Day v. Wilcox Landscaping, Inc. ( 2017 )


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  • IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
    MARLENA L. DAY,
    Plaintiff,
    C.A. No. Nl 5C-06-277 AML
    v.
    WILCOX LANDSCAPING, INC.,
    CARROW CONSTRUCTION, LLC and
    SLEEPY HOLLOW LAWN CARE &
    LANDSCAPING, INC.,
    TRIAL BY JURY DEMANDED
    Defendants,
    \/\/\/\/\/V\/\/\/\/\/\/V
    Submitted: November 1 8, 2016
    Decided: February 28, 2017
    ORDER
    Defendants’ Motions for Summary Judgment: GRANTED
    l. A common law rule in Delaware, known as the “continuing storm
    doctrine” and consistently applied over the last five decades, is that landowners act
    with reasonable care when they await the end of a storm before undertaking to
    remove snow and ice from their property. The plaintiff in this action was injured
    at her place of employment when she slipped on ice during a storm. In an effort to
    avoid what appears to be a straightforward application of the continuing storm
    doctrine, the plaintiff advances various theories that fundamentally are at odds with
    the doctrine and the public policy underlying it. In a nutshell, the question before
    the Court is this: does the continuing storm doctrine apply even when a landowner
    retains a third party to clear snow and ice from the property? For the reasons that
    follow, I conclude the doctrine applies, and l therefore grant the defendants’
    motions for summary judgment
    FACTUAL BACKGROUND
    2. Except as otherwise noted, the following facts are not disputed. In
    October 2013, Sallie Mae, lnc. (“Sallie Mae”) hired Defendant Wilcox
    Landscaping, lnc. (“Wilcox”) to provide snow and ice removal services at Sallie
    Mae’s Newark facility between November 2013 and April 2014.1 Under Sallie
    Mae’s contract with Wilcox, Wilcox was to clear snow and ice at a contractual
    rate, including removing snow “from the roadways and parking lots [consisting] of
    plowing, clearing, and salting these areas to allow tenants to exit from the
    property.”2 WilcoX in turn relied on its own independent contractors, Defendants
    Carrow Construction, LLC (“Carrow”) and Sleepy Hollow Lawn Care &
    Landscaping, lnc. (“Sleepy Hollow,” and together with WilcoX and Carrow, the
    ‘FDefendants”), to provide snow and ice removal as directed by Wilcox for certain
    of Wilcox’s clients. Specifically, Sleepy Hollow agreed to provide snow removal
    l Pl.’s Resp. Br. EX. F.
    2 
    Id. at 11
    3.
    services for Wilcox’s accounts as directed by Wilcox, and Carrow similarly agreed
    to provide plowing, snow removal, and salting services as directed by Wilcox.3
    3. The plaintiff, Marlena L. Day, was a Sallie Mae employee working at
    the company’s Newark office building on January 2l, 2014. That day, a winter
    storm began shortly after 9:00 a.m., bringing light-to-moderate snowfall to the area
    that continued through the day and into that night.4 Ms. Day arrived at work
    shortly after 8:00 a.m. According to an expert retained by the Defendants, no snow
    or ice was present on the ground before the storm began that morning.5 By ll:30
    a.m., there was between a half-inch to one inch of snow on the ground.6 The storm
    ended just before midnight, with approximately ll inches of snow accumulating7
    4. In the late morning, Ms. Day decided to drive home before the
    weather and driving conditions worsened.8 When Ms. Day walked outside, it was
    snowing, and the sidewalks around the building had been salted.9 When she
    reached the parking lot, Ms. Day saw what appeared to be a sheet of ice.10 Having
    3 Sleepy Hollow’s Mot. Summ. J. EX. A; Carrow’s Mot. Summ. J. Ex. A.
    4 Sleepy Hollow’s Mot. Summ. J. Ex. C, at 6.
    5 
    Id. Ms. Day
    has not identified any dispute as to this fact.
    6 
    Id. at 7.
    7 
    Id. ate-1 8
    Marlena L. Day Dep. 15, l7, l9.
    914 at 18-19, 28, 82.
    ‘° 
    Id. at 18.
    no other way to get to her car, Ms. Day attempted to cross the ice, but fell after a
    few steps, injuring her right knee.11
    5. Ms. Day filed a complaint against Wilcox alleging that her injuries
    proximately were caused by Wilcox’s negligence in failing to (i) maintain the
    premises in a safe condition, (ii) inspect the premises for dangerous conditions,
    (iii) warn others of dangerous conditions that existed, and (iv) otherwise exercise
    reasonable care in discharging its contractual responsibility to clear the parking lot
    of snow and ice.12 Ms. Day later amended her complaint to add Carrow and
    Sleepy Hollow as defendants There is evidence from which a fact-finder
    reasonably could conclude that both Carrow and Sleepy Hollow worked at the
    Sallie Mae premises that day at Wilcox’s direction. There is some dispute in the
    record regarding whether Sleepy Hollow or Carrow was responsible for plowing
    the lot.13 lt is undisputed that no salt was applied to the Sallie Mae parking lot
    until after the snow stopped and the parking lot was plowed completely.14 All
    parties agree that both Sleepy Hollow and Carrow acted under Wilcox’s oversight
    and that it was Wilcox who determined when to apply salt to the parking lot.15
    11 
    Id. at 18-20.
    12 D.I. 1.
    13 See Pl.’s Resp. Br. 9-10.
    14 winia.m shetzler, Jr. Dep. 46-47.
    15 1a at 47.
    6. After discovery concluded, all three Defendants moved for summary
    judgment on the basis that the continuing storm doctrine precludes any finding that
    they breached a duty to Ms. Day. The parties briefed and argued those motions.
    ANALYSIS
    7. Summary judgment should be awarded if “the pleadings, depositions,
    answers to interrogatories and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if
    any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving
    party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.”16 The question of whether a
    defendant owes a legal duty is a question of law that may be resolved on summary
    judgment,17 Although determining whether a duty is breached often is a factual
    question, there are circumstances under which a court may determine as a matter of
    law that no breach occurred.18
    8. When considering a motion for summary judgment, the evidence and
    the inferences drawn from the evidence are to be viewed in the light most
    favorable to the nonmoving party.19 The Court will accept “as established all
    undisputed factual assertions . . . and accept the non-movant’s version of any
    disputed facts. From those accepted facts[,] the [C]ourt will draw all rational
    16 Super. Ct. Civ. R. 56(c).
    17 Handler Corp. v. Tlapechco, 
    901 A.2d 737
    , 748-49 (Del. 2006).
    18 Elder v. Dover Downs, 
    2012 WL 2553091
    , at *2 (Del. Super. July 2, 2012).
    19 Brzoska v. Olson, 
    668 A.2d 1355
    , 1364 (Del. 1995); Judah v. Del. Trust Co., 
    378 A.2d 624
    ,
    632 (Del. 1977).
    ”20 A party seeking summary
    inferences which favor the non-moving party.
    judgment bears the initial burden of showing that no genuine issue of material fact
    exists.21 lf the movant makes such a showing, the burden then shifts to the
    nonmoving party to submit sufficient evidence to show that a genuine factual issue,
    material to the outcome of the case, precludes judgment before trial.22
    9. The Defendants contend summary judgment is appropriate here
    because the continuing storm doctrine precludes any finding that the Defendants
    failed to act with reasonable care at the time Ms. Day was injured. Ms. Day
    presents a number of arguments in opposition to the motions, which generally may
    be summarized as follows: (1) the continuing storm doctrine does not apply to
    independent contractors and should not be extended in that manner; (2) even if the
    doctrine applies to independent contractors, Wilcox assumed a contractual duty to
    maintain safe premises through snow and ice removal and those contractual duties
    define Wilcox’s duties under tort law; (3) the Restatement (Second) of Torts §
    324A imposes duties on the Defendants that they violated; and (4) Wilcox violated
    its duty to act with reasonable care by failing to prepare for the storm by pre-
    treating Sallie Mae’s parking lot and sidewalks. In essence, each of these
    arguments repackages the same contention: the Defendants owed duties to take
    20 Marro v. Gopez, 
    1994 WL 45338
    , at *1 (Del. Super. Jan 18, 1994) (citing Merrz``ll v. Crothall-
    Am., lnc., 
    606 A.2d 96
    , 99-100 (Del. 1992)).
    21 Moore v. Sizemore, 
    405 A.2d 679
    , 680-81 (Del. 1979).
    22 Id.; see also 
    Brzoska, 668 A.2d at 1363
    .
    action before and during the storm and failed to discharge those duties. As
    explained below, l conclude Delaware law precludes such a finding and therefore
    grant the Defendants’ motions.
    A. The continuing storm doctrine and independent contractors
    10. Ms. Day first argues that the Defendants failed to exercise reasonable
    care in discharging their duty to clear the Sallie Mae property of natural
    accumulations of snow and ice. The landowner or occupant of a business property
    has a duty under Delaware law to “exercise reasonable care to keep the premises
    safe for all business invitees.”23 Where a dangerous condition exists on the land,
    which a landowner knows exists or upon reasonable inspection would discover, the
    owner has a duty to make that condition safe.24 A landowner’s duties in this regard
    apply to weather-related conditions, such that the landowner must “keep the
    premises reasonably safe from the hazards associated with natural accumulations
    of ice and snow.”25
    11. Under settled Delaware law, however, the continuing storm doctrine
    provides that, in the absence of unusual circumstances, a landowner is permitted to
    await the end of a storm and a reasonable time thereafter to remove snow and ice
    23 Cash v. E. Coast Prop. Mgmt., Inc., 
    2010 WL 2336867
    , at *2 (Del. Super. June 8, 2010)
    (citing Hamm v. Ramurmo, 
    281 A.2d 601
    , 603 (Del. 1971)).
    24 
    Hamm, 281 A.2d at 603
    .
    25 Woods v. Prices Corner Shopping Ctr. Merch. Ass’n., 
    541 A.2d 574
    , 577 (Del. Super. 1988).
    7
    from his property.26 That doctrine, first adopted in Delaware in Young v.
    Saroukos,27 consistently has been applied by Delaware courts for several decades
    to preclude any finding of liability for landowners on whose property someone is
    injured while a storm is ongoing28 The doctrine provides that a landowner does
    not breach his duty to act with reasonable care by waiting until the conclusion of a
    storm before beginning snow and ice removal efforts.29
    12. In applying the continuing storm doctrine, Delaware courts also have
    held that a landowner who undertakes to clear public areas of snow or ice while the
    storm is ongoing does not lose the benefit of the doctrine and those efforts, even if
    unsuccessful, do not subject a landowner to liability.30 As this Court reasoned in
    Kovach v. Brana'ywine ]nnkeepers, L.P., it would contravene public policy to
    26 Young v. Saroukos, 
    185 A.2d 274
    , 282 (Del. super. oct. 24, 1962); Elder, 2012 wL 2553091,
    at * 2.
    27 
    185 A.2d 274
    , 282 (Del. Super. Oct. 24, 1962).
    28 See, e.g. Elder v. Dover Downs, 
    2012 WL 2553091
    (holding the defendant acted reasonably as
    a matter of law by waiting until storm ended before clearing property of snow and ice); Cash,
    
    2010 WL 2336867
    (granting summary judgment to defendants where plaintiff fell on ice that
    accumulated while storm was ongoing), ajj"’d 
    7 A.3d 484
    (Del. Oct. 29, 2010) (TABLE); Morris
    v. Theta Vest, lnc., 
    2009 WL 693253
    (Del. Super. Mar. 10, 2009), ajj"d 
    2009 WL 2246777
    (Del.
    2009) (concluding landowner acted reasonably as a matter of law by waiting until a storm ended
    before completely clearing entrances); Kovach v. Brandywine Innkeepers, Ltd. P ’ship, 
    2001 WL 1198944
    (Del. Super. Oct. 1, 2001).
    29 The Delaware cases applying the continuing storm doctrine refer interchangeably to a finding
    that no duty exists while a storm is ongoing and a finding that the duty to act with reasonable
    care was not breached. Although the distinction often is immaterial for purposes of applying the
    doctrine, in my view the better analysis is that a landowner’s duty always exists, but that
    “reasonable care” does not require a landowner to clear the premises of ice and snow until a
    reasonable period after the storm ends. See Elder, 
    2012 WL 2553091
    , at *3-4; Kovach, 2001
    1198944 at *2.
    30 Morris, 2009 wL 693253 at *2; Kovach, 2001 wL 1198944, at *2.
    8
    conclude landowners assumed a higher duty by attempting to remove snow and ice
    before a storm ended.
    Landowners should be encouraged to try to clear all public areas of
    snow and ice during and after snowstorms, if possible. Landowners
    should not fear legal liability for not clearing every inch of their
    property during an all-day snowstorm if they attempt to clear some
    public areas of snow . . . . To hold otherwise would be a disincentive
    to vigilant efforts by landowners to monitor and clear snow during
    snowstorms. Every landowner would choose to wait out a snowstorm
    rather than clear a path for fear of legal jeopardy. Such a fear would
    be a grave detriment to the public.31
    13. Ms. Day acknowledges this general law, but argues the Defendants
    are not entitled to summary judgment on the basis of the continuing storm doctrine
    because they are not landowners but rather independent contractors retained by the
    landowner. This argument fails to recognize the basis for the rule and the policy
    underlying it. The continuing storm doctrine provides that a landowner, charged
    with undertaking reasonable efforts to remove ice and snow from property, acts
    reasonably by waiting to begin such efforts until a storm concludes, and that even
    voluntarily undertaking such efforts during the storm does not alter the doctrine’s
    application. The doctrine is intended not only to shield landowners from
    repeatedly subjecting themselves to the elements and dangerous conditions in order
    to clear property, but also to encourage landowners to make an effort to clear
    public areas during a storm without fear of incurring liability where there
    31 Kovach, 2001 wL 1198944 at *2.
    otherwise would be none.32 In contrast, Ms. Day’s argument would create an
    inconsistent application of the reasonable care standard under which landowners
    who undertake their own snow and ice removal efforts act reasonably by waiting to
    do so until the end of a storm, but third parties retained to perform the work on
    landowners’ behalf face potential liability by waiting or by engaging in incomplete
    or unsuccessful clean-up efforts during the storm, Ms. Day offers no reasoned
    argument supporting such a distinction, nor is any apparent to me. The conclusion
    Ms. Day champions would contravene the intent of the continuing storm doctrine
    and likely would chill the willingness of contractors to undertake clean-up efforts
    during a storm. That result would be neither in the interest of the public nor
    consistent with the purpose of the doctrine.
    14. Ms. Day’s argument that the doctrine should not extend to
    independent contractors also is inconsistent with binding case law applying the
    doctrine to third parties retained by a landowner. In Cash, this Court applied the
    doctrine to both the landowner and a third party retained by the landowner to
    . . . 3 . .
    engage 1n snow and 1ce removal services.3 That dec1s10n was affirmed on appeal
    32 See 
    Young, 185 A.2d at 282
    ; Cash, 
    2010 WL 2336867
    ; Elder, 
    2012 WL 2553091
    .
    33 Cash, 
    2010 WL 2336867
    . Ms. Day argues Cash is distinguishable because the third party in
    question in Cash was a maintenance company in an agency relationship with the property owner.
    While arguing that the principal-agent relationship is distinct from that involving an independent
    contractor, Ms. Day does not explain why that distinction should alter the analysis regarding
    whether the continuing storm doctrine applies. As explained above, the reason for the doctrine
    and the public policy supporting it render immaterial the distinction Ms. Day draws.
    10
    by the Delaware Supreme Court and is supported by both logic and public policy.34
    Under the continuing storm doctrine, the Defendants did not breach their duty to
    Ms. Day as a matter of law.
    B. The significance of the contracts
    15. Ms. Day next argues that, even if the continuing storm doctrine
    applies to independent contractors, Wilcox nevertheless owed Ms. Day a duty
    under the contract between Wilcox and Sallie Mae. Ms. Day points specifically to
    the language in the contract requiring Wilcox to clear parking lots and roadways to
    allow tenants to exit those areas. This argument is a slightly reworked version of
    Ms. Day’s position that the continuing storm doctrine does not apply to
    independent contractors and it fails for largely the same reasons. By concluding
    that third parties hired by landowners are covered by the continuing storm doctrine,
    the Court, consistent with the decision in Cash, effectively has concluded that third
    parties are entitled to await the end of the storm before discharging their
    contractual duty to clear the property, and that voluntarily undertaking efforts to
    clear property before the storm ends should not subject a landowner or their
    contractor to liability. Indeed, the only duty the Defendants owed to Ms. Day was
    one arising from the contract; they had no common law duty to undertake efforts to
    clear the property either during or before the storm. Accordingly, Ms. Day’s
    24 Cash, 
    7 A.3d 484
    .
    11
    attempt to draw a distinction between the Defendants’ common law duty and their
    contractual duty is unconvincing
    C. The effect of Restatement Section 324A
    16. Ms. Day further attempts to distinguish her case from a
    straightforward application of the continuing storm doctrine by arguing that the
    Restatement (Second) of Torts § 324A creates a new or heightened duty owed by
    the Defendants under the circumstances of this case. That Section provides, in
    pertinent part:
    One who undertakes, gratuitously or for consideration, to render
    services to another which he should recognize as necessary for the
    protection of a third person or his things, is subject to liability to the
    third person for physical harm resulting from his failure to exercise
    reasonable care to protect his undertaking, if
    (a) his failure to exercise reasonable care increases the risk of such
    harm, or
    >l< >l= >l<
    (c) the harm is suffered because of reliance of the other or the third
    person upon the undertaking35
    17. Again, Ms. Day’s reliance on Section 324A to circumvent the
    continuing storm doctrine ignores the nature of that doctrine. Section 324A is
    premised on a failure to exercise reasonable care. The continuing storm doctrine
    provides that a person who owes a duty to remove accumulations of snow and ice
    from property acts with reasonable care by waiting until the end of a storm to do so
    35 Restatement (Second) of Torts § 324(A) (1965) (emphasis added).
    12
    or by making incomplete efforts to clear the property during the storm. That is, as
    a matter of law in Delaware, the Defendants acted with reasonable care by
    beginning their snow removal efforts during the storm, even if those efforts were
    ineffective or may have contributed to Ms. Day’s accident.
    18. Ms. Day’s remaining arguments are unmoving. She contends that,
    even if the continuing storm doctrine applies, the Defendants acted negligently by
    failing to undertake pre-storm efforts to treat Sallie Mae’s parking lot to prevent
    the accumulation of snow and ice. Ms. Day can point to no common law doctrine
    requiring a landowner to take “reasonable” efforts to prevent snow or ice from
    accumulating. The continuing storm doctrine provides that it is reasonable to wait
    a reasonable time after a storm ends before removing snow and ice; finding that a
    landowner nonetheless must make efforts to prevent the accumulation of snow and
    ice would swallow the rule. Even if, however, the Court concluded that a
    landowner owed such a duty, nothing in Sallie Mae’s contract with Wilcox
    provided or even permitted Wilcox to undertake pre-storm efforts. Because the
    Defendants owed no duties to Ms. Day outside those undertaken in the contract,
    her argument about pre-storm efforts is a non sequitur. Similarly, l find
    unconvincing Ms. Day’s contention that “public policy dictates that Wilcox be
    held accountable for failing to fulfill its obligations under the Sallie Mae contract”
    because Wilcox “was paid to perform a service” and should not be permitted to
    13
    “escape its contractual responsibilities by simply arguing that it was snowing.” To
    the contrary, for the reasons explained above, the purpose of the continuing storm
    doctrine and the policy behind it strongly support its application in this case.
    For the foregoing reasons, the Defendants’ Motions for Summary Judgment
    are GRANTED. IT IS SO ORDERED.
    Abig l M``"LeGrow, u@lge]
    Original to Prothonotary
    cc: Joseph J. Rhoades, Esquire
    Christopher T. Logullo, Esquire
    Colin M. Shalk, Esquire
    Susan List Hauske, Esquire
    14