Lead Opinion
In this premises-liability case we address the issue of whether summary judgment may be granted when the injured party observed the condition but failed to step around the easily avoidable obstacle. We hold that the trial court properly granted summary judgment, because as a matter of law Appellees owed no duty to warn Appellant, and properly discharged their duty to exercise ordinary care to maintain the premises in a reasonably safe condition.
Appellant went to Winn-Dixie to make a purchase and get empty boxes. During his visit, Appellant made a total of four trips into and out of the store. On the first trip, Appellant made his purchase and took it to his car; he then made three more trips into Winn-Dixie to obtain empty boxes, returning them to his car. During this time, a Lewis Bear employee was delivering a shipment of beer. The beer was stacked approximately five feet high on a pallet between Winn-Dixie’s entrance and exit doors, and an empty pallet was sitting on the pallet jack’s prongs to the right of the exit. On Appellant’s third trip exiting the store, he saw the empty pallet, but tripped and fell over it, suffering injuries as a result. Appellant sued Appellees for negligently failing to warn of the dangerous condition and negligently failing to make the sidewalk safe to walk across.
During discovery, Appellant produced an affidavit from his expert averring that Appellees created an unsafe condition, and Appellees offered video surveillance still-shots from footage of the events. In his deposition, Appellant testified that he did not notice the empty pallet until his third trip, claiming that he tripped over the prongs protruding from underneath the pallet, as opposed to the pallet itself. After hearing arguments, the trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Appellees, finding Appellees owed no duty to warn Appellant of the pallet or the prongs, because Appellant was aware of the condition. The court further found the condition to have been so open, obvious, and ordinary that it was inherently not dangerous as a matter of law, absolving Appellees of liability.
In a premises-liability decision upholding summary judgment for the landowner, the Florida Supreme Court recognized more than a half-century ago that a
business invitee is entitled to expect that the proprietor will take reasonable care to discover the actual condition of the premises and either make them safe or warn [the invitee] of dangerous conditions, it is equally well settled that the*1131 proprietor has a right to assume that the invitee will perceive that which would be obvious to him upon the ordinary use of his own senses.
Earley v. Morrison Cafeteria Co. of Orlando,
As noted in Rocamonde:
The granting of summary judgment is subject to de novo review. Volusia Cnty. v. Aberdeen at Ormond Beach, L.P.,760 So.2d 126 (Fla. 2000). The appellate court is required to ‘consider the evidence contained in the record, including any supporting affidavits, in the light most favorable to the non-moving party ... and if the slightest doubt exists, the summary judgment must be reversed.’ Tropical Glass & Constr. Co. v. Gitlin,13 So.3d 156 , 158 (Fla. 3d DCA 2009), quoting Krol v. City of Orlando,778 So.2d 490 , 492 (Fla. 5th DCA 2001). In negligence suits particularly, ‘summary judgments should be cautiously granted.’ Moore v. Morris,475 So.2d 666 , 668 (Fla. 1985). ‘If the evidence raises any issue of material fact, if it is conflicting, if it will permit different reasonable inferences, or if it tends to prove the issues, it should be submitted to the jury as a question of fact to be determined by it.’ Id. (citing Williams v. Lake City,62 So.2d 732 (Fla. 1953)). Summary judgment should not be granted ‘unless the facts are so' crystallized that nothing remains but questions of law.’ Id. (citing Shaffran v. Holness,93 So.2d 94 (Fla. 1957)).
Id. at 864-865.
In Rocamonde, the Third District held that summary judgment based on Earley was improper where “‘it is the dangerous condition of an object which must be open and obvious, not simply the object itself.’ ” Id. (quoting Kloster Cruise Ltd. v. Grubbs,
Here, Appellant admitted that he saw the empty pallet when he exited the store and took four more steps before tripping over it. The surveillance video footage conclusively refutes Appellant’s allegation that he tripped over the prongs, as he tripped over the pallet itself, but we note that the trial court found Appellant’s claim regarding the prongs to be immaterial, and we
Therefore, the facts are sufficiently crystallized here so that the issue on appeal is purely a question of law: Did Appellees violate either a duty to warn of a dangerous condition or a duty to maintain the premises in a reasonably safe condition, when Appellant previously observed an open and obvious condition, not inherently dangerous, and walked into the object causing his own injury.
First, we hold that Appellees owed no duty to warn Appellant of the open and obvious condition, because Appellees’ knowledge of the condition was not “superior” to Appellant’s. Hunt v. Slippery Dip of Jacksonville, Inc.,
Second, we must address whether Appellees breached their duty to exercise ordinary care in maintaining the walkway in a reasonably safe condition for its intended use. Denson v. SM-Planters Walk Apartments,
Nonetheless, some conditions are so obvious and not inherently dangerous that they can be said, as a matter of law, not to constitute a dangerous condition, and will not give rise to liability due to the failure to maintain the premises in a reasonably safe condition. See, e.g., Schoen v. Gilbert,436 So.2d 75 (Fla. 1983) (holding difference in floor levels is not inherently dangerous condition, even in dim lighting, so as to constitute failure to use due care for safety of person invited to premises). Other conditions are dangerous, but are so open and obvious that an invitee may be reasonably expected to discover them and to protect himself. See, e.g., Ashcroft v. Calder Race Course, Inc.,492 So.2d 1309 , 1311 (Fla. 1986). The rale applied in these circumstances is to absolve the landowner of liability unless the landowner should anticipate or foresee harm from the dangerous condition despite such knowledge or obviousness. Id.; Etheredge v. Walt Disney World Co.,999 So.2d 669 , 672 (Fla. 5th DCA 2008); Aguiar v. Walt Disney World*1133 Hospitality,920 So.2d 1233 , 1234 (Fla. 5th DCA 2006).
In Denson, this court reversed summary judgment because material facts remained in dispute as to whether the landowner properly mixed a non-skid additive to outdoor-concrete paint.
Addressing the first possible reason in determining whether Appellees are absolved of any liability of then- duty to maintain the premises in a reasonably safe condition, we hold that the pallet’s location was open and obvious and not inherently dangerous. There are times when conditions are so common, or so innocuous in our everyday life, that they do not impose liability on the landowner. Circle K Convenience Stores, Inc. v. Ferguson,
In McAllister, the plaintiff hurt his foot “when he caught his heel on one of a number of concrete blocks marking the property line of the Wisteria Bar.”
In Miranda v. Home Depot U.S.A., Inc., the plaintiff, in attempting to reach a planter on a display shelf which was blocked by a ladder, “projected her head and shoulders and upper torso through the ladder,” and after standing up, hit a cross bar on the ladder and injured her right eye, leading to her suit against Home Depot.
This is closely comparable to the facts here: Appellant’s action of walking right into the pallet, not an inherently dangerous condition and one that he had previously and contemporaneously observed twice before, was the sole proximate cause of his injuries. It is neither “probable nor foreseeable” that someone seeing a pallet on the ground, and having passed by it twice before, would fail to avoid the open and obvious condition. The standard must be based on an objective evaluation, understanding that every case will involve an accident, which cannot by itself mandate that summary judgment never be granted in cases involving open and obvious conditions.
We would also hold here that even if the pallet’s location was inherently dangerous, which it was not, that summary judgment was properly granted, because Appellant saw the allegedly dangerous condition, which was so open and obvious, that he could be “ ‘reasonably expected to discover [the pallet] and to protect himself.’ ” Denson,
To reverse the summary judgment here would make business owners universal insurers. Business owners receive shipments of products every day, which must be
And we do not think that Owens v. Publix Supermarkets, Inc.,
the existence of a foreign substance on the floor of a business premises that causes a customer to fall and be injured is not a safe condition and the existence of that unsafe condition creates a rebut-table presumption that the premises owner did not maintain the premises in a reasonably safe condition.
Id. at 331. A pallet used for unloading goods is not a “foreign substance,” but a legitimate aspect of a retail-business economy. Furthermore, the Owens court did not overrule its earlier announced principle in Earley, and that court has long held that other courts are not to assume that the supreme court overrules itself sub si-lentio. Arsali v. Chase Home Fin. LLC,
We also think our decision in Lomack v. Mowrey,
The ultimate question is “whether the owner or possessor should have anticipated that the dangerous condition would cause injury despite the fact that it was open and obvious.” Moultrie v. Consolidated Stores Int’l Corp.,
But the court in Burton also acknowledged the decision in Arnoul v. Busch Entertainment Corp.,
only when a landowner should anticipate that people will choose to negotiate obvious hazards and thereby injure themselves, despite their awareness of the danger, is the landowner responsible for injury resulting from an obvious condition. Such anticipation should occur, for example, when avoiding the hazard would be impossible or highly inconvenient.
Id. (emphasis added) (citation omitted). Thus, the corollary proposition is trae as well:
If the obviousness of the condition would lead a reasonable person to believe that the danger will be avoided, the condition is not unreasonably dangerous, and the landowner is not liable.... So, merely being on another’s property when injured by such conditions does not automatically allow a person to shift the fault for accidents caused by his own negligence.
Id. at *3 (emphasis added). Or as stated in Crawford, “The mere occurrence of an accident does not, without more, give rise to an inference of negligence.”
To reverse the summary judgment here would make all landowners subject to a jury trial when a business invitee, by his own negligence, unnecessarily trips on an open and obvious condition, of which he is aware, when no reasonable person would injure himself by such negligence. The facts of Arnoul are closely similar with the facts here: Despite seeing the branch over a busy sidewalk at Busch Gardens, Arnoul argued that he was distracted by his granddaughter and the “amount of pedestrian activity and the flashy displays and
It would defy common sense and any valid notion of a rational allocation of risk in everyday life to make all businesses everywhere liable for unreasonable inattentiveness of invitees. As concisely noted by the Arnoul court, this court too “is not prepared to dispense with the duty of care owed to one’s self, the exercise of which others are entitled to depend upon.” Id.
A premises owner operating a lawful business benefits society, and part of the burden of a viable commercial enterprise often requires the receipt and stocking of goods and products. The law provides protection to premises owners from unjustified and costly litigation, when any reasonably attentive invitee who saw an open and obvious conditkm—such as a pallet partially blocking a walkway—would act in his or her own interest in personal safety, and by the use of ordinary common sense, avoid the observed transitory item. Arnoul,
Contrary to the dissenting opinion, we plainly do not hold that Appellees owed Appellant no duty to maintain their premises in a reasonably safe condition. Rather, we follow precedent to hold that Appellees complied with their duty to maintain the premises in a reasonably safe condition by exercising ordinary care in accepting delivery of an inventory shipment which, as the trial court correctly noted, is an ordinary feature, of everyday life. Appellees could not reasonably have anticipated that Appellant would trip over the pallet he had previously observed and safely walked around twice before the accident.
AFFIRMED.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in part and dissenting in part.
As the majority opinion correctly notes, a business owner owes two “separate and distinct” duties to business invitees. (Maj. Op. 1130-31). See also Grimes v. Family Dollar Stores of Florida, Inc., 194 So.3d
Here, the Appellees’ motions for summary judgment recognized that there were two separate duties alleged and therefore two issues for the trial court’s consideration. The trial court’s order granting summary judgment also recognized the two duties and thoroughly analyzed the duty to warn, Appellant’s knowledge of the hazard, and the fact that the pallets and jack were not inherently dangerous. But the trial court’s order did not explain why the Ap-pellees did not owe Appellant a duty to maintain the premises in a reasonably safe condition. We are left with a review of the record to determine as a matter of law whether no material issues of fact exist such that summary judgment was appropriate as to Appellees’ duty to maintain the premises. See Fla. R. Civ. P. 1.510; Lomack v. Mowrey,
In opposition to the motions for summary judgment, Appellant submitted the affidavit of Jeremy Cummings, Ph.D., as expert opinion in the areas of human factors, biomechanics, and biomedicine. Dr. Cummings’ affidavit stated that the pallet was not in a reasonably safe location and that it was reasonable to anticipate that Appellant’s attention could have been diverted when Appellant tripped. Deposition testimony of Appellees’ employees showed that the pallets were placed as they were so that the beer on the pallets could be monitored to prevent theft. Appellant contended that a safer location for the pallets would have been next to the entry door against the wall of the premises.
In the past, this court has looked to the Restatement (Second) of Torts section 343A in analyzing legal principles of premises liability. Lynch,
There are, however, cases in which the possessor of land can and should anticipate that the dangerous condition will cause physical harm to the invitee notwithstanding its known or obvious danger. In such cases the possessor is not relieved of the duty of reasonable care which he owes to the invitee for his protection. This duty may require him to warn the invitee, or to take other reasonable steps to protect him, against the known or obvious condition or activity, if the possessor has reason to expect that the invitee will nevertheless suffer physical harm.
Such reason to expect harm to the visitor from known or obvious dangers may arise, for example, where the possessor has reason to expect that the invitee’s attention may be distracted, so that he will not discover what is obvious, or will forget what he has discovered, or fail to protect himself against it. Such reason may also arise where the possessor has reason to expect that the invitee will proceed to encounter the known or obvious danger because to a reasonable man in his position the advantages of doing so would outweigh the apparent risk. In such cases the fact that the danger is known, or is obvious, is important in determining whether the invitee is to be charged with contributory negligence, or assumption of risk. ... It is not, however, conclusive in determining the duty of the possessor, or whether he has acted reasonably under the circumstances.
The Restatement comments are consistent with Florida law that even when there is an open and obvious hazard, “liability can still attach when the landowner or possessor should have anticipated the possibility of injury resulting from the hazard.” Cook v. Bay Area Renaissance Festival of Largo, Inc.,
I believe the situation here is similar to other cases where a material issue of fact as to the possessor of the premises’ duty to maintain the premises remained when a customer tripped on an open , and obvious object. See De Cruz-Haymer v. Festival Food Market, Inc.,
I do not believe that Appellees have carried their burden to show no disputed issues of material fact remain for summary judgment on the issue of their duty to maintain the premises. For the above reasons, I respectfully dissent from the portion of the majority opinion which holds Appellees had no duty to maintain the premises. I would remand the case back to the trial court for further proceedings.
Notes
. Appellant tripped over the empty pallet or tips of the pallet jack while exiting the premises for a third time, this time with an armful of boxes which obstructed his vision.
. Appellant would still need to prove that Appellees “had actual or constructive notice of the dangerous condition.” Grimes,
