Heather Grace Giammarco v. Diverse Facility Solutions Inc

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 12, 2018
Docket338025
StatusUnpublished

This text of Heather Grace Giammarco v. Diverse Facility Solutions Inc (Heather Grace Giammarco v. Diverse Facility Solutions Inc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heather Grace Giammarco v. Diverse Facility Solutions Inc, (Mich. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

HEATHER GRACE GIAMMARCO, UNPUBLISHED June 12, 2018 Plaintiff-Appellant,

v No. 338025 Wayne Circuit Court DIVERSE FACILITY SOLUTIONS, INC., LC No. 15-016616-NO

Defendant-Appellee.

Before: SAWYER, P.J., and CAVANAGH and FORT HOOD, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Plaintiff, Heather Grace Giammarco, appeals as of right from the trial court’s order granting summary disposition in favor of defendant, Diverse Facility Solutions, Inc., in this premises liability case. We affirm.

I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On November 2, 2014, plaintiff was injured when she fell on some water on the floor of the airport concourse after disembarking from a flight at Detroit-Metropolitan Airport. According to her deposition testimony, plaintiff was travelling home from Sarasota, Florida with her friend, Suzanne Narloch, and their plane landed at approximately 11:30 p.m. According to plaintiff, she was walking along the concourse, and all of a sudden she fell. In plaintiff’s words, “I was walking[,]” and “[a]ll of a sudden I was on the floor and that was basically it, walking and fell.” While plaintiff does wear eyeglasses for distance, she was not wearing them when she fell, she had not had any alcohol to drink that day, and she had her cellular telephone in her hands, but she was not texting or talking on her cellular telephone when she was walking. As she was walking on the concourse, plaintiff was watching where she was going, and there was nothing obstructing her view of where she was walking. Immediately after she fell, plaintiff’s knee hurt, and she could not get up on her own and needed the assistance of a police officer to get up. Plaintiff also testified that she is well-familiar with the area where she fell, having been there before many times.

When Officer Scott Hunter with the Wayne County Airport Authority Police Department arrived on the scene, he noticed plaintiff in a seated position on the ground close to where she had fallen, he observed her to be “somewhat” in pain, and she had abrasions on her knee and her knee was swollen. Officer Hunter completed a police report which stated that plaintiff “slipped in water and fell on her right knee.” Officer Hunter also observed “a streak of water” where -1- plaintiff fell that was “approximately [four] to [five] feet long.” Officer Hunter’s report indicated that there were no caution signs near where plaintiff fell, and that he called for a cleaning crew to have the water mopped up. During his deposition testimony, Officer Hunter agreed with plaintiff’s counsel that the streak of water appeared to have been left behind by a cleaning crew.

On December 21, 2015, plaintiff filed a two-count complaint against defendant alleging negligence and nuisance. Only her claim alleging negligence is at issue in this appeal. With regard to her negligence claim, plaintiff alleged, in pertinent part, that defendant was negligent in “failing to maintain the premises in a reasonably safe condition[,]” and that defendant failed to warn plaintiff of the presence of water on the floor.

On January 24, 2017, defendant filed its motion for summary disposition pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(10), asserting that the alleged hazard that led to plaintiff’s injuries, the presence of water on the airport concourse floor that plaintiff slipped on, “was open and obvious as a matter of law.”1 In its brief in support of the motion, defendant claimed that the standing water was an open and obvious condition, and that as a result, defendant did not have a duty to warn plaintiff of the alleged hazard. Noting that it was a subcontractor, defendant claimed that “[a]s the entity in possession of the subject premises [where plaintiff fell],” with control and possession of that area of the concourse, it could raise the fact that the alleged hazard was open and obvious as a defense to plaintiff’s premises liability claim. Defendant further asserted that where (1) plaintiff testified during her deposition that she could see the water that she slipped on in a photograph taken shortly after her fall, and (2) Officer Hunter noted the presence of the water in his police report following plaintiff’s fall, the alleged hazardous condition was one where an “ordinary person of average intelligence could discover the danger and the risk presented upon casual inspection[,]” and it was therefore open and obvious. Defendant also pointed out that the alleged hazard did not contain any special aspects that would remove it from the ambit of the open and obvious doctrine. In its brief in support of its motion for summary disposition, defendant also argued that count I of plaintiff’s complaint alleging negligence was “[i]mproper” where it alleged that plaintiff’s injuries were caused by a dangerous condition on land, and sounded in premises liability instead of negligence.2

In her response to defendant’s motion for summary disposition, plaintiff noted that defendant was the floor cleaning company that the Wayne County Airport Authority hired to provide floor maintenance at the airport, a fact that the parties did not dispute. Plaintiff also

1 Defendant’s second motion for summary disposition followed its initial motion for summary disposition filed on October 24, 2016, arguing that the open and obvious doctrine insulated defendant from liability. Following a hearing on defendant’s motion on January 12, 2017, the trial court denied defendant’s motion without prejudice, noting that defendant had contended, without legal support, that it was a possessor or occupier of the concourse where plaintiff fell, and that the governing law on premises liability law should apply. 2 Defendant’s arguments in its reply brief in the trial court echoed its arguments made in its brief supporting its motion for summary disposition.

-2- argued that the issue of possession was a factual question for the jury, and that possession should be “assessed at the time of Plaintiff’s fall and/or injuries.”3 Plaintiff also claimed that in a premises liability action, she was not precluded from bringing a separate claim alleging negligence on the basis of defendant’s conduct. Plaintiff also asserted that her claim did not sound in premises liability, and that she had properly alleged negligence against defendant. Plaintiff also contended that the open and obvious doctrine did not operate to bar her claims where she alleged negligence rather than premises liability.

During a hearing on defendant’s motion on March 23, 2017, the trial court ruled, in pertinent part, as follows from the bench:

The first issue is whether plaintiff can avoid the open and obvious defense to a premise[s] liability claim by alleging negligence instead of premise[s] liability. Plaintiff’s position is that the defendant was not an owner or possessor of the premises. Therefore, the premise[s] liability doctrines don’t apply. Plaintiff is suing about a condition on the land, even though she calls her claim ordinary negligence and specifically asserts that it is not premise[s] liability, this does not matter. The courts are not bound by the labels that the parties attach to their claims[.] . . . It’s well settled that the gravamen of an action is determined by reading the complaint as a whole and by looking beyond mere procedural labels to determine the exact nature of the claim. . . . Michigan law distinguishes between claims arising from ordinary negligence and claims premised on a condition of the land. And I think that’s where the problem for plaintiff is here. . . . If the plaintiff’s injury arose from the allegedly dangerous condition on the land[,] the action sounds in premises liability rather than ordinary negligence. And this is true even when the plaintiff alleges that the premises possessor created the condition giving rise to the plaintiff’s injury. . . .

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Bluebook (online)
Heather Grace Giammarco v. Diverse Facility Solutions Inc, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heather-grace-giammarco-v-diverse-facility-solutions-inc-michctapp-2018.