delivered the opinion of the court, in which
This appeal involves a nursing home visitor who injured herself by stepping into a grassy depression in the building’s landscaping. The visitor and her husband filed suit in the Circuit Court for Lawrence County alleging that the nursing home’s owner had failed to maintain the premises in a reasonably safe condition. A jury apportioned sixty percent of the fault to the nursing home and forty percent to the visitor and awarded the visitor $40,000 for medical expenses and permanent impairment. Both parties filed post-trial motions after the trial court entered a $24,000 judgment for the visitor. The visitor and her husband sought a new trial or an additur because the jury had not awarded damages for pain and suffering. The nursing home filed a Tenn. R. Civ. P. 50.02 motion for a judgment in accordance with its motion for a directed verdict. The trial court denied the nursing home’s motion and suggested a $5,000 additur. The nursing home accepted the additur, and both parties appealed. The visitor asserts that the trial court erred by failing to grant a new trial, and the nursing home asserts that the trial court errеd by denying its Tenn. R. Civ. P. 50.02 motion. We have determined that the trial court erred by denying the nursing home’s Tenn. R. Civ. P. 50.02 motion because it was not reasonably foreseeable that visitors would be walking on the grassy area where the plaintiff fell. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment.
I.
Linda Plunk аnd her husband live in Lawrenceburg. On November 17, 1996, they decided to visit Ms. Plunk’s mother who was residing at the old Scott Hospital that was being operated as a nursing home by National Health Investors, Inc. (“NHC Healthcare”). While Ms. Plunk visited her mother, Mr. Plunk drove to Wal-Mart. Ms. Plunk bid her mother good-bye when she saw Mr. Plunk drive back to the nursing home. After her mother expressed an interest in seeing Mr. Plunk, Ms. Plunk told her to look out her window and that she would have Mr. Plunk wave to her as they drove away.
After Ms. Plunk left the building, she motioned her husband to pull around the circular drive to get closer to the window to her mother’s room. Then, instead of getting into the couple’s automobile, Ms. Plunk stepped off a concrete walkway leading to the circular drive, over the asphalt curb of the driveway, and onto a small grassy area that was part of the landscaping adjoining the building. She walked closer to her mother’s window and waived to her mother while Mr. Plunk waived from the SUV. As Ms. Plunk walked back toward her automobile, she stepped in a depression in the grass and fell, breaking both of her ankles.
Ms. Plunk was hospitalized for ten days and was required to undergo surgery to repair her right ankle. After she was released from the hospital, she spent three weeks at a rehabilitation facility undergoing therapy. She was at first confined to a wheelchair, but shе eventually progressed to a walker and then to a cane. Ms. Plunk’s injuries have left her permanently impaired, and it is unlikely that her right ankle will ever regain its full range of motion.
The Plunks filed suit against NHC Healthcare in the Circuit Court for Lawrence County, alleging that the company had failed to maintain its premises in a reasonably safe condition. NHC Healthcare responded by insisting that it had
Both parties filed timely post-triаl motions. Ms. Plunk moved for an additur, or in the alternative a new trial, on the ground that the verdict was inconsistent and inadequate because it did not include an award for pain and suffering. NHC Healthcare filed a Tenn. R. Civ. P. 50.02 motion for a judgment in accordance with its motions for directed verdict. The trial court denied NHC Healthcare’s motion as well as Ms. Plunk’s motion for a new trial. However, the trial court suggested a $5,000 additur 2 which NHC Healthcare accepted. Both parties have appealed, attacking the judgment from opposite directions. Ms. Plunk insists that the trial court should have granted a new trial because the damage award is too low. 3 For its part, NHC Healthcare insists that the trial court erred by failing to grant its motion for a directed verdict because thе evidence does not establish that it breached any duty of care it owed to Ms. Plunk. If NHC Healthcare prevails, Ms. Plunk’s arguments regarding the inadequacy of the damage award become largely academic. Accordingly, we will take up NHC Healthcare’s issue first.
II.
Tenn. R. Civ. P. 50.02 permits parties who have moved unsuccessfully for a directed verdict to move after the verdict “to have the verdict and any judgment entered thereon set aside and to have judgment entered in accordance with the party’s mоtion for a directed verdict....” Appellate courts use the same standard for reviewing the denial of a Tenn. R. Civ. P. 50.02 motion that they use for reviewing the denial of a Tenn. R. Civ. P. 50.01 motion for a directed verdict.
Holmes v. Wilson,
Granting a Tenn. R. Civ. P. 50.02 motion is appropriate only when the evidence is insufficient to create an issue for the jury to decide,
White v. Vanderbilt Univ.,
III.
NHC Healthcare premised its Tenn. R. Civ. P. 50.02 motion on the argument that it did not owe a duty to Ms. Plunk to maintain its landscaping in a way that made it safe for her to traverse. This issue raises a legal question because determining the existence and extent of one person’s duty to another is a question of law to be decided by the courts.
Staples v. CBL & Assocs., Inc.,
Owners аnd occupiers of business premises are not insurers of the safety of their customers, potential customers, or the general public.
McClung v. Delta Square Ltd. P’ship,
A duty to act with due care arises when the risk of harm becomes unreasonable, and a risk of harm becomes unreasonable “if the foreseeable probability and gravity of harm рosed by defendant’s conduct outweigh the burden upon defendant to engage in alternative conduct that would have prevented the harm.”
Rice v. Sabir,
the foreseeable probability оf the harm or injury occurring; the possible magnitude of the potential harm or injury; the importance or social value of the activity engaged in by defendant; the usefulness of the conduct to defendant; the feasibility of alternative, safer conduct аnd the relative costs and burdens associated with that conduct; the relative usefulness of the safer conduct; and the relative safety of alternative conduct.
Coin v. City of Savannah,
The extent that harm is foreseeable plays a pivotal role in this analysis. The сourts will not impose a duty on a business to protect persons who come on
Premises liability cases such as this one arrange themselves around one organizing principle. Owners and occupiers of business premises have a duty to maintain their premises in a safe manner only in areas where customers or the public will foreseeably be present.
Aluminum Co. of Am. v. Baker,
The circumstances of this case are similar to
Dobson v. State
where a visitor to the campus of the University of Tennessee at Martin tripped over a metal landscape border while detouring across a lawn insteаd of using a nearby sidewalk leading to the customary entrance to the building where she was going.
Dobson v. State,
In this case, Ms. Plunk walked onto and fell in a small plot of grass that was part of the landscaping betwеen the nursing home’s circular driveway and the building. This small plot of grass existed for aesthetic purposes and was not intended to provide a pathway from or to places at the nursing home where patients, their families, or other guests would be expеcted to go. Ms. Plunk impulsively left the con
A moving party is entitled to a directed verdict if the opposing рarty fails to present evidence establishing a prima facie case.
Harrogate Corp. v. Systems Sales Corp.,
IV.
We reverse the judgment and remand the case to the trial court with directions that Ms. Plunk’s negligеnce claim be dismissed. 4 The costs of this appeal are taxed to Linda K. Plunk and her surety for which execution, if necessary, may issue.
Notes
. $40,000 [total damages] x 60% [NHC Healthcare’s fault] = $24,000.
. The trial court stated that the award for pain and suffering "should have been еqual to the amount awarded for permanent impairment.”
.Mr. Plunk has not appealed from the jury’s verdict rejecting his claims against NHC Healthcare.
. In light of our decision that NHC Healthcare was entitled to a directed verdict, we pretermit Ms. Plunk’s arguments that the jury’s verdict was inconsistent, inadequate, and against the weight of the evidence.
