hearse, and the group carried the casket, without any apparent difficulty, to the bottom of the stairs Plaintiff had navigated moments earlier. They then began ascending the stairs, unhindered by the casket. Before reaching the entryway, Plaintiff, who was positioned on the front left side of the casket, tripped on the top step and injured his knees. The top step was approximately two-and-a-half inches taller than the preceding steps.
Plaintiff filed suit against the Church on 22 August 2017, alleging negligence, negligence per se , and res ipsa loquitur arising out of the stair's defective and dangerous condition, i.e. , the difference in height between the top step and the ones below it. In response, the Church filed a combined answer and third-party complaint against Dafford for contribution and indemnification, asserting by affirmative defense that Plaintiff was contributorily negligent in failing to use reasonable care. Plaintiff, with leave of the trial court, filed an amended complaint on 5 March 2018.
The Church moved for summary judgment on Plaintiff's claims. The Church's motion argued, among other things, that Plaintiff possessed equal or superior knowledge of the alleged defective condition, having descended the stairs without issue moments before tripping. Plaintiff filed an affidavit in opposition; he also filed an affidavit from an engineering expert attesting to the defect in the stairs. Following a hearing, the trial court granted the Church's summary judgment motion on the grounds that Plaintiff had equal or superior knowledge of the open and obvious hazard and failed to exercise due care in navigating the steps. Plaintiff appeals.
II. ANALYSIS
Plaintiff argues that because he introduced sufficient evidence demonstrating genuine issues of material fact, his negligence claim should have survived summary judgment. The Church disagrees, asserting that: (1) Plaintiff had equal or superior knowledge of the alleged defect so the Church did not owe him a duty of care; and (2) Plaintiff's contributory negligence caused him to trip. Reviewing the evidence and applicable law, we agree with Plaintiff and reverse the trial court.
A. Standard of Review
"[The] standard of review of an appeal from summary judgment is de novo."
In re Will of Jones
,
"Summary judgment is rarely appropriate in negligence cases, even when there is no dispute as to the facts, becausе the issue of whether a party acted in conformity with the reasonable person standard is ordinarily an issue to be determined by a jury."
Surrette v. Duke Power Co.
,
B. Duty to Warn
The pаrties dispute whether Plaintiff's evidence discloses a duty owed to him by the Church. Landowners "have a duty to exercise reasonable care in the maintenance of their premises for the protection of lawful visitors."
Bolick v. Bon Worth, Inc.
,
The Church argues that Plaintiff had equal or superior knowledge of the stairs' condition because he had descended them without issue before later tripping on ascent, noting that this Court has upheld entry of summary judgment on premises liability claims where the plaintiffs had previously avoided or successfully navigated the hazards that later caused injury.
Bolick
,
In
Bolick
, a customer asked to use a store's bathroom.
Similarly, in
Von Viczay
, the plaintiff walked down an icy path to the front door of a home to attend a party.
Having held that a genuine issue of material fact exists concerning Plaintiff's knowledge of the hazard, we believe this case is more similar to
Lamm v. Bissette Realty, Inc.
,
[T]he fact that the last step down is some two inches deeper than the other two steps, partly as a result of this sloping, is not so obvious to someone descending the stairs. The combination of the slope and the variation of the height cannot be said as a matter of law to be an open and obvious defect of which plaintiff ... should have been aware.
Id.
at 416-17,
The Church argues that
Lamm
is inapposite, asserting it: (1) involved a plaintiff with no prior experience with the hazard, and therefore does not concern a plaintiff with equal or superior knowledge; and (2) addresses hidden, and not open and obvious, defects. These arguments are misplaced. First, as set forth
supra
, there exists a genuine issue of material fact as to Plaintiff's knowledge of the hazard at issue.
Plaintiff's affidavit states that the defect in question-the variation in height between the top step and the preceding ones-was not observable from a reasonable distance or while descending or ascending the stairs. Taken in the light most favorable to him, this evidence creates a disputed issue of material fact concerning whether the defect was hidden or open and obvious. The same evidence creates a disputed factual issue regarding whether Plaintiff had equal or superior knowledge of the danger after descending the stairs and while approaching with the casket. These factual disputes preclude a decision as a matter of law that the Church did not owe Plaintiff a duty to warn of the alleged defect.
As noted by the dissent, the Church points out that Plaintiff testified at his deposition that he tripped on both the top of the fourth step and the brick riser of the top step; he also acknowledged he made contact with the top of the fourth step first. But Plaintiff also testified that "I tripped on the top step and fell into the church." This testimony concerning the cause of Plaintiff's fall and the role of the fourth step and defective top riser in it raises a factual question for the jury to resolvе.
In
Lamm
, the defendants attempted a similar argument, "contend[ing] that plaintiff's forecast of evidence shows only that the sloping of the asphalt ramp and not the riser height was the cause of her accident, and therefore the accident was caused by an open and obvious condition of which defendants had no duty to warn plaintiff."
Lamm
,
Consistent with
Lamm,
we hold that summary judgment was improper and that a jury should have the opportunity to resolve the factual questions discussed above.
See also
Kiser v. Snyder
,
C. Contributory Negligence
The Church argues an alternative basis for affirming the trial court's order, asserting that "Plaintiff was contributorily negligent because he walked into a danger that was open and obvious." Having held that there is a genuine issue of material fact concerning the openness and obviousness of the hazard at issue, we need not address this argument. The Church also asserts that, even if the defect was hidden, Plaintiff was contributorily nеgligent in electing to use the stairs rather than taking an adjacent ramp. The cases cited by the Church for this proposition, however, are not applicable here.
The Church first sites
Kelly v. Regency Centers Corp.
,
Notwithstanding these differences, the Church contends that no reasonably prudent person would elect to carry a casket by hand up the stairs under the circumstances faced by Plaintiff independent of his subjective
knowledge оf any danger.
See, e.g.,
Smith v. Fiber Controls Corp.
,
The Church asserts Plaintiff was contributorily negligent in: (1) failing to use a nearby ramp; (2) failing to ask for additional assistance in carrying the casket or suggеsting the use of a trolley; and (3) ascending the stairs sideways while carrying the casket. These conclusory assertions of fact, however, are disputed by Plaintiff's evidence. Plaintiff's deposition testimony and affidavit assert that the danger in this case was not the act of carrying a casket up a flight of stairs, but was instead a hazardous difference in height between the top step and the ones below it; indeed, Plaintiff stated in his affidavit that his "fall occurred solely becаuse [he] tripped on the top stair of the staircase" and expressly disclaimed any effect the casket had on his ability to climb the steps. He also testified in deposition that he had no concerns carrying the casket with just four people and reiterated in his affidavit that he is "a strong man and had no difficulty lifting the casket or carrying the casket[.]" Nor, per his affidavit, did he have a "reason to think that four strong adults could not safely carry a casket uр a flight of stairs." As for the danger itself, Plaintiff's affidavit states that "the defect in the stairs ... cannot be perceived by the naked eye at a reasonable distance while climbing those stairs" or "while walking down ... or ... up the stairs[,]" and he testified at deposition that he "didn't recognize" the defect at the time he descended the steps.
Taking this evidence in the light most favorable to Plaintiff, a reasonable and prudent person would not know to take any precautiоns against this apparently imperceptible danger, whether carrying a casket or not. Thus, that same reasonable and prudent person would not believe taking the adjacent ramp to be necessary, nor feel the need to seek additional help or use a trolley, and we do not believe that carrying
a casket up the church steps into the sanctuary for a funeral is an indisputably negligent act.
Cf.
O'Neal
,
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the trial court's entry of summary judgment for the Church and remand for further proceedings.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Judge COLLINS concurs.
Judge DILLON dissents by separate opinion.
Counsel for Dafford has not entered an appearance in this appeal, so we limit our discussion of Dafford to the factual and procedural history.
As a factual matter, the Church appears to be incorrect in claiming the plaintiff in
Lamm
had never before traversed the steps on which she was injured.
Lamm v. Bissette Realty
,
This decision was reprinted in 1953 at
Dissenting Opinion
I believe that the evidence establishes, as a matter of law, that Plaintiff was contributorily negligent when he tripped walking up steps leading from the sidewalk into the Church building. Specifically, the evidence conclusively establishes that Plaintiff began his fall when he tripped over a step which was properly constructed. And, the evidence also conclusively establishes that Plaintiff was negligent as he stumblеd over the next step whose defective design was obvious. I believe that Judge Gray ruled correctly and, therefore, I dissent.
Here, Plaintiff's own expert described the stairs essentially as follows: There are five concrete steps leading from the sidewalk to the Church's entry door. But there is also a rise from the top (fifth) concrete step into the Church building itself. The rises between the five concrete steps (that is, between the first and second, the second and third, the third and fourth, and the fourth and fifth) are all concrete and are uniform in height, about 6.5 inches each. However, the rise between the fifth concrete step and the interior of the Church building, composed of mostly red brick (part of the Church building) and a white-painted, wooden threshold, is over 10.5 inches.
I agree with the majority that Plaintiff's evidence is sufficient to reach the jury on the question of whether the Church's negligence was a proximate cause of Plaintiff's fall; Plaintiff stated that he tripped as he was stepping from the top concrete step into the Church building; Section 1115.3(b) of the our State Building Code requires that "risers [shall be] of uniform height in any one flight of stairs[;]" and our Supreme Court has indicated that a violation of the Building Code may constitute negligence
per se
.
Lamm v. Bissette Realty, Inc.
,
But I also conclude that the evidence establishes, as a matter of law, that Plaintiff's own negligence, too, wаs a proximate cause in his fall and subsequent injury. Specifically, Plaintiff admitted in his deposition that he began his fall when he tripped as he was stepping from the fourth concrete step to the fifth concrete step, before attempting to make the last step into the Church building:
Q: Are you tripping on concrete or brick?
A: Both of them, really.
Q: Which one do you trip on first?
A: Well, it would have to be that one first because it comes first.
Q: Which one? The concrete?
A: Yeah, it would have to be that.
Q: Would it be the front of the concrete you trip on, that step of concrete?
A:No, it would have been the front of it .
(Emphasis added.) Through this testimony, Plaintiff clearly states that he first tripped on the top of the concrete rise between the fourth and fifth step. Any doubt as to what Plaintiff was saying was cleared up with his response to the following question, which clearly assumes that Plaintiff began tripping as he was stepping on the fifth concrete step:
Q: From the area you started tripping, which you say [is] the front of this concrete step, would you draw a line from that point over to this part of the picture and put a 1 оn it.
Plaintiff then marked on a photo of the steps that he began tripping on the top front corner of the fifth concrete step; he did not initially trip on the 10.5 inch rise from the fifth step into the Church building. This picture marked by Plaintiff was before Judge Gray and is part of the record on appeal. And Plaintiff's own evidence, through the affidavit of his expert, is uncontradicted that this step between the fourth and fifth concrete step was not in violation of the Building Code, as it was uniform with the other steps that Plaintiff had just ascended.
I am guided by our Supreme Court that "if [a] step is properly constructed and well lighted so that it can be seen by one entering or leaving the [building], by the exercise of reasonable care, then there is no liability."
Garner v. Atlantic Greyhound Corp.
,
I further conclude that Plaintiff was contributorily negligent, as a matter of law, as
he as he took his final, off-balanced step into the Church building itself. Assuming, the Church may have been negligent as to this final step because of the height differential, Plaintiff was also negligent for not taking due care in taking this final step. Plaintiff's own expert described the rise between the cоncrete steps as being concrete, but that the rise between the last concrete step into the church consisted of some concrete, then brick, and then a wooden threshold, a difference which I believe was open and obvious. The picture of the steps in the record shows obvious differences between the other step rises and the rise leading into the building, such as the rise into the building consisting of some concrete, then mostly dark red briсk, and then a white threshold, whereas the other rises were uniformly gray concrete. Further, Plaintiff had walked down these same steps just minutes prior to the fall, surely noticing the height differential as he stepped from the Church building to the top step. And the evidence shows that it was daytime when he fell.
See
Stoltz v. Burton
,
