Larissa Pendley v. City of Owensboro, Kentucky

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 20, 2023
Docket2022 CA 000354
StatusUnknown

This text of Larissa Pendley v. City of Owensboro, Kentucky (Larissa Pendley v. City of Owensboro, Kentucky) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Larissa Pendley v. City of Owensboro, Kentucky, (Ky. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

RENDERED: APRIL 21, 2023; 10:00 A.M. NOT TO BE PUBLISHED

Commonwealth of Kentucky Court of Appeals

NO. 2022-CA-0354-MR

LARISSA PENDLEY APPELLANT

APPEAL FROM DAVIESS CIRCUIT COURT v. HONORABLE JAY A. WETHINGTON, JUDGE ACTION NO. 19-CI-00963

CITY OF OWENSBORO, KENTUCKY APPELLEE

OPINION AFFIRMING

** ** ** ** **

BEFORE: CALDWELL, ECKERLE, AND KAREM, JUDGES.

CALDWELL, JUDGE: Larissa Pendley appeals from a summary judgment

granted in favor of the City of Owensboro, Kentucky on her premises liability

claim. We affirm.

FACTS

Larissa Pendley (Pendley) attended a conference at the city-owned

Owensboro Convention Center with friends. She, her friends, and others passed through a well-worn landscaped area rather than using the sidewalk to enter the

convention center in the morning. This landscaped area contained a concrete pad.

A few hours later, along with others, she went through the same landscaped area

when going to lunch and suddenly fell. She suffered injuries from her fall and

filed suit against the city and other entities. Discovery commenced.

According to deposition testimony, Pendley had tripped over the

concrete pad’s ledge. Evidence showed that the concrete pad was level with the

wood chips and landscaping on the northern ingress side, but the concrete pad was

inches higher than the landscaping on the southern egress side. In other words, one

did not have to step up over the pad to go towards the center grounds, but one

would have to step up over the pad when leaving the center grounds.

Pendley testified by deposition that she had been watching where she

was going and was aware of the concrete pad structure. She also testified there

were no signs warning anyone to stay out of the landscaped area and that she had

not perceived the area to be dangerous before her fall. She admitted she should

have just used the sidewalk, but she noted others passed through the same area

without incident.

-2- The city filed a motion for summary judgment, arguing inter alia that

the landscaped area was open and obvious and not unreasonably dangerous.1

Pendley filed a response, asserting genuine issues of material facts existed and

precluded summary judgment. She also argued that even if any hazardous

condition was open and obvious, that alone did not entitle the city to summary

judgment under recent precedent and a jury should determine any issues of

comparative fault.

Following oral argument by the parties’ counsel, the trial court

granted the city’s motion for summary judgment. It perceived that the material

facts were not in dispute. It noted the city owned the property at issue and was

responsible for its maintenance. It noted that weather conditions were not adverse.

It also accepted that Pendley was an invitee though she had elected to cross

through the landscaped area rather than using the sidewalk.2

1 The city also argued that Pendley’s lawsuit was barred by the Claims Against Local Governments Act (CALGA). But the trial court ultimately declined to rule on this argument. We express no opinion on any CALGA issues – particularly as the parties have not argued CALGA issues in their appellate briefs. 2 The city’s counsel orally noted to the trial court that Pendley might be considered a trespasser since she passed through the landscaping area rather than using the sidewalk. But counsel argued the city was entitled to summary judgment even if Pendley was an invitee. The city did not argue that Pendley was a trespasser in its appellee brief or in its written motion for summary judgment. So, for purposes of resolving this appeal, Pendley’s status as an invitee appears undisputed and we do not reach any issues about how the city’s liability might be affected if she was considered a trespasser.

-3- Without explicitly discussing how one side of the concrete pad was

level with the landscaping but the other was not, the trial court summarized that

Pendley fell on the concrete pad within the landscaped area. It also noted in its

order and judgment her testimony that she was paying attention to where she was

going, noticed the concrete pad and did not perceive any danger prior to her fall:

Plaintiff testified in her deposition that the condition that caused her to trip, the edge of the concrete pad and the landscaping adjacent to the concrete pad, did not appear dangerous to her when she first walked to the entrance of the Owensboro Convention Center on the morning of this incident and traversing the same landscaping. Plaintiff further testified that she would not have walked through and over the concrete slab on the first or second occasion if she had believed the area was dangerous.

The trial court also referred to Pendley testifying that, both while going into and

leaving the conference center area via the landscaped area, Pendley looked ahead

and “was fully aware that she was walking on a concrete pad surrounded by

decorative landscaping but adjacent to the unobstructed sidewalk.”

Even construing the evidence in Pendley’s favor, the trial court

concluded it would be impossible for her to prevail at trial based on recent

precedent.3 It concluded that she could not prove the existence of a dangerous

3 Oddly, the trial court also stated in its conclusions of law: “Here, the condition that caused Plaintiff’s injury was not dangerous or hazardous.” It is hard to understand how the trial court both concluded that a condition had caused her injury and that the same condition was not dangerous or hazardous. Nonetheless, regardless of this perplexing statement, we conclude the trial court properly determined that Pendley could not prove that the city breached a duty based on the record before us and controlling precedent as we later discuss.

-4- condition, emphasizing her testimony that she did not perceive any danger before

her fall despite being aware of the concrete pad and landscaping both when

entering and exiting the conference center area. It also concluded that the concrete

pad surrounded by landscaping was an open and obvious condition which she

observed prior to her fall and that the city had done everything reasonable to

“segregate foot-traffic from the area.” It concluded Pendley could not prove that

the city had breached a duty to her, and noted she was aware the concrete pad was

surrounded by landscaping but “chose to avoid this barrier.” So, it granted

summary judgment in favor of the city, and it dismissed Pendley’s complaint with

prejudice.4

4 Since the complaint was dismissed with prejudice and no counterclaims or cross-claims had been filed, the appealed-from order granting summary judgment in the city’s favor was a final and appealable judgment since it effectively “adjudicat[ed] all the rights of all the parties in an action or proceeding[.]” Kentucky Rule of Civil Procedure (CR) 54.01. It does not appear that the other defendants to the action were formally dismissed prior to the appealed-from order granting the city summary judgment and dismissing the complaint. Though the order granting summary judgment for the city states that it is final and appealable, it does not contain a statement that there is no just cause for delay. See CR 54.02(1) (“when multiple parties are involved, the court may grant a final judgment upon one or more but less than all of the claims or parties only upon a determination that there is no just reason for delay. The judgment shall recite such determination and shall recite that the judgment is final.

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Larissa Pendley v. City of Owensboro, Kentucky, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/larissa-pendley-v-city-of-owensboro-kentucky-kyctapp-2023.