Hicks v. Cleveland Museum of Art

2023 Ohio 3633, 226 N.E.3d 415
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 5, 2023
Docket112503
StatusPublished

This text of 2023 Ohio 3633 (Hicks v. Cleveland Museum of Art) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hicks v. Cleveland Museum of Art, 2023 Ohio 3633, 226 N.E.3d 415 (Ohio Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

[Cite as Hicks v. Cleveland Museum of Art, 2023-Ohio-3633.]

COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO

EIGHTH APPELLATE DISTRICT COUNTY OF CUYAHOGA

IRIS HICKS, :

Plaintiff-Appellant, : No. 112503

v. :

THE CLEVELAND MUSEUM OF ART, :

Defendant-Appellee. :

JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION

JUDGMENT: AFFIRMED RELEASED AND JOURNALIZED: October 5, 2023

Civil Appeal from the Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas Case No. CV-21-953099

Appearances:

Friedman, Domiano & Smith Co., L.P.A. and Marco G. Bocciarelli, for appellant.

Keith D. Thomas, for appellee.

EILEEN A. GALLAGHER, J.:

Plaintiff-appellant Iris Hicks was injured after she fell into a large

planter box containing trees and other plants in the west atrium of the Cleveland

Museum of Art (the “museum”). She appeals the trial court’s order granting

summary judgment in favor of the museum on her negligence claim. She contends that genuine issues of material fact exist as to whether the museum owed a duty to

warn her regarding the hazard presented by the planter box. For the reasons that

follow, we affirm.

Procedural and Factual Background

On February 12, 2020, at approximately 6:00 or 6:30 p.m., Hicks and

a friend, Hope Morgan, went to the museum’s west atrium to attend a discussion by

Dr. Runoko Rashidi, a guest speaker on Egyptology. The west atrium had two large

“planter boxes” containing trees and various other types of plants and “greenery.”

The bases of the planter boxes were a foot or more beneath the level of the atrium

floor. The tops of the plants were visible over the sides of the planter boxes but the

tree roots were not visible.

Around the perimeter of each of the planter boxes were white-grey

cement walkways. In the aisle or walkway between the two planter boxes (the

“center aisle”), backless wooden benches abutted against and extended over the

planter boxes. The outside edges of the planter boxes were surrounded by a border

in a “contrasting color,” i.e., a darker grey, that helped define the outer edges of the

planter boxes. There was no such border along the sides of the planter boxes where

they abutted against the benches in the center aisle.

Hicks testified that as she made her way to the area of the atrium in

which Dr. Rashidi was speaking, she proceeded down the center aisle, toward a

bench, where she could sit and listen to the discussion. The center aisle contained four benches, two to her left and two to her right. The planter boxes were behind

the benches.

Hicks stated that she had intended to sit on the right edge of the first

bench she encountered on her right. Attempting to make more room for Hope to sit

on the bench beside her, Hicks took a step to the right, stepping off the edge of the

walkway and into the greenery in the planter box behind the bench. Hicks tripped

and fell on her right side and back. As a result of her fall, Hicks experienced

significant pain in her right leg and knee.

Hicks testified that she was aware of the presence of the “greenery” in

the planter box before her fall — i.e., she had “passed [the garden] section two times

that evening” when looking for Dr. Rashidi and had also seen the greenery as she

made her way down the center aisle. Hicks stated that the greenery “cover[ed] the

edge of the lip” of the walkway and that “the plants come up above the lip of the

floor.”

Hicks testified that because the outer sides of the planter box were

surrounded by a decorative, “darker grey” “border” — which she had observed when

walking in the atrium earlier that evening — she had thought that “there was also a

border on the inside of the walkway,” where the benches were located, because it

“look[ed] dark,” it “look[ed] like there’ s a pattern on the inside as well” and “it would

be consistent with the pattern that’s on the outside.” Hicks stated that, when she

stepped to the right, she had “no intention of stepping in the greenery.” Rather, she thought she was “stepping onto the border,” i.e., what she believed to be level

ground.

As Hicks was “stepping over to give Hope a chance to sit down on the

edge of the bench,” she was also “acknowledging” Dr. Rashidi. Hicks testified that

she was either still looking right at Dr. Rashidi or was “on [her] way looking down,”

when she fell. Hicks acknowledged that if she had been looking at the area between

the two benches (rather than at Dr. Rashidi) before she took her step, she “would

have seen that [she] would have been stepping on greenery” and not the floor.

The Litigation

On September 15, 2021, Hicks filed a complaint in the Cuyahoga

County Court of Common Pleas, asserting a negligence claim against the museum.

Hicks alleged that the “poorly designed and maintained benches” “overhanging the

landscaping” presented a hazard to invitees that was not open and obvious, that by

failing to remove the hazard or warn against it, the museum was negligent and that

the museum’s negligence was a direct and proximate cause of her fall and injuries.

The museum filed an answer in which it denied the material

allegations of the complaint and asserted various affirmative defenses, including

that Hicks’ claim was barred by the open-and-obvious doctrine.

The Museum’s Motion for Summary Judgment

After the parties conducted discovery, the museum filed a motion for

summary judgment, arguing that the “edge and greenery” where Hicks stepped,

leading to her fall, was open and obvious and that, therefore, the museum owed no duty to warn Hicks of the alleged defect and was entitled to summary judgment as a

matter of law. In support of its motion, the museum submitted excerpts from Hicks’

deposition testimony and two photographs Hicks had identified during her

deposition that showed the area in which Hicks had tripped and fallen, including the

benches and the planter box.1 The museum argued that, based on the photographs

and Hicks’ testimony, there was no genuine issue of material fact that the edge of

the walkway and the greenery where Hicks stepped was “entirely visible” and “open

and obvious” to Hicks prior to her fall and that Hicks’ claim was, therefore, barred

by the open-and-obvious doctrine.

Hicks opposed the motion for summary judgment, contending that

there were genuine issues of material fact as to whether (1) the “deceptive edge of

the planter box” and “hidden drop down to the ground” “concealed * * * underneath

the fauna” constituted “latent hazards” that were “not readily discernable by

ordinary inspection” and were, therefore, not “open and obvious,” (2) the museum

had actual or constructive knowledge of the hazard presented by the “pit for the

planter box” that “dropped down 1-2 feet” and was “covered by fauna” and (3) the

museum breached its duty of care “by failing to inspect [its] premises in a reasonable

manner” and “by failing to maintain its premises in a reasonably safe condition.”

Hicks argued that because “the concealed drop underneath the fauna” in the planter

box “could not be detected by a business invitee” and “[t]he lack of a contrast edge

1 In her deposition, Hicks claimed that the photographs of the atrium did not

accurately depict the area because there was sunlight in the photographs and her accident occurred in the early evening. on the inner walkway went unobserved by Ms. Hicks because of the pattern of

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Bluebook (online)
2023 Ohio 3633, 226 N.E.3d 415, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hicks-v-cleveland-museum-of-art-ohioctapp-2023.