648 N.E.2d 899 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1994
This cause came on to be heard upon the appeal, the transcript of the docket, journal entries and original papers from the Hamilton County Court of Common Pleas, the transcript of the proceedings, the briefs and the arguments of counsel. This cause has been removed sua sponte from the court's accelerated calendar.
Plaintiff-appellant, Pinkie Marshall, and her husband Paul appeal from the summary judgment granted by the trial court in favor of the defendants-appellees, Plainville IGA and Keller's Food Market, Inc., on her claim for personal injuries and her husband's claim for loss of consortium. In her single assignment of error she contends that summary judgment was improper under Civ.R. 56 because, in view of her status as an invitee of the defendants, genuine issues of material fact existed relative to her fall on an unnatural accumulation of ice.
Marshall stated that while carrying groceries from defendants' supermarket to her car, she slipped and fell on ice in the parking lot. She maintained that the ice was in a "groove" in the pavement. In his deposition and affidavit filed in opposition to the defendants' motion for summary judgment, Marshall's expert, a civil engineer, described where Marshall fell as a "drainage trough" built into the asphalt pavement, measuring three feet wide, forty-five feet long, one and one-quarter inches deep, and extending in the parking lot across the front of the supermarket as depicted in photographs. In his affidavit Marshall's expert stated: *475
"The depression was not just a minor imperfection but was a trough built into the asphalt surfaced parking area. It was installed without proper drainage inlets such as catch basins or open grating and storm drain pipes to remove water from the surface. Therefore, it caused an unnatural accumulation of ice in the area traversed by pedestrians, when walking from the parking area to the store entrance, after the temperature dropped below freezing."
Although an owner or occupier of land ordinarily owes no duty to its business invitees to remove or warn of natural accumulations of ice and snow on its premises, Brinkman v. Ross
(1993),
In Celotex Corp. v. Catrett (1986),
The defendants maintain that Marshall's expert is not competent to render his opinion because (1) his examination of the premises and the trough occurred two years after Marshall sustained her injuries, and (2) he was unable to identify the exact location where Marshall fell. Neither contention has merit. Evid.R. 703 requires that the facts upon which an expert bases an opinion be those perceived by the expert or admitted into evidence. The pertinent evidence before the trial court was: (1) Marshall's deposition, in which she testified how and where she fell on ice in the trough; (2) the photographs of the trough and parking lot, which were exhibits in the depositions of Marshall and her expert; and (3) her expert's deposition, in which he testified that although he did not read Marshall's deposition, her attorney was present during his examination of the premises and identified for him where Marshall fell in the trough. Having offered evidence that she fell on ice in this trough, which she claimed was a construction defect allowing an unnatural accumulation of ice, Marshall was not required to pinpoint the precise location of her fall for the expert in the same manner, for example, as had she fallen in a particular pothole in the parking lot. Furthermore, the record does not suggest that this trough had changed since her fall.
In Cash v. Cincinnati (1981),
When the evidence is viewed most favorably to Marshall, as required by Civ.R. 56(C), whether the trough was a substantial defect allowing ice to accumulate artificially presents an issue on which reasonable minds could differ.
The judgment is reversed, and this cause is remanded to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with law and this decision.
Judgment reversedand cause remanded.
SHANNON, P.J., KLUSMEIER and GORMAN, JJ., concur. *477