Barnes v. St. Stephen's Missionary Baptist Church

580 S.E.2d 587, 260 Ga. App. 765, 2003 Fulton County D. Rep. 1057, 2003 Ga. App. LEXIS 392
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMarch 19, 2003
DocketA02A2277
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 580 S.E.2d 587 (Barnes v. St. Stephen's Missionary Baptist Church) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barnes v. St. Stephen's Missionary Baptist Church, 580 S.E.2d 587, 260 Ga. App. 765, 2003 Fulton County D. Rep. 1057, 2003 Ga. App. LEXIS 392 (Ga. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

Smith, Chief Judge.

Harriett Barnes appeals from the grant of summary judgment in favor of St. Stephen’s Missionary Baptist Church in this premises liability suit. Finding no error, we affirm.

Summary judgment is appropriate when no genuine issue of material fact remains and the movant is entitled to judgment as.a matter of law. Matthews v. The Varsity, 248 Ga. App. 512 (546 SE2d *766 878) (2001). On appeal from a grant of summary judgment, we apply a de novo standard of review and “view the evidence, and all reasonable conclusions and inferences drawn from it, in the light most favorable to the nonmovant.” (Citation and footnote omitted.) Id. Viewed in this light, the record shows that Barnes was assaulted and seriously injured on her way home late one evening from a neighborhood convenience store. Her assailant crept up behind her as she walked along the sidewalk near St. Stephen’s Missionary Baptist Church on Ralph David Abernathy Boulevard in downtown Atlanta. The church building was abandoned. Barnes speculates that her assailant was hiding behind bushes near the church; however, she did not see him before he hit her on the back of her head. A narrow window well extends along the west wall of the building and terminates in stairs several feet from the sidewalk, but Barnes denied in her deposition that she fell or was pushed down those stairs. During the attack, Barnes’s back wás injured and her legs paralyzed. While Barnes lay immobile, she testified, a second assailant emerged from a door on the church property. This person raped Barnes and left her.

The church adamantly disputes that any doorway on the church property was open. Approximately two years before the assault, after the church moved to another location, the building’s ground floor windows and doors were sealed with concrete blocks, except for one locked basement door on Central Avenue, at the opposite corner of the church from the location at which Barnes testified the assault occurred. A police officer testified that he inspected the church four weeks after the assault and that “the basement and ground-level doors and windows were sealed with concrete blocks.” The officer took photographs of the church, showing the sealed door and window openings and the basement door.

Barnes presented no evidence establishing that her assailants or any others were living on the property or that the building was being used generally for criminal activity at the time of the attack. The evidence did show that the building was in poor repair and that vandals had taken windows out of the church. While Barnes contends in her brief that problems with transients and vagrants continued despite the church’s attempts to secure the building, citing various portions of the record, the testimony cited instead shows problems with people loitering on the street during services before the church relocated or problems with vandals and transients in. the building before the building was finally secured. After the use of plywood to board up the building was unsuccessful, the church voted in September 1991 to close the doorways with concrete blocks and did so shortly afterward. Contrary to Barnes’s assertion in her brief, the cited testimony does not demonstrate that the blocking of the doorways was inadequate, much less that St. Stephen’s was “well aware of the inadequacy of its *767 purported corrective measures.” To the contrary, one of the deacons who has visited the old church building once or twice a week since the move saw no one loitering near the church and found no sign of anyone living there, other than some clothing, “just some pants, a shirt or something like that,” on the premises on one occasion “right after we moved.”

1. Negligence Claim. Summary judgment was proper because Barnes failed to establish the church owed her a duty of care under the circumstances of this premises liability action. “The threshold issue in any cause of action for negligence is whether, and to what extent, the defendant owes the plaintiff a duty of care. Whether a duty exists upon which liability can be based is a question of law.” (Citations and footnote omitted.) City of Rome v. Jordan, 263 Ga. 26, 27 (1) (426 SE2d 861) (1993).

“Generally, there is .no duty to control the conduct of third persons to prevent them from causing physical harm to others.” (Footnote omitted.) Thomas v. Food Lion, 256 Ga. App. 880, 882 (1) (570 SE2d 18) (2002). A landowner’s duty to protect an individual against foreseeable criminal acts arises from the landowner’s control over the premises and depends upon the individual’s relationship to the landowner or upon his or her status as an invitee, licensee, or trespasser with respect to the property on which the crime occurred. See generally OCGA §§ 51-3-1; 51-3-2.

OCGA § 51-3-1 requires that a landowner exercise ordinary care in keeping the premises and approaches safe for invitees. But “[t]his statute does not purport to govern every instance of one going upon the land of another. Only where the owner or occupier invites, induces or leads another to come on his land for a lawful purpose is the statute implicated.” Todd v. F.W. Woolworth Co., 258 Ga. 194, 195 (1) (366 SE2d 674) (1988). 1 Georgia decisions considering the liability of property owners for criminal acts by third parties uniformly limit their discussions to the claims of invitees. See, e.g., Rice v. Six Flags Over Ga., 257 Ga. App. 864, 866-867 (572 SE2d 322) (2002), and cases cited therein.

Here, the record establishes that Barnes was a member of the general public, a passerby. She had no relationship with the church, nor was she an invitee, a tenant, a licensee, or even a trespasser to whom the church owed a duty of care under Georgia law. Nevertheless, Barnes contends the church owed her a duty of care because the *768 church should have foreseen that a criminal might use an abandoned building as a haven or hideout when preying on the general public.

Georgia law has recognized that a landowner may have a duty toward those traveling a public way adjacent to the property in certain limited circumstances. For example, a landowner owes to invitees a duty to keep safe not only the premises themselves but also the approaches along which invitees enter the property. Todd, supra, 258 Ga. at 196. This duty, however, does not extend to “mere pedestrians.” Id. at 197 (2). Landowners also owe a duty to passersby to protect them from objects falling from their property onto the public way, such as trees with patent visible decay. See Wade v. Howard, 232 Ga. App. 55, 58 (499 SE2d 652) (1998). And while landowners may not maintain a pitfall, mantrap, or other hazardous condition near a public way, “[i]f a peril is not so close to a traveled way to pose a danger to those accidentally stepping off that path, it is not a mantrap. [Cit.]” Moore-Sapp Investors v. Richards, 240 Ga. App. 798, 799 (1) (522 SE2d 739) (1999); see also Aldredge v. Symbas, 248 Ga. App.

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Bluebook (online)
580 S.E.2d 587, 260 Ga. App. 765, 2003 Fulton County D. Rep. 1057, 2003 Ga. App. LEXIS 392, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barnes-v-st-stephens-missionary-baptist-church-gactapp-2003.