Appellant Evelyn Nickens Lynn filed a complaint against the District of Columbia for an injury she allegedly sustained when she fell on a sidewalk in a deteriorated condition. The case was resolved in the trial court by the grant of the District’s motion for summary judgment. Lynn appeals, claiming there were genuine issues of material fact with respect to: (1) whether the District had constructive notice of the condition of the sidewalk; and (2) whether Lynn was contributorily negligent. We reverse and remand.
I. FACTS
In the early evening in May 1992, appellant fell and fractured her left knee when she stepped up onto the curb after crossing the intersection of Benning Road and F Street, Southeast. At the time, she was walking with her four young children on the way to visit appellant’s adult daughter, Lolita Capers. Appellant fell in a treebox after she and the children crossed Benning
During discovery, appellant testified that the pavement and treebox had been in a condition of disrepair for a substantial period of time. In deposition she stated the condition had existed for “[m]ore than a month” and “[pjrobably” for a year. She described the intersection as heavily traveled because it is proximate to two shopping centers and large housing developments. Appellant stated there is also a public school and a police substation nearby. She stated she had observed workmen surveying the area sometime prior to her fall.
In an affidavit, appellant stated that she was aware of an alternate route to cross the street, but chose not to use it. According to appellant, that path, emanating from the northwest corner of F Street, also entailed crossing two busy streets instead of one, and was unsafe for her and her children because it was littered with gravel, stones, and other debris. Appellant’s adult daughter also filed an affidavit describing the alternate pavement across the street as cracked and deteriorated. She stated that in 1991 she herself had fallen on stones and gravel and twisted her ankle.
In response to a motion by the District, the trial court issued an order of summary judgment, stating Lynn had failed to present prima facie evidence of constructive notice, and that she was contributorily negligent as a matter of law.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
Summary judgment “is appropriate only when there are no material facts in issue and when it is clear that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”
Willis v. Cheek,
III. DISCUSSION
A. Constructive Notice
As one ground for granting summary judgment, the court concluded that appellant had failed to present
prima facie
evidence of constructive notice. The District cannot be held hable for an injury caused by an unsafe condition on its streets, unless it has actual or constructive notice of the condition.
Washington Metro. Area Transit Auth. v. Davis,
Since questions of this kind are necessarily fact-specific, a trial judge must carefully assess, in considering a motion for summary judgment or directed verdict, whether material questions of fact exist. This court concluded that evidence showing that foliage obstructed a bus stop for two years was sufficient to raise a factual question of constructive notice.
WMATA, supra,
In contrast, where the plaintiff presented “no evidence as to how long the alleged defect existed,” a directed verdict against the claimant was affirmed.
Jones v. District of Columbia,
In order to prove constructive notice, then, a plaintiff must present evidence: (1) that a dangerous condition existed,
see Harding v. District of Columbia,
In this instance appellant proffered evidence that the condition of the sidewalk and treebox had existed for “[m]ore than a month,” and “[pjrobably” for a year. The government attempts to strengthen its position in this regard by referring to appellant’s seeming uncertainty as to the specific condition of the pavement shortly before her fall. 1 However, depositions and affidavits from others support appellant’s pHma facie claim that appellee had constructive notice.
Additionally, appellant presented evidence that the intersection where she fell was a busy one, proximate to a police facility, a public school and shopping areas. Given the nature of the area which involved pedestrian traffic, the alleged dangerous condition of the sidewalk, the time during which that dangerous condition allegedly had existed and the presence of police officers in the immediate vicinity, we cannot agree that there was not even a question of fact for the fact finder with respect to constructive notice to the District of the alleged dangerous condition. We note, in particular, the proximity to police presence. In a different context, dealing with waiver of immunity, D.C.Code § 12-309 permits a written police report meeting specific requirements to substitute as the statutorily required notice before a lawsuit may be brought against the District. Although the situation in this case would not satisfy the notice requirement under § 12-309,
see District of Columbia v. Dunmore,
B. Contributory Negligence
The second basis given by the trial judge for granting summary judgment was that appellant was contributorily negligent as a matter of law. A claimant who is contributorily negligent is completely barred from recovery.
George Washington Univ. v. Waas,
The existence of negligence and contributory negligence are normally questions of fact for the jury, and it is only where the facts are undisputed and, considering every legitimate inference, only one conclusion may be drawn that a trial court may find negligence or contributory negligence as a matter of law.
D.C. Transit System, Inc. v. Harris,
“Ordinarily a person may use the street so long as it is consistent with reasonable care to do so .... ”
Altemus v. Talmadge,
Nor is the existence of an alternate route alone sufficient to show contributory negligence.
See Martin v. George Hyman Constr. Co.,
In this instance, the District has shown that appellant knew of the eroded condition of the treebox prior to May 1, 1992. That alone, however, is not enough to find contributory negligence as a matter of law.
See Safeway Stores, supra,
197 at 849;
Willis, supra,
In considering the surrounding circumstances, appellant stated that she was walking with her four young children, and was concerned for their safety. For that reason, she sought to keep her body between her children and the street. Her concern for her children comprises part of the circumstances the jury must assess in determining whether Lynn exercised reasonable care.
See Safeway Stores, supra,
While the District has shown that an alternate route was available, appellant presented evidence that the alternate route was also hazardous. Both appellant and Capers stated that the northwest corner of F Street was cracked and deteriorated, and littered with gravel, loose stones, and debris. Further, Capers testified that one year prior to this incident, she had fallen on the loose stones and
IV. CONCLUSION
Under these circumstances, we find the grant of summary judgment to be error. Whether the District had constructive notice, and whether appellant was contribu-torily negligent, were factual issues material to the case and genuinely disputed. We therefore reverse the trial court’s decision, and remand the case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. The deposition transcript reads:
Q: But you don’t know if it was that deep the day before, is that right?
A: The day before.
Q: Do you know if it was?
A: Yeah, it was that deep the day before.
Q: It was that deep the day before?
A: Yeah.
Q: Okay. What about the week before, do you know if it was that deep the week before?
A: No, I can't say.
. In her deposition, Capers states, “In 1991, the year before my mother had this accident, I twisted my ankle pretty badly in stepping onto the curb at the northwest comer of that intersection, because of the accumulation there of loose stones and gravel along the curb, in the crosswalk" (emphasis added). Appellant, however, fell at the southeast corner of the intersection. Capers did not injure herself, therefore, at the very spot Lynn did.
