delivered the opinion of the court.
Plаintiff Jaylyn Harlin, a minor, by and through plaintiff Wanda Harlin, her mother and next friend, and Wanda Harlin, individually, filed suit against the defendant Sears Roebuck and Company after Jaylyn sustained injuries after falling and hitting her head on a display stand at a Sears department store. The trial court granted Sears’s motion for summary judgment. The plaintiffs appeal, contending: (1) the trial court made procedural errors in granting summary judgment; (2) issues of material fact exist to preclude summary judgment; аnd (3) the trial court erred by in effect precluding the plaintiffs from filing an amended complaint. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.
BACKGROUND
On April 19, 2002, Wanda Harlin, her mother, Mattie Jackson, and Wanda’s two-year-old daughter, Jaylyn Harlin, went to the Sears department store at North and Harlem Avenues in Chicago. Jaylyn, who could walk on her own, was not put in a stroller but instead held Wanda’s hand as they walked through the store. As Jaylyn and Wanda passed through the hosiery department, Jаylyn fell for unknown reasons and struck her head on a corner of a stand used for displaying merchandise, causing a laceration above her eye. An ambulance took Jaylyn to West Suburban Hospital, where she received stitches.
The plaintiffs filed a two-count complaint seeking over $50,000 in damages. Count I alleged that Wanda and Jaylyn were present in a retail establishment owned or operated by Sears pursuant to a specific invitatiоn to the public, that Jaylyn tripped and fell, “striking her face upon an unreasonably sharp edge or section of an object used by Defendant to display its merchandise,” that Sears had a duty to maintain its premises in a reasonably safe manner, and that Jaylyn’s fall resulted in serious injury. The plaintiffs alleged Sears carelessly, negligently and improperly: (1) maintained its premises; (2) failed to correct a condition that it knew or should have known posed serious risks to its customers, especially those of tender years; (3) failed to prevent customers and the general public from coming in contact with said dangerous condition; and/or (4) displayed its merchandise upon equipment that it knew, or should have known, posed serious risk to its customers, especially those of tender years. Count II sought recovery under the family expense statute of the Rights of Married Persons Act (750 ILCS 65/15 (West 2002)) for expenses Wanda incurred.
Attached to Sears’s motion was Wanda’s deposition. Wanda stated that before the fall occurred, she and Jaylyn were walking in the middle of the hosiery department. Wanda was walking straight ahead on a clear path toward the elevators, where Mattie was talking to a friend. Wanda wаs holding Jaylyn’s left hand in her right hand. As they passed a display stand on Jaylyn’s right, Jaylyn fell. Wanda did not see what caused Jaylyn to fall and did not actually see Jaylyn fall. However, before Jaylyn fell, Wanda saw the display stand, which she described as a tall, brown, wooden stand “with metal on the bottom” that was not circular. The stand had socks and merchandise hanging from it and nothing blocked her view of it. Similar stands were located throughout the hosiery department. Before Jaylyn fell, Wanda did not perceive anything dangerous about the stand.
Jaylyn fell facedown and struck her head on the edge of the corner part of the stand toward the bottom, receiving a “big gash” above her right eyebrow that was bleeding. Wanda showed a female Sears employee where the fall occurred, but was not sure whether the photograph of a stand taken on April 19, 2002, was the same stand upon which Jaylyn struck her head.
The plaintiffs responded to Sears’s motion and argued that under Kahn v. James Burton Co.,
Attached to the plaintiffs’ response was the affidavit of Julius Holmes, who, at the time of Jaylyn’s fall, was a loss prevention agent at the Sears store at North and Harlem and, at the time of his deposition, was a loss prevention manager of a different Sears store. Julius testified that on April 19, 2002, he was notified by a Sears employee that a little girl had fallen. He obtained a first aid Mt from the security office and went to the cosmetics area, wherе he saw Wanda talking to the employee. Julius applied an ice pack to Jaylyn’s brow and went with Wanda to the scene of the fall. Wanda showed Julius the place where Jaylyn hit her head, which Julius described as a base of a fixture. Julius inspected the area for blood or debris that Jaylyn may have slipped on, but found none. He retrieved a Polaroid camera from the security office and photographed the area where Jaylyn fеll. He was unsure whether Wanda was there when he took the photos. Julius identified a photograph of an empty display stand as the one Wanda pointed out as where Jaylyn hit her head. He did not notice anything unusual about the corner, which he described as “a 90-degree piece of metal that’s along the corner of that base.” He also did not know whether that particular corner was rougher or smoother than the other three corners, but testified it looked the same as the other three.
Julius did not know why the display stand was empty and testified it was not unusual to see stands empty. His duties as a loss prevention agent required him to monitor the store for safety, including looking at the condition of display equipment to make sure it was presentable to customers and free of chips or loose
The trial court granted Sears’s motion for summary judgment and disposed of the case. The record does not contain a report of proceedings, certified bystander’s report, or an agreed statement of facts of the summary judgment proceedings. The trial court thereafter denied the plaintiffs’ motion to reconsider after hearing arguments from the parties.
ANALYSIS
I
The purpose of a summary judgment motion is to determine whether a genuine issue of material fact exists. Purtill v. Hess,
II
We first address several issues presented in the parties’ briefs. We initially note the plaintiffs’ attorney’s improper reliance on material that is not part of the appellate record. In fact, we previously granted Sears’s motion to strike a transcript of a tape-recorded statement made by Sears employee Yvette Figueroa, which was attached to the plaintiffs’ brief but not included in the record on appeal and therefore not considered by the trial court during the summary judgment proceedings. The plaintiffs’ attorney also takes issue with the trial court’s findings in granting summary judgment. However, this сourt can review the trial court’s factual findings only if we have been provided with a sufficiently complete record of the trial proceedings. Dargis v. Paradise Park, Inc.,
We also disagree with the plaintiffs’ contention that Sears’s motion for summary judgment did not address every allegation in the complaint. Sears moved for summary judgment on the basis that it owed no duty to protect Jaylyn against any injury from falling on the display stand and, in any event, the condition of the display stand was open and obvious. The open and obvious doctrine speaks to the duty element which, as discussed below, is a central element of any negligence claim. See Bucheleres v. Chicago Park District,
Having clarified that we are considering only materials included in the appellate record, that we are reviewing the ruling and not the reasoning of the trial court, and that we may affirm the grant of summary judgment on any factual basis supported by the record, we turn to the merits of this appeal.
Ill
The plaintiffs contend summary judgment was improper in this negligence action. To state a cause of action for negligence, a plaintiff must establish the existenсe of a duty, the defendant’s breach of that duty, and that the breach was the proximate cause of the plaintiffs resulting injuries. Mt. Zion State Bank & Trust v. Consolidated Communications, Inc.,
The issue in this case is whether Sears owed a duty to exercise due care to remedy the condition of the display stand or otherwise protect Jaylyn, a two-year-old child, from any resulting injury. The imposition of a duty depends on: (1) the foreseeability of injury; (2) the likelihood of injury; (3) the magnitude of the burden of guarding against the injury; and (4) the consequences of placing that burden on the defendant. Ward,
The touchstone of a court’s duty analysis is to determine whether the defendant and the plaintiffs stood in such a relationship to each other that the law imposed upon the defendant an obligation of reasonable conduct for the benefit of the plaintiffs. Happel v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.,
The plaintiffs have not provided this court with any case involving a factual situation similar to that presented in this аppeal. They contend, however, that Sears’s duty arises under our supreme court’s decision in Kahn, which, along with its progeny, “established the foreseeability of harm to children as the cornerstone of liability.” Corcoran v. Village of Libertyville,
Kahn is usually addressed in cases where the injured minor is trespassing or unaccompanied. See Corcoran,
We first address the threshold determination under Kahn: whether a dangerous condition existed on Sears’s property. The dangerous condition alleged in this case was an “unreasonably sharp edge or section” of the display stand. A dangerous condition under Kahn is one that is likely to cause injury to children, who, by reason of their age and immaturity, would not be capable of appreciating the risk involved. Mt. Zion,
The plaintiffs contend that the corner of the display stand constituted a latent dangerous condition that a two-year-old child could not be expected to appreciate. The plaintiffs’ contention demonstrates the difficulty of applying the Kahn doctrine in this case, as cases relying on Kahn generally involve a dаngerous condition that a child actively encounters. In this case, however, there was no evidence that the corner of the display constituted a dangerous condition in the absence of Jaylyn falling upon it. Of course, Jaylyn had no control over what she would encounter when she fell. That she would strike any particular object and would sustain injuries other than those associated with a fall itself was unforeseeable, in the absence of any evidence that the stand itself caused the fall. Given that the injury to Jaylyn occurred during an involuntary act of falling, her age and immaturity had no bearing on appreciating the risk of injury in falling on the corner of the display.
Additionally, as Sears points out, that an injured child was under the care or control of a parent will sometimes absolve defendants of their duty toward the child. Compare Stevens,
In Stevens, a child, not yet 18 months old, was a social guest with her parents at the defendants’ home, fell into a pond located in the defendants’ backyard and suffered brain injury. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of the defendants, finding they owed no duty to the child. In affirming the trial court’s decision, the reviewing court first addressed whether a dangerous condition existed on the premises. Although bodies of water have been found to constitute obvious dangers to children, the plaintiffs argued that the danger of the pond was not obvious because it was obscured by weeds and had a sudden drop-off. The reviеwing court agreed with the plaintiffs’ contention that a very young child may not be expected to avoid the dangers of drowning, but found that because the child’s parents were aware of the water, a visible dangerous condition, and the weeds, the defendants were relieved of their duty to protect the child. Stevens,
In Perri, the parents of a three-month-old girl sued a restaurant after a four-year-old boy at their table, who was accompanied by his parents, spun a lazy susan upon which a pot of hot tea had been placed and burned the infant. A waitress had placed the tea on thе table unbeknownst to the adults in the party. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of the defendant restaurant. This court reversed, holding that the hot tea on
Applying the reasoning of Stevens, Kay, and Perri to this case, we find that even if the corner of the display stand constituted a dangerous condition, Sears did not owe Jaylyn a duty. Wanda testified she saw the display stand, which she described as tall, wooden, not circular, and as having metal on the bottom, before Jaylyn fell. She also testified it was similar to the numerous stands throughout the hosiery department. This case is therefore unlike Perri, where the parents were unaware that the hot tea had been placed on their table. Rather, as in Stevens, in this case the parent was made aware of any dangerous condition, even if the injured child could not be expected to appreciate it. As in Kay, Wanda apparently saw no harm in letting her daughter walk on her own near the display stand. Although Wanda testified she did not perceive anything dangerous about thе stand, we find that it is a matter of common sense that two year olds often fall and may get hurt when they land on noncircular objects with metal at the bottom. See Young v. Chicago Housing Authority,
This is not a case where a store negligently maintаined its display stands in a manner such that it would be foreseeable that children would attempt to climb upon and swing from them. See Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Lerma,
The plaintiffs argue that the deposition testimony and photographic evidence in the record present a factual disрute about whether the display stand was empty. They also argue Julius Holmes’s testimony indicating a stand left empty for more than 24 hours, constituted a “safety concern” established the placement of the stand was improper. While we agree with the plaintiffs that a factual dispute exists about whether the stand was empty or full, we do not find this factual dispute to be material in light of Wanda’s testimony that she saw the stand before Jaylyn fell.
IV
The plaintiffs’ final contention is that the trial court erred by in effect precluding them from filing an amended complaint. Section 2—1005(g) of the Code of Civil Procedure provides “[bjefore or after the entry of a summary judgment, the court shall permit pleadings to be amended upon just and reasonable terms.” 735 ILCS 5/2—1005(g) (West 2002). A trial
We initially disagree with the plaintiffs’ contention that the trial сourt precluded them from filing an amended complaint. Our reading of the record shows that the trial court did, in fact, leave open the possibility of the filing of an amended complaint. Further, our supreme court has set forth a four-pronged test to determine whether amendment should be permitted. Hoover,
CONCLUSION
For these reasons, the decision of the circuit court of Cook County is affirmed.
Affirmed.
McBRIDE, EJ., and CAHILL, J., concur.
