Davis v. Walmart Stores , 2022 UT App 87 ( 2022 )


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    2022 UT App 87
    THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS
    TWILA DAVIS,
    Appellant,
    v.
    WAL-MART STORES INC.,
    Appellee.
    Opinion
    No. 20210346-CA
    Filed July 8, 2022
    Fifth District Court, Cedar City Department
    The Honorable Matthew L. Bell
    No. 170500175
    Brian K. Harris and Heather E. Harris, Attorneys
    for Appellant
    Mitchel T. Rice, Andrea M. Keysar, and Marianne
    Schumann, Attorneys for Appellee
    JUDGE RYAN D. TENNEY authored this Opinion, in which
    JUDGES DAVID N. MORTENSEN and RYAN M. HARRIS concurred.
    TENNEY, Judge:
    ¶1     Twila Davis was shopping in a Wal-Mart one day when an
    employee collided with her. Davis was allegedly injured, and she
    later sued Wal-Mart for negligence. The district court granted
    Wal-Mart’s request for summary judgment, however, and it did
    so based on its conclusion that Wal-Mart owed no duty to Davis.
    For the reasons set forth below, we reverse.
    Davis v. Wal-Mart
    BACKGROUND 1
    ¶2     One day in August 2017, Twila Davis was shopping at Wal-
    Mart when she decided to look for a clock. When Davis got to the
    clock aisle, a Wal-Mart employee was stocking merchandise there.
    Davis saw something that she wanted to look at on the lower shelf
    “right next to” the employee, so she moved “from [the
    employee’s] right side to [her] left side” and got within “a foot
    and a half” of the employee. As Davis bent over to get the item,
    the employee finished her task and “turned to [her] left” to walk
    away. The employee did not see Davis crouched beside her,
    however, and she collided with Davis as she turned.
    ¶3     Davis was allegedly injured in the collision, and she later
    sued Wal-Mart for negligence. In her complaint, Davis alleged
    that Wal-Mart had “negligently failed to design, construct,
    control, supervise, repair and maintain the premises and further
    failed to warn [Davis] of the hazard created by an employee of
    [Wal-Mart] when [she] fell on top of [Davis] knocking [Davis] to
    the floor.”
    ¶4      Wal-Mart moved for summary judgment. In its motion,
    Wal-Mart first argued that Davis’s claim failed as a matter of law
    because Wal-Mart “did not owe a duty of care to [Davis].”
    Alternatively, Wal-Mart argued that the open and obvious danger
    rule barred Davis’s claim. Davis opposed the motion, but the
    district court granted it.
    ¶5    In its decision, the court rejected Wal-Mart’s reliance on the
    open and obvious danger rule. The court determined that the rule
    1. “When reviewing a grant of summary judgment, we view the
    facts in the light most favorable to the non-moving party.” Utah
    Golf Ass’n v. City of N. Salt Lake, 
    2003 UT 38
    , ¶ 10, 
    79 P.3d 919
    .
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    Davis v. Wal-Mart
    was inapplicable because “the instant case is not one of a
    hazardous condition on the property.”
    ¶6     But the court agreed with Wal-Mart on the duty question.
    In the court’s view, Wal-Mart “owed no duty” to Davis based on
    the five-factor test set forth in B.R. ex rel. Jeffs v. West, 
    2012 UT 11
    ,
    
    275 P.3d 228
    . Of note, the court concluded that it “was not
    foreseeable that [Davis] would move within inches” of the
    employee, “stoop below the employee’s field of vision, and do so
    without alerting the employee to her presence or waiting for the
    employee to finish returning merchandise to the top shelf.” The
    court further opined that “serious injuries” were “unlikely” to
    result from such “low speed pedestrian collision[s]” and that
    “public policy” therefore “support[ed] refusal to impose upon
    property owners a greater duty to anticipate or avoid such low-
    probability events than the duty of invitees to do likewise.”
    Because the court concluded that there was no duty, it granted
    Wal-Mart’s request for summary judgment and dismissed Davis’s
    complaint.
    ¶7     Davis timely appealed the court’s decision.
    ISSUE AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
    ¶8     Davis argues that the district court erred when it
    determined that Wal-Mart did not owe her a duty of care and, by
    extension, when it granted Wal-Mart’s motion for summary
    judgment. “Whether a duty exists is a question of law” that we
    review for correctness. Mower v. Baird, 
    2018 UT 29
    , ¶ 14, 
    422 P.3d 837
     (quotation simplified). “We review a [district] court’s legal
    conclusions and ultimate grant or denial of summary judgment
    for correctness, viewing the facts and all reasonable inferences
    drawn therefrom in the light most favorable to the nonmoving
    party.” Heartwood Home Health & Hospice LLC v. Huber, 
    2020 UT App 13
    , ¶ 11, 
    459 P.3d 1060
     (quotation simplified).
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    Davis v. Wal-Mart
    ANALYSIS
    I. Duty of Care
    ¶9     The district court granted Wal-Mart’s request for summary
    judgment based on its determination that Wal-Mart owed no duty
    of care to Davis. We disagree with this determination.
    ¶10 “As every first-year law student learns, duty is one of four
    essential elements of a cause of action in tort.” B.R. ex rel. Jeffs v.
    West, 
    2012 UT 11
    , ¶ 5, 
    275 P.3d 228
    . “A duty, in negligence cases,
    may be defined as an obligation, to which the law will give
    recognition and effect, to conform to a particular standard of
    conduct toward another.” AMS Salt Indus., Inc. v. Magnesium Corp.
    of Am., 
    942 P.2d 315
    , 320–21 (Utah 1997) (quotation simplified).
    The existence of a “[d]uty must be determined as a matter of law
    and on a categorical basis for a given class of tort claims.” Jeffs,
    
    2012 UT 11
    , ¶ 23.
    ¶11 Here, it’s undisputed that Wal-Mart is a business and that
    Davis was visiting Wal-Mart as its customer. As a result, Davis
    “enjoyed the status of ‘business invitee’ while upon [Wal-Mart’s]
    property.” Hale v. Beckstead, 
    2005 UT 24
    , ¶ 33, 
    116 P.3d 263
    . This
    was so because “the status of invitee includes business visitors
    who are invited to enter or remain on land for a purpose directly
    or indirectly connected with business dealings with the possessor
    of the land.” 
    Id.
     (quotation simplified); see also Restatement
    (Second) of Torts § 332(3) (Am. L. Inst. 1965).
    ¶12 Because Davis was Wal-Mart’s invitee, it’s settled that Wal-
    Mart owed Davis a duty of care. 2 As explained by our supreme
    2. We acknowledge that the employee may have also had an
    independent duty of reasonable care unconnected with Davis’s
    status as a business invitee and for which Wal-Mart may have
    (continued…)
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    Davis v. Wal-Mart
    court, “[o]wners of land must . . . exercise due care and prudence
    for the safety of business invitees.” Dwiggins v. Morgan Jewelers,
    
    811 P.2d 182
    , 183 (Utah 1991). We have recognized this same duty
    too. See, e.g., Zazzetti v. Prestige Senior Living Center LLC, 
    2022 UT App 42
    , ¶ 32, 
    509 P.3d 776
     (“All possessors of land . . . owe duties
    of reasonable care to invitees who come onto their land.”), petition
    for cert. filed, June 1, 2022 (No. 20220513); Proctor v. Costco Wholesale
    Corp., 
    2013 UT App 226
    , ¶ 20, 
    311 P.3d 564
     (recognizing that
    businesses have a duty “to exercise due care and prudence for the
    safety of business invitees” (quotation simplified)).
    ¶13 Despite such authority, the district court held that Wal-
    Mart did not owe Davis any duty in this case. And it did so based
    on its application of the supreme court’s decision in Jeffs. In Jeffs,
    the court “identified several factors” that are “relevant to
    determining whether a defendant owes a duty to a plaintiff.” 
    2012 UT 11
    , ¶ 5. These factors include:
    (1) whether the defendant’s allegedly tortious
    conduct consists of an affirmative act or merely an
    omission, (2) the legal relationship of the parties, (3)
    the foreseeability or likelihood of injury, (4) public
    policy as to which party can best bear the loss
    occasioned by the injury, and (5) other general
    policy considerations.
    
    Id.
     (quotation simplified).
    ¶14 Applying these factors, the district court recognized that
    (1) the allegedly tortious conduct at issue consisted of an omission
    by Wal-Mart and (2) Davis was a “customer and invitee.” But the
    court then held that Wal-Mart owed no duty to Davis. In the
    court’s view, (3) the actions that gave rise to Davis’s alleged
    been potentially liable under a respondeat superior theory. But
    such a theory was not pursued here.
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    Davis v. Wal-Mart
    injuries were “unlikely” and “not foreseeable,” and (4 & 5)
    “[p]ublic policy [was] not furthered by requiring business owners
    to bear the loss of unforeseeable, unlikely injuries occasioned by
    circumstances such as those present in this case.”
    ¶15 But the district court need not have engaged in a Jeffs
    analysis at all. As noted, both the supreme court and this court
    have already held that a business does owe a duty of reasonable
    care to its invitees, and this is the very duty that Davis invoked in
    her suit. Given this, the existence of the duty in question has
    already been established.
    ¶16 In any event, even if there was some basis for the district
    court to consider the matter anew under a Jeffs analysis, the court’s
    analysis was still flawed in a few key respects.
    ¶17 First, the district court’s conclusion was largely driven by
    its assessment of the facts of this case. In its foreseeability analysis,
    for example, the court focused on whether it would be foreseeable
    that Davis “would move within inches of [Wal-Mart’s] employee,
    stoop below the employee’s field of vision, and do so without
    alerting the employee to her presence or waiting for the employee
    to finish returning merchandise to the top shelf.” Then, in its
    analysis of the policy factors, the court focused on whether
    businesses should “bear the loss of unforeseeable, unlikely
    injuries occasioned by circumstances such as those present in this
    case.” (Emphasis added.)
    ¶18 But under Jeffs, such case-specific analyses are
    unwarranted at the duty stage of the negligence inquiry. See 
    2012 UT 11
    , ¶ 25. Jeffs explained that “[d]uty must be determined as a
    matter of law and on a categorical basis for a given class of tort
    claims,” and it further instructed that duty “should be articulated
    in relatively clear, categorical, bright-line rules of law applicable
    to a general class of cases.” Id. ¶ 23 (emphasis added, quotation
    otherwise simplified). Indeed, with respect to the foreseeability
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    Davis v. Wal-Mart
    inquiry, Jeffs explained that in a “duty analysis, foreseeability does
    not question the specifics of the alleged tortious conduct such as
    the specific mechanism of the harm,” but “instead relates to the
    general relationship between the alleged tortfeasor and the victim
    and the general foreseeability of harm.” Id. ¶ 25 (quotation
    simplified).
    ¶19 By contrast, Jeffs instructed that it’s the next steps of the
    negligence analysis—“breach and proximate cause”—that
    involve “questions for the fact finder” that can be “determined on
    a case-specific basis.” Id. Thus, by focusing on the particular facts
    of this case, the court’s duty analysis was misdirected.
    ¶20 Second, “[n]ot every factor” in the Jeffs analysis “is created
    equal.” Id. ¶ 5. “[S]ome factors are featured heavily in certain
    types of cases, while other factors play a less important, or
    different, role.” Id. Of note, the second Jeffs factor looks to the
    “legal relationship of the parties.” Id. And as noted, the “legal
    relationship” at issue here is that of a business and its invitee. This
    matters because, again, this relationship has long been recognized
    as the source of the very duty at issue in this case. 3
    ¶21 Indeed, the nature of this relationship also undermines the
    district court’s conclusions regarding the foreseeability and policy
    factors. Jeffs held that, at the duty stage, foreseeability “relates to
    3. In an apparent attempt to avoid the implications of this, Wal-
    Mart repeatedly describes the accident in question as a collision
    between “two pedestrians.” But Davis didn’t collide with a
    random passerby on the street. Rather, she collided with a Wal-
    Mart employee who was stocking shelves in a Wal-Mart while
    Davis was shopping inside that Wal-Mart. This is why Davis is
    alleging that Wal-Mart should be held liable for not taking
    additional steps to protect her while she was shopping. Thus, with
    respect to the relationship component of the duty analysis, this
    case fits comfortably within the rubric of a business and its invitee.
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    Davis v. Wal-Mart
    the general relationship between the alleged tortfeasor and the
    victim and the general foreseeability of harm.” Id. ¶ 25 (quotation
    simplified). So too with the policy implications (at least as far as
    they relate to duty). After all, duty is “the product of policy
    judgments applied to relationships.” Yazd v. Woodside Homes
    Corp., 
    2006 UT 47
    , ¶ 17, 
    143 P.3d 283
    . And on that front, courts
    have already accounted for the relevant policy—namely, courts
    have imposed this duty based on “the age-old principle that,
    because the land possessor effectively throws open his property
    to the public for business, an invitee is entitled to visit and assume
    that the premises have been made safe for his visit.” Oswald v.
    Costco Wholesale Corp., 
    473 P.3d 809
    , 821 (Idaho 2020); cf.
    Restatement (Second) of Torts § 343A cmt. g (“[T]he fact that
    premises have been held open to the visitor, and that he has been
    invited to use them, . . . offer[s] some assurance to the invitee that
    the place has been prepared for his reception, and that reasonable
    care has been used to make it safe.”). By holding otherwise, the
    district court erred.
    ¶22 Finally, Wal-Mart claims that even with the above
    authority, summary judgment was still appropriate under
    Schnuphase v. Storehouse Markets, 
    918 P.2d 476
     (Utah 1996).
    Schnuphase was a slip-and-fall case. At oral argument, Wal-Mart
    elaborated on its view that, under the principles set forth in
    Schnuphase and other similar cases, it owed no duty to Davis.
    ¶23 We acknowledge that in some such cases, Utah courts have
    affirmed grants of summary judgment to defendants in the face of
    negligence suits. See, e.g., 
    id.
     at 477–80; Long v. Smith Food King
    Store, 
    531 P.2d 360
    , 361 (Utah 1973); Price v. Smith's Food & Drug
    Centers, Inc., 
    2011 UT App 66
    , ¶¶ 8–30, 
    252 P.3d 365
    . But even so,
    these cases don’t compel a different result here.
    ¶24 In Price, we explained that “premises liability cases” such
    as those involving the slip-and-fall scenario “generally fall into
    two classes: those involving temporary conditions and those
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    Davis v. Wal-Mart
    involving permanent conditions.” 
    2011 UT App 66
    , ¶ 9. Notably,
    the “second class of cases involves some unsafe condition . . .
    which was created or chosen by the defendant (or his agents), or
    for which he is responsible,” and “it also includes cases where the
    storeowner’s method of operation creates a situation where the
    reasonably foreseeable acts of third parties will create a dangerous
    condition.” 
    Id.
     (quotation simplified).
    ¶25 Many of the cases from this line of authority pre-dated Jeffs.
    But as discussed, the supreme court in Jeffs analyzed in depth how
    courts should approach the duty element in a negligence suit and,
    more particularly, how courts should consider the duty question
    at the summary judgment stage. Jeffs made it clear that a court
    should not engage in a fact-intensive analysis regarding the
    question of duty and that fact-intensive analyses are instead
    generally conducted at the breach or proximate cause stages. See
    
    2012 UT 11
    , ¶ 25.
    ¶26 We don’t read the slip-and-fall cases that are relied on by
    Wal-Mart as being inconsistent with the Jeffs framework. Indeed,
    in such cases, our courts consistently recognized that businesses
    do owe a duty of reasonable care to their invitees. See Schnuphase,
    918 P.2d at 478 (explaining that a store owner “is charged with the
    duty to use reasonable care to maintain the floor of his
    establishment in a reasonably safe condition for his patrons”
    (quotation simplified)); Long, 531 P.2d at 362 (acknowledging “the
    admittedly correct rule requiring the defendant to exercise
    due care and prudence for the safety of its business invitees”);
    Price, 
    2011 UT App 66
    , ¶ 8 (holding that “a business owner is
    charged with the duty to use reasonable care” to maintain his
    property “in a reasonably safe condition for his patrons”
    (quotation simplified)). Thus, on the very point in dispute in this
    appeal, these cases are inconsistent with the position now
    advanced by Wal-Mart, which is that Wal-Mart owed no duty to
    Davis at all.
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    Davis v. Wal-Mart
    ¶27 And while it’s true that those cases often affirmed grants of
    summary judgment, they did so for reasons that are reconcilable
    with the treatment of duty from Jeffs. What those cases hold is that
    summary judgment is appropriate when reasonable minds cannot
    differ about whether the defendant’s actions violated the duty of
    reasonable care. Schnuphase, for example, held that summary
    judgment was appropriate because “reasonable minds could not
    differ on the question of whether [the defendant] took reasonable
    precautions to protect its customers.” 918 P.2d at 479 (quotation
    simplified). And in Long, the supreme court held that summary
    judgment was appropriate because the plaintiff had “not shown
    any basis upon which it reasonably could be found” that the
    defendant had done anything “inherently dangerous” or was
    otherwise “negligent.” 531 P.2d at 362.
    ¶28 By discussing the particular facts of a case and then
    determining that, on those facts, reasonable minds could not
    disagree about whether the defendant acted negligently, those
    cases turned on questions of breach, not duty. So here, Wal-Mart
    could in theory rely on these cases to argue that, under these
    circumstances, this accident was so unforeseeable that no
    reasonable mind could conclude that Wal-Mart had breached
    the duty of reasonable care that it owed to Davis. And if it makes
    such an argument on remand, we express no opinion about
    how the argument should turn out. But in the decision at issue,
    the district court’s analysis turned on duty, not breach. And as
    discussed, this duty analysis was incorrect under both Jeffs’s
    general framework and under the prior cases that specifically
    held that businesses do owe a duty of reasonable care to their
    invitees.
    ¶29 In short, Wal-Mart is a business and Davis was its invitee.
    Because of this, Wal-Mart had a duty to exercise reasonable care
    to ensure Davis’s safety. The district court erred in determining
    otherwise.
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    Davis v. Wal-Mart
    II. Open and Obvious Danger Rule
    ¶30 Wal-Mart next argues that, even if there was a generally
    applicable duty, the open and obvious danger rule absolved it of
    this duty under the circumstances of this case. In Wal-Mart’s
    view, because Davis “knew that [the employee] was in the aisle
    and [was] engaged with arranging items on an upper shelf,” and
    because Davis also “had more than one reasonable alternative to
    encountering any potential danger that [the employee’s]
    movements might present,” Wal-Mart owed no duty “to warn or
    otherwise protect [Davis] from the open and obvious danger
    presented by intruding into a working person’s personal space.”
    We disagree with Wal-Mart’s proposed application of this rule. 4
    ¶31 Under the open and obvious danger rule, “a possessor of
    land is not liable to [its] invitees for physical harm caused to them
    by any activity or condition on the land whose danger is known
    or obvious to them.” Downham v. Arbuckle, 
    2021 UT App 121
    , ¶ 12,
    
    502 P.3d 312
     (quotation simplified). “If the open and obvious
    danger rule applies, then the land possessor owes no duty to its
    invitees with respect to the open and obvious danger and
    therefore cannot be held liable for any injury caused thereby.” 
    Id.
    (quotation simplified). And the “open and obvious danger rule
    can still be appropriately applied even when the overarching duty
    owed is one of reasonable care.” Zazzetti, 
    2022 UT App 42
    , ¶ 32.
    4. Wal-Mart asked the district court to grant summary judgment
    under this rule as an alternative basis, but the court declined to do
    so. Wal-Mart now invokes this rule as an alternative basis for
    affirmance. See PC Riverview, LLC v. Xiao-Yan Cao, 
    2017 UT 52
    ,
    ¶ 34, 
    424 P.3d 162
     (holding that “when a party raises alternative
    grounds for affirmance, an appellate court may affirm the
    judgment appealed from on any legal ground or theory apparent
    on the record” (quotation simplified)).
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    Davis v. Wal-Mart
    ¶32 There are “two key steps” to an open and obvious danger
    analysis—“the ‘open and obvious danger’ step and the
    ‘anticipated harm’ step.” Downham, 
    2021 UT App 121
    , ¶ 14. Under
    the first step, courts must determine whether there was an
    “activity or condition on the land whose danger [was] known or
    obvious” to invitees. Id. ¶ 12 (quotation simplified); accord Lyman
    v. Solomon, 
    2011 UT App 204
    , ¶ 4, 
    258 P.3d 647
    . Under the second
    step, courts “inquire into whether factors existed to vest in the
    land possessor a duty to warn or otherwise protect the invitee
    from the obvious danger.” Downham, 
    2021 UT App 121
    , ¶ 16
    (quotation simplified). The rule’s stringency accordingly ebbs and
    flows in this second step “depending upon the nature of the
    invitee and the nature of the possessor of land.” Hale, 
    2005 UT 24
    ,
    ¶ 31.
    ¶33 “Most cases involving claims of negligence are not
    susceptible to summary disposition.” Lyman, 
    2011 UT App 204
    ,
    ¶ 3 (quotation simplified); see also Dwiggins, 811 P.2d at 183
    (“[S]ummary judgment is appropriate in negligence cases only in
    the clearest instances.”). This is so because negligence cases
    commonly turn on factual questions. See Downham, 
    2021 UT App 121
    , ¶ 22. And this reluctance extends to cases involving the
    open and obvious danger rule. See id. ¶¶ 22, 26. Indeed, in
    Downham, we recently held that both steps of this rule involve
    factual questions; as a result, if “reasonable jurors could disagree”
    about either step, summary judgment would be “premature.” Id.
    ¶¶ 26–27.
    ¶34 Given these principles, there are two reasons why Wal-
    Mart is not entitled to summary judgment based on the open and
    obvious danger rule.
    ¶35 First, much of Wal-Mart’s argument about the potential
    application of this rule is focused on Davis’s behavior. For
    example, Wal-Mart claims that the rule applies, in part, because
    of the “open and obvious danger presented by [Davis] intruding
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    Davis v. Wal-Mart
    into a working person’s personal space.” Wal-Mart also claims
    that the rule applies because Davis “decided to move behind [the
    employee]” and “then crouch or otherwise lower her body only
    twelve to eighteen inches away.”
    ¶36 This focus is misplaced. As explained in the Restatement,
    the open and obvious danger rule holds that a “possessor of land
    is not liable to his invitees for physical harm caused to them by
    any activity or condition on the land whose danger is known or
    obvious to them, unless the possessor should anticipate the harm
    despite such knowledge or obviousness.” Restatement (Second)
    of Torts § 343A(1). By focusing on dangers that exist “on the land,”
    id., this rule is concerned with a landowner’s obligations to protect
    invitees from dangers that are associated with the landowner’s
    property. And while this rule covers open and obvious dangers
    caused by an “activity” “on the land,” the Restatement clarifies
    that this aspect of the rule implicates the “possessor’s activities”
    that “may involve a risk which is known or obvious to those who
    enter his land.” Id. § 343A cmt. c (emphasis added). Thus, “an
    invitee who enters land is entitled to nothing more than
    knowledge of the conditions and dangers he will encounter if he
    comes,” meaning, “the actual conditions” and the “activities
    carried [out] on” that land. Id. § 343A cmt. e (emphasis added).
    And an invitee’s “knowledge” of a land possessor’s failure “to
    take particular precautions for the safety of such visitors” is
    “material only in determining whether the visitor is to be charged
    with contributory negligence, or assumption of risk” (and, we’d
    add, comparative fault) “in coming in contact with the dangerous
    condition.” Id. § 343A cmt. d.
    ¶37 Here, the initial portion of Wal-Mart’s argument is not
    focused on any condition or activity “on the land” that an invitee
    might encounter and from which Wal-Mart should potentially
    protect its invitees. Rather, Wal-Mart is focused on what the
    invitee herself subsequently did. There are many ways that Wal-
    Mart could potentially rely on that behavior in this suit—this
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    Davis v. Wal-Mart
    behavior might support an argument about a lack of proximate
    cause, for example, or perhaps an assertion of comparative
    negligence. But the open and obvious danger rule is concerned
    with dangers that were caused by activities or conditions on Wal-
    Mart’s land. Wal-Mart points us to no authority (and we’re aware
    of none) holding that the open and obvious danger component of
    the open and obvious danger rule can be satisfied by the
    subsequent conduct of the allegedly injured invitee herself. To the
    extent that Wal-Mart’s argument turns on Davis’s behavior, the
    rule is inapplicable.
    ¶38 Second, this leaves the question of whether the rule can
    apply here based on a condition on the land or Wal-Mart’s own
    activity on it. And again, Davis’s suit arguably implicated such an
    activity: namely, Davis claims that Wal-Mart was negligent for
    allowing its employee to stock shelves around customers without
    taking steps to adequately protect those customers. But to the
    extent that Wal-Mart now argues that this was the “activity on the
    land” that could trigger application of the open and obvious
    danger rule, thereby entitling it to summary judgment, the
    argument must fail because reasonable minds could differ about
    whether this was actually so.
    ¶39 Again, the first step requires proof that the condition or
    activity on the land involved a “danger” that was “known or
    obvious.” Downham, 
    2021 UT App 121
    , ¶¶ 12, 14. And because this
    presents a factual question, summary judgment is warranted only
    if no reasonable juror could conclude otherwise. See id. ¶ 27. But
    in the open and obvious danger portion of its brief, Wal-Mart
    argued to us that “[n]o danger arose from [its employee’s]
    potential movement.” And in the earlier portions of its brief in
    which it discussed duty, Wal-Mart likewise insisted that this
    collision was “both unlikely and unforeseeable.” Reiterating this
    view at oral argument, Wal-Mart asserted that “this is not a
    situation where Wal-Mart . . . was engaged in a hazardous
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    Davis v. Wal-Mart
    activity” and that its employee “was not involved in any type of
    hazardous conduct.”
    ¶40 Taking Wal-Mart at its word, this must mean that at least
    some reasonable jurors could conclude that there was not a
    “known and obvious danger” on Wal-Mart’s property. Lyman,
    
    2011 UT App 204
    , ¶ 4 (quotation simplified). And if such jurors
    did conclude this, there would be no basis for applying the open
    and obvious danger rule. Thus, in light of its own arguments,
    Wal-Mart cannot show that it was entitled to summary judgment
    based on this rule.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶41 Davis was Wal-Mart’s invitee, so Wal-Mart owed her a
    duty of reasonable care. And under the circumstances of this case,
    Wal-Mart is not entitled to summary judgment based on the open
    and obvious danger rule. We therefore reverse the district court’s
    grant of summary judgment and remand for further proceedings
    consistent with this opinion.
    20210346-CA                   15               
    2022 UT App 87