Flavia Linnea Borgo v. The Narragansett Electric Company d/b/a National Grid

CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 6, 2022
Docket21-21
StatusPublished

This text of Flavia Linnea Borgo v. The Narragansett Electric Company d/b/a National Grid (Flavia Linnea Borgo v. The Narragansett Electric Company d/b/a National Grid) 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
Flavia Linnea Borgo v. The Narragansett Electric Company d/b/a National Grid, (R.I. 2022).

Opinion

Supreme Court

No. 2021-21-Appeal. (PC 16-2407)

Flavia Linnea Borgo :

v. :

The Narragansett Electric Company : d/b/a National Grid 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

The Narragansett Electric Company : d/b/a National Grid et al.

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

OPINION

Chief Justice Suttell, for the Court. A tragic accident in a utility substation

resulted in serious injuries to the plaintiff, eighteen-year-old Flavia Linnea Borgo

(plaintiff or Borgo), including the amputation of her left hand. The question

confronting us is whether the property owner, the defendant, The Narragansett

Electric Company d/b/a National Grid (defendant or National Grid), owed a duty of

care to Borgo, an admitted trespasser at the time of the accident.1 A justice of the

Superior Court ruled that National Grid did not owe Borgo a duty of care and granted

the defendant’s motion for summary judgment. The plaintiff now appeals the

Superior Court judgment. This case came before the Supreme Court pursuant to an

order directing the parties to appear and show cause why the issues raised in this

1 The plaintiff’s complaint named a second entity, which was dismissed from the case in December 2016, and several John and/or Jane Doe defendants; for our purposes, the only defendant pertinent to the present appeal is National Grid. -1- appeal should not be summarily decided. After considering the parties’ written and

oral submissions and reviewing the record, we conclude that cause has not been

shown and that this case may be decided without further briefing or argument. For

the reasons stated in this opinion, we affirm the judgment of the Superior Court.

I

Facts and Travel

This action arises out of events that took place in April 2014. At that time,

plaintiff was a freshman at Rhode Island School of Design (RISD) in Providence.

According to plaintiff’s deposition testimony, during the spring semester she was

enrolled in various art classes, including a design class that required her to complete

a “cityscape project”—that is, to photographically capture different parts of the city

from different vantage points and “combine them into a painting.”

A few weeks before the accident, plaintiff began thinking about including a

property located at the corner of Eddy and South Streets in Providence in her

cityscape project. The plaintiff testified that she discussed entering onto the property

to take photographs with Nicholas Meehan, a fellow RISD student and a friend of

plaintiff. According to plaintiff, Meehan told her that he had entered the property

twice previously, and he agreed to accompany her. The plaintiff also testified that,

before she attempted to enter the property, she had heard other RISD students

discussing entering the property and had seen students using photographs of the

-2- property as references for drawings and paintings they worked on in the RISD

studios. According to plaintiff, at the time she decided to enter the property, she

believed that the property was abandoned.

In the spring of 2014, the property in question contained two adjacent

buildings that shared a wall but were otherwise entirely separate. At that time, one

building was a decommissioned generating station not owned or maintained by

National Grid, and the other building was an active electrical substation. It is

uncontested that, at the time relevant to this action, National Grid owned and

maintained the substation.

The plaintiff and Meehan entered the property on April 5, 2014, sometime

around eight o’clock in the evening. The plaintiff testified that she did not see any

signage indicating that the property was owned by National Grid or any signs that

the property was still in use by anyone. Additionally, according to plaintiff, the gate

in the fence on the property in front of the facility was physically open when she and

Meehan arrived at the property that night, and there was no other fence blocking

access to the buildings. However, National Grid contests plaintiff’s testimony of the

facts and asserts that there was a “No Trespassing” sign on a closed fence that

plaintiff and Meehan crawled under to access the substation. This factual disparity

is immaterial to our analysis, as there can be no question but that plaintiff was a

trespasser.

-3- After entering the property, plaintiff and Meehan climbed a fire escape to

access the roof of the substation building, where, according to plaintiff, they took

pictures of the Providence skyline. It is undisputed that plaintiff and Meehan then

entered the building through a window or door on the roof of the building; however,

plaintiff testified that the opening was uncovered, while National Grid contends that

plaintiff and Meehan removed plywood to access the entry point. According to

plaintiff, there was a ladder directly below the window that neither she nor Meehan

placed there, but which facilitated their entry into the substation building.

At her deposition, plaintiff testified that, after she and Meehan entered the

building, they wandered throughout the facility for a short while, sometimes taking

photographs, until they came to a room that was like a long corridor. The plaintiff

testified that her last memory before the accident was walking down that long

hallway within the substation.

At his deposition, Meehan testified to having witnessed the accident.

According to Meehan, the long corridor was filled with doors on one side that looked

like doors to rooms, although it is undisputed that at least one was actually a door to

a cabinet containing electrical equipment. Meehan testified that, within a few

seconds of entering the long hallway, plaintiff’s body came in contact with

something inside a cabinet and suddenly there were sparks, a bright flash, and an

indescribable noise. According to Meehan, the doors on the cabinet may have been

-4- open, and in her papers plaintiff asserts that they were. Meehan testified that he

grabbed plaintiff by her shirt and pulled her away from the cabinet; he then called

911.

According to Meehan, after the accident plaintiff fell on the ground and had a

seizure. The plaintiff testified that she has a brief memory of being rescued by

emergency personnel and then of waking up in the hospital later that night. As a

result of the accident, plaintiff spent two months in the hospital, and her left hand

was amputated.

On May 25, 2016, plaintiff filed a complaint in the Providence County

Superior Court against National Grid and others alleging negligence. Specifically,

plaintiff alleged that National Grid “owed a duty to maintain its substation * * * in

a reasonably safe condition[,]” that it did not do so, and that “[a]s a direct and

proximate result” of defendant’s negligence, “plaintiff Flavia Linnea Borgo suffered

severe and permanent injuries to her mind and body[.]”

In May 2020, after years of discovery, National Grid filed a motion for

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