Lee v. Rock Corner Marathon

2026 IL App (2d) 250004
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 15, 2026
Docket2-25-0004
StatusPublished

This text of 2026 IL App (2d) 250004 (Lee v. Rock Corner Marathon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lee v. Rock Corner Marathon, 2026 IL App (2d) 250004 (Ill. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

2026 IL App (2d) 250004 No. 2-25-0004 Opinion filed January 15, 2026 ______________________________________________________________________________

IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

SECOND DISTRICT ______________________________________________________________________________

LORI LEE, ) Appeal from the Circuit Court ) of Lake County. Plaintiff-Appellant, ) ) v. ) No. 22-L-43 ) ROCK CORNER MARATHON, a/k/a ) Marathon Gas Rock Corner, and ) BEDROCK MANAGEMENT INC., ) Honorable ) Charles W. Smith, Defendants-Appellees. ) Judge, Presiding. ______________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE SCHOSTOK delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Justices McLaren and Mullen concurred in the judgment and opinion.

OPINION

¶1 Plaintiff, Lori Lee, sued defendants, Rock Corner Marathon and Bedrock Management,

Inc., alleging negligence and premises liability after she slipped and fell while walking her dog on

the premises of a gas station owned and operated by defendants. The trial court granted defendants’

motions in limine to bar plaintiff’s expert and for summary judgment. Plaintiff appeals from these

orders. We affirm.

¶2 I. BACKGROUND

¶3 On January 2, 2022, plaintiff and her husband were driving from a friend’s house in

Arlington Heights to their home in Sheboygan, Wisconsin. On the way, they picked up their dog, 2026 IL App (2d) 250004

a 12-pound Yorkie, from a boarding facility and, about 20 minutes later, stopped for gas at a

Marathon gas station in Fox Lake owned and operated by defendants. While plaintiff’s husband

was filling the car with gas, plaintiff walked the dog around the gas station. It had begun snowing

at noon on January 1, 2022, and continued until 10 a.m. on January 2, 2022. The gas station had

been plowed earlier that morning. At some point, plaintiff slipped, fell, and broke her left femur.

Plaintiff’s husband went to her aid, and the gas station attendant called paramedics. Surveillance

video of plaintiff’s fall shows that the area had been plowed but that a light layer of snow remained

on the ground in some areas of the gas station.

¶4 On January 27, 2022, plaintiff filed a complaint alleging claims against each defendant

under theories of premises liability and negligence. Plaintiff alleged that defendants had a duty to

maintain their premises in a reasonably safe condition, breached that duty by failing to keep the

premises free of slipping hazards and creating a condition that caused an unnatural accumulation

of ice to exist on the premises, and had actual and constructive notice of the unnaturally created

ice. Plaintiff further alleged that, as a direct and proximate result of defendants’ conduct, she

slipped and fell and was injured. Defendants filed an answer denying the allegations, and the matter

proceeded to discovery.

¶5 In her deposition, plaintiff testified that it began snowing on January 1, 2022, and continued

through the morning of January 2, 2022. When she and her husband stopped at the gas station on

the way home, she walked her dog around the parking lot while her husband filled the car with

gas. Although the parking lot had been plowed, some snow remained on the ground. Plaintiff

acknowledged that certain areas of the parking lot were clear. Prior to her fall, she did not recall

the parking lot being slippery. Her husband did not see her fall but heard her scream afterward.

Plaintiff walked her dog both on areas that were clear of snow and through areas with snow. She

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believed she slipped on a combination of snow and ice. Surveillance footage showed that plaintiff

fell where the pavement was covered by a light layer of snow.

¶6 Daniel Lee, plaintiff’s husband, testified that plaintiff slipped at about noon. He stated that,

when they stopped for gas while traveling with their dog, it was typical for plaintiff to walk the

dog while he filled the car with gas. Plaintiff was wearing a winter coat and snow boots. He

described the weather as very cold and sunny and testified that it had snowed, sleeted, and rained;

he also recalled that his windshield wipers were stuck to the windshield. When he pulled into the

gas station, there was snow on the pavement, but he could not tell whether there was ice beneath

the snow. At the gas pumps, the ground was clear because the area was covered. He testified that

the remainder of the parking lot was a sheet of ice, covered with snow. He did not know how long

the snow and ice had been present. He did not see plaintiff walking the dog because his back was

to her, and he turned toward her only after he heard her scream and she had already fallen. Because

of the snow cover, he did not recall exactly where she fell, but he remembered that the area where

she fell was covered with snow and ice. Approximately three days after the incident, he returned

to the gas station, took a photograph of the area where he believed plaintiff fell, and marked the

photograph with an “X.” The photograph was admitted as Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 3.

¶7 William Adams testified that he was the sole owner of Bedrock Management, Inc., which

owned several gas stations, including the gas station where plaintiff slipped. He testified that

Michael Ruggles, his father and an employee, was responsible for snow removal at the gas station

on the day of plaintiff’s fall. Adams and Ruggles had approximately 20 years of snow-plowing

experience and used their best judgment to determine when plowing was necessary. Ruggles has

since passed away. Adams believed the gas station was plowed at approximately 4 or 5 a.m. on

January 2, 2022. He added that crosswalks and sidewalks would have been hand shoveled and

-3- 2026 IL App (2d) 250004

salted. Ruggles was typically at the gas station multiple times each day, and employees could

contact him for assistance at any time. Adams was not present at the gas station on the day of the

incident, but he reviewed the surveillance video of plaintiff’s fall. He testified that there was snow

on the ground in the area where plaintiff fell, but he did not know whether ice was present.

¶8 On March 4, 2024, defendants filed a motion for summary judgment, arguing that they had

no duty to remove natural accumulations of ice and snow and that there was no evidence that the

snow and ice on which plaintiff slipped was anything other than a natural accumulation.

Defendants further argued that they had no duty to warn customers of the ice and snow and that

they did not fail to maintain, supervise, or inspect the premises.

¶9 Thereafter, although the deadline to file Illinois Supreme Court Rule 213(f) (eff. Jan. 1,

2018) disclosures had passed, plaintiff filed a motion for leave to disclose a Rule 213(f)(3) liability

expert. The trial court granted the motion and set a schedule for the expert’s disclosure and

deposition. Plaintiff disclosed David Schroeder as her expert, and he produced an initial report on

March 25, 2024. In that report, Schroeder cited various code violations related to the icy walking

surface and opined that, in the area where plaintiff slipped, the concrete contained a concavity in

which ice accumulated unnaturally because runoff from the gas station roof drained directly onto

it. He further noted that weather records showed precipitation on multiple days preceding

plaintiff’s fall and that, during the seven days before the incident, the temperatures fluctuated

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2026 IL App (2d) 250004, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-v-rock-corner-marathon-illappct-2026.