Matthews, T. v. Wince, M. & D. ( 2017 )


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  • J-A03013-17
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    TIFFANY MATTHEWS                                 IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    PENNSYLVANIA
    Appellant
    v.
    MICHAEL G. & DORENE M. WINCE
    Appellees                 No. 900 MDA 2016
    Appeal from the Order Entered May 12, 2016
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Lackawanna County
    Civil Division at No(s): 15 CV 5882
    BEFORE: LAZARUS, J., STABILE, J., and DUBOW, J.
    MEMORANDUM BY LAZARUS, J.:                            FILED APRIL 13, 2017
    Tiffany Matthews appeals from the trial court’s order granting
    summary judgment in favor of Appellees Michael G. & Dorene M. Wince (the
    “Winces”) in this slip and fall case. After careful review, we affirm.
    On February 21, 2014, Matthews slipped and fell on property she
    leased1 from the Winces,2 located at 1926 Lafayette Street in Scranton,
    Pennsylvania. The Winces, owners of the property, had purchased the real
    estate in 2006; Matthews began renting the home from the Winces in March
    2013. The subject property is a one-floor, single-family dwelling positioned
    ____________________________________________
    1
    The parties had a month-to-month oral lease agreement to rent the
    premises.
    2
    Two other tenants also leased the property from the Winces. They are not
    parties to this appeal.
    J-A03013-17
    on an upgrade hill.    At the time of the accident, there were front steps
    leading from the front door/porch area to the front lawn; however, there
    was no walkway or railing from the base of the porch steps to the sidewalk
    in the front of the property. The property has a rear entrance/exit from the
    main floor that leads to a backyard alley/driveway with a parking spot for
    use by tenants. The tenants access the parking spot by driving up and down
    the common alleyway/driveway.       In the winter months, when the City of
    Scranton would fail to plow the alleyway/driveway, Matthews would park her
    car on the street in front of the subject property and use the front door to
    enter and exit the premises.
    On the evening of February 21, 2014, Matthews walked down one of
    the pathways that she had shoveled on the snowy, icy, grassy hill, toward
    her car parked on the street in the front of the property. She began to slide
    on mud and/or snow on the pathway and fell to the ground. As a result of
    the fall, Matthews sustained a dislocated left ankle, swelling of her left leg,
    and pain in her left knee; she underwent surgery to set her ankle. Matthews
    also suffered a blood clot as a result of the trauma to her ankle.
    On October 5, 2015, Mathews filed a complaint sounding in negligence
    against the Winces. The complaint averred that the Winces “managed the
    property and were responsible for snow and ice removal, maintenance in the
    front and the back of said property and safe ingress and egress to said
    property.” Matthew’s Complaint, 9/5/15, at ¶ 6. Matthews further alleged
    that the Winces “knew or in the exercise of reasonable care should have had
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    knowledge of the existence of the dangerous condition [the accumulation of
    snow and ice on the path] so as to be able to remove it or remedy the
    condition.” 
    Id. at ¶
    11.
    The Winces filed preliminary objections alleging that portions of
    Matthews’ complaint should be stricken for lack of specificity.          After a
    hearing, the court sustained the objection to one paragraph (¶ 23(L)) of the
    complaint and overruled, denied and dismissed the remaining objections.
    The Winces filed an answer and new matter alleging that Matthews, as a
    tenant-in-possession   of   the   subject   property,   was   responsible    for
    maintaining the entire premises, including the front and back of the property
    and ensuring that residents had “safe and appropriate methods of ingress
    and egress to the property.” Winces’ Complaint, 2/4/16, at ¶¶ 21, 26.
    On February 25, 2016, the Winces filed a summary judgment motion
    claiming that: (1) Matthews fully realized the risks involved in proceeding
    along the pathway that she shoveled and that she voluntarily assumed those
    risks; (2) the Winces did not breach any duty owed to Matthews; (3) the
    Winces were not negligent; and (4) Matthews failed to present sufficient
    evidence to support a claim against them upon which relief may be granted.
    On May 12, 2016, following oral arguments, the court granted the Winces’
    motion finding that there was a safe and satisfactory means of ingress and
    egress to the subject property by use of a rear entrance way and that the
    “City’s failure to plow the back alleyway does not constitute a breach of the
    implied warranty of habitability.” Trial Court Opinion, 8/16/16, at 8.
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    Matthews filed a filed a timely notice of appeal and court-ordered
    Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b) concise statement of matters complained of on appeal.
    Matthews presents the following issues for our review:
    (1)   Whether [the Winces’] Motion for Summary Judgment
    should have been denied.
    (2)   Whether Defendants Michael Wince and Dorene Wince
    owed Plaintiff, Tiffany Matthews[,] a duty of care.
    (3)   Whether the [t]rial [c]ourt erred in applying the
    assumption of the risk doctrine and/or the contributory
    negligence doctrine.
    Our standard of review in cases of summary judgment is well-settled.
    This court will only reverse the trial court’s entry of summary judgment only
    if the court committed an error of law.       Merriweather v. Philadelphia
    Newspapers, Inc., 
    684 A.2d 137
    , 140 (Pa. Super. 1996).                Summary
    judgment    is   proper   when   the    pleadings,   depositions,   answers   to
    interrogatories, admissions on file, and affidavits demonstrate that there
    exists no genuine issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to
    judgment as a matter of law. Pa.R.C.P. 1035.2. In determining whether to
    grant summary judgment, a trial court must resolve all doubts against the
    moving party and examine the record in a light most favorable to the non-
    moving party. 
    Id. The issue
    as to whether there are no genuine issues as to any material
    fact presents a question of law, and therefore, on that question the appellate
    court’s standard of review is de novo.       Summers v. Certainteed Corp.,
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    997 A.2d 1152
    (Pa. 2010).             This means it need not defer to the
    determinations made by the lower tribunals. 
    Id. On appeal,
    Matthews claims that the court erred in granting summary
    judgment in favor of the Winces where they had a duty to her as her
    landlord, they maintained control over the area where she fell, and where
    she was not negligent.      Matthews also asserts that because there is a
    question as to whether the absence of a walkway and/or sidewalk and/or
    stairs in the front of the property is a dangerous condition, the court should
    have denied summary judgment and the issue should be resolved by a trier
    of fact.
    Duty of Care
    A. Breach of Implied Warranty of Habitability
    In Pennsylvania, it is well settled that landlords owe a duty to
    protect tenants from injury or loss arising out of a negligent
    failure to maintain a rental property in a safe condition. A
    tenant seeking to recover damages stemming from the condition
    of a rental property may pursue claims sounding in ordinary
    negligence or a breach of the implied warranty of habitability.
    Feld v. Merriam, 
    485 A.2d 742
    , 754 (Pa. 1984). In Pugh v. Holmes, 
    405 A.2d 897
    (Pa. 1979), our Supreme Court adopted an implied warranty of
    habitability in residential leases.    This warranty, also reflected in section
    17.6 of the Restatement (Second) of Property, states:
    A landlord is subject to liability for physical harm caused to the
    tenant and others upon the leased property with the consent of
    the tenant or his subtenant by a dangerous condition existing
    before or arising after the tenant has taken possession, if he
    failed to exercise reasonable care to repair the condition and the
    existence of the condition is in violation of:
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    (1)   Implied warranty of habitability; or
    (2)   A duty created       by   statute   or   administrative
    regulation.
    Restatement (Second) of Property, § 17.6 (emphasis added). See Rivera
    v. Selfon Home Repairs & Improve. Co., 
    439 A.2d 739
    (Pa. Super. 1982)
    (implied warranty designed to insure that landlord will provide facilities and
    services vital to life, health, and safety of tenant and to use of premises for
    residential purposes).
    To establish a breach of the implied warranty of habitability, the tenant
    must show that he or she gave notice to the landlord of the defect or
    condition, that the landlord had a reasonable opportunity to make the
    necessary repairs, and that he failed to do so.       Kuriger v. Cramer, 
    489 A.2d 1331
    (Pa. Super. 1985).       In order to constitute a breach of the
    warranty, the defect must be “of a nature and kind which will prevent the
    use of the [lot] for its intended purpose to provide the premises fit for
    habitation[.]” Staley v. Bouril, 
    718 A.2d 283
    , 285 (Pa. 1998), citing 
    Pugh, 405 A.2d at 905
    .
    At her deposition, Matthews testified that on the day she first visited
    the property it had rained the day before and “it [had] rain[ed] hard because
    the front of the house where they put the steps in now is like a muddy – like
    muddy, and like, you would slide walking on it. . . . [Y]ou could see where
    the mud was running down.       So we were asking questions about how we
    were going to get in and out because, during the summertime, you can use
    the back door so we were using the back door so the front we didn’t even
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    [use].”    Tiffany Matthews Deposition, 1/8/16, at 14-15.          In response to
    asking the Winces how she was to enter and exit the premises in the winter,
    Matthews testified that the Winces responded, “This is what it was.” 
    Id. at 15.
    Matthew stated that despite the fact that she noticed the muddy front
    lawn on the day she inspected the premises, she also indicated that she
    thought it might be slippery and yet still decided to rent the premises. 
    Id. Matthews further
    testified that she or one of the other tenants always
    shoveled the pathway leading from the front door of the property to the
    street and, that prior to the accident, they would use these pathways to get
    to the sidewalk and to the front of house. 
    Id. at 21-22.
    Since the accident,
    Matthews testified that the tenants still do all the shoveling of the property.
    
    Id. at 41.
    At his deposition, Michael Wince testified that tenants of the Lafayette
    Street house parked behind the home in an alley that cuts through the back
    of the property and that they “park right there by the back door.” Michael
    G. Wince Deposition, 1/8/16, at 18.            Wince also acknowledged that cars
    could park on the street in the front of the house and that he did not have a
    plan to put in a front walkway.           
    Id. at 18,
    25.   Wince testified that he
    mowed the lawn to the property. 
    Id. at 20.3
    Finally, Wince testified that
    Matthews never indicated to him that she had difficulty coming and going
    ____________________________________________
    3
    Prior to Matthews moving in, the only renovations the Winces made to the
    property was repainting the interior of the home. 
    Id. at 23.
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    from the property using the front lawn or that she had trouble parking in the
    back alleyway due to snow. 
    Id. at 30-31.
    Dorene Wince testified at her deposition that she and her husband had
    planned to put in a retaining wall and front walkway or stairs when they
    could financially afford to do so.   Dorene Wince Deposition, 1/8/16, at 8.
    She also testified that she did not recall ever having any conversations with
    Matthews about whether the Winces were going to do anything with the
    front of the property in terms of putting in a means of ingress and egress
    from the front porch steps to the front sidewalk. 
    Id. at 9.
    Dorene testified
    that before Matthews’ fall, they did nothing as landlords to ensure that the
    tenants’ means of egress out the front door was safe; however, she did not
    have any concerns about the tenants going and coming safely using the
    front of the property. 
    Id. at 11-12.
    Dorene further testified that she was
    completely unaware that snow would accumulate in large amounts in the
    back alleyway because the City would occasionally fail to plow the alley. 
    Id. at 12.
      Finally, Mrs. Wince testified that other than mowing the lawn, her
    husband did not do anything else on the exterior of the premises. 
    Id. at 17.
    Instantly, the record, viewed in the light most favorable to Matthews
    as the non-moving party, does not adduce any evidence to show that
    Matthews gave notice to the Winces of the alleged defect or condition of the
    premises, namely the lack of a front walkway. Specifically, Matthews never
    communicated to the Winces that she often was unable to use the back
    entrance and alleyway and, as a result, was forced to use the front of the
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    property as her means of ingress and egress to her parked car on the public
    street.   Moreover, the record does not reflect that the lack of a front
    walkway prevented Matthews from using the lot for its intended purpose --
    to make the premises fit for habitation.     
    Staley, supra
    ; 
    Pugh, supra
    .
    Accordingly, Matthews could not prevail, as a matter of law, on an action for
    a violating an implied warranty of habitability. 
    Kuriger, supra
    .
    II. Common Law/Ordinary Negligence
    In landlord-tenant disputes, the basic elements of a negligence cause
    of action include the existence of a duty, a breach thereof, a causal
    connection between the breach and the injury, and actual loss.      Keck v.
    Doughman, 
    572 A.2d 724
    (Pa. Super. 1990). However, unlike a claim for
    breach of an implied warranty of habitability, to prove ordinary negligence a
    tenant need not give notice. Under a theory of conventional negligence, the
    injured tenant must prove that his or her injuries were proximately caused
    by the landlord’s failure to exercise reasonable care to make the premises
    safe. Asper v. Haffley, 
    458 A.2d 1364
    , 1370 (Pa. Super. 1983). See also
    Echeverria v. Holley, 
    142 A.3d 29
    , 34 (Pa. Super. 2016) (reiterating well-
    established principle that landlords owe duty to protect tenants from injury
    or loss arising out of negligent failure to maintain rental property in safe
    condition).
    Matthews relies upon this Court’s decisions, 
    Echeverria, supra
    , and
    
    Rivera, supra
    , to support her position that the Winces breached their duty
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    to maintain the subject premises in a safe condition. We find these cases
    are distinguishable from the instant situation.
    In Echeverria, several individuals lost their lives to a fire at a multi-
    family structure, consisting of a two-story unit in the front and a two-story
    unit in the back of the property. 
    Id. at 32.
    The owner of the property, who
    had bought the property approximately three months before the fire
    occurred, did not perform any modifications or repair work on the premises.
    
    Id. The decedents’
    estates filed a complaint in common-law negligence for
    failure to install smoke detectors at the property and for failure to maintain
    electrical wiring at the property. 
    Id. The trial
    court granted the landlord’s
    motion for summary judgment due to the fact that the plaintiffs could not
    establish the cause of the fire. 
    Id. at 33.
    On appeal, our Court vacated the
    judgment and remanded the case, finding that plaintiffs alleged sufficient
    facts under a theory of common-law negligence to go before a jury. 
    Id. at 36.
      Specifically, the Court found that the absence of smoke detectors
    constituted a dangerous condition which could potentially be considered, by
    a jury, to be a breach of a landlord’s duty to maintain the property in a safe
    condition. 
    Id. Here, unlike
    the case in Echeverria, there was no comparable
    “dangerous condition” on the premises.       The fact that the tenant-created
    pathway down the front lawn of the property was slippery and wet on the
    day in question is a condition that Matthews was aware of from the moment
    she rented the property, was a means of ingress and egress she chose to
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    use despite the fact that the property had another means to enter and exit
    the home, and was not something that would foreseeably result in injuries to
    Matthews.
    In Rivera, while first inspecting the premises, the tenant specifically
    mentioned her concern about the condition of the wooden landing at the top
    of a wooden staircase which provided a means of ingress and egress to the
    leased premises.    The landlord assured the tenant that he would have
    someone come over to “take a look at it.” 
    Id. at 741.
    After the tenant fell
    through the landing and injured herself, she brought a cause of action in
    trespass against the landlord.   Our Court concluded that it was a matter for
    the fact finder to determine whether or not the landlord was subject to
    liability for the tenant’s injuries based up “an alleged dangerous condition
    existing before the tenant had taken possession” and whether the landlord
    “failed to exercise reasonable care to repair the condition and whether or not
    the existence of the condition was in violation of an implied warranty of
    habitability.” 
    Id. at 743.
    Here, the Winces never agreed to repair any dangerous condition on
    the premises when Matthews first inspected the property and decided to
    lease it.   More importantly, the Winces were not even aware of any such
    condition on the property.
    An appellate court’s responsibility in reviewing summary judgment is
    to determine whether the record either establishes that the material facts
    are undisputed or contains insufficient evidence of facts to make out a prima
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    facie cause of action, such that there is no issue to be decided by the fact-
    finder. Pa.R.C.P. No. 1035.2. If there is evidence that would allow a fact-
    finder to render a verdict in favor of the non-moving party, then summary
    judgment should be denied.       Lackner v. Glosser, 
    892 A.2d 21
    , 29 (Pa.
    Super. 2006).
    The law is clear that a landlord is generally not liable for injuries
    sustained by his tenant on the leased premises when he or she is entirely
    out of control and possession.    Craig v. Ryan, 
    191 A.2d 711
    (Pa. Super.
    1963). However, there are several exceptions to this general rule. One of
    these exceptions is where, at the time of the leasing, the landlord knows, or
    has reason to know, of a defect.     Dinio v. Goshorn, 
    270 A.2d 203
    (Pa.
    1969).
    Here, it is undisputed that the Winces did not retain control of the
    leased premises. In fact, the only actions that the Winces took in relation to
    the property were to mow the lawn (so that the grass would not exceed a
    certain height in violation of a local ordinance) and to collect rent checks.
    The uncontradicted evidence shows that Matthews and the other two tenants
    of the Lafayette Street property shoveled the front lawn to create a pathway
    to access the front sidewalk and street in the winter months. They did this
    on a consistent basis both before and after the accident.
    Thus, the paramount issue in this case is whether there were sufficient
    facts to go before a jury on the issue of whether the Winces breached their
    duty to keep the premises safe by not erecting a front entrance or whether
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    the failure to construct a front walkway is, in and of itself, a defect.   We
    answer both questions in the negative.
    Under the law, the Winces were responsible for providing a safe means
    of ingress and egress to the property; to that end, they provided a fully
    operational rear entrance and a designated tenant parking spot accessed by
    a common alleyway. The fact that the City of Scranton may have failed to
    plow the back alleyway making it difficult or impossible for Matthews to park
    her car in the rear of the property on occasion does not mean that the
    Winces were negligent and created a dangerous condition for their tenant or
    failed to maintain the property in a safe condition.
    We also cannot conclude that an issue of fact existed with regard to
    whether a hilly, front lawn without a walkway constitutes a “defect” of the
    property.   All three tenants used the front lawn to come and go from the
    house when they parked on the street. The mail carrier would use this same
    path to get to the mailbox that was located on the front porch. Most telling,
    however, is the fact that the Winces often used the same means of ingress
    and egress to the home when they would collect rent checks. Cf. 
    Rivera, supra
    (where tenant fell through landing leading to apartment that had
    become decayed, rotten and otherwise unstable, cause of action property
    submitted to jury); Reitmeyer v. Sprecher, 
    243 A.2d 395
    (Pa. 1968)
    (where tenant injured after falling from defective back porch, court found
    complaint stated claim for negligence where landlord failed to exercise
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    reasonable care in performing his promise to repair).        Accordingly, there
    were no facts that could legally entitle Matthews to a right to relief.
    With regard to Matthews’ claim that the trial court improperly applied
    the doctrines of assumption of the risk and contributory negligence to the
    instant matter, they are misguided.        The trial court did not apply either
    doctrine in ruling on the Wince’s summary judgment motion; rather, the
    court concluded that there was insufficient evidence to create a genuine
    issue of material fact on the issue of the Winces’ negligence based on no
    breach of a duty owed to Matthews.
    Accordingly, because the trial court did not commit an error of law in
    granting   the   Winces’   motion    for   summary     judgment,    we    affirm.
    
    Merriweather, supra
    .
    Order affirmed.
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 4/13/2017
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