delivered the opinion of the court:
Plaintiff, Elfrieda Strahs, appeals from an order of the circuit court of Cook County granting the motion of defendants Tovar’s Snowplowing (Tovar), Walgreen Company (Walgreen), and Bond Drug Company of Illinois (Bond Drug) for a directed verdict at the close of plaintiff’s premises liability case.
BACKGROUND
This suit originates from a fall suffered by plaintiff on the morning of January 15, 2001, in a parking lot adjacent to the Walgreen’s store at the Irving Park Streamwood Plaza (Streamwood Plaza). Plaintiff, then 84 years old, parked her car in the lot, walked toward the Walgreen’s entrance and slipped on what she believed was a patch of black ice. She testified at trial that the parking lot was wet at the time of the accident, as were the roads between her home and the store, and she felt ice on the pavement when she tried to lift herself up. She sustained several injuries, including a fractured hip.
The building occupied by Walgreen and the parking lot was owned by a trust of which Amalgamated Bank of Chicago (Amalgamated) was trustee. Bond Drug, a subsidiary of Walgreen, leased the store building from Amalgamated. The lease agreement provided that certain portions
Amalgamated and contracted with Tovar for the removal of accumulations of snow and for chemical treatment of ice in thе parking lot.
On June 29, 2001, plaintiff filed a premises liability cause of action against defendants in which she alleged, in relevant part, that Tovar negligently created, caused, and/or contributed to unnatural accumulations of ice and snow in the parking lot which resulted in her slip and fall. She further alleged that Walgreen and Bond Drug were aware of the icy conditions in the parking lot on the morning of the accident but negligently failed to remove or warn of the danger.
At the jury trial, plaintiff testified that on the morning of January 15, 2001, the temperature hovered around freezing and that a light rain had fallen prior to when she departed for Walgreen’s around 9 a.m. She noticed that the pavement was wet when she pulled into the parking lot, but she did not see any ice. There were piles of dirty snow along the Irving Park perimeter that were approximately one or two feet high and extended a foot or two into the lot. After plaintiff parked her car, she took four or five steps towards the Walgreen’s entrance when her right foot slipped on some ice, causing her to fall to the pavement in a sitting position. She tried lifting herself up with her left hand and felt “ice squishing through her fingers.” As she sat on the pavement, she assumed that the ice had been formed from precipitation that had not drained off, although she was unaware of any drains in the parking lot that sloped downward toward the store.
On cross-examination, plaintiff acknowledged that on the morning of her accident the streets were uniformly wet, as would be typical after it rained. She thought that the water came from the snow piles because “where else would that water come from.” Plaintiff testified that she did not believe the water came from the rain, although she conceded that she never observed any water flowing through the parking lot and only assumed the watеr came from the melting snow piles.
Plaintiffs son, Glen Strahs, testified that he drove to the Stream-wood Plaza parking lot for the first time on the evening of January 15, 2001, and observed piles of plowed snow in a number of locations in and around the parking lot area.
Janice Fitzpatrick, National’s property manager, testified that the tenants at Streamwood Plaza wеre not responsible for snow and ice removal in the parking area. Tovar was expected to monitor the lot for ice and snow accumulation, and tenants could contact Tovar directly if there was a problem with ice and snow accumulation.
Jeff Tovar, the president of Tovar, testified that the company was responsible for icе and snow removal at approximately 150 properties, including Streamwood Plaza. The snow at the front of Streamwood Plaza was plowed by them onto a flat grassy area at the northwest corner of the property and left to melt. After reviewing various records, he testified that 25 inches of snow had fallen in the area in December of 2000, and that prior to plaintiffs accident the parking lot had last been plowed
Barbara Creamer, a cashier at the Streamwood Plaza Walgreen’s, noticed that the parking lot was slippery when she arrived at work approximately two hours prior to plaintiffs accident but never informed anyone of the lot’s condition. Around 9:30 a.m., she was told that an elderly lady had fallen in the parking lot. She immediately went outside and saw plaintiff being physically supported by a man in the parking area. She also observed black ice on the sidewalk and in the parking lot which made the area slippery.
Nina Ryan, a bookkeeper at the Streamwood Plaza Walgreen’s, also noticed that the parking lot was slippery when she arrived at work around 8 a.m. on January 15, 2001. She slid a little bit when she exited her car and hаd to hold onto the vehicle’s door. She did not recall telling anyone that she slid in the parking lot prior to plaintiffs accident.
John Bailey, Walgreen’s store manager at Streamwood Plaza, testified that the parking lot was slippery when he arrived at work approximately three hours prior to plaintiffs fall and that his car swerved when he attempted to park. The Walgreen’s store was at the south end of the parking lot and at a lower level than Irving Park Road to the north. At his deposition, Bailey testified that “in the back of his mind” he thought that someone could fall on the ice, and he intended to call Fitzpatrick around 8:30 or 9 a.m. At trial, he testified that he did not intend to call her until after 9:30 a.m. when he learned of plaintiffs accident from Creamer.
At the completion of plaintiffs case, Tovar, Walgreen and Bond Drug all moved for a directed verdict. The trial court granted defendants’ motions, and this appeal ensued.
On appeal, plaintiff contends that the trial court erred in granting defendants’ motions for a directed verdict. She also argues that the trial court made certain errors in its evidentiary rulings.
ANALYSIS
As a threshold matter, we address Tovar’s claim that we lack jurisdiction over this appeal. Tovar’s contention is based upon the fact that after National was severed by the trial court as a defendant in this case, the trial court did not include Rule 304(a) (155 Ill. 2d R. 304(a)) language that the judgment at issue here was suitable for review without resolution of plаintiffs claim against National.
The record, however, reveals that when the trial court severed National from this case and consolidated it with another (No. 03 L 483), it specifically entered an order that “plaintiffs claims against National shall proceed separate from the other claims and parties to 01 L 7843.” The order also specified that the triаl court “intend[ed] this severance to be in the narrow sense as instructed by Carter v. Chicago & Illinois Midland Railway.” Accordingly, we reject Tovar’s claim that we lack jurisdiction over this appeal. See Carter v. Chicago & Illinois Midland Ry. Co.,
In directing a verdict, the trial court concludes аs a matter of law that there are no evidentiary facts out of which the jury may construe the necessary facts essential to recovery. Sullivan v. Edward Hospital,
In Illinois, in the absence of a contractual obligation, there is generally no duty with respect to the removal of natural accumulations of snow, water and ice. Ziencina v. County of Cook,
We find Crane to be instructive. The plaintiff in Crane slipped and fell on a patch of ice in the defendant’s parking lot after she got out of her car. Plaintiff had backed her car into a space which was adjacent to a snow pile that encircled the perimeter of the lot and had been plowed by the defendant. The temperature in the area had fluctuated above and below the freezing mark in the days prior to the accident. While on the ground, the plaintiff felt around and determined that she was lying on an ice patch. The plaintiff
As in Crane, plaintiff in the instant case was required to provide some factual basis that the patch of ice upon which she fell was an artificial or unnatural accumulation caused by Tovar’s snow plowing. While she did testify that she felt ice squishing through her fingers after her fall, she acknowledged that it had recently rаined, the streets were uniformly wet, she did not see any water flowing from the snow piles through the parking lot, and she only assumed that the ice formation upon which she fell was created by the melting snow piles. Her son’s testimony that he observed piles of plowed snow in a number of locations in and around the lot did not constitute a sufficient factual basis that the ice formаtion at issue was created by one of these snow piles. As in Crane, we find there was no sufficient nexus between the plowed snow piles on the periphery of the dtreamwood Plaza lot and the ice formation upon which plaintiff slipped that would have potentially entitled her to judgment against Tovar. We conclude that plaintiff s case against Tovаr failed factually as a matter of law and that the trial court properly granted its motion for a directed verdict.
Alternatively, plaintiff claims that the trial court improperly barred her from testifying that the snow along the perimeter appeared to be plowed snow, as opposed to fallen snow, based upon the following colloquy:
“[PLAINTIFF’S COUNSEL]: Can you describe how the snow looked along Irving?
[PLAINTIFF]: It had been plowed.
[TOVAR’S COUNSEL]: Objection. Foundation. Move to strike.
[THE COURT]: Sustained. The answer will be stricken. The jury will disregard the answer.”
Plaintiffs attorney proceeded to ask her again to describe the snow, and plaintiff was allowed to testify that it looked dirty, that it extended approximately one foot into the parking lot, and it was about one or two feet high. Accordingly, we find the record refutes рlaintiffs characterization that she was barred from testifying about the nature of the snow accumulation along the perimeter.
Plaintiff next contends that the trial court erred in granting Walgreen’s and Bond Drug’s motions for a directed verdict. She claims that Walgreen had a duty to warn her of a foreseeable danger of which it was aware in the parking lot, and that it had vоluntarily assumed a duty regarding the maintenance of the lot. Plaintiffs voluntary assumption argument is based upon her claim that Walgreen could contact Tovar directly if there was a problem with the maintenance of the parking lot, and that the lease agreement provided defendants with a certain number of parking spaces and the right to “self-help.” Plaintiff аlso contends that the trial court abused its discretion in various evidentiary rulings that it made.
Plaintiff provides us with no legal authority, and there is no basis for us to conclude, that Walgreen or Bond Drug had a duty to warn of or remove any dangerous condition in the parking lot because of any purported notice of icy conditions before plaintiffs accident. We find plaintiffs argument that defendants voluntarily assumed a duty, based upon the lease agreement’s “self-help” provision, that the lease provided defendants with the use of a certain number of parking spaces, and that defendants had the ability to contact Tovar directly to come out and treat the parking lot, equally unpersuasive and not supported by case law. See generally Collins v. Mid-America Bag Co.,
Finally, plaintiff argues, in the alternative, that the trial court abused its discretion in barring any evidence that maintenance costs for the parking lot were passed through National to Bond Drug, that a prior car accident had occurred in the parking lot, and that Walgreen’s employees salted and shovelеd the area immediately outside the store.
The determination as to the admissibility of evidence rests with the discretion of the trial court, and its determinations will not be overturned absent a clear abuse of discretion. Simmons v. Garces,
Accordingly, the judgment of the circuit court of Cook County is affirmed.
Affirmed.
