Lampkin Ex Rel. Lapping v. Housing Management Resources, Inc.

725 S.E.2d 432, 220 N.C. App. 457, 2012 WL 1672900, 2012 N.C. App. LEXIS 662
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedMay 15, 2012
DocketCOA11-1062
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 725 S.E.2d 432 (Lampkin Ex Rel. Lapping v. Housing Management Resources, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lampkin Ex Rel. Lapping v. Housing Management Resources, Inc., 725 S.E.2d 432, 220 N.C. App. 457, 2012 WL 1672900, 2012 N.C. App. LEXIS 662 (N.C. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

STEPHENS, Judge.

Plaintiff Jada Marie Lampkin, by and through her Guardian ad Litem, Stephen Lapping, 1 and Lampkin’s father, Plaintiff James Conrad, commenced this action in Moore County Superior Court against Defendants Housing Management Resources, Inc., Catawba-Hickory Limited Partnership, and Silver Street Development Corporation, seeking damages for personal injuries Lampkin sustained while a resident of the Silver Spring Terrace apartment complex (“the apartment complex”), a group of apartment buildings located on land owned by Defendant Catawba-Hickory Limited Partnership, operated by Defendant Silver Street Development Corporation, and managed by Defendant Housing Management Resources, Inc.

In their complaint, Plaintiffs alleged that on 15 January 2010, while Lampkin was playing on a playground in the common area of the apartment complex, she passed through a broken portion of a chain-link fence owned by the apartment complex to play on a frozen pond on adjacent property. When the ice on the frozen pond broke, Lampkin, who was four years old at the time, fell into the water and sustained permanent brain injury. Plaintiffs also alleged that, prior to Lampkin’s injury, when the owner of the adjacent property notified the apartment complex that “children were coming through the fence onto her property” and that she “was concerned someone would get hurt,” an apartment complex employee told her that “they would look into the matter.” On these allegations, Plaintiffs sought to hold Defendants liable for Lampkin’s injury on the grounds that Defendants negligently breached their duty to properly maintain a barrier between their property and the pond.

In their answer, Defendants moved to dismiss Plaintiffs’ complaint pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) of the North Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. Defendants also impleaded the owner of the adjacent prop *459 erty and pond. Following a hearing on Defendants’ motion before the Honorable Eric L. Levinson, 2 the trial court concluded that Plaintiffs failed to state a claim upon which relief may be granted and entered a 28 April 2011 order granting Defendants’ motion to dismiss. From the order dismissing their claims, Plaintiffs appeal, contending that the trial court’s dismissal was error because their amended complaint sufficiently pleads a claim of negligence.

On appeal from a Rule 12(b)(6) dismissal, we review the trial court’s decision de novo, Toomer v. Branch Banking & Tr. Co., 171 N.C. App. 58, 66, 614 S.E.2d 328, 335, disc. review denied, 360 N.C. 78, 623 S.E.2d 263 (2005), and we determine whether, as a matter of law, the allegations of the complaint, treated as true, are sufficient to state a claim upon which relief may be granted under some legal theory, whether properly labeled or not. Grant Constr. Co. v. McRae, 146 N.C. App. 370, 373, 553 S.E.2d 89, 91 (2001). To sufficiently state a prima facie claim of negligence, a plaintiff’s complaint must allege the existence of a legal duty or standard of care owed to the plaintiff by the defendant, breach of that duty, and a causal relationship between the breach of duty and certain actual injury or loss sustained by the plaintiff. Sterner v. Penn, 159 N.C. App. 626, 629, 583 S.E.2d 670, 673 (2003). In this case, Defendants contend that Plaintiffs failed to set forth a prima facie claim of negligence in that Plaintiffs did not allege facts sufficient to show that Defendants breached a duty owed to Lampkin. For the following reasons, we agree.

A landowner in North Carolina owes to those on its land the duty to “exercise reasonable care in the maintenance of [its] premises.” Nelson v. Freeland, 349 N.C. 615, 632, 507 S.E.2d 882, 892 (1998). In their complaint, Plaintiffs allege that this duty of reasonable care includes the duty to keep children on one’s land from accessing potentially dangerous adjacent property owned by a third party. Plaintiffs further allege that Defendants negligently breached this duty by failing to ensure that a “suitable barrier was in place to prevent small children from wandering off the property and to the area of the pond.” Plaintiffs analogize this case and the duty allegedly owed by Defendants to cases from this State applying the attractive nuisance doctrine, which, in one form, imposes upon a landowner that maintains a pond the duty to protect against injury from that pond where the landowner knows or should know that children gather and play at the pond. See Fitch v. Selwyn Village, Inc., 234 *460 N.C. 632, 635, 68 S.E.2d 255, 257 (1951). Plaintiffs contend that a similar, reciprocal duty should be imposed on landowners whose property abuts property on which a third party maintains a pond, viz., where a landowner knows that children from his property are gathering and playing on or near a dangerous condition on neighboring property, the landowner has a duty to protect those children from injury by that condition. We disagree with Plaintiffs’ contention that a landowner’s duty of reasonable care extends to guarding against injury caused by a dangerous condition on neighboring property, and we conclude that the imposition of such a duty would be contrary to public policy and the established law of this State.

Initially, we note that imposing a reciprocal duty on a landowner adjoining property with a dangerous condition would necessarily and, in our view, impermissibly shift the burden of making that condition safe from the owner of that condition, who has exclusive control over the use of her land, to the owner of the adjacent property, who has no control. Not only would the landowner adjacent to the land with the dangerous condition be burdened with the costs of protecting persons from the neighbor’s use, that landowner would be burdened with the costs for compensation of injuries resulting from that use. This burden-shifting would allow the. neighboring landowner to retain all benefits from the use, while externalizing some or all of the secondary costs of the use. As a matter of fairness and economics, where, as here, the neighboring landowner retains the exclusive right to control and benefit from the use of her land, the burden to prevent injury from such use should, likewise, be retained by that neighboring landowner.

This conclusion is in line with numerous decisions in this State establishing that the duty to protect from a condition on property arises from a person’s control of the property and/or condition, and in the absence of control, there is no duty. See, e.g., McCorkle v. N. Point Chrysler Jeep, Inc., _N.C. App.

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Bluebook (online)
725 S.E.2d 432, 220 N.C. App. 457, 2012 WL 1672900, 2012 N.C. App. LEXIS 662, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lampkin-ex-rel-lapping-v-housing-management-resources-inc-ncctapp-2012.