Joseph v. Bozzuto Management Co.

918 A.2d 1230, 173 Md. App. 305, 2007 Md. App. LEXIS 41
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 15, 2007
Docket0322, Sept. Term, 2006
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 918 A.2d 1230 (Joseph v. Bozzuto Management Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Joseph v. Bozzuto Management Co., 918 A.2d 1230, 173 Md. App. 305, 2007 Md. App. LEXIS 41 (Md. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

MOYLAN, J.

This appeal is from a slip-and-fall case, not from a lead-paint case. The difference is critical to the outcome. Both types of cases, to be sure, involve, in a very general sense, the responsibility of landowners or landlords to keep property owned by them reasonably free of risk to users of the property. At about that level of abstraction, however, the similarities cease. The respective types of cases are of the same genus, perhaps, but they are very different species. Strained analogies are treacherously inappropriate, therefore, and a recent change in the lead-paint caselaw effected by Brooks v. Lewin Realty III, Inc., 378 Md. 70, 835 A.2d 616 (2003), has no bearing whatsoever on the slip-and-fall case now before us.

On October 13, 2004, the appellant, Michael Singer Joseph, brought suit against the appellees, the Housing Opportunities Commission of Montgomery County (“HOC”) and the Bozzuto Management Company, in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County, alleging that negligence on their part resulted in a knee injury he sustained following a slip-and-fall on property owned or maintained by them. Both appellees filed motions for summary judgment, contending that, based on the undisputed facts, the appellant had not shown a prima facie case of negligence. On March 9, 2006, Judge Joseph A. Dugan, Jr., granted summary judgment in favor of both appellees. The appellant has taken this timely appeal from that grant of summary judgment.

Factual Background

The Metropolitan is a 13-story apartment building at 7620 Old Georgetown Road in Bethesda, Maryland, owned by the *310 HOC. It is managed by the Bozzuto Management Company. Joel Joseph, who is both the father of the appellant and his attorney in this case, is a resident of the Metropolitan with an apartment on the tenth floor. The appellant is a resident of Boulder, Colorado, but, in August of 2004, was visiting his family in the Washington area and was staying with his father at the Metropolitan.

On the evening of August 20, 2004, at approximately 6 p.m., the appellant was scheduled to meet with his mother in the lobby and to go out to dinner. Instead of using the elevator, he decided to walk down the ten flights of stairs. Walking just behind him was his younger brother, 17-year-old Alex Joseph. According to the complaint, as the appellant approached the eighth floor landing “he slipped on an oily substance and fell violently to the concrete floor, hitting his knee on the floor.” At the time that he slipped, the appellant was not using the hand rail.

The “Oily Substance”

The appellant, in his pretrial deposition, described the “oily substance” on which he slipped as translucent and colorless.

Q. And what color was the substance?
A. It’s translucent.
Q. So it was clear?
A. It was colorless.

In terms of the size of the “oily” spot, the appellant based his estimate on the one-foot square tiles that covered the floor of the eighth floor landing. He estimated that the oily spot covered between 15% and 20% of one of the tiles. Although the lighting in the stairwell was good, the appellant stated that he did not see the oily spot before he slipped on it. The appellant was not sure whether, had he been looking straight down, he would have seen the oily patch.

Q For clarification, I want to ask you a question again. As you were descending the stairs and you were looking generally toward the forward motion that you were making, *311 if you had been looking directly at the floor, would you have been able to see this substance?
A It’s possible. I don’t know. It’s possible. I mean it depends were you looking at a given moment in time? There’s a lot of space in that stairwell so if I would have been looking directly down, would I have seen it? The chances are high. Directly down at a given moment, sure.
Q You’re saying if you had been looking directly down at this tile where this spot, the greasy spot was, if you’d been looking down on it as you were just about to step on to that tile, would you have been able to see it, knowing now what it looked like and where it was, if you went back and looked at it after you fell?
A I’m not sure. I’m not sure. I couldn’t be sure of something like that.
Q Why not?
A Why not? Because it didn’t happen and as you can tell from the picture, at different angles, that substances give off a different reflection as well. So, at a given angle, if I were looking down at it, I may not have seen it or at another angle, I may have seen it.

(Emphasis supplied).

In his deposition, Alex Joseph also testified that, although he could see the floor and the stairs in front of his brother, he saw nothing abnormal on the floor.

Q And could you see the floor and the stairs that were in front of him?
A Yes.
Q What did you see on the floor, if anything, before he fell?
AI couldn’t see anything. It looked normal.
AI could see clearly where he was walking, yes.
Q You could see the whole landing?
A Yes.
*312 Q And how was the lighting in the stairwell?
A It was good.
Q Any problems seeing the stairs as you guys went down?
A No. I could see fíne.

After the appellant slipped and fell, Alex Joseph looked to see what had caused the slip. He described it:

Q What did you see?
AI saw a shiny substance on the floor?
Q What color was it?
A It was clear.
A It wasn’t really a puddle. It was like a smudge on the floor.
Q A smudge, can you describe that a little bit better for us?
A It was kind of greasy. It was like smeared on the floor. That’s how I can describe it.

No one else ever saw the oily substance. On the afternoon after his fall, the appellant reported the incident to Antonio Muniz, the maintenance supervisor at the Metropolitan apartment house. In a deposition, Muniz described his actions in response to the appellant’s report of the fall.

Q. Do you know what the substance was that was on the steps?
THE WITNESS:

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Bluebook (online)
918 A.2d 1230, 173 Md. App. 305, 2007 Md. App. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joseph-v-bozzuto-management-co-mdctspecapp-2007.