Cuiyan Qian v. Toll Brothers, Inc. (073982) , 223 N.J. 124 ( 2015 )


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  •                                                      SYLLABUS
    (This syllabus is not part of the opinion of the Court. It has been prepared by the Office of the Clerk for the
    convenience of the reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the Supreme Court. Please note that, in the
    interest of brevity, portions of any opinion may not have been summarized.)
    Cuiyun Qian v. Toll Brothers Inc. (A-95-13) (073982)
    Argued March 16, 2015 -- Decided August 12, 2015
    ALBIN, J., writing for a unanimous Court.
    In this appeal, the Court considers whether sidewalk immunity applied in Luchejko v. City of Hoboken,
    
    207 N.J. 191
    (2011) (Luchejko), in the context of injuries that occurred on a public sidewalk adjoining a residential
    condominium community, is applicable to claims for personal injuries sustained on a private sidewalk owned and
    controlled by a homeowners association of a common-interest community.
    Plaintiff and her husband resided in a home at the Villas at Cranbury Brook (Villas), a common-interest
    community, in the Township of Plainsboro. The homeowners at the Villas take title only to their dwelling units; all
    other areas, including the sidewalks and walkways, are common area property owned by the homeowners
    association and the recreation association. Homeowners are charged monthly assessments for the maintenance of
    the common areas, which pay for services such as snow and ice removal from the sidewalks. Although the Villas is
    not a gated community, the general public does not have an easement to use the sidewalks. Under the community’s
    certificate of incorporation and by-laws, the homeowners association is responsible for the maintenance of the
    community’s common areas.
    On December 19, 2008, a snowstorm with freezing rain led to the accumulation of approximately one-and-
    a-half inches of ice on the sidewalks and streets of the Villas. At the request of the homeowners association, a
    landscape contractor salted the roadways, but the association did not request that the common sidewalks and
    walkways also be cleared. Two days later, on December 21, 2008, additional freezing rain accumulated. The
    landscape contractor did not apply any salt to the roadways or sidewalks that day. That afternoon, plaintiff and her
    husband walked through the Villas to a food market; on their way back to their home, plaintiff slipped and fell on
    ice on a common-area sidewalk within the community, injuring her wrist and shoulder.
    Plaintiff sued the developer of the community, the management company, the homeowners association, and
    the landscape contractor to recover for the personal injuries that she sustained. The trial court granted summary
    judgment to the homeowners association and the management company, and dismissed plaintiff’s complaint. The
    trial court concluded that the private sidewalks in the community were the functional equivalent of the public
    sidewalk for which the Court conferred immunity in Luchejko. The Appellate Division affirmed that determination
    in an unpublished decision.
    The Court granted plaintiff’s petition for certification. 
    217 N.J. 623
    (2014).
    HELD: The immunity of a property owner from claims for injuries on a public sidewalk addressed in Luchejko
    does not apply to bar a claim for personal injuries against the homeowners association and management company of
    the common-interest community because the sidewalk on which plaintiff fell on ice constitutes a private sidewalk, as
    it is part of the common area owned by the homeowners association, and the association’s by-laws and statutory
    obligations require the association to manage and maintain the community’s common areas.
    1. In reviewing a grant of summary judgment, the court applies the same standards under Rule 4:46-2(c) that govern
    the trial court. A court must view the evidence in the light most favorable to the non-moving party. Summary
    judgment should not be granted unless the record reveals no genuine issue as to any material fact, and the moving
    party is entitled to a judgment or order as a matter of law. In reviewing the law, the court need not defer to the
    interpretative conclusions of the trial court or the Appellate Division. (pp. 13-14)
    2. At common law, both commercial and residential property owners were under no duty to keep the public
    sidewalk adjoining their premises free of snow and ice, and therefore were not liable for the condition of the
    sidewalk caused by the elements. An exception was then created for commercial property, imposing a duty on the
    owner to take reasonable measures to maintain an adjoining public sidewalk for the safety of pedestrians, including
    the removal of snow or ice, as appropriate, and rendering the property owner liable for injuries caused by negligent
    failure to maintain the sidewalk in reasonably good condition. Residential property owners have no similar common
    law duty with respect to a public sidewalk. (pp. 14-15)
    3. The duty of care that a landowner owes to a pedestrian on a sidewalk on or abutting his property depends on
    whether the sidewalk is characterized as a public or private sidewalk. Generally, whether a sidewalk is classified as
    public or private depends on who owns or controls the walkway, rather than who uses it. A critical factor in
    determining whether a sidewalk is public is whether the municipality has sufficient control over or responsibility for
    the maintenance and repair of the sidewalk. (pp. 17-18)
    4. An owner of private property has a duty to exercise reasonable care to protect those entering the property from
    dangerous conditions on the property. A duty therefore exists to make private walkways on the property reasonably
    safe, and, to the extent reasonable, to clear snow and ice that presents a danger to known or expected visitors. (pp.
    17-18)
    5. Under the standards stated above and the specific facts of this matter, the walkway in the Villas on which
    plaintiff fell is a private, rather than a public, sidewalk. The certificate of incorporation and the association’s by-
    laws classify the sidewalks and interior roadways as common property. Under the Condominium Act, a
    homeowners association is responsible for maintaining the common elements of the community, and obtaining
    insurance for liability resulting from accidents within the common areas. Nothing in the record suggests that the
    municipality has control of, or responsibility for, the community’s interior sidewalks. Additionally, the limited
    immunity that the Legislature conferred on homeowners associations under N.J.S.A. 2A:62A-13, protecting against
    liability from certain lawsuits by unit owners, confirms the application of premises liability to a community’s
    common elements because, without the potential for liability, there would be no need for the grant of immunity.
    There is no bar in the immunity provision to a negligence action against the association by a non-unit owner injured
    on the community’s common areas. (pp. 18-21)
    6. The decision in Luchejko is not controlling here. Luchejko reaffirmed the distinction between commercial and
    residential property owners where injuries occur on a public sidewalk, and did not address a private sidewalk that is
    part of the common area of the community. There are also stark factual differences between Luchejko and this case.
    In contrast to this case, the public sidewalk addressed in Luchejko was not part of the common area of the
    condominium. Additionally, a public easement existed over the sidewalk in Luchejko; there is no public easement
    here. The condominium’s by-laws and other documents did not impose any duty upon the association in Luchejko
    to maintain and clear the public sidewalk of snow and ice, or to obtain liability insurance covering the sidewalk; in
    contrast, such duties exist here. The Villas homeowners association collected maintenance fees from the
    homeowners to ensure that all common property, including the sidewalk on which plaintiff was injured, would be
    reasonably safe. No such fees were collected to maintain the public sidewalk in Luchejko. (pp. 22-24)
    7. The Court does not address whether plaintiff should be deemed a unit owner for purposes of the immunity
    provision in the association’s by-laws precluding liability for negligence by unit owners (noting that plaintiff’s son
    is listed as owner in the deed, but plaintiff and her husband reside in the unit), because this issue was not addressed
    by the trial court or the Appellate Division, and must be explored further on remand. (p. 24)
    The judgment of the Appellate Division, which affirmed the grant of summary judgment by the trial court,
    is REVERSED, and the matter is REMANDED to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this
    decision.
    CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER; JUSTICES LaVECCHIA, PATTERSON, and SOLOMON; and
    JUDGE CUFF (temporarily assigned) join in JUSTICE ALBIN’s opinion. JUSTICE FERNANDEZ-VINA
    did not participate.
    .
    2
    SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    A-95 September Term 2013
    073982
    CUIYUN QIAN,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    TOLL BROTHERS INC., INTEGRA
    MANAGEMENT CORP., THE VILLAS
    AT CRANBURY BROOK HOMEOWNERS
    ASSOCIATION,
    Defendants-Respondents,
    and
    LANDSCAPE MAINTENANCE
    SERVICES,
    Defendant.
    Argued March 16, 2015 – Decided August 12, 2015
    On certification to the Superior Court,
    Appellate Division.
    Nicholas J. Leonardis argued the cause for
    appellant (Stathis & Leonardis, attorneys;
    Mr. Leonardis and Randi S. Greenberg, on the
    briefs).
    Matthew J. Tharney argued the cause for
    respondents (McCarter & English, attorneys;
    Mr. Tharney, Natalie S. Watson, and Ryan A.
    Richman, on the briefs).
    Ronald B. Grayzel argued the cause for
    amicus curiae New Jersey Association of
    Justice (Levinson Axelrod, attorneys).
    JUSTICE ALBIN delivered the opinion of the Court.
    1
    New Jersey’s common law imposes a duty on commercial
    landowners to clear public sidewalks abutting their properties
    of snow and ice for the safe travel of pedestrians.    No
    corresponding duty is imposed on residential landowners.    We
    adhered to that distinction between commercial and residential
    landowners in Luchejko v. City of Hoboken, 
    207 N.J. 191
    , 211
    (2011), a case involving a pedestrian who slipped on ice on a
    public sidewalk abutting a residential condominium building.       We
    held that the condominium association and management company
    were immune from suit for allegedly failing to clear ice from
    the public sidewalk.   
    Id. at 195,
    211.
    In this personal-injury case, a resident fell on ice on a
    private sidewalk within a common-interest community.     We must
    determine whether the community’s homeowners association and its
    management company had the duty to clear snow and ice from the
    community’s private sidewalks.   Under the community’s
    certificate of incorporation and by-laws -- as well as by
    statute -- the homeowners association is responsible for the
    maintenance of the common elements, which include the sidewalks.
    Both the trial court and the Appellate Division concluded that
    the private sidewalks in this case were the functional
    equivalent of the public sidewalk on which we conferred immunity
    in Luchejko.   The trial court granted summary judgment to the
    2
    homeowners association and management company and dismissed
    plaintiff’s complaint, and the Appellate Division affirmed.
    We now reverse.     Residential public-sidewalk immunity does
    not apply in the case of a sidewalk privately owned by a common-
    interest community.    Who owns or controls the sidewalk, not who
    uses it, is the key distinguishing point between a public and
    private sidewalk.     Here, the by-laws of the homeowners
    association spell out the association’s duty to manage and
    maintain the community’s common areas, including sidewalks.
    This association also has a statutory obligation to manage the
    common elements of which the sidewalks are a part.     See N.J.S.A.
    46:8B-14(a).   Last, the limited immunity given to “a qualified
    common interest community” under N.J.S.A. 2A:62A-13 is a
    legislative acknowledgement that common-law tort liability
    extends to the private areas of such a community.
    We therefore vacate the grant of summary judgment and
    remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    I.
    A.
    Plaintiff Cuiyun Qian filed a personal-injury action,
    naming as defendants Toll Brothers, Inc., Integra Management
    Corp. (Management Company or Integra), The Villas at Cranbury
    Brook Homeowners Association (Homeowners Association or
    Association), and Landscape Maintenance Services, Inc.
    3
    (Landscape Inc.).    In her complaint, plaintiff alleged that she
    suffered personal injuries resulting from defendants’ negligent
    maintenance of a sidewalk on the grounds of The Villas at
    Cranbury Brook (Villas) in the Township of Plainsboro.    The
    trial court granted summary judgment in favor of defendants and
    dismissed plaintiff’s lawsuit.    The Appellate Division affirmed.
    This appeal is based on the summary-judgment record before
    the trial court.    At this procedural posture, we present the
    facts, as we must, in the light most favorable to plaintiff.
    See Gormley v. Wood-El, 
    218 N.J. 72
    , 86 (2014).
    B.
    The Villas is an “over 55,” age-restricted, common-interest
    community, consisting of approximately 102 detached single-
    family homes on 32.5 acres of land.1    Homeowners at the Villas
    take title only to their dwelling units.    All other areas are
    common property owned by the Homeowners Association and
    Recreation Association.2    The common areas include the sidewalks
    and walkways.    The Homeowners Association is a non-profit
    organization, and its governing board is comprised of five
    members, who do not receive compensation for their services.
    All homeowners are obligatory members of the Association and
    1   The Villas was developed by Toll Brothers.
    2 The Recreation Association is responsible for the recreational
    facilities.
    4
    charged monthly assessments for the maintenance of the common
    areas.    Those assessments pay for services such as snow and ice
    removal from the sidewalks.    The Villas is not a gated community
    and does not have a policy of restricting the public from using
    the community’s private roads and sidewalks.   Nevertheless, the
    general public does not have an easement to use the sidewalks.
    The documents central to the foundation of the Villas and
    the Homeowners Association detail the Association’s
    responsibility for managing the community’s property.    The
    Public Offering Statement filed by the developer grants the
    Homeowners Association the “exclusive” authority to maintain the
    “Common Property.”   That authority extends to clearing the
    walkways and driveways of snow and ice.   The Certificate of
    Incorporation of the Homeowners Association states that the
    Association was formed “to provide for the maintenance,
    preservation and control of the Property . . . and to promote
    the health, safety and welfare of the residents within” the
    Villas.   The Declarations of Covenants, Easements and
    Restrictions for the Homeowners Association refers to common
    property as including “all walkways, sidewalks, driveways and
    interior roadways within the Villas Community.”
    The by-laws of the Association state that it is “the
    affirmative and perpetual obligation and duty of the Board of
    Trustees to . . . cause the Common Property and Areas of Common
    5
    Responsibility to be maintained according to accepted
    standards.”   To “maintain and operate the Common Property,” the
    Board hired Integra.   The Association also contracted with
    Landscape Inc. for snow-removal purposes.   Under the contract,
    Landscape Inc.’s responsibilities included the removal of snow
    and ice, in accumulations of two inches or more, from “roadways,
    parking areas, driveways and sidewalks.”    However, the
    Association had to direct Landscape Inc. to clear snow and ice
    in accumulations of less than two inches.
    The Association is also required, by its by-laws, to
    maintain liability insurance for “accidents occurring within the
    property of the Villas Community.”3   Last, the by-laws provide
    that the Association is not liable in “any civil action brought
    by or on behalf of [a homeowner] to respond in damages as a
    result of bodily injury to the Owner occurring on the premises
    of the Association except as a result of its willful, wanton or
    3 The Condominium Act requires a homeowners association to
    maintain
    insurance against liability for personal
    injury and death for accidents occurring
    within the common elements whether limited or
    general and the defense of any actions brought
    by reason of injury or death to person, or
    damage to property occurring within such
    common elements and not arising by reason of
    any act or negligence of any individual unit
    owner.
    [N.J.S.A. 46:8B-14(e).]
    6
    grossly negligent act of commission or omission.”    See N.J.S.A.
    2A:62A-13(b).
    This case arises from an accident that occurred on December
    21, 2008.   As of that date, plaintiff and her husband lived in a
    home at the Villas purchased by their son whose name appears on
    the deed.   On December 19, 2008, a snowstorm with freezing rain
    led to the accumulation of approximately one-and-a-half inches
    of ice on the sidewalks and streets of the Villas.    At the
    Association’s request, Landscape Inc. salted the roadways, but
    the Association made no similar request for clearing the common
    sidewalks and walkways.
    On December 21, 2008, additional freezing rain accumulated
    between 4:00 a.m. and 1:00 p.m.    Landscape Inc. did not apply
    any salt to the roadways or sidewalks that day.    That afternoon,
    plaintiff and her husband walked a half mile through the Villas
    to a food market.   On the way back to their home, plaintiff
    slipped and fell on ice on a common-area sidewalk within the
    Villas.   She landed on her back, injuring her wrist and
    shoulder.
    C.
    Defendants moved to dismiss the action.     The trial court,
    applying Luchejko, granted summary judgment in favor of the
    Homeowners Association and the Management Company on the ground
    that residential public-sidewalk immunity barred plaintiff’s
    7
    claims.4    The court also dismissed the lawsuit against Toll
    Brothers, finding that the developer did not control the
    property at the Villas and that its earlier designation of Board
    members on the Homeowners Association did not change that
    equation.    The court, however, determined that Landscape Inc.
    stood on a different footing because the holding in Luchejko was
    limited to the homeowners association and management company and
    because Landscape Inc. was paid for its services.    Accordingly,
    the court denied summary judgment to Landscape Inc., concluding
    that a genuine issue remained concerning whether it exercised
    due care in fulfilling its snow-removal obligation.
    After plaintiff’s motion for reconsideration was denied,
    she appealed.5
    II.
    A.
    In an unpublished opinion, the Appellate Division affirmed
    the grant of summary judgment for the Homeowners Association and
    the Management Company, determining that Luchejko controlled the
    outcome.    The appellate panel also upheld the dismissal of the
    4 Plaintiff also moved to enforce a purported settlement with
    Toll Brothers, the Homeowners Association, and the Management
    Company. The trial court denied that motion, and the Appellate
    Division affirmed. The enforceability of the purported
    settlement is not an issue before this Court.
    5 Plaintiff entered into a settlement with Landscape Inc., and
    the claims against that defendant were dismissed.
    8
    suit against Toll Brothers because it “did not own or control
    the property at the time of plaintiff’s accident.”
    According to the panel, the Court in Luchejko “expressly
    declined . . . to impose sidewalk maintenance duties on an
    association of residential property owners that was responsible
    for maintenance of the common areas of the property.”     The panel
    asserted that, for purposes of residential-sidewalk immunity,
    the interior sidewalks of the Villas could not be distinguished
    from the sidewalk abutting a public street in Luchejko.    It
    reasoned that because “[a]ll members of the public had free
    access to the streets and sidewalks of the [Villas],” those
    “interior sidewalks were publicly-used sidewalks just as the
    abutting sidewalk was in Luchejko.”   In the panel’s view, the
    Villas’ interior sidewalks “functioned like the public sidewalks
    of any residential development,” and “the [Homeowners]
    Association functions in a governing capacity for a small group
    of homeowners, just as a municipal government does for all its
    residents and taxpayers.”   The panel observed that the
    Homeowners Association’s “duty to clear the interior sidewalks
    of ice and snow” was not “conceptually different” from “the duty
    of the association in Luchejko, to clear an abutting sidewalk
    used by the public.”   It concluded that if a private residential
    community’s interior sidewalks are to be treated differently
    9
    from its sidewalks abutting a public street, the Supreme Court
    must “make the appropriate distinctions.”
    In a concurring opinion, Judge Leone noted the differences
    between the sidewalk in the Villas, which “is adjacent to an
    apparently private road,” and the sidewalk in Luchejko abutting
    a public road.   He mused that those “differences may implicate
    the applicability of the traditional common law duties of
    private property owners.”   However, on the basis of this
    “Court’s unequivocal reaffirmation of the
    ‘commercial/residential dichotomy,’” he believed that it was not
    the Appellate Division’s role “to disturb that dichotomy.”
    B.
    We granted plaintiff’s petition for certification.      Qian v.
    Toll Bros. Inc., 
    217 N.J. 623
    (2014).   We also granted the
    motion of the New Jersey Association of Justice (NJAJ) to
    participate as amicus curiae.
    III.
    A.
    Plaintiff argues that the Appellate Division, in applying
    Luchejko, overlooked a critical distinction between that case
    and the present one.   Plaintiff emphasizes that in Luchejko, the
    condominium association did not list the public sidewalk in the
    master deed as a common element and therefore could not secure
    insurance to protect itself from accidents occurring there.    In
    10
    contrast, plaintiff submits that, here, the Association owned
    the private sidewalk and collected fees to maintain it.
    Plaintiff argues that the Appellate Division erred by looking at
    who used the sidewalk rather than who owned the sidewalk.
    Plaintiff reasons that because the Association owned the private
    sidewalk, the use of that sidewalk by members of the public did
    not convert it into a public sidewalk.   In plaintiff’s view, the
    holding in Luchejko was limited to the “question of whether a
    residential landowner had a legal obligation to . . . maintain[]
    a sidewalk that it did not own” for the public’s benefit.    In
    this case, plaintiff stresses that the Homeowners Association
    owns the private sidewalk on which she was injured and that its
    by-laws and N.J.S.A. 46:8B-14(a) obligate the Association to
    exercise reasonable care in maintaining that sidewalk as part of
    the common areas of the Villas.
    B.
    Amicus NJAJ echoes plaintiff’s position that Luchejko
    addressed a very specific issue, whether sidewalk immunity
    applied to “public” sidewalks abutting a condominium building.
    Here, in contrast, the issue is whether the immunity applies to
    “a common walkway situated exclusively on private property . . .
    owned and controlled by the Homeowners Association.”   Amicus
    points out that the “general public has not been granted access
    to use the private roads and sidewalks within the Villas” and
    11
    therefore the usage of those private sidewalks by “trespassers”
    does not change the character of the property for purposes of
    tort liability.   NJAJ contends that the Homeowners Association
    has a duty imposed by statute and its own by-laws to maintain
    the common-area sidewalks by removing unsafe accumulations of
    snow and ice.   It was the negligent performance of that duty
    that, according to NJAJ, gives rise to the action in this case.
    Last, NJAJ argues that the limited immunity from suit that
    applies to unit owners, as set forth in the by-laws, does not
    extend to the claims of plaintiff, who is only a resident of a
    unit.
    C.
    Defendants, the Homeowners Association and Management
    Company, contend that the Appellate Division properly affirmed
    the grant of summary judgment because “plaintiff’s alleged
    accident occurred on a portion of sidewalk abutting residential
    property.”   Defendants state that, in determining whether
    immunity applies, the defining question is whether the sidewalk
    abuts residential or commercial property.   In defendants’ view,
    Luchejko reaffirmed the notion that a residential owner,
    including a condominium association, is not subject to sidewalk
    liability for failing to clear the walkway in front of the
    building of snow or ice, whether the sidewalk is denominated
    public or private.   Defendants claim that the similarities
    12
    between the condominium association in Luchejko and the
    Homeowners Association here should lead to similar outcomes.
    Defendants note that, under Luchejko, the issue is not whether
    the sidewalk is public or private, but whether the abutting
    property is commercial or residential.   This
    commercial/residential distinction, according to defendants,
    protects a residential owner from losing his home in the event
    of a sidewalk accident.   Defendants also submit, as did the
    Appellate Division, that the payment of fees for maintenance and
    insurance coverage by residents of the Villas does not create a
    tort-law duty on the part of the Homeowners Association to clear
    the sidewalks of snow and ice.    Finally, defendants maintain
    that the Association’s by-laws bar a negligence action brought
    by a unit owner, and therefore plaintiff’s claim is precluded
    because her rights are derivative of those possessed by her son
    who holds title to the unit.
    IV.
    A.
    In reviewing a grant of summary judgment, “we apply the
    same standard governing the trial court -- we view the evidence
    in the light most favorable to the non-moving party.”     Murray v.
    Plainfield Rescue Squad, 
    210 N.J. 581
    , 584 (2012).    Summary
    judgment should not be granted unless the record reveals “no
    genuine issue as to any material fact” and “the moving party is
    13
    entitled to a judgment or order as a matter of law.”     R. 4:46-
    2(c).   Additionally, in construing the law -- whether the common
    law or a statute -- our review is de novo.   
    Murray, supra
    , 210
    N.J. at 584.   “We need not defer to the trial court or Appellate
    Division’s interpretative conclusions . . . .”   
    Ibid. The issue before
    us is whether public-sidewalk immunity
    bars plaintiff from pursuing a personal-injury action for an
    accident caused by icy conditions on a private sidewalk owned or
    controlled by the Homeowners Association of a common-interest
    community.
    We begin with a brief overview of our jurisprudence on
    sidewalk liability.
    B.
    At common law, property owners were “under no duty to keep
    the public sidewalk adjoining their premises free of snow and
    ice.”   Skupienski v. Maly, 
    27 N.J. 240
    , 247 (1958).   Generally,
    property owners, both commercial and residential, were “not
    liable for the condition of a sidewalk caused by the action of
    the elements or by wear and tear incident to public use.”
    Yanhko v. Fane, 
    70 N.J. 528
    , 532 (1976), overruled in part by
    Stewart v. 104 Wallace St., Inc., 
    87 N.J. 146
    (1981).
    We carved out an exception to that common-law rule for
    commercial property owners in 
    Stewart, supra
    , 87 N.J. at 149.
    In Stewart, we held that commercial property owners would be
    14
    “liable for injuries on the sidewalks abutting their property
    that are caused by their negligent failure to maintain the
    sidewalks in reasonably good condition.”    
    Id. at 150.6
      We
    determined that imposing a duty on commercial property owners to
    take reasonable measures to maintain a public sidewalk for the
    safety of pedestrians was consonant with public policy and
    notions of fairness.   
    Id. at 157-58.
      We later made clear that a
    commercial property owner’s duty to maintain “a public sidewalk
    in a reasonably good condition may require removal of snow or
    ice or reduction of the risk, depending upon the circumstances.”
    Mirza v. Filmore Corp., 
    92 N.J. 390
    , 395–96 (1983).
    Since Stewart, residential-public-sidewalk immunity has
    remained intact.   Norris v. Borough of Leonia, 
    160 N.J. 427
    , 434
    (1999).   Residential property owners do not have a common-law
    duty to clear snow or ice from a public sidewalk and the failure
    to do so does not expose them to tort liability.    
    Luchejko, supra
    , 207 N.J. at 211.   That is so even if a municipal
    ordinance requires residential owners to clear their sidewalks.
    
    Id. at 199,
    211.
    In Luchejko, we reaffirmed the distinction between
    commercial and residential property owners in public-sidewalk
    liability cases.   
    Id. at 195.
      There, we determined that a
    6 In 
    Stewart, supra
    , we stated that apartment buildings would be
    considered “commercial” 
    properties. 87 N.J. at 160
    n.7.
    15
    condominium complex, through its condominium association and
    management company, did not have a common-law duty to clear a
    public sidewalk of snow or ice and was immune from a lawsuit
    filed by a pedestrian who slipped on the icy pavement, breaking
    his leg.    
    Id. at 196,
    211.
    The accident in Luchejko occurred on a public sidewalk,
    which abutted a 104-unit condominium building on one side and a
    public highway on the other.     
    Id. at 195-96.
      Each unit in the
    condominium building was owned in fee simple, and each owner
    possessed “an undivided interest in the common elements.”        
    Id. at 196.
        The condominium association, which represented the
    interests of the individual owners, was responsible for
    “maintaining the ‘common elements’ of the property.”     
    Id. at 196,
    197.    Importantly, the public sidewalk was not part of the
    common elements and, therefore, the association had no common-
    law obligation to maintain the sidewalk.7    
    Id. at 198,
    207.     The
    condominium’s master deed required the association to acquire
    liability insurance covering the common elements, not the public
    sidewalk where the accident occurred.     
    Id. at 198.
    Significantly, Luchejko did not address the condominium’s
    7 The City of Hoboken, where the accident occurred, had an
    ordinance requiring residential landowners to “remove snow and
    ice from sidewalks abutting their property.” 
    Luchejko, supra
    ,
    207 N.J. at 199. Ultimately, we decided that the ordinance did
    not abrogate the tort-law immunity that protected the
    condominium building in Luchejko. See 
    id. at 200-01.
                                      16
    duty to maintain a private sidewalk or walkway that fell within
    the common elements of the condominium’s property.
    C.
    The duty of care that a landowner owes to a pedestrian
    walking on a sidewalk on or abutting his property will depend on
    whether the sidewalk is characterized as public or private.
    Cogliati v. Ecco High Frequency Corp., 
    92 N.J. 402
    , 415 n.6
    (1983) (“[H]istorically and currently, the law has not been the
    same with respect to individuals who have been injured due to
    the conditions on the public sidewalk as opposed to private
    property.”).   At common law, a landowner owes a duty to exercise
    reasonable care to protect visitors from a dangerous condition
    of private property.   Hopkins v. Fox & Lazo Realtors, 
    132 N.J. 426
    , 433-34 (1993).    Landowners may owe a limited duty even to
    trespassers.   
    Id. at 434
    (noting that, ordinarily, duty owed to
    trespassers is only to warn “of artificial conditions on the
    property that pose a risk of death or serious bodily harm”).       A
    residential homeowner has a duty to render private walkways on
    the property reasonably safe and -- to the extent reasonable
    under the circumstances -- to clear snow and ice that presents a
    danger to known or expected visitors.    See Lynch v. McDermott,
    
    111 N.J.L. 216
    , 217-19 (Sup. Ct. 1933) (holding that person in
    control of premises and extending invitation to guest had duty
    17
    to keep premises, including front steps, “reasonably safe” from
    ice, which had accumulated earlier).
    Accordingly, under our tort law, liability may depend on
    whether a plaintiff suffers an injury on the walk leading to the
    front door of a house -- which is owned or controlled by the
    property owner -- as opposed to a sidewalk abutting the
    property.    See 
    Cogliati, supra
    , 92 N.J. at 415 n.6.
    Our Stewart and Luchejko decisions did not deal with the
    distinction between public and private ownership of a sidewalk
    for purposes of tort liability, which is the focal point of this
    appeal.
    V.
    A.
    A critical factor in determining whether a sidewalk is
    “public” is whether “the municipality ha[s] sufficient control
    over or responsibility for the maintenance and repair of the
    sidewalk.”   
    Norris, supra
    , 160 N.J. at 443.   Generally, a
    sidewalk is classified public or private based on who owns or
    controls the walkway, not based on who uses it.    See 
    ibid. By that measure,
    the walkway on which plaintiff fell in the Villas
    was a private sidewalk, not a public sidewalk.    Nothing in the
    record remotely suggests that Plainsboro Township has control or
    responsibility over the interior sidewalks at the Villas.
    Additionally, at least as of the time of the accident, based on
    18
    the record before us, the roadway abutting the sidewalk was
    private; it had not been dedicated to the Township.
    The Certificate of Incorporation of the Homeowners
    Association, by reference to the Declarations of Covenants,
    Easements and Restrictions for the Association, and the
    Association’s by-laws clearly classify the sidewalks and
    interior roadways within the Villas Community as common property
    -- in other words, private property.   Under the Condominium Act,
    a homeowners association is responsible for the maintenance of
    the common elements.   N.J.S.A. 46:8B-14(a) (“The association . .
    . shall be responsible for . . . [t]he maintenance, repair,
    replacement, cleaning and sanitation of the common elements.”).8
    The Association is also required to maintain “insurance against
    liability for personal injury and death for accidents occurring
    within the common elements.”   N.J.S.A. 46:8B-14(e).
    The Legislature has recognized the application of premises
    liability to the common elements of a “qualified common interest
    community” by crafting a limited immunity protecting homeowners
    8 The detached single-family homes at the Villas are governed by
    the Condominium Act, N.J.S.A. 46:8B-1 to -38. See Brandon Farms
    Prop. Owners Ass’n v. Brandon Farms Condo. Ass’n, 
    180 N.J. 361
    ,
    362-63 (2004) (applying Condominium Act to “development of
    single-family detached homes, townhouses, and condominiums”);
    Port Liberte Homeowners Ass’n v. Sordoni Constr. Co., 393 N.J.
    Super. 492, 498 (App. Div. 2007) (discussing series “of single-
    family detached homes, townhomes, and mid-rise buildings” that
    were “established pursuant to the New Jersey Condominium Act”).
    19
    associations from certain lawsuits brought by unit owners.     See
    N.J.S.A. 2A:62A-13.   N.J.S.A. 2A:62A-13(a) provides that a
    homeowners association may provide through its by-laws that it
    “shall not be liable in any civil action brought by or on behalf
    of a unit owner to respond in damages as a result of bodily
    injury to the unit owner occurring on the premises of the
    qualified common interest community.”    The caveat to that
    provision is that an association does not have immunity for
    injuries caused “by its willful, wanton or grossly negligent act
    of commission or omission.”   N.J.S.A. 2A:62A-13(b).
    The purpose of the statute is to “permit condominium and
    cooperative homeowners’ associations to protect themselves
    against suits by unit owners.”   Assemb. Ins. Comm., Statement to
    S. 251, 203d Leg. (Sept. 1, 1987).    The Legislature was mindful
    that “[s]ome associations have had lawsuits filed against them
    by unit owners who have fallen on icy sidewalks or sustained
    other injuries on the common property,” and that “as a result,
    some associations have had trouble getting insurance coverage or
    have had their premiums rise significantly.”    
    Ibid. Accordingly, the statute
    was intended to “permit the members of
    the association to agree to eliminate this type of suit.”     
    Ibid. Clearly, the Legislature
    believed that the private
    sidewalks of a common-interest community were subject to tort
    20
    liability; otherwise, it would not have conferred a limited
    immunity on homeowners associations.
    In language similar to N.J.S.A. 2A:62A-13, the Homeowners
    Association at the Villas has promulgated a by-law that, in
    effect, exculpates the Association from liability for negligent
    acts when a unit owner is the injured party.9    Neither the
    statute nor the by-law prohibits a non-unit owner from bringing
    an action sounding in negligence against the Association for an
    injury arising on the common property of the Association.
    Significantly, the Association acquired liability insurance to
    protect itself against personal-injury-damage claims arising
    from accidents occurring on “the property of the Villas
    Community,” including its private sidewalks.
    We reject defendants’ contention that immunity should apply
    because permitting lawsuits to be filed against the Association
    for not maintaining its private sidewalks will potentially
    expose unit owners -- despite insurance coverage -- to losing
    their homes.    First, this lawsuit is against the Homeowners
    9   The by-law reads:
    The Association shall not be liable in any
    civil action brought by or on behalf of a[n]
    Owner to respond in damages as a result of
    bodily injury to the Owner occurring on the
    premises of the Association except as a result
    of its willful, wanton or grossly negligent
    act of commission or omission.
    21
    Association, not the unit holders.    Moreover, taking defendants’
    argument to its logical endpoint would lead to the abrogation of
    premises-liability law in its entirety.   The point of premises
    liability, in part, is to encourage property owners to exercise
    a reasonable degree of care in maintaining their property.
    That, in turn, will reduce the number of avoidable accidents.
    The Villas is age restricted to those fifty-five years and
    above, a population more susceptible to serious injuries from
    falls.   With fewer avoidable accidents, lawsuits decline and,
    presumably, insurance premiums will as well.    In short, strong
    public-policy reasons support maintaining our traditional
    common-law approach to premises liability.
    B.
    We disagree with the Appellate Division that Luchejko
    governs the outcome of this case.    The two cases are
    distinguished by their stark factual differences.
    In 
    Luchejko, supra
    , the public sidewalk was not a common
    element of the condominium complex, and therefore the
    association was not responsible for its 
    maintenance, 207 N.J. at 207
    ; here, the sidewalk is a part of the common area of the
    Villas, and its maintenance falls under the control of the
    Association.   In Luchejko, the association’s by-laws and other
    documents did not impose on it a duty to clear the public
    sidewalk of snow and ice, 
    id. at 198,
    207; here, the governance
    22
    documents of the Association place on it the responsibility to
    clear the private sidewalks of accumulated snow and ice.   In
    Luchejko, the association did not collect fees from condominium
    owners for the purpose of maintaining the public sidewalk in
    safe condition, 
    id. at 197-98;
    here, the Association collected
    maintenance fees from the homeowners to ensure that all common
    property, including the very sidewalk on which plaintiff fell,
    would be reasonably safe.
    Furthermore, in Luchejko, the association was not required
    to insure itself against damages arising from accidents on the
    public sidewalk on which the accident occurred, 
    id. at 197-98,
    207; here, the Association was required to secure liability
    insurance covering the private sidewalk.   In Luchejko, the
    public had a right of way on the sidewalk, see 
    id. at 195;
    here,
    the general public had no easement to use the private walkways
    at the Villas.   Last, and most importantly, in Luchejko, the
    accident occurred on a public sidewalk abutting the condominium
    complex, 
    id. at 195;
    here, plaintiff’s accident occurred on a
    private sidewalk within the Villas.
    Therefore, while the condominium association in Luchejko
    had no common-law duty to take reasonable measures to clear the
    public sidewalk of snow and ice, here, common-law premises-
    liability jurisprudence imposes a duty on the Association to
    keep its private sidewalks reasonably safe.
    23
    Accordingly, the Appellate Division erred in affirming the
    grant of summary judgment in favor of the Homeowners Association
    and the Management Company.
    C.
    Finally, we note that the limited record before us
    indicates that plaintiff’s son is the title holder to the unit
    in which plaintiff lived.     We do not address whether plaintiff
    should be deemed a unit owner for purposes of the immunity
    provision in the Homeowner Association’s by-laws.     That issue
    was not reached by the trial court or the Appellate Division.
    That issue must be further explored, and we express no opinion
    on the subject.
    VI.
    For the reasons expressed, we reverse the judgment of the
    Appellate Division, which affirmed the grant of summary judgment
    in favor of defendants Integra Management Corp. and The Villas
    at Cranbury Brook Homeowners Association.     We remand this case
    to the trial court for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER; JUSTICES LaVECCHIA, PATTERSON, and
    SOLOMON; and JUDGE CUFF (temporarily assigned) join in JUSTICE
    ALBIN’s opinion. JUSTICE FERNANDEZ-VINA did not participate.
    24
    SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    NO.       A-95                                  SEPTEMBER TERM 2013
    ON CERTIFICATION TO             Appellate Division, Superior Court
    CUIYUN QIAN,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    TOLL BROTHERS, INC., INTEGRA
    MANAGEMENT CORP., THE VILLAS
    AT CRANBURY BROOK HOMEOWNERS
    ASSOCIATION,
    Defendants-Respondents,
    and
    LANDSCAPE MAINTENANCE SERVICES,
    Defendant.
    DECIDED                August 12, 2015
    Chief Justice Rabner                          PRESIDING
    OPINION BY             Justice Albin
    CONCURRING/DISSENTING OPINIONS BY
    DISSENTING OPINION BY
    REVERSE AND
    CHECKLIST
    REMAND
    CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER                        X
    JUSTICE LaVECCHIA                           X
    JUSTICE ALBIN                               X
    JUSTICE PATTERSON                           X
    JUSTICE FERNANDEZ-VINA             --------------------   --------------------
    JUSTICE SOLOMON                             X
    JUDGE CUFF (t/a)                            X
    TOTALS                                      6