Kurczy v. St. Joseph Veterans Ass'n, Inc.

820 A.2d 929, 2003 R.I. LEXIS 96, 2003 WL 1873366
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedApril 15, 2003
Docket2000-387-Appeal
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 820 A.2d 929 (Kurczy v. St. Joseph Veterans Ass'n, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kurczy v. St. Joseph Veterans Ass'n, Inc., 820 A.2d 929, 2003 R.I. LEXIS 96, 2003 WL 1873366 (R.I. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION

FLANDERS, Justice.

After a remand and a second Superior Court jury trial in this premises-liability case, we revisit on appeal the facts and law that we first encountered in Kurczy v. St. Joseph Veterans Association, Inc., 713 A.2d 766, 772 (R.I.1998) (Kurczy I). But this time, in contrast to the result in Kurczy I, the jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff, Mary M. Kurczy, in her capacity as the mother and next friend of the injured victim, Lucas Landry (Lucas). Lucas was a ten-year-old boy in 1990 when he injured himself by plunging to the bottom of a darkened outdoor stairwell during a nighttime wedding reception on the defendant’s premises.

The defendant, property owner St. Joseph Veterans Association, Inc., appeals from the judgment for damages that entered on the jury’s verdict. Adhering to the kitchen-sink school of legal advocacy, defendant apparently decided to throw up against our appellate wall as many possible arguments as it could squeeze into the fifty pages of briefing allowed by this Court, hoping that one or more of them might stick. Thus, accusing the trial justice of committing a host of reversible errors during the second trial, defendant articulates seventeen separate reasons why we should vacate the judgment in plaintiffs favor.

Rejecting these arguments en toto for the reasons illumined in this opinion, we affirm the judgment and deny the appeal. We also deny plaintiffs cross-appeal, holding that when, as here, a party has appealed from a final judgment adjudicating the rights of the parties, post-judgment interest does not begin to accrue until we affirm that judgment or dismiss the appeal, whichever first occurs. See, e.g., Rhode Island Insurers’ Insolvency Fund v. Leviton Manufacturing Co., 813 A.2d 47, 49 (R.I.2003) (per curiam).

I

Denial of Defendant’s Motions for Judgment as a Matter of Law

At the close of plaintiffs case-in-chief, and again at the close of all the *935 evidence, defendant moved for judgment as a matter of law. On both occasions, defendant argued that the trial justice should enter judgment in its favor because plaintiff had failed to introduce sufficient evidence to prove each of the elements required to establish negligence in this premises-liability case. These elements included, according to defendant, some sort of a pre-incident notice to defendant concerning an allegedly dangerous artificial condition existing on the premises. As we previously have held, however, actual notice is not always a condition precedent to liability in these situations. See Tancrelle v. Friendly Ice Cream Corp., 756 A.2d 744, 752 (R.I.2000). Rather, premises-liability law in Rhode Island imposes an affirmative duty upon owners and possessors of property:

“to exercise reasonable care for the safety of persons reasonably expected to be on the premises * * * including] an obligation to protect against the risks of a dangerous condition existing on the premises, provided the landowner knows of, or by the exercise of reasonable care would have discovered, the dangerous condition.” Id. (citing Cutroneo v. F.W. Woolworth Co., 112 R.I. 696, 698, 315 A.2d 56, 58 (1974)).

In this case, defendant argued that plaintiff did not produce sufficient evidence to establish that it either knew or should have known that a dangerous condition existed on the premises before Lucas’s fall. And even if it had such notice, it argued, it still had to be afforded a reasonable time thereafter either to remedy the danger or to warn of its existence.

When considering a motion for judgment as a matter of law, the trial justice must examine:

“the evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, without weighing the evidence or evaluating the credibility of witnesses, * * * drawing] from the record all reasonable inferences that support the position of the nonmoving party. * * * If, after such a review, there remain factual issues upon which reasonable persons might draw different conclusions, the motion for [judgment as a matter of law] must be denied, and the issues must be submitted to the jury for determination.” Marketing Design Source, Inc. v. Pranda North America, Inc., 799 A.2d 267, 271 (R.I.2002) (quoting Martinelli v. Hopkins, 787 A.2d 1158, 1165 (R.I.2001)).

Thus, the trial justice should grant such a motion for judgment as a matter of law and dismiss the claims in question only when, “ ‘no relevant issues of fact exist and defendant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law * * ” Id. at 272-73. In reviewing a trial justice’s decision on this score, “we are ‘bound by the same rules and [standards] as the trial justice.’ ” Id. at 272.

After analyzing the evidence in the light most favorable to plaintiff, the trial justice denied defendant’s first motion for judgment as a matter of law at the close of plaintiffs case-in-chief. In doing so, the trial justice observed that the jury had heard conflicting evidence concerning the lighting situation that prevailed in the outside stairwell area adjacent to the building on the night of Lucas’s injury:

“In any event, the club certainly knew that the children were running in and out of the building that night. The plaintiffs theory is quite simply that in the dark, Lucas Landry, playing at 10 years old with 8 years [sic] old Kerri Hamelin, ran around the corner of that building and ran ahead falling down stairs, that that was occasioned, if by nothing else, certainly by the lack of lighting which has been testified to by a plethora of plaintiffs witnesses although *936 contradicted also by one of the club members called as an adverse witness in the plaintiffs case.
“All of this, however in the [c]ourt’s judgment, adds up to a case where reasonable minds may differ and a case upon which the evidence, if believed, could reasonably satisfy the elements that are necessary to find the defendant negligent, negligent in the maintenance of the premises on that night and in that location. So after completing this analysis, the [cjourt believes it is compelled as a result of this finding to deny the motion for judgment as a matter of law sfc * % »

By this point in the trial, numerous witnesses had testified about the lack of any artificial illumination in the area of the stairwell on the night of the wedding reception. Several of plaintiffs witnesses specifically testified that they observed the descending staircase to be dark and unlit on that evening. For example, Jacques Staelen was the person who descended into the stairwell and eventually retrieved the injured Lucas, who he found lying on his side in the dark at the concrete base of the stairs, semiconscious and curled up in the fetal position.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
820 A.2d 929, 2003 R.I. LEXIS 96, 2003 WL 1873366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kurczy-v-st-joseph-veterans-assn-inc-ri-2003.