Julian v. Secured Investment Advisors

2003 OK CIV APP 81, 77 P.3d 604, 74 O.B.A.J. 2905, 2003 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 67, 2003 WL 22309325
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 20, 2003
Docket98,891
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 2003 OK CIV APP 81 (Julian v. Secured Investment Advisors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Julian v. Secured Investment Advisors, 2003 OK CIV APP 81, 77 P.3d 604, 74 O.B.A.J. 2905, 2003 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 67, 2003 WL 22309325 (Okla. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

Opinion by

RONALD J. STUBBLEFIELD, Judge.

{1 This is the appeal by tenants from district court order granting summary judgment in favor of apartment owners in an action seeking damages for personal injuries sustained as a result of a fall in a common area of the apartment complex. The appeal has been assigned to the accelerated docket pursuant to Oklahoma Supreme Court Rule 1.36, 12 0.9.2001, ch. 15, app. 1. Based on our review of the record on appeal and applicable law, we reverse and remand.

*605 BACKGROUND FACTS

T2 Donna and Lawrence Julian (hereafter Plaintiffs) were residents of the Vintage on Yale Apartments, which were owned and/or managed by Secured Investment Advisors d/b/a Vintage on Yale Apartments, Vintage on Yale Ltd., and Vintage on Yale Limited Partnership (hereafter Defendants or Owners). On January 12, 2000, between 7:00 and 7:15 a.m., Donna Julian was walking on the sidewalk toward her parked car preparing to go to work. As she approached her car she stepped on or tripped over a "chunk of rock-like debris" twisting her ankle and causing her to fall forward into her car, striking her head on the car bumper then striking the curb and the pavement. Plaintiffs filed this action against Defendants seeking damages for injuries sustained by Donna Julian as a result of Defendants' negligence in allowing debris to accumulate on the walkways of the apartment complex. Plaintiffs specifically alleged that Defendants' agents, servants, employees, or contractors created large amounts of debris in the apartment complex and failed to adequately clean it up. Lawrence Julian stated a claim for loss of consortium.

13 Defendants admitted that Plaintiffs were tenants of the Vintage on Yale Apartments but denied all other allegations. Defendants asserted as "affirmative defenses:" (1) comparative and/or contributory negli-genee; (2) assumption of risk; (3) failure to join indispensable party; (4) negligence of independent contractor or other third party over which Defendants had no control; (5) statute of limitations; (6) open and obvious condition; and (7) no duty to warn.

T4 After deposing Plaintiffs, Defendants sought summary judgment on their claims. They asserted that they were entitled to judgment as a matter of law based on what they labeled as an "undisputed fact"-that the debris which caused Donna Julian's fall was open and obvious. They claimed that during her deposition she expressly and unequivocally admitted there was nothing to prevent her from seeing the debris which caused her fall.

T5 According to Defendants, the record was also devoid of any proof that they placed the debris on the sidewalk or should have known of the presence of the debris. Furthermore, they asserted that the premises were appropriately lighted at the time of the incident, they had no duty to warn of or remove the debris and, under the cireum-stances, Donna Julian's voluntary use of the premises resulted in her assumption of risks related to the undisputedly open and obvious debris. Making a "condition versus cause" argument, they called Donna Julian's accident a "self-inflicted misfortune."

T 6 Defendants also sought summary judgment on the claim of Lawrence Julian. The basis for the motion was that his claim was entirely derivative of his wife's claim.

T7 In response to Defendants' motions, Plaintiffs set forth their own statement of "undisputed facts" and specifically identified the facts in Defendants' statement which they claimed remained in dispute and precluded the grant of summary judgment. First, Plaintiffs disputed Defendants' assertion that the area where Donna Julian fell was adequately lit. They submitted eviden-tiary materials which they claimed showed that, although there were photocell lights in various locations in the parking lot and along the walkways, none directly illuminated the curve in the sidewalk where Donna Julian fell.

T8 Next, Plaintiffs disputed Defendants' assertion that there was no proof Defendants placed the debris on the sidewalk or allowed it to remain there. Plaintiffs pointed out that although their apartment was located in a building that had been completed, when they moved into their unit in October 1999, construction and landscaping were ongoing with regard to other buildings in the 15-building hillside complex. They submitted excerpts from Lawrence Julian's deposition wherein he testified that he observed construction dump trucks constantly driving past the parking area for their building "dropping clumps of clay or debris off the back ... [which] would just hit the ground and bounce and go everywhere." Lawrence Julian also testified that landscape workers actually drove bobeats up and down the sloping sidewalk by their building, using it as a *606 ramp, dropping mud, gravel and debris in the process. According to Lawrence Julian's testimony, employees of the apartment complex would usually sweep debris in the evenings. ‘

T9 Lawrence Julian also testified that on one occasion prior to his wife's fall he observed a new tenant having difficulty negotiating the sidewalk up to the building. The man was attempting to move a piece of furniture on a dolly, but according to Lawrence Julian there "was so much gravel and debris on the sidewalk that you could hardly see the sidewalk," and the wheels on the dolly would not turn because the man "kept running into this gravel." Lawrence Julian asserted that he reported this to the complex office, and afterwards "[they got some guys up there with shovels and brooms and they cleaned up the area."

{10 Finally, Plaintiffs disputed Defendants' assertion that the rock/debris was open and obvious. Citing Spirgis v. Circle K Stores, Inc., 1987 OK CIV APP 45, 748 P.2d 682 (approved for publication by the Oklahoma Supreme Court), they argued that the fact Donna Julian had acknowledged that a chunk of concrete is something that you could ordinarily see, and that she was not carrying anything in her arms such as a brief case which would have obstructed her vision, does not mean that the debris constituted an open and obvious condition. They submitted additional excerpts of their deposition testimony describing how Donna Julian stepped on, or tripped over, a piece of concrete debris and fell while rounding a curve on the downward sloping sidewalk which was bordered by a retaining wall approximately five feet in height at the point where the accident occurred. Plaintiffs submitted color photographs showing the descending sidewalk, the height of the wall at the curve and debris that was purportedly similar in size, color and appearance to the piece of debris which Donna Julian claimed caused her to fall.

111 After Plaintiffs filed their response, Defendants sought leave to file a reply brief and also filed a motion to strike from the record (1) certain purportedly uncontrovert-ed facts that Plaintiffs asserted precluded summary judgment; and, (2) portions of Plaintiffs' depositions appended to Plaintiffs' objection to summary judgment.. Defendants claimed that the evidentiary materials submitted by Plaintiffs were insufficient to raise disputed issues of material fact and defeat their motion for summary judgment. They attacked Plaintiffs' evidentiary submissions for failing to "rise to the level of admissible evidence" describing them as "speculation," "not the best evidence" and "ambiguous."

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2003 OK CIV APP 81, 77 P.3d 604, 74 O.B.A.J. 2905, 2003 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 67, 2003 WL 22309325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/julian-v-secured-investment-advisors-oklacivapp-2003.