Carol Allen v. Laura Sitrin, as Finance Director for the City of Newport

CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMay 23, 2024
Docket21-320
StatusPublished

This text of Carol Allen v. Laura Sitrin, as Finance Director for the City of Newport (Carol Allen v. Laura Sitrin, as Finance Director for the City of Newport) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carol Allen v. Laura Sitrin, as Finance Director for the City of Newport, (R.I. 2024).

Opinion

Supreme Court

No. 2021-320-Appeal. No. 2021-321-Appeal. (NC 14-333)

(Dissent begins on Page 14)

Carol Allen :

v. :

Laura Sitrin, as Finance Director for : the City of Newport, et al.

NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the Rhode Island Reporter. Readers are requested to notify the Opinion Analyst, Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 250 Benefit Street, Providence, Rhode Island 02903, at Telephone (401) 222-3258 or Email opinionanalyst@courts.ri.gov of any typographical or other formal errors in order that corrections may be made before the opinion is published. Supreme Court

Laura Sitrin, as Finance Director for : the City of Newport, et al.

Present: Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Robinson, Lynch Prata, and Long, JJ.

OPINION

Justice Lynch Prata, for the Court. In these consolidated appeals, the

plaintiff, Carol Allen individually, and in her capacity as Administratrix for the

Estate of Kenneth MacDuff (Allen or the plaintiff),1 and the defendants, Laura Sitrin,

as the Finance Director for the City of Newport (the city), Donald Botelho, and Ben

Bona (collectively, the city defendants), cross-appeal from two amended judgments

of the Superior Court entered in favor of the plaintiff following a nonjury trial. The

city defendants argue that the trial justice erred by: failing to apply the Connecticut

1 Kenneth MacDuff’s name is spelled inconsistently in the record. We adopt the spelling that appears in the trial transcripts. No disrespect is intended. -1- Rule;2 finding that there were unusual circumstances that triggered their duty before

the end of the storm; determining that Botelho and Bona owed duties in their

individual capacities to the plaintiff; and finding that the plaintiff did not assume the

risk of her injury. On her cross-appeal, the plaintiff argues that the trial justice erred

by limiting the city’s liability under the public-duty doctrine. For the reasons stated

herein, we vacate the judgments of the Superior Court.

Facts and Travel

On February 3, 2014, Allen and MacDuff, Allen’s husband, 3 went to Newport

City Hall (city hall) to pay their quarterly property taxes. MacDuff dropped Allen

off at the Bull Street entrance to city hall. Allen testified that when she arrived, she

remembered feeling an icy rain or sleet on her face. On cross-examination, she

explained that it could have been a light mix of sleet and snow. Allen made it up the

steps to city hall without any difficulty, but she testified that there was a slushy

mixture or “slight film” on the stairway. A bystander, Charles M. Holder Sr.,

testified that there was no snow accumulation on the stairway before Allen’s fall,

but that the stairs were slippery and wet. 4 Holder further testified that it may have

2 The Connecticut Rule will be explained infra. 3 The trial justice’s determination that the evidence “clearly establishes that Mr. MacDuff was Ms. Allen’s common-law husband” is not contested by the city defendants on appeal. 4 Holder’s testimony was presented, by agreement of the parties, through deposition because he was unavailable to testify at trial due to a medical condition. -2- been lightly snowing prior to Allen’s fall. After paying her taxes, Allen began to

exit the building the way she entered.

That morning, defendants Bona and Botelho were the employees responsible

for treating the city hall steps with ice melt. Although Bona typically treated all the

stairways and sidewalks before 8 a.m., he had not begun treating the Bull Street

entrance at the time of Allen’s fall. Further, Bona had neither placed warning signs

at the exits nor roped off the Bull Street stairway, as he had done on prior occasions.

Allen made it down the first set of stairs, but as she approached the landing, she

noticed that the second set of stairs was covered with a slushy film. Consequently,

she held onto the center handrail with both hands and proceeded slowly down the

stairway, one step at a time.

While descending, Allen slipped and fell on the granite steps. Photographs of

the scene taken approximately seven to twenty-three minutes after her fall depict

“heavy, wet snow” falling and accumulating on nearby bushes, cars, railings, and

people. As a result of her fall, Allen suffered a severe head injury, which induced

multiple seizures and the loss of her ability to taste and smell. When Allen returned

home from the hospital, she needed around-the-clock care. She could not cook,

clean, or do her laundry without help from MacDuff, friends, and family. MacDuff

cared for her until his death in 2017. Allen alleges that the city and its employees

were negligent in failing to properly treat the stairs for adverse weather conditions.

-3- Allen filed a complaint for negligence and, in her capacity as Administratrix

of MacDuff’s estate, for loss of consortium against the city, Bona, Botelho, and

William R. Riccio Jr., the Director of Public Services for the city.5 Following a

nonjury trial, the trial justice issued a written decision summarizing the facts

established at trial and making findings relative to the credibility of the witnesses.

He first addressed the city’s duty to plaintiff. He noted the general rule that the duty

of a premises owner to clear snow and ice is not triggered until a reasonable time

after a storm ends, known as the Connecticut Rule. However, the trial justice

commented that precedent “clearly suggests that there are fact patterns in which the

Connecticut Rule may not apply even if winter precipitation is occurring.”

Looking to the facts of the instant case, the trial justice found: that “there was

intermittent light to moderate snow on the morning of February 3, 2014”; that “the

temperatures on February 3, 2014[,] were falling and reached freezing (32 degrees)

at 8:22 a.m.”; that the photographs of the scene taken after Allen’s fall show no

detectable accumulation of snow on the steps, but that Allen and Holder’s testimony

that there was a “slight film” forming on the steps as she ascended them was credible;

and that the application of ice melt “would have prevented the early accumulation

of snow and the formation of ice” on the steps. The trial justice thus found that

5 There was no evidence presented against Riccio at trial; therefore, the trial justice entered judgment in his favor. Neither plaintiff nor Riccio have appealed that judgment. -4- “there was not a sufficient accumulation of snow or ice on the steps where [Allen]

fell to [in]voke the Connecticut Rule.”

Alternatively, the trial justice found that “[e]ven if the Connecticut Rule were

to apply * * * the circumstances here present[ed] a scenario that would trigger the

unusual circumstance[s] exception.” The trial justice reasoned that there were

unusual circumstances present because the failure to “apply ice melt and to take other

protective measures that had been used in the past exacerbated the risks inherent in

the use of the stairs by [Allen].” The trial justice further reasoned that the policy

behind the Connecticut Rule would not be fulfilled by its application in this case

because the storm was not so severe that any efforts of the city defendants to clear

the steps would have been useless.

The trial justice then proceeded to address the remaining issues in the case,

finding that: the public-duty doctrine did not apply; Botelho and Bona were

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Carol Allen v. Laura Sitrin, as Finance Director for the City of Newport, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carol-allen-v-laura-sitrin-as-finance-director-for-the-city-of-newport-ri-2024.