Asher v. Honeycutt

CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedAugust 2, 2022
Docket21-689
StatusPublished

This text of Asher v. Honeycutt (Asher v. Honeycutt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Asher v. Honeycutt, (N.C. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA

2022-NCCOA-517

No. COA21-689

Filed 2 August 2022

Mecklenburg County, No. 19 CVS 7954

ROBERT ASHER, Plaintiff,

v.

DAVID HUNEYCUTT, MICHAEL KISER and TRACY KISER, Defendants.

Appeal by plaintiff from order entered 17 March 2021 by Judge Karen Eady-

Williams in Mecklenburg County Superior Court. Heard in the Court of Appeals 24

May 2022.

Green Mistretta Law, PLLC, by Robert A. Smith and Stanley B. Green, for plaintiff-appellant.

No brief filed for defendant-appellee David Huneycutt.

Martineau King PLLC, by Stephen D. Fuller and Joseph W. Fulton, for defendants-appellees Michael Kiser and Tracy Kiser.

ZACHARY, Judge.

¶1 Plaintiff Robert Asher appeals from the trial court’s order granting Defendants

Michael and Tracy Kiser’s motion for summary judgment. After careful review, we

affirm.

Background ASHER V. HUNEYCUTT

Opinion of the Court

¶2 In 2013, Defendants purchased a rental property in Charlotte, North Carolina

(the “House”). The House has three points of entry, all of which require the use of

steps: the front door has brick steps, the back porch has a set of steps, and the garage

has three wooden steps leading into the House (the “Steps”).

¶3 Prior to purchasing the House, Defendants hired a professional home

inspection company to evaluate the condition of the House and identify any potential

problems. Although the inspection revealed several items throughout the House that

warranted repair, the only issue that the inspector noted concerning the “steps,

stairways, balconies and railings” was that “[t]here [wa]s a little play or movement

of the handrail for the steps located in the garage.” The inspection company

recommended that the “handrail be properly tighten[ed] or re-secured[,]” which

Defendants did before renting the House to tenants. Defendant Michael Kiser also

stained the Steps and the adjacent handrail, but otherwise Defendants made no

alterations to the Steps.

¶4 Defendants rented the House to the Rushing family from 2013 to 2015. The

Rushings reported no issues with the Steps or the handrail during their tenancy, and

Sylvia Rushing described the Steps and handrail as “always in stable and safe

condition.” After the Rushing family moved out in November 2015, Defendants rented

the House to David Huneycutt, who lived there for approximately two and a half

years. Huneycutt similarly had no complaints regarding the Steps. At his deposition, ASHER V. HUNEYCUTT

Defendant Michael Kiser explained that he conducts a visual inspection while

walking through the House with new tenants when they first move in, and performs

this same walkthrough and visual inspection process with the tenants upon the

termination of a tenancy. Defendant Michael Kiser, like his tenants, also never

observed any problem with the Steps.

¶5 On 21 May 2016, Plaintiff and his wife attended a graduation party hosted by

Huneycutt at the House. Plaintiff’s wife had been using a wheelchair for about a year

and half at that time; she could only walk short distances due to a surgical procedure

on her left foot. Having visited Huneycutt’s home before, Plaintiff knew that his wife

would need assistance entering and exiting the House. When they arrived, Huneycutt

requested that Plaintiff and his wife use the Steps in the garage. Plaintiff’s wife

walked up the three Steps using only one foot, “which wore her out tremendously.”

Plaintiff later stated that he “had some concerns” about the condition of the Steps,

but he did not voice his reservations that day.

¶6 When Plaintiff and his wife were ready to leave, Huneycutt asked that they

exit through the garage rather than the front door to avoid disrupting the party.

Then, without consulting Plaintiff or Plaintiff’s wife, Huneycutt began maneuvering

Plaintiff’s wife down the Steps; he grabbed the legs of the wheelchair, tilted her back

in the chair, and began moving her down one step at a time. Plaintiff, from the top

step, grabbed the handles of the wheelchair in an attempt to stop Huneycutt, worried ASHER V. HUNEYCUTT

that his wife might get hurt. Upon realizing that he could not stop Huneycutt,

Plaintiff grabbed his wife and put his arms around her head and neck, to “protect her

from any injury going down the” Steps. When Huneycutt stopped moving the chair,

Plaintiff lost his balance and fell down the Steps. He landed on a part of his wife’s

wheelchair, “and his left eye went into a cavity in the wheelchair brace.” As a result

of this fall, his optic nerve was severed, and Plaintiff lost all vision in his left eye.

¶7 Subsequent inspection by the parties’ experts revealed that the Steps did not

comply with the applicable provisions of the North Carolina Residential Building

Code. Specifically, the variance among the Steps’ heights was 1/4-inch greater, the

threshold height from the floor was 1/4-inch higher, and the variance between each

step’s tread depth was 3/8-inches greater than the Code permitted; additionally, at

least one tread had a 3.1% slope—1.1% greater than the maximum 2% slope that the

Code permitted. See N.C. State Building Code, §§ 312.1, 314.2 (1997).1

¶8 On 22 April 2019, Plaintiff and his wife filed a complaint2 against Defendants

and Huneycutt. Plaintiff asserted that Defendants were negligent per se, in that they

leased a home with steps that violated the Building Code. He also alleged that

Defendants were negligent because they breached their common-law duty as

1 The 1997 version of the North Carolina State Building Code is applicable in the instant case, as it was the version of the Code in effect at the time of the House’s construction. 2 Plaintiff’s wife voluntarily dismissed her claims without prejudice on 21 October

2021, and consequently was not a party to this lawsuit at the time of appeal. ASHER V. HUNEYCUTT

landlords to lease the House “in a habitable and reasonably safe condition . . . by

failing to install and/or maintain a garage staircase that was reasonable to prevent

foreseeable falls.”

¶9 On 8 July 2019, Defendants filed a motion to dismiss, an answer, and

crossclaims against Huneycutt. Defendants generally denied liability and asserted

several affirmative defenses, including contributory negligence. On 16 September

2020, Defendants filed a motion for summary judgment.

¶ 10 This matter came on for hearing in Mecklenburg County Superior Court on 11

January 2021. On 17 March 2021, the trial court entered an order granting summary

judgment in favor of Defendants, finding that “there is no genuine issue of material

fact in dispute as to the claims against” Defendants. Although there remained claims

pending against Huneycutt, the trial court certified the case for immediate appeal,

stating that “there exists no just reason for delay” and that “this order is entered as

a Final Judgment [as to Defendants] pursuant to N.C. R. Civ. P. 54(b).”

¶ 11 Plaintiff timely appealed pursuant to Rule 3(c)(2) of the North Carolina Rules

of Appellate Procedure. See N.C.R. App. P. 3(c)(2). Subsequently, Plaintiff voluntarily

dismissed his claims against Huneycutt on 1 July 2021, and Defendants voluntarily

dismissed their crossclaims against Huneycutt on 12 July 2021.

Grounds for Appellate Review

¶ 12 This Court chiefly entertains appeals from final judgments. See N.C. Gen. Stat. ASHER V.

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