Jeannine C. Steele and Robert H. Steele sued Rosehaven Chapel, Inc. (“Rosehaven”) for personal injuries and loss of consortium respectively due to Jeannine Steele’s fall on the front entrance step of Rosehaven’s funeral home. The Steeles appeal the trial court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Rosehaven.
Summary judgment is appropriate when the court, viewing all the evidence and drawing reasonable inferences in a light most favorable to the non-movant, concludes that the evidence does not create a triable issue as to each essential element of the case.
Lau’s Corp. v. Haskins,
Steele relied on the testimony of Deborah Hyde, Ph.D., who used the 1988 Standard Building Code and the Life Safety Code which had been adopted by Douglas County to decide whether this step complied with building codes and minimum safety standards. Hyde opined that the placement of the single step with the lack of defined nosing (leading edge of a step), absence of a handrail, and the lack of a defining contrast in the composition of the brick pattern, created an inherently dangerous condition.
Although Rosehaven had not posted a warning sign cautioning about the step, it is undisputed that no one had previously fallen there. Steele admitted that she was not looking down because she *854 incorrectly assumed that the ground was level and also admitted that she was not looking where she was walking because her attention was focused on her vehicle parked nearby. According to Steele, nothing obstructed her vision or prevented her from looking down had she chosen to do so. After determining that Steele failed to exercise ordinary care for her own safety and that she failed to offer any evidence that Rosehaven had superior knowledge of the alleged hazard, the trial court granted summary judgment. Held:
We have carefully reconsidered this case in light of
Robinson v. Kroger Co.,
In order to recover for her injuries allegedly sustained due to an allegedly hazardous condition, Steele had to show fault on the part of Rosehaven and her own ignorance of the danger.
Steinberger v. Barwick Pharmacy,
The brick step at issue was not crumbling or in disrepair or icy or wet. Nor was it poorly lit or obscured by an object from view. This single brick step just outside Rosehaven’s main double glass doors was a permanent static condition, not a transient foreign substance. Although Steele contends that Rosehaven’s failure to provide a handrail or striping on the step violated local codes, and established negligence per se, the braiding code at issue merely suggested but did not require striping or a handrail.
2
Steinberger,
It has long been the position of this Court that “ ‘[t]he mere existence or maintenance of a difference in floor levels or of steps in a business building does not constitute negligence.’ [Cits.]”
Wilson,
Even after
Robinson,
supra, in a premises liability action, a defendant can prevail on summary judgment by pointing to the absence of evidence as to an essential element of a plaintiff’s prima facie case.
Robinson,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
The Supreme Court vacated
Steele v. Rosehaven Chapel,
Steele offered no evidence that either striping or a handrail was mandated by law in this situation. The safety code section at issue provides, “A contrasting stripe on each stepping surface may be provided at the nosing or leading edge. . ..” Life Safety Code A-5.1.6.2. (Emphasis supplied.)
