—Alan Fredrickson appeals a summary-judgment dismissing his personal injury claim against Bertolino’s coffee shop. Fredrickson alleges that he was injured when a chair he sat in at Bertolino’s broke. The trial court granted summary judgment because Fredrickson presented no evidence that Bertolino’s either actually or constructively knew the chair was defective. Fredrickson argues that because Bertolino’s way of doing business created an ongoing danger of injury from old chairs, he was not required to prove knowledge. We disagree with Fredrickson and therefore affirm.
FACTS
¶2 Detective Alan Fredrickson purchased coffee at Bertolino’s coffee shop. When he sat down at a table in the shop, the chair broke and gave way. Fredrickson claims that he was injured as a result.
¶3 At the time, William Easley owned and managed Bertolino’s. When Easley purchased the coffee shop in 1995, the decor consisted of antique-looking, mismatched, wooden tables, chairs, and book cases. Easley maintained that aesthetic after he became the owner.
¶4 Easley considered himself an active manager. He testified that he arrived at the shop at 5:00 a.m. each day, seven days a week, “to make sure everything was working, whether it was the equipment or the chairs.” Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 33. Over the course of a week, he would inspect each chair, focusing on the ones he knew were questionable or “were going in the direction of needing to be thrown out or fixed.” CP at 38. He also tested the chairs by sitting in them. Sometimes customers told him when chairs were wobbly or needed to be fixed, although no customer before Fredrickson had ever complained of being injured by a chair. Between the time Easley purchased the shop in 1995 and Fredrickson’s fall in 2001, Easley received about three complaints concerning chairs.
¶5 Easley asserts that when a wobbly or unstable chair came to his attention, he would immediately fix it or throw it away and replace it with another. He generally purchased replacement chairs at garage sales and antique shops, and sometimes at Fred Meyer. Easley repaired broken chairs himself because he was “accustomed to woodwork.” CP at 33. He owned a construction business and occasionally built houses in the afternoons while managing Bertolino’s in the mornings. Easley estimated that he threw away four chairs a year and that he repaired another four to five a year.
¶6 Sarah Erickson, a Bertolino’s barista, stated:
[Biased upon my best recollection of the day, my knowledge of our everyday customer traffic patterns and the habit and routine of Bertolino’s service and care of its employees, I know one or more persons sat at that location that morning before the plaintiff sat there. I observed no one having difficulties with any of our chairs that morning, nor did anyone complain about the condition of the chair the plaintiff broke.
CP at 22.
¶7 Brooke Giesbrecht, another Bertolino’s employee, witnessed the incident while working at a computer near the chair that broke. Giesbrecht was certain that someone sat in the chair before Fredrickson sat in it. She also asserts,
[although Bertolino’s has antique-looking chairs, the coffee shop took good care of them. I often observed Willie Easley inspecting the chairs. I even recall him disposing of a couple of chairs when theybecame too rickety. I also observed him bringing in chairs from his vehicle after repairing them.
CP at 25.
¶8 Fredrickson sued Bertolino’s for negligently furnishing and maintaining its premises. Bertolino’s moved for summary judgment, arguing that Fredrickson presented no evidence that (1) it had actual or constructive notice the chair would collapse under Fredrickson’s weight and (2) it failed to exercise reasonable care to protect Fredrickson from the danger of a collapsing chair.
¶9 In response, Fredrickson argued that he did not have to prove notice because it was reasonably foreseeable that, due to the operations at Bertolino’s, a customer could be injured by a breaking chair. He also argued that there was sufficient evidence to create an issue of fact whether Bertolino’s had constructive knowledge that the chair could break. The trial court disagreed and granted Bertolino’s motion for summary judgment.
ANALYSIS
I. Summary Judgment
¶10 We review a summary judgment de novo. See Retired Pub. Employees Council of Wash. v. Charles,
II. Liability to Business Invitees
¶11 To establish the elements of his claim, Fredrickson had to show “(1). . . duty. . . , (2) breach of that duty, (3) a resulting injury, and (4) a proximate cause between the breach and the injury.” Tincani v. Inland Empire Zoological Soc’y,
¶12 Generally, a business owner is liable to an invitee for an unsafe condition on the premises if the condition was “ ‘caused by the proprietor or his employees, or the proprietor [had] actual or constructive notice of the unsafe condition.’” Wiltse v. Albertson’s, Inc.,
¶13 Reasonable care requires a landowner to inspect for dangerous conditions, “ ‘followed by such repair, safeguards, or warning as may be reasonably necessary for [the invitee’s] protection under the circumstances.’ ” Tincani,
¶15 Fredrickson complains that Bertolino’s inspection procedures were inadequate, asserting that there was no “system.” Br. of Appellant at 7. But he offered no evidence that Easley failed to inspect the chairs or that his inspection routine did not meet industry standards. In contrast, Easley testified that he visually and physically inspected chairs daily, paying closer attention to the chairs he had repaired or ones he thought might need repairing in the near future. Further, he explained that once he discovered a chair was in need of repair or throwing out, he would immediately fix it or replace it with a new chair. Giesbrecht corroborated that “[a]lthough Bertolino’s has antique-looking chairs, the coffee shop took good care of them.” CP at 25. She stated that she “often observed Willie Easley inspecting the chairs.” CP at 25. She confirmed that he disposed of chairs when they became rickety or he repaired them. Fredrickson offered no evidence to the contrary.
¶16 Fredrickson also theorizes that the repairing procedures were inadequate because Easley was “not a trained carpenter.” Br. of Appellant at 8. But Easley testified that he owned his own construction business and, on occasion, built houses while managing Bertolino’s. Fredrickson presented no evidence that Easley was not competent to repair the chairs himself. Moreover, he offered no evidence that Easley had repaired the chair that broke or that faulty repairs caused the chair to break.
¶17 In short, Fredrickson presented no evidence that Bertolino’s had either actual or constructive notice of any problem with the chair.
III. The Pimentel
¶18 Fredrickson claims that he does not have to show actual or constructive notice because the danger of breaking chairs at Bertolino’s was unreasonable, continuous, or reasonably foreseeable. An injured business invitee may be excused from proving notice if the unsafe condition causing the injury is “ ‘continuous or foreseeably inherent in the nature of the business or mode of operation.’ ” Ingersoll,
¶19 For example, in O’Donnell,
¶20 In Iwai v. State,
¶21 Moreover, even if we applied Pimentel, Fredrickson has not shown that the seating area at Bertolino’s is a self-service area. Specifically, he has not shown that customers “serve themselves” in the Bertolino’s seating area; and he has presented no evidence that customers in the seating area perform duties that a proprietor’s employees would customarily perform. Further, he has not shown how any hazardous condition posed by the chairs relates to any self-service aspect of Bertolino’s.
¶22 Nor has Fredrickson established that the danger of breaking chairs was continuous or foreseeably inherent in the nature of Bertolino’s business. Easley testified that he has never had an incident where a chair gave way either partially or completely under a customer. And no customer has ever complained of a breaking chair injury. Fredrickson has not shown that there is anything inherently dangerous about running a coffee shop equipped with used furniture. The evidence of one broken chair is not sufficient to establish that antique chairs are inherently or foreseeably dangerous.
¶23 Affirmed.
Van Deren, A.C.J., and Houghton, J., concur.
Review denied at
Notes
The plaintiff must establish that the defendant had, or should have had, knowledge of the dangerous condition in time to remedy the situation before the injury or to warn the plaintiff of the danger. Ingersoll,
Pimentel,
Other divisions of the Court of Appeals in Washington have agreed that the Pimentel exception applies solely to self-service entities. In Carlyle, Division Three expressly held that the Pimentel exception is a limited rule for self-service operations and applies only to specific unsafe conditions that are continuous or foreseeably inherent in the nature of the business or mode of operation. Carlyle v. Safeway Stores, Inc.,
The exception was first noted by the Court of Appeals in Ciminski v. Finn Corp.,
