Plаintiff appeals as of right orders granting summary disposition pursuant to MCR 2.116(0(10) in favor of defendants in this premises liability action. We affirm.
Plaintiff slipped and fell on ice in the parking lot of his apartment complex. Defendant Springs Apartments (Springs) owns the premises. Defendant Olie Watkins contracted with Springs to provide snowрlowing services. Plaintiff argues that the trial court erred by granting Springs’ motion for summary disposition on the basis of its finding that the condition that plaintiff encountered was open and obvious.
This Court reviews de novo a trial court’s ruling on a motion for summary disposition.
Dressel v Ameribank,
*427
To establish a prima facie cаse of negligence, a plaintiff must prove (1) that the defendant owed a duty to the plaintiff, (2) that the defendant breached the duty, (3) that the defendant’s breaсh of the duty caused the plaintiffs injuries, and (4) that the plaintiff suffered damages.
Case v Consumers Power Co,
The open and obvious danger doctrine is a defensive doctrine that attacks the duty element that a plaintiff must establish in a prima facie negligence case.
Id.
at 612. Whether a danger is open and obvious depends on whether it is reasonable to exрect that an average person with ordinary intelligence would have discovered the danger on casual inspection.
Novotney v Burger King Corp (On Remand),
As a genеral rule, and absent special circumstances, the hazards presented by snow and ice are open and obvious, and do not impose a duty on the property owner to warn of or remove the hazard.
Corey v Davenport College of Business (On Remand),
Plaintiff also contends that the trial court erred by granting summary disposition in favor of Watkins on plaintiffs claim of negligent performance of duties under the snow removal contrаct.
In
Fultz v Union-Commerce
Assoc,
Affirmed.
Notes
Plaintiff also arguеs that the trial court erred when it failed to address, his argument that Springs had a statutory duty under MCL 554.139 to keep its premises and common areas in reasonable repair and fit for their intended uses, which negates the defense of open and obvious danger. Any error in the trial court’s failure to address this argument is harmless. The plain meaning of "reasonable repair” as used in MCL 554.139(1)(b) requires repair of a defect in the premises. Accumulation of snow and ice is not a defeсt in the premises. Thus, a lessor’s duty under MCL 554.139(1)(a) and (b) to keep its premises in reasonable repair and fit for its intended use does not extend to snow and ice removal.
Fultz
noted that, in previous decisions, the Supreme Court and the Court of Appeals “have defined a tort action stemming from misfeasance of a сontractual obligation as the ‘violation of a legal duty separate and distinct from the contractual obligation.’ ”
Id., quoting Rinaldo’s Constr Corp v Michigan Bell Tel Co,
the “separate and distinct” definition of misfeasance offers better guidance in determining whether a negligence action based on a contract and brought by a third party to that contract may lie because it focuses on the threshold question of duty in a negligence claim. As there can be no breach of a nonexistent duty, the former misfeasance/nonfeasance inquiry in a negligence case is defective beсause it improperly focuses on whether a duty was breached instead of whether a duty exists at all.
Accordingly, the lower courts should analyze tort actions based on contract and brought by a plaintiff who is not a party to that contract by using a “separate and distinct” mode of analysis. Specificаlly, the threshold question is whether the defendant owed a duty to the plaintiff that is separate and distinct from the defendant’s contractual obligations. If no independent duty exists, no tort action based on a contract will he.
Applying that analysis here, the Court of Appeals erred in affirming the jury verdict and in holding that “evidence suggested that [the defendant] engaged in misfeasance distinct from any breach of contract.” [Fultz, supra at 467-468.]
