Barr v. Frausto

2016 IL App (3d) 150014, 65 N.E.3d 915
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 13, 2016
Docket3-15-0014
StatusUnpublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2016 IL App (3d) 150014 (Barr v. Frausto) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barr v. Frausto, 2016 IL App (3d) 150014, 65 N.E.3d 915 (Ill. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

2016 IL App (3d) 150014

Opinion filed October 13, 2016 _____________________________________________________________________________

IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

THIRD DISTRICT

KEVIN BARR, ) Appeal from the Circuit Court ) of the 12th Judicial Circuit, Plaintiff-Appellant, ) Will County, Illinois. ) v. ) ) Appeal No. 3-15-0014

DEANNA FRAUSTO and THE CITY OF ) Circuit No. 13-L-355

JOLIET, )

)

Defendants )

) The Honorable

(The City of Joliet, Defendant-Appellee). ) Michael J. Powers,

) Judge, presiding.

____________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE CARTER delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Justices McDade and Schmidt concurred in the judgment and opinion. _____________________________________________________________________________

OPINION

¶1 Plaintiff, Kevin Barr, filed a suit for negligent property maintenance against defendants,

Deanna Frausto and the City of Joliet (City), to recover damages for injuries he sustained on City

property when he stepped into a hole on a grass-covered parkway and fell. Both defendants filed

motions for summary judgment. After hearings, the trial court granted the motions. Plaintiff

appeals, but only challenges the trial court’s grant of summary judgment for the City. We affirm

the trial court’s judgment. ¶2 FACTS

¶3 In July 2012, plaintiff and his wife went for a morning walk in Joliet, Will County,

Illinois, near their home. Plaintiff was wearing running shoes, and he and his wife were walking

on the sidewalk at a leisurely pace. A woman who was walking her dog on the same sidewalk

approached from the opposite direction. Plaintiff and his wife stepped off the sidewalk and onto

the grass-covered parkway (the grassy area in front of or to the side of a house, between the

sidewalk and the road). The parkway was located to the side of Deanna Frausto’s residence and

was owned by the City. While plaintiff was walking on the parkway, he stepped into a hole, fell,

and injured his knee or leg.

¶4 In May 2013, plaintiff filed the instant negligent property maintenance action against

Frausto and the City. The complaint was later amended. During pretrial proceedings, summary

judgment was granted for Frausto after the trial court found that she did not owe a duty to

prevent harm to others on property owned by the City.

¶5 After summary judgment was granted for Frausto, the City filed its own motion for

summary judgment. The matter was fully briefed by the parties in the trial court. Attached to

parties’ filings were various supporting documents, including several depositions, photographs of

the site and of the hole, and the affidavit of plaintiff’s expert witness. The evidence presented in

those supporting documents can be summarized as follows.

¶6 Plaintiff testified in his deposition to many of the background facts set forth above. In

addition to those facts, plaintiff stated that the accident occurred on a Sunday morning shortly

after 7 a.m. The weather was nice that day, and it was sunny and completely light out. Plaintiff

and his wife walked or rode their bikes on that same route about once a week when the weather

permitted. Plaintiff and his wife had lived in that area for about six years, and plaintiff was

familiar with the area, although he had never walked on that parkway before. Prior to that time,

plaintiff had never seen anyone performing maintenance, doing construction, digging, or cutting

the lawn on that particular parkway.

¶7 As plaintiff and his wife were walking on the sidewalk that morning and the woman was

approaching from the other direction with her dog on a leash, plaintiff nudged or told his wife to

move over onto the parkway. The dog was not barking, threatening, or menacing in any way, but

the woman and her dog were taking up the entire sidewalk. Plaintiff and his wife both moved to

the right onto the parkway. Plaintiff was closer to the sidewalk, and his wife was closer to the

road. That summer was very dry, and the grass on the parkway was like straw and was trampled

down. As the woman with the dog went past, plaintiff took one or two more steps on the

parkway and then stepped into the hole.

¶8 Plaintiff was wearing a size 9 or 9½ running shoe at the time and his entire foot and part

of his leg went into the hole, up to his ankle or shin. The ground was dry and the hole was not

muddy. Plaintiff fell forward and injured his knee or leg. The woman who was walking the dog

did not stop, and plaintiff did not know who the woman was. Plaintiff’s wife had to help him

because he could not pull his foot out of the hole. Plaintiff sat there for a short time while his

wife went home and got the van. When she returned, plaintiff and his wife went home, and

plaintiff put ice on the injured area. After a short time, plaintiff decided to go to the hospital.

¶9 Plaintiff did not know that the hole was there and had no idea how the hole had formed.

Plaintiff was unsure whether anything had prevented him from seeing the hole that morning and

stated that the grass might have been covering it. Plaintiff insisted that he was watching where he

was going at the time of the injury and stated that he had only glanced at the dog for a moment.

As a result of the accident, plaintiff missed a significant amount of time from work and suffered

some lasting effects from his injury.

¶ 10 Deanna Frausto, the person who owned the house to the side of where the accident

occurred, testified in her deposition that she lived at that location for the past 18 years. Frausto

and her live-in boyfriend, Michael Trimmer, mowed, raked, and edged the lawn on that

particular parkway. Frausto and Trimmer used a push mower to mow the grass in that area.

During that time of summer, the weather was very hot and dry, and the grass had patches of

brown and green areas. Frausto and Trimmer did not mow the grass as often during that time

period because the grass was so dry. Although Frausto owned the house at that location, she did

not own the parkway property in front of and to the side of the house.

¶ 11 Frausto first became aware of the hole on the parkway when she received a letter from

plaintiff’s attorney after the injury occurred. Frausto had no knowledge of the hole in that

location prior to receiving the letter and did not notice any other holes in the parkway. Upon

checking, Frausto found a hole in the parkway to the side of her house and assumed that it was

the hole to which the letter referred. In Frausto’s opinion, the hole looked like an oversized snake

hole—it was small in width, probably not wide enough for her hand to fit inside of it, but was

several inches deep. After she got the letter from plaintiff’s attorney, Frausto filled the hole in

with dirt.

¶ 12 In the 18 years that Frausto had lived at that location, she had never seen anyone from the

City or the utility companies working in the area where the hole was located. Frausto knew that

the previous owners had a lot of trees in the yard but did not know if there was ever a tree in the

parkway area that had been removed.

¶ 13 Michael Trimmer testified in his deposition that he was Frausto’s boyfriend and that he

had lived with her at the residence in question for the past seven years. According to Trimmer,

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2016 IL App (3d) 150014, 65 N.E.3d 915, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barr-v-frausto-illappct-2016.