Currier v. Washman, LLC

366 P.3d 811, 276 Or. App. 93, 2016 Ore. App. LEXIS 80
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJanuary 27, 2016
Docket120405409; A154821
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 366 P.3d 811 (Currier v. Washman, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Currier v. Washman, LLC, 366 P.3d 811, 276 Or. App. 93, 2016 Ore. App. LEXIS 80 (Or. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

SERCOMBE, P. J.

Defendant appeals a judgment awarding plaintiff damages for the injuries he sustained after plaintiff rode his bicycle onto the wet concrete surface of defendant’s car wash property, the bicycle tires slid, and plaintiff fell from the bicycle. Defendant contends that the trial court erred in denying its motion for directed verdict. According to defendant, there was no evidence from which a jury could find that plaintiff was defendant’s licensee to whom defendant owed a duty to exercise reasonable care. Before the trial court, defendant argued that plaintiff was a trespasser and not a licensee who entered the property by express or implied invitation, and the parties agreed that defendant is not liable to the plaintiff if plaintiff was a trespasser on defendant’s property. In response to defendant’s contention on appeal, plaintiff argues that there was sufficient evidence from which to infer that defendant impliedly consented to plaintiff entering its property, plaintiff was a licensee, and the jury properly considered his negligence claim. We agree with plaintiff and, accordingly, affirm.

The facts pertinent to plaintiffs status when he entered defendant’s property are undisputed. Defendant owns and operates a car wash facility that is located at the southeast corner of the intersection of Northeast Weidler Street and Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard in Portland. The property’s north border on Northeast Weidler Street and its west border on Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard are open to those streets, and have no fences, barriers, or demarcations that indicate where the sidewalk ends and the property begins. Motor vehicles can leave the car wash facility and travel a short distance on a marked lane that exits on Northeast Weidler Street. The accident occurred on that lane.

There is considerable bicycle, pedestrian, and motor vehicle traffic on the streets, bicycle lanes, and sidewalks that adjoin the car wash facility. Pedestrians and bicyclists enter and leave the property at will, and defendant did not seek to prevent them from doing so. At the time of the incident, there were no posted “no trespassing” signs or other access controls on the property. Defendant’s assistant [96]*96manager testified that “[w]e don’t do anything” to inform pedestrians and bicyclists that they are not allowed on the property. Other nearby businesses do not limit the use of their parking and drive lane areas by pedestrians and bicyclists. There was testimony that most people consider the commercial properties in that area to be open to use by the travelling public during normal business hours.

On August 6, 2011, plaintiff was riding his bicycle eastbound in a bicycle lane on Northeast Weidler Street and approaching the car wash property. A car was leaving the car wash property and had stopped at the curb cut on Northeast Weidler Street to wait for traffic to clear. The car blocked plaintiffs travel on the bike lane and the adjacent sidewalk. Plaintiff testified that he thought that it was unsafe to ride around the car into the dense traffic to his left or to stop and wait for the obstructing car to leave the bicycle lane. Plaintiff attempted to ride around the back of the car by leaving the bicycle lane, crossing the sidewalk, and riding into the drive lane and parking area of the car wash property.

In the course of that maneuver, plaintiff noticed that part of the concrete pavement in his path was damp. Plaintiff testified that he proceeded anyway because he had always safely ridden his bicycle over ordinary damp pavement and did not believe the condition was dangerous. But when plaintiff encountered the damp surface of the car wash property, his bicycle tires slid out from under him as if they were “on ice.” The concrete was actually wet with a combination of water, soap, and “anything that drips off the car[s]” as they come out of the car wash tunnel. Plaintiff fell with the bicycle and sustained a fracture of his left hip and a deep cut in his elbow, both of which required surgery.

Defendant admitted to knowing that the area of the car wash property where plaintiff fell “was the most slippery portion of the car wash.” There were no posted signs that warned others about the slippery surface. Defendant also knew that traffic on Northeast Weidler Street was often so heavy that customers leaving the car wash property had difficulty turning onto the street, and would stop on the sidewalk and the bicycle lane. Defendant did not discourage [97]*97those customers from blocking the sidewalk and bicycle lane, and even posted a sign that affirmatively instructed customers to not stop on the slippery area of the property. Defendant was aware that pedestrians and bicyclists traversed the car wash property both for their own purposes and for the specific purpose of moving around defendant’s customers who blocked the bicycle lane and sidewalk.

At the conclusion of defendant’s case, defendant moved for a directed verdict. Defendant argued that no reasonable juror could find that defendant consented to plaintiffs entry to the car wash property, so as to make it accountable to plaintiff as its licensee, and that it breached no duty owed to plaintiff as a trespasser. Defendant asserted that it never expressly consented to plaintiffs entry and that “[a] failure to object or prevent trespass does not manifest consent to trespass.” The trial court denied the motion, stating that, although mere failure to object to trespassing is not consent, a reasonable jury could find implied consent when considering the surrounding circumstances. The jury found that plaintiff had not trespassed, and awarded plaintiff a verdict of damages.

On appeal from the denial of a motion for directed verdict, we review the evidence and any resulting inferences in the light most favorable to the party that obtained a favorable verdict, and the verdict cannot be set aside “unless we can affirmatively say that there is no evidence from which the jury could have found the facts necessary” to support the verdict. Brown v. J. C. Penney Co., 297 Or 695, 705, 688 P2d 811 (1984). We do not weigh conflicting evidence or evaluate credibility when reviewing the record. Fang v. Li, 203 Or App 481, 485, 125 P3d 832 (2005). “A directed verdict is appropriate only if there is a complete absence of proof on an essential issue or when there is no conflict in the evidence and it is susceptible of only one construction.” Malensky v. Mobay Chemical Corp., 104 Or App 165, 170, 799 P2d 683 (1990), rev den, 311 Or 187 (1991). Thus, we affirm the denial of a motion for a directed verdict if we find any evidence, when viewed in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, that could support the jury’s ultimate finding.

[98]*98On appeal, the parties renew their arguments regarding the sufficiency of the evidence to prove that plaintiff was a licensee of defendant and not a trespasser. Oregon adheres to the traditional rule that a landowner’s duties to a visitor vary depending on whether the visitor is an invitee, licensee, or trespasser. Walsh v. C & K Market, Inc., 171 Or App 536, 539, 16 P3d 1179 (2000). “An invitee is one who comes upon the premises upon business which concerns the occupier, with the occupier’s invitation, expressed or implied.” Rich v. Tite-Knot Pine Mill, 245 Or 185, 191-92, 421 P2d 370 (1966). A possessor of land has the duty to warn an invitee of latent dangers and to “protect the invitee against dangers in the condition of the premises about which the [possessor] knows or should reasonably have known.” Cassidy v. Bonham,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
366 P.3d 811, 276 Or. App. 93, 2016 Ore. App. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/currier-v-washman-llc-orctapp-2016.