Ford v. Nairn

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 7, 1999
Docket4-98-0675
StatusPublished

This text of Ford v. Nairn (Ford v. Nairn) 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
Ford v. Nairn, (Ill. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

7 September 1999

NOS. 4-98-0675, 4-98-0717 cons.

IN THE APPELLATE COURT

OF ILLINOIS

FOURTH DISTRICT

CHRISTA FORD, a Minor, by and through    )   Appeal from

her Father and Next Friend, DENNIS FORD, )   Circuit Court of

and DENNIS FORD, Individually,           )   Jersey County

Plaintiffs-Appellants,         )   No. 94L40

v.                             )

JERRY NAIRN, BETTY NAIRN, and JUMPKING,  )  

INC., a Corporation,                     )  

Defendants-Appellees.          )  

------------------------------------------

CHRISTA FORD, a Minor by and Through her )

Father and Next Friend, DENNIS FORD and  )

DENNIS FORD, Individually,               )

Plaintiffs-Appellees,          )

JERRY NAIRN and BETTY NAIRN,             )

Defendants-Appellants,         )

and                            )   Honorable

JUMPKING, INC., a Corporation,           )   Thomas G. Russell,

Defendant.                     )   Judge Presiding.

_________________________________________________________________

PRESIDING JUSTICE KNECHT delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiffs, Christa Ford, a minor, by and through her fa­ther and next friend, Den­nis Ford, and Dennis Ford, individual­

ly, brought this action to recover money damages for injuries to Christa's knee received while she was jumping on a trampo­line.  They al­lege defendants Jerry and Betty Nairn, the tram­po­line owners, had a duty to keep the trampoline in a reasonably safe condition for use by Christa and others using the trampoline with the consent of the Nairns and to warn them of any hazards reason­

ably expected to exist by using the trampoline.  They also al­lege both neg­li­gence and prod­ucts lia­bili­ty against de­fen­dant Jumpking, Inc., the trampo­line manu­fac­tur­er, claiming it was Jumpking's duty to warn consumers of any hazards reasonably ex­

pected to exist by the use of the trampoline, including the haz

ard of two or more people simultaneously jumping, called "double jump­ing," and that Jumpking negligently failed to provide ade­

quate warn­ings.  The trial court grant­ed sum­mary judg­ment for

each de­fen­dant.  Plain­tiffs appeal from both orders of summary judg­ment, docketed No. 4-98-0675.  The Nairns also appeal, seek

ing dismissal of Jumpking’s third-party complaint against them, docketed No. 4-98-0717.  We affirm the summary judgment orders in No. 4-98-0675 and dismiss the appeal in No. 4-98-0717 as moot.

The Fords filed their complaint on November 7, 1994.  The parties engaged in discovery and numerous discovery depo­si­

tions were taken.  Jumpking filed a motion for summary judgment with an accompanying memorandum and exhibits on April 17, 1997.  On May 7, Jerry and Betty Nairn also filed a motion for summary judg­ment with an accompanying memorandum and exhibits.  No memorandum or exhibits were filed by the plaintiffs in opposition to either motion for summary judgment.  

On September 3, 1997, the Nairns' motion for summary judgment was argued, and the trial court granted it by docket entry on September 29, finding no genuine issue of material fact.  The trial court entered a clarification and amplification of its decision on November 7, finding the Nairns owed no duty to Christa to warn of dangers inher­ent in the use of a trampoline under the circumstances.  Christa was a teenager, and the dangers of the trampoline were open and obvious.  In addition, the trial court found the Nairns are protected from liability for the use of their personal property located on their land pursuant to the Recreational Use of Land and Water Areas Act (Recreational Use Act) (745 ILCS 65/1 et seq . (West 1992)).

Further discovery ensued and Jumpking's motion for summary judgment was finally argued on May 28, 1998.  The trial court issued its order on July 23.  The court found the warnings provided by Jumpking were reasonable under the circumstances, the trampoline had been delivered in a safe condition, and plaintiffs failed to establish a causal link between the alleged inadequate warnings and the injury.  Plaintiffs filed a timely notice of ap­

peal from both summary judgment orders.

The evidence in this case consists primar­ily of the deposition testimony of the parties.  Christa testi­fied in her deposition that on No­vem­ber 8, 1992, she jumped on a tram­po­line at the home of defen­dants, Jerry and Betty Nairn.  She was 14 years old at that time.  Christa was spend­ing time with her friend, Angie Gulledge, on the date of the inci­dent.  Angie asked Christa if she wanted to go jump on the tram­poline at the Nairn resi­dence, across the street from where Angie was liv­ing.  Angie and Christa went to the Nairns' home and talked to the youn­gest daugh­ter, Allison, who asked someone else in the home wheth­er the girls could jump on the trampoline and that "someone" said "yes."  When Christa called home to ask her mother if it would be all right to jump on the trampo­line, Angie told her to tell her moth­

er Jerry Nairn was home and he was the person the girls asked for per­mis­sion.   Christa had never been to the Nairn resi­dence be­

fore but she had jumped on trampo­lines previ­ously at least four or five times.  

Christa described the Nairns' trampoline as big and round with pads all the way around.  At first Christa and Angie jumped sepa­rate­ly on the tram­po­line for about 10 min­utes before Christa Nairn and Toni Frank came to use the trampo­line also.  Christa Nairn and Toni began to do stunts on the trampo­line while both were jumping at the same time, and Christa asked if she could join them.  Christa testified two people jumped ­­toward each other on the trampoline and then jumped away.  They sometimes did a flip or "just little things."  They jumped two, three, or four at a time.    

Christa continued to jump for an additional 15 or 20 minutes.  Toni asked Christa if she want­ed to jump high­er and Christa said, "Sure."   Toni indicated they did it "all the time and it's a lot of fun."  Toni jumped to­ward Christa to make her go high­er and was back in the air when Christa felt a pain in her knee as she land­ed on the tram­poline mat.   

Christa stated she hurt her knee when the tram­po­line mat was coming up and she was coming down.  Christa said when she landed "there was no give in the trampoline to stabilize, and it [the knee] just clicked on me and went out, and there was a sharp pain."   

Christa admitted giving a statement prior to her depo­

sition in which she said she "did come down on it wrong."  She also said, "I came down on my foot.  It was like the inside of my foot had made my knee give out on me."  She further indicated in her statement she was "jumping high."  

Christa observed nothing wrong with the trampoline while she was on it.  The pads were in place and it appeared to be in good condition. The only warnings or labels Christa re

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