Amended June 27, 2016 Kathryn Winger and Timothy Potts v. Cm Holdings, L.L.C.

CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 24, 2016
Docket14–0199
StatusPublished

This text of Amended June 27, 2016 Kathryn Winger and Timothy Potts v. Cm Holdings, L.L.C. (Amended June 27, 2016 Kathryn Winger and Timothy Potts v. Cm Holdings, L.L.C.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Amended June 27, 2016 Kathryn Winger and Timothy Potts v. Cm Holdings, L.L.C., (iowa 2016).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA No. 14–0199

Filed June 24, 2016

Amended June 27, 2016

KATHRYN WINGER and TIMOTHY POTTS,

Appellants,

vs.

CM HOLDINGS, L.L.C.,

Appellee.

On review from the Iowa Court of Appeals.

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Richard G.

Blane II, Judge.

Plaintiffs and defendant seek further review of court of appeals

decision ordering a new trial in a wrongful-death action arising from a

fatal fall from an apartment balcony. DECISION OF COURT OF

APPEALS VACATED; DISTRICT COURT ORDER AFFIRMED IN PART

AND REVERSED IN PART; CASE REMANDED FOR NEW TRIAL.

Robert G. Rehkemper and Cory F. Gourley of Gourley, Rehkemper

& Lindholm, P.L.C., for appellants.

Brenda K. Wallrichs of Lederer Weston Craig PLC, Cedar Rapids,

and Michael A. Carmoney and Jack W. Leverenz of Carmoney Law Firm,

PLLC, Des Moines, for appellee. 2

WATERMAN, Justice.

This wrongful-death action arises from a fatal fall from an

apartment balcony and presents several issues on the applicability of the

doctrine of negligence per se to an alleged municipal housing code

violation. The thirty-two-inch high balcony railing complied with the

local housing code when the apartment complex was constructed in

1968, but unless exempted under a grandfather provision, it is ten

inches shorter than the current housing code allows. Before the

accident, a local housing inspector cited the landlord for that code

violation. The inspector reasoned that an attached plastic lattice

modified the railings to eliminate grandfather status. The landlord did

not appeal that finding but rather ordered the higher railings and asked

for an extension of time to install them. The City of Des Moines Housing

Appeal Board (HAB), without a contested hearing, found the property

was in violation but granted a three-month extension to install compliant

railings and suspended the $1090 fine. The plaintiffs’ daughter fell over

the original railing to her death three days later.

The plaintiffs filed a premises liability action alleging the thirty-

two-inch railing violated the local housing code. Their expert testified the

forty-two-inch railing would have prevented the accident. The district

court ruled the landlord was bound by the HAB’s determination that

forty-two-inch railings were required and rejected the landlord’s

arguments that the property was grandfathered out of the current code

or that the HAB’s extension of time to install higher railings excused tort

liability. The court instructed the jury that the landlord’s violation of the

housing code constituted negligence per se and limited the jury to

deciding causation, comparative fault, and damages. The jury found the 3

landlord sixty-five percent at fault, the plaintiffs’ daughter thirty-five

percent at fault, and awarded combined total damages of $1,750,000

($1,137,500 after reduction for comparative fault). In posttrial rulings,

the district court concluded the doctrine of negligence per se did not

apply to a local housing code and ordered a new trial. Both sides

appealed, and we transferred the case to the court of appeals, which

affirmed with one judge dissenting and another specially concurring. We

granted the applications for further review by both sides.

For the reasons explained below, we hold that the doctrine of

negligence per se applies to the violation of a municipal housing code

and is not limited to statewide laws. Additionally, the district court

correctly rejected the landlord’s argument that the old code applied as a

matter of law. The HAB’s extension of time for the landlord to comply

with the code merely suspended administrative penalties without

excusing tort liability. The district court, however, erred by instructing

the jury on the basis that the new code applied as a matter of law. The

HAB’s determination of a code violation does not have preclusive effect in

this wrongful-death action. On remand, the parties may present

evidence on whether prior modifications eliminated grandfather status.

Accordingly, we vacate the decision of the court of appeals, reverse the

district court’s posttrial rulings, and remand this case for a new trial.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

On July 23, 2011, twenty-one-year-old Shannon Potts came to the

Grand Stratford Apartments in Des Moines after work to socialize with

friends. She arrived at their second-floor apartment around 1:30 a.m.

slightly intoxicated and watched movies with a small group. She

continued drinking until about 4 a.m. when her friends hid the alcohol.

Shannon asked one to talk with her privately on the balcony. They 4

talked for about twenty minutes before her friend returned inside to get

another drink. While inside, her friend heard a scream and a crash.

Shannon had gone over the railing. Her friends ran downstairs and

found her unresponsive. A bystander called 911. Shannon was rushed

to the hospital with a fractured neck and crushed spine and was

pronounced dead there. Toxicology tests indicated she was intoxicated

at the time of her fall and had marijuana and Xanax in her bloodstream.

Mark Critelli was the sole owner of the Grand Stratford Apartments

until February 15, just over five months before Shannon’s fatal fall. This

apartment complex consists of a duplex and three larger buildings

constructed in 1968. The apartments were built to comply with the 1968

housing code which required guardrails between thirty- and thirty-four

inches high. Des Moines, Iowa, Municipal Code § 24-28.06 (1962). The

original black iron railings are thirty-two inches high and remained in

place when Shannon fell forty-three years later. In 1979, the

Des Moines, Iowa, Municipal Code was amended to require guardrails of

forty-two inches in height. Des Moines, Iowa, Municipal Code § 14-10(b)

(1979). The 1979 Code included a grandfather provision stating that

“[g]uardrails which were installed prior to the passage of this subchapter

and were in conformance with the Health and Safety Housing Code then

in effect may be allowed to remain if in structurally sound condition.” Id.

In 2005, the guardrail ordinance stated, “Multiple family dwellings with

porches, balconies or raised floor surfaces located more than 30 inches

above the floor or below grade shall have guards not less than 42 inches

in height.” Des Moines, Iowa, Municipal Code § 60-127(c) (2005). The

grandfather provision was revised to state, “Any structure that was in

compliance on the day previous to the adoption of this code will be 5

allowed to remain.” Id. § 60-5. The ordinance was admitted into

evidence without objection.

The HAB found Critelli was a “habitual violator” of the code. All

properties under his ownership were put on an accelerated inspection

schedule. In 2009, Critelli attached a forty-eight-inch high white plastic

lattice to the guardrails with zip ties. The lattice served as a privacy

screen to shield each balcony from view. Although Critelli received

numerous notices of violations regarding this property, none addressed

the guardrails before February 2011.

Eddie Leedom is a city inspector assigned to the Neighborhood

Inspection Unit. He inspected the Grand Stratford Apartments on

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