Bernier v. Smitty's Sports Pub, Inc. , 90 Mass. App. Ct. 472 ( 2016 )


Menu:
  • NOTICE: All slip opinions and orders are subject to formal
    revision and are superseded by the advance sheets and bound
    volumes of the Official Reports. If you find a typographical
    error or other formal error, please notify the Reporter of
    Decisions, Supreme Judicial Court, John Adams Courthouse, 1
    Pemberton Square, Suite 2500, Boston, MA, 02108-1750; (617) 557-
    1030; SJCReporter@sjc.state.ma.us
    14-P-1967                                            Appeals Court
    NANCY BERNIER, administratrix,1 & another2     vs.   SMITTY'S SPORTS
    PUB, INC.
    No. 14-P-1967.
    Bristol.      December 18, 2015. - October 11, 2016.
    Present:   Cohen, Trainor, & Katzmann, JJ.
    Negligence, Trespasser, Foreseeability of harm.
    Civil action commenced in the Superior Court Department on
    June 28, 2010.
    The case was tried before Richard T. Moses, J.
    John P. Knight for the defendant.
    J. Christopher Amrhein for the plaintiffs.
    TRAINOR, J.     The defendant, Smitty's Sports Pub, Inc.
    (Smitty's), appeals from a judgment in favor of the plaintiffs
    that entered following a jury trial of a wrongful death lawsuit
    of Ronald J. Leger, the plaintiffs' decedent (decedent), filed
    1
    Of the estate of Ronald J. Leger.
    2
    Cecile M. Leger.
    2
    by Nancy M. Bernier, administratrix of the estate of Ronald J.
    Leger, and Cecile M. Leger (plaintiffs).     We are asked to
    determine whether the decedent was a trespasser and, therefore,
    what duty of care was owed to him by the defendant.    The
    defendant argues that the trial court erred in denying its
    motion for directed verdict and motion for judgment
    notwithstanding the verdict because the decedent was a
    trespasser as a matter of law.   Alternatively, the defendant
    argues that the determination whether the decedent was a
    trespasser should have been a question of fact that was
    presented to the jury.   We affirm.
    Background.   We recite the facts the jury could have found,
    reserving some facts for later discussion.    On March 11, 2010,
    the decedent, age seventy-four, went into Smitty's rear
    entrance.   Upon entering Smitty's, the decedent mistakenly
    opened a door marked "Employees Only" believing it was the men's
    bathroom.   Three doors, marked "Gentlemen," "Ladies," and
    "Employees Only," were all similarly marked, the same color, and
    close to each other.   The "Employees Only" door opened directly
    onto a concrete staircase which had a drop of over two and one-
    half feet onto the middle of the staircase.     The "Employees
    Only" door opened inward onto the unlit stairwell.     The
    "Gentlemen's" and "Ladies'" doors opened outward.     The
    "Employees Only" door was usually locked during business hours
    3
    but was not locked at the time of the incident.    The decedent
    fell down the steps and died of his injuries two weeks later.
    The jury found that the defendant was negligent in the
    maintenance of the property and that this negligence was
    causally related to the injuries suffered by the decedent.     The
    jury determined that the decedent was twenty percent negligent
    and the award of damages was reduced by that percentage.    The
    jury also found that the defendant's conduct was not grossly
    negligent and therefore awarded no punitive damages.
    Discussion.   The defendant argues that the judge erred in
    denying the defendant’s motion for a directed verdict and a
    motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict because the
    decedent was a trespasser as a matter of law.     The defendant
    argues that if the decedent was a trespasser, there would be no
    tort liability established on the facts of this case.     We must
    first determine the nature of the legal duty of care that the
    defendant owed to the decedent, and then determine whether there
    was an evidentiary basis for the jury to have determined that
    the defendant breached the duty of care owed to the decedent.
    Duty of care.   The first element in a plaintiff's burden of
    proof is evidence of a duty of care owed to the plaintiff by the
    defendant.   Actionable negligence only exists in the context of
    a legal duty of care owed from one party to another.     See Altman
    v. Aronson, 
    231 Mass. 588
    , 591 (1919) ("Negligence, without
    4
    qualification and in its ordinary sense, is the failure of a
    responsible person, either by omission or by action, to exercise
    that degree of care, vigilance and forethought which, in the
    discharge of the duty then resting on him, the person of
    ordinary caution and prudence ought to exercise under the
    particular circumstances").   Actionable negligence does not and
    cannot exist in the abstract.    See Slaven v. Salem, 
    386 Mass. 885
    , 887 (1982).    See also Hinds v. Bowen, 
    268 Mass. 55
    , 59
    (1929); Atlas v. Silsbury-Gamble Motors Co., 
    278 Mass. 279
    , 282
    (1932).   Generally, a person lawfully on the premises of another
    is owed a duty of due care in all the circumstances.    See
    Mounsey v. Ellard, 
    363 Mass. 693
    , 695-709 (1973).    "A landowner
    must act as a reasonable man in maintaining his property in a
    reasonably safe condition in view of all the circumstances,
    including the likelihood of injury to others, the seriousness of
    the injury, and the burden of avoiding the risk."    
    Id. at 708,
    quoting from Smith v. Arbaugh's Restaurant, Inc., 
    469 F.2d 97
    ,
    100 (D.C. Cir.).3
    A landowner, on the other hand, does not owe a person
    unlawfully on the landowner's premises, i.e. a trespasser, a
    duty of reasonable care in all circumstances.   The landowner
    3
    Mounsey abolished the distinction in negligence law
    between invitees and licensees. A legal duty of reasonable care
    is now owed in all circumstances to any person lawfully on the
    premises of another. See 
    id. at 707.
                                                                       5
    does owe a trespasser the legal duty to refrain from willful,
    wanton, or reckless conduct that could cause injury or damage to
    the trespasser, but a trespasser cannot maintain an action based
    in negligence.   See 
    id. at 707
    n.7.
    The significance for liability purposes as to whether a
    plaintiff is lawfully or unlawfully present on the premises of
    the landowner is obvious.   The legal duty of care owed to a
    plaintiff, when applied to the attendant facts and circumstances
    of a case, is often dispositive in determining whether tort
    liability exists against a landowner.
    Here, the defendant argues that the decedent was a
    trespasser, as a matter of law, because he had no right to open
    the door marked "Employees Only" and enter the basement area.
    Even if he was on the premises lawfully, the defendant contends
    the decedent became a trespasser when he entered the basement
    area.   The defendant argues, in the alternative, that if the
    decedent was not a trespasser, as a matter of law, then the
    issue of his status was a question of fact that should have been
    submitted to the jury for determination.
    The trial judge, however, ruled "as a matter of law, [the
    decedent] was not a trespasser under these circumstances" and
    6
    the decedent's status was not a factual question to be submitted
    to the jury.4
    We agree that, when the relevant facts of a case are not in
    dispute,5 the plaintiff's status as a person lawfully on the
    premises or as a trespasser is a question of law for the court
    to determine and is not a question of fact for the jury to
    determine.   See generally Restatement (Third) of Torts, § 50
    Comment e (2012).6
    The judge, therefore, properly ruled that as a matter of
    law, the decedent was not a trespasser, and submitted to the
    jury these questions:   whether the defendant breached his legal
    duty of care to the decedent because of the negligent
    maintenance of the premises; whether and to what extent the
    decedent was comparatively negligent in the causation of his
    injuries; and whether the defendant was grossly negligent in the
    4
    A trespasser is "a person who enters or remains upon land
    [or premises,] in the possession of another, without a privilege
    to do so, created by the possessor's consent or otherwise."
    Gage v. Westfield, 
    26 Mass. App. Ct. 681
    , 695 n.8 (1988),
    quoting from Restatement (Second) Torts § 329 (1965).
    5
    It was undisputed that, here, the decedent, as a patron of
    the bar, was lawfully present at the bar and that his lawful
    presence extended to going to the hallway to use the restroom
    where he mistakenly opened the door to the basement stairway.
    6
    The plaintiffs cite to Beausoleil v. Mass Bay Transp.
    Authy, 
    138 F. Supp. 2d 189
    (D. Mass. 2001), which in turn cites
    to Schofield v. Merrill, 
    386 Mass. 244
    (1982), as authority for
    the proposition that whether a plaintiff is a trespasser or not
    is a question of law to be determined by the court. Schofield,
    however, makes no such statement. 
    See 386 Mass. at 252-254
    .
    7
    maintenance of the premises (for the purpose of punitive
    damages).
    Breach of duty.     Having determined that the decedent was
    lawfully on the premises at all times and that the defendant
    owed him a legal duty of reasonable care in all the
    circumstances, the jury had to determine whether the evidence
    established a violation or a failure to meet the requirement of
    that duty of care.    A plaintiff is not only required to
    establish that the defendant owed him a duty of reasonable care
    but also that the defendant breached that duty in a way that
    caused injury to the plaintiff.    See Foster v. Loft, Inc., 
    26 Mass. App. Ct. 289
    , 294-295 (1988).    See also Restatement
    (Second) Torts § 283 (1965).    The defendant, in the exercise of
    reasonable care in all the circumstances, has the legal
    obligation not to take unreasonable risks.    Restatement (Second)
    Torts § 290 & comment c.    Liability is based on the
    determination that the risk was unreasonable and not that the
    defendant knows that the risk was unreasonable, but that he
    should have known that the risk was unreasonable.     See 
    Ibid. The foreseeability of
    the risk of harm, or injury to the
    plaintiff, is often used to determine whether or not the risk
    was unreasonable.    See Foley v. Boston Housing Authy., 
    407 Mass. 640
    , 643 (1990) (summary judgment granted where no demonstration
    that defendants could have foreseen the risk).
    8
    Here, the defendant testified that the unlocked "Employees
    Only" door created a dangerous condition for someone who did not
    know what was on the other side.    The defendant also testified
    that it was foreseeable that a patron may open this door by
    mistake.   It was undisputed that the decedent's intention was to
    use the men's room and that he mistakenly opened the wrong door.
    Additionally, the defendant disclosed that it was the usual
    business practice to keep the "Employees Only" door locked
    during business hours.   See Kushner v. Dravo Corp., 
    339 Mass. 273
    , 277-279 (1959); Restatement (Second) Torts § 290.    There
    was sufficient evidence here for the jury to conclude that it
    was the negligence of the defendant that caused or permitted the
    decedent to mistakenly use the wrong door to enter what he
    believed to be a public restroom.    The unlocked door opened
    inward, instead of outward, to an unlit staircase onto a more
    than two and one-half feet drop to the cellar stairs.     The three
    doors looked similar, were close in proximity, and had similar
    looking signage.   The doors were also in a hallway where there
    were distractions to the patrons, such as a Keno lottery game
    machine and signs that advertised games and alcoholic beverages.
    The negligence of the defendant occurred within premises that
    were open to the public and to whom were owed a duty of
    reasonable care in all the circumstances.
    Judgment affirmed.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: AC 14-P-1967

Citation Numbers: 90 Mass. App. Ct. 472

Judges: Cohen, Trainor, Katzmann

Filed Date: 10/11/2016

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024