Maureen Kelly, V. Dave Demulling Et Ano

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedNovember 25, 2024
Docket86009-7
StatusUnpublished

This text of Maureen Kelly, V. Dave Demulling Et Ano (Maureen Kelly, V. Dave Demulling Et Ano) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maureen Kelly, V. Dave Demulling Et Ano, (Wash. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

MAUREEN KELLY, an individual, DIVISION ONE Appellant, No. 86009-7-I v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION DAVE DEMULLING and GRETCHEN DEMULLING, husband and wife and the marital community composed thereof,

Respondents.

DWYER, J. — Maureen Kelly appeals from the order of the superior court

granting the motion for summary judgment brought by Dave and Gretchen

DeMulling and dismissing Kelley’s negligence claim against them. On appeal,

Kelly asserts that the superior court erred in so ruling because a genuine issue of

material fact remains for trial as to whether the DeMullings breached their duty of

care as landlords by failing to keep the premises reasonably safe or warn her of

the danger posed by a boulder located in a landscaped area of the property on

which she tripped and sustained injuries. Because the boulder did not pose an

unreasonable risk of harm in its location within the decorative planting strip, the

DeMullings did not breach their duty to warn Kelly of the hazard. Thus, we affirm

the order of the superior court.

I

The DeMullings own real property containing a single-family residence in

which they both reside and a studio apartment that they rent to tenants. Kelly No. 86009-7-I/2

resided in the apartment on two separate occasions, for a period of three or four

years between approximately 2007 and 2010, and, most recently, for a period of

nearly five years, from May 2014 until January 2019.1

The access to the DeMullings’ residence and Kelly’s apartment was by a

driveway. From as early as 2011, there was a decorative planting area parallel

to that driveway within which were located several boulders placed in a line. The

first boulder—the alleged hazard in question—was located at the end of the

planting strip, adjacent to the entryway to the driveway, and protruded slightly

beyond the fence line that ran perpendicular to the driveway and planting strip.

The first boulder had been in that location since at least July 2018. The following

photo illustrates the positions of the driveway, decorative planting strip with the

boulders, and the beginning of the fence line of the property.

During the course of Kelly’s tenancy, the DeMullings parked their vehicle

in the driveway and instructed Kelly to park her vehicle at an angle on the

1 In her deposition Kelly stated that she first moved into the apartment in either 2007 or

2008 and moved out after three or four years.

2 No. 86009-7-I/3

shoulder of the road along the fence line that runs perpendicular to the driveway.

In order to travel between her vehicle and the apartment, Kelly walked up and

down the driveway, often multiple times each day. Kelly was “generally aware of

the boulder outcropping.” She estimated that, between May 2014 and December

2018, she walked past the boulders nearly 2,400 times.

On a midafternoon in December 2018, Kelly and her husband, Adrian,

returned to the property from a nearby park with both their dog and the

DeMullings’ dog. The day was cold, dry, and bright outside. Kelly parked her

vehicle diagonally in the designated parking area in front of the house. She

exited the vehicle and walked behind it to the rear door on the passenger side to

retrieve the DeMullings’ dog. With the dog on a leash, Kelly began walking

toward the driveway. She described her path as follows:

I walked not directly towards the fence line. I walked towards the driveway a few feet out. And because – Adrian was behind me, and we were just kind of walking towards the driveway, more like in a curve. Not like hugging the fence, is what I’m saying. Just walking towards the driveway.

And then when I turned to go up, there’s a gravel area at the end of the driveway.

As she walked toward the driveway, Kelly caught the side of her left foot on the

first boulder in the planting strip, fell toward the ground, and, in the course of

falling, hit her head on either the second or third boulder in the planting strip.

She sustained injuries related to the fall.

Kelly filed a lawsuit against the DeMullings alleging that they were

negligent in that they breached their duty to use reasonable care to keep and

3 No. 86009-7-I/4

maintain the common areas of the premises in a reasonably safe condition, they

failed to take reasonable precautions to protect her from foreseeable harm, and

they failed to warn her of the hazard.

Thereafter, the DeMullings filed a motion for summary judgment arguing

that dismissal was appropriate because Kelly was “solely to blame for her own

injuries when she fell over large, obvious landscaping boulders in a planting

strip.”2

Kelly opposed the motion and, in so doing, presented a report from a

human factors engineer3 who concluded that the boulder was placed in an area

where it was foreseeable that pedestrians would be walking and that the design

and conditions of the general area created a foreseeable tripping hazard for a

pedestrian walking in the area. The expert noted the configuration of the area

where Kelly parked her vehicle and explained that

after parking a vehicle in this location, it would be natural to walk along the fence line so as to access the driveway of the residence. In other words, it was certainly foreseeable that pedestrians would be walking along the fence line so as to access the driveway, making this a foreseeable pedestrian pathway. Also notice that there are generally no boulders or raised obstructions along the fence line; hence, as a pedestrian is walking in this area there wouldn’t be a need to be abnormally vigilant in searching the ground for hazards.

2 The DeMullings filed a motion for summary judgment in December 2022. Kelly responded to the motion. The DeMullings noted a hearing on the motion for March 2023, but the record does not indicate any further action on the motion. In July 2023, the DeMullings again moved for summary judgment resulting in entry of the order that is the subject of this appeal. 3 As described by the engineer in this case, “the approach of Human Factors Engineering

is to compliment the traditional engineering design process by including within that process consideration of the human component, including its foreseeable failure modes, within the system.” She further explained, that opinions related to human factors are developed though a human factors engineering analysis which “to determine the underlying root cause(s) of a personal injury incident considers the system as a whole including, the environment, the user, and the task/user behavior, relative to the scope of the requested analysis.”

4 No. 86009-7-I/5

Based on an analysis of the area in question, the engineer opined that

it is foreseeable that a pedestrian walking along the fence line would not reliably detect the protruding boulder, which was partially occluded and which would blend in with the gray driveway behind it. In other words, the overall conditions that existed created a hazardous condition for pedestrians that would not be reliably detect[ed] by pedestrians walking in the general area.

The trial court held a hearing, heard argument on the parties’ briefing, and

granted summary judgment in favor of the DeMullings. According to the court,

“on this record there is nothing that would suggest that the landlord should have

anticipated the harm from this tenant walking or anybody else walking past this

rock.” The trial court further explained that “there is no issue -- genuine issue of

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