Barbara a Kozak v. City of Lincoln Park

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 21, 2015
Docket319797
StatusUnpublished

This text of Barbara a Kozak v. City of Lincoln Park (Barbara a Kozak v. City of Lincoln Park) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barbara a Kozak v. City of Lincoln Park, (Mich. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

BARBARA A. KOZAK and KEVIN J. KOZAK, UNPUBLISHED July 21, 2015 Plaintiffs-Appellants,

v No. 319797 Wayne Circuit Court CITY OF LINCOLN PARK, LC No. 12-010845-NO

Defendant-Appellee.

Before: BECKERING, P.J., and CAVANAGH and SAAD, JJ.

BECKERING, P.J. (dissenting).

In this personal injury action, Plaintiffs Barbara and Kevin Kozak are seeking recovery for injuries Barbara sustained when she tripped and fell while crossing a street in the City of Lincoln Park due to an approximately three-inch drop in the roadway running down the center of the street. I respectfully dissent from the majority opinion. In my view, the trial court erred in granting defendant’s motion for summary disposition because, despite finding that the condition of the roadway at issue was “absolutely” unreasonably unsafe, the court misinterpreted the language in Wilson v Alpena Co Rd Comm, 474 Mich 161; 713 NW2d 717 (2006), and concluded that an unrebutted affidavit signed by one of defendant’s employees concerning his opinion that the roadway was not unsafe required dismissal of the case. I would find that, consistent with Wilson, a plaintiff does not need to proffer evidence that literally describes or proves what a reasonable road commission would do under the facts of the instant case, e.g., a series of affidavits prepared by road commissions or other governmental agencies regarding what they would have done if they were aware of the defect on which plaintiff was injured. Instead, to survive a motion for summary disposition, plaintiffs may submit evidence from which an inference may be drawn “that a reasonable road commission, aware of this particular condition, would have understood it posed an unreasonable threat to safe public travel and would have addressed it.” Id. at 169. The majority’s interpretation of Wilson, with which I disagree, would lead to nothing but self-serving affidavits by road commissions—for themselves and other road commissions—in order to thwart liability arising from their failure to keep roadways in reasonable repair. Because plaintiff produced photographic evidence from which a reasonable juror could conclude that defendant failed to maintain the roadway in reasonable repair such that it was not reasonably safe and convenient for public travel, I would reverse the trial court’s grant of summary disposition and remand for further proceedings.

-1- I. PERTINENT FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Between 4:00 p.m. and 6:00 p.m. on February 23, 2012, Barbara was crossing the street in front of 813 Kings Highway, Lincoln Park, Michigan. She was house shopping with Kevin and planning to look at the property adjacent to 813 Kings Highway. At her deposition, Barbara explained, “I was walking [across the street] and then all of a sudden I wasn’t anymore. The ground fell from underneath me.” After she fell, she noticed the “drop-off” or elevation difference in the road, which she did not see when approaching from the raised side of the roadway.

Plaintiffs filed this action alleging that defendant was liable for Barbara’s injuries pursuant to the highway exception to governmental immunity because it breached its duty to maintain the roadway in reasonable repair. Plaintiffs alleged that Barbara sustained “grievous and painful” injuries from the fall, including to her knee and lower back.

Mary Uncapher resided at 819 Kings Highway at the time of the incident, which was next door to a house that was for sale. She remembered a woman falling in front of the house next door to her home. She testified at her deposition that the crack or difference in elevation in the road had been present for “[p]robably a few years,” although she was unsure when the elevation difference grew to be approximately three inches.1

Plaintiffs produced photographs of the subject defect. The photographs reveal a three- inch difference in height—as depicted with a measuring tape—between each lane of the two-lane roadway for what appears to be an extended length of the roadway, much like a fault line running down the middle of the road.

Robert Bartok, the Director of Public Services for defendant, who is responsible for roadways and sidewalks under defendant’s jurisdiction, prepared an affidavit after the incident. He stated that the condition that allegedly caused Barbara’s injuries, which he described as “a difference in elevation between two slaps [sic] of pavement that run in the center of Kings Highway near 813 Kings Highway,” did “not impact vehicular traffic” and was “not at any pedestrian walkway or crosswalk.” He stated that he was unaware of any other accidents that have occurred in the area due to the elevation difference and that, “[i]n [his] opinion as the Director of Public Services for the City of Lincoln Park, this condition does not render the highway either unsafe or inconvenient for public travel.” Likewise, he stated, “I believe the highway in this area is in fact reasonably safe and convenient for public travel.”

Defendant filed a motion for summary disposition pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(7) and (C)(10). Defendant argued the highway exception to governmental immunity was not triggered

1 Uncapher also testified that defendant made the following repairs 12 to 15 years before her deposition: “They resurfaced by my driveway because there was water from the waterlines seeping. It was washing stuff away. So they put, I think, four or five new cement squares in. It wasn’t elevated. And then they blacktopped where the thing was. The deviation that you’re saying, they had that blacktopped.”

-2- in this case because there was no admissible evidence demonstrating that it had failed to maintain the road on which Barbara fell so that it was reasonably safe and convenient for public travel. Defendant noted that the area where Barbara fell “was mid-block” and not designed for pedestrian travel.2 Defendant asserted that its records did not include any indication of other injuries or complaints related to the area and argued that plaintiffs had failed to submit any evidence to contradict Bartok’s affidavit opining that the road was reasonably safe. Defendant claimed that in light of the language in Wilson, 474 Mich 161, which requires a plaintiff to present evidence that a reasonable road commission that was aware of the condition would have believed that it posed an unreasonable threat to public travel and addressed it, it was entitled to summary disposition.

Plaintiffs opposed defendant’s motion, asserting that “public travel” under MCL 691.1402(1) includes pedestrian traffic, not just vehicular traffic. Further, they contested defendant’s claim that the roadway was in reasonable repair and submitted their photographic evidence that depicted an elevation difference of approximately three inches, along with Barbara’s and Uncapher’s deposition testimony.3 Thus, they argued, they had created a question of fact regarding whether it was maintained in reasonable repair. Plaintiffs also cited the two- inch presumption with regard to vertical discontinuities in sidewalks under MCL 691.1402a. With regard to Wilson, 474 Mich 161, and Ellerbee v City of Detroit, unpublished opinion per curiam of the Court of Appeals, issued June 13, 2013 (Docket No. 308952), cited by defendant in its motion, plaintiffs argued that both addressed whether a defendant had notice of a defect 30 days before an accident and did not negate plaintiffs’ “evidence of defect.” Additionally, plaintiffs asserted that the deposition testimony of Uncapher met the notice requirements of the highway exception to governmental immunity.4

At a hearing on defendant’s motion, the trial court stated:

Listen, I’ve looked at your pictures. I agree with you; they should have fixed it[,] but that’s not the standard.

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Barbara a Kozak v. City of Lincoln Park, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barbara-a-kozak-v-city-of-lincoln-park-michctapp-2015.