This case raises the issue of whether abutting property owners or lessees may assume a duty to pedestrians to inspect and maintain public sidewalks absent any affirmative action on their part which creates a dangerous condition.
Edmund J. Lange, Jr. appeals from separate grants of summary judgment to Weh-renberg Theaters, Inc. and Boatmen’s National Bank. The relevant facts are as follows.
*882 Boatmen’s Bank is trastee and Wehren-berg Theaters is lessee of the property housing the Shady Oak Theater on Forsyth Boulevard in Clayton, Missouri. Appellant Lange is confined to a wheelchair. On January 9, 1989, Lange was being wheeled past the Shady Oak Theater when his wheelchair struck a pothole depression in the sidewalk and flipped over. Lange’s face struck the sidewalk. He sustained severe injuries.
Lange brought suit against Boatmen’s National Bank [hereinafter trustee], Wehren-berg Theater [hereinafter lessee], and the City of Clayton for their negligent maintenance of the sidewalk in front of the Shady Oak Theater. The trial court granted trustee’s and lessee’s separate motions for summary judgment on the ground that they owed no duty to an injured party and certified these orders as final for purposes of appeal pursuant to the provisions of Rule 74.01(b).
Lange concedes, that under Missouri law, a municipality has a nondelegable duty to maintain public sidewalks. He argues, however, that a municipality is not necessarily exclusively liable and that the trial court erroneously granted the motions for summary judgment because material questions of fact existed as to whether trustee and lessee, by their actions, assumed an obligation to Lange to properly inspect and maintain the sidewalk fronting the Shady Oak Theater. Lange claims that a combination of the following factors evidences trustee’s and lessee’s assumption of such a role: a Clayton ordinance imposing a duty on abutting landowners to maintain public sidewalks; a lease, provision concerning maintenance of sidewalks; lessee’s periodic inspections of and repairs to the sidewalk; and trustee’s and lessee’s responses to a deposition question and an interrogatory.
In determining whether a grant of summary judgment was proper, we must consider the record in the light most favorable to an appellant.
Scott v. Thornton,
In the case at hand, Lange brought a negligence action against trustee and lessee. Accordingly, as part of his prima facie case, he must show the existence of a legal duty flowing from trustee and lessee to himself. He is unable to do so. The trial court’s grants of summary judgment were therefore proper.
Grant of Summary Judgment to Trustee
The award of summary judgment to trustee was appropriate since, prior to the accident, trustee leased the property and, under Missouri law, in the absence of a contrary agreement, the duty to make necessary repairs to property and the liability flowing from the failure thereof, is on the lessee and not on the owner.
Thomas v. Barnes,
Grant of Summary Judgment to Lessee
We find that lessee was also entitled to summary judgment. Although trustee technically owned a portion of the sidewalk, neither trustee nor lessee attempted to assert ownership, or restrict passage or usage, of this area since 1977. The private portion of the sidewalk was essentially “dedicated to public use as part "of the street and accepted by public user.”
Morgan v. Kroger Grocery & Baking Co.,
Generally, an abutting landowner has no duty to repair or maintain public sidewalks.
Hart v. City of Butler,
There are only two exceptions to this rule. First, an abutting landowner (or lessee) may be held liable if he or she makes “special use” of the sidewalk.
Rauh,
The second exception exists when the property owner has acted negligently and
artificially created
a dangerous condition.
Hart,
Lange appears to be trying to create a third exception to the general rule. He argues that a municipality is not necessarily the only party responsible for maintenance of a sidewalk and that a landowner or lessee is also liable when they take actions evidencing an intent to assume a duty to injured pedestrians. A similar argument was previously raised in
Teichman v. Potashnick Construction, Inc.,
In all three of these eases, based on circumstances similar to those in the case at hand, plaintiffs attempted to hold defendants to a greater duty than they imposed upon themselves and the court refused to increase the duty owed as a matter of law. In
Teich-man,
a directed verdict for defendants was affirmed.
Lange contends that these cases are all distinguishable on their facts and that none of them stand for the proposition that an abutting property owner or user can never be found to have assumed a duty to third parties to inspect and repair public sidewalks in a case in which the property owner does not affirmatively and artificially create the dangerous situation. He claims that the question of whether trustee and lessee assumed a duty is a question of fact and that, based on the totality of the circumstances, a reasonable jury could have found that trustee and lessee assumed a duty by their actions.
As evidence, Lange first cites a Clayton ordinance which he says imposes a duty on the abutting landowner flowing towards an injured pedestrian. Section 20.70 reads as follows:
It shall be the duty of every owner of real estate to keep the sidewalks, curb and gutter and driveway entrance adjacent to his property and in the city in good repair at all times and free from irregularities and offsets in the surface thereof which may render the same unsafe for use. Clayton, MO. Code art. IV, § 20-70. 1
This ordinance, however, merely creates a duty flowing from owner (or lessee through contractual assignment) to the City of Clayton and the liability for failure to comply with such an ordinance cannot exceed the fine or penalty prescribed therein.
Callaway,
Lange also avers that the lease provision 2 , and trustee’s and lessee’s responses to *885 a deposition question 3 and an interrogatory 4 are admissions of their assumption of a duty to Lange. Review of the record reveals otherwise. The lease provision merely created a contractual obligation flowing from lessee to trustee and in no way affected third party rights. Trustee’s and lessee’s responses to the interrogatory and the deposition question only appear to be an acknowledgement of their duty to the City of Clayton.
Finally, Lange argues that lessee’s periodic inspections and repairs to portions of the sidewalk constituted an assumption of duty as to the entire sidewalk. We do not agree. Prior to Lange’s fall, lessee repaired part of the sidewalk but not the portion where the accident occurred. Under Missouri law, liability imposed may be no broader than the duty assumed.
Teichman,
For the above reasons the trial court’s separate grants of summary judgment to trustee and lessee were proper.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
. The ordinance further provides that the director of public works may require the property owner to perform certain repairs. If the property owner does not complete the repairs within the specified time he or she is deemed guilty of a misdemeanor.
. Paragraph seven of the lease Wehrenberg signed reads as follows:
During the term of this lease, Lessee shall keep and maintain the demised premises and the buildings and other improvements thereon, and the appurtenances and sidewalks and alleys adjoining the same, in a safe, clean and wholesome condition and in accordance with all local public ordinances affecting said premises, and shall at all times, at its expense, comply with all laws, local ordinances or regu *885 lations of any municipality or other governmental agency applicable to the same....
. Deposition of Clyde Patton, Wehrenberg Director of Facilities:
Question: So, you would say, it's your understanding that the entire white building to the street is the responsibility of Wehrenberg to maintain that sidewalk [sic].
Answer: As I now understand the lease, yes.
. Question three of the interrogatories submitted to Wehrenberg and Boatmen's Bank:
Question: State the person or entity who you contend has responsibility to maintain the sidewalk and sidewalk area (specifically, that area of the concrete sidewalk which extends from the exterior of the Shady Oak Theater to the curb of Forsyth Boulevard) and if there is a written agreement or document related to the maintenance of the sidewalk, please attach a copy of the said agreement or document to your answers to these interrogatories. If the agreement is verbal, state what the agreement is.
Answer (from both Wehrenberg and Boatmen's): ... Objection. Calls for a legal conclusion. Without waiving said objection, defendant answers as follows: See Lease Agreement attached; in addition, the City of Clayton [sic].
