Mickens v. CPS Chicago Parking, LLC

2019 IL App (1st) 180156
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 26, 2019
Docket1-18-0156
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2019 IL App (1st) 180156 (Mickens v. CPS Chicago Parking, LLC) 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
Mickens v. CPS Chicago Parking, LLC, 2019 IL App (1st) 180156 (Ill. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

2019 IL App (1st) 180156

THIRD DIVISION June 26, 2019

No. 1-18-0156 ______________________________________________________________________________

IN THE APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT ______________________________________________________________________________

JAUKITA MICKENS, ) ) Plaintiff-Appellant, ) Appeal from the ) Circuit Court of v. ) Cook County ) CPS CHICAGO PARKING, LLC, an Illinois Limited ) 15 L 9864 Liability Company, FOUR SEASONS SERVICES, INC., ) an Illinois Corporation, and NORTHEAST ILLINOIS ) Honorable REGIONAL COMMUTER RAILROAD CORPORATION, ) John P. Callahan, Jr., d/b/a Metra, an Illinois Not-for-Profit Corporation, ) Judge Presiding ) Defendants-Appellees. ) _____________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE ELLIS delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Justices Howse and Cobbs concurred in the judgment and opinion.

OPINION

¶1 Plaintiff, Jaukita Mickens, was seriously injured when she slipped and fell on ice at a

Metra train station. She alleged that defendants (Metra, the property manager, and a snow-

removal contractor) negligently failed to clear the pedestrian ramp where she fell. Defendants

moved for summary judgment, claiming plaintiff failed to show an unnatural accumulation of ice

that would render them liable. The circuit court granted summary judgment to all defendants.

¶2 We reverse and remand. We find a question of fact as to whether the ice formed naturally

or unnaturally. And we hold that the property manager and snow-removal contractor could be

held liable for even natural accumulations of snow or ice. No. 1-18-0156

¶3 BACKGROUND

¶4 In the early morning of Monday, February 9, 2015, Mickens was walking down a

pedestrian ramp at a Metra station in Harvey (Metra Station) when she slipped on a sheet of ice

that she estimated as an inch thick. The slip and fall caused a severe ankle injury that required

next-day emergency surgery. She missed about three months of work.

¶5 Mickens is a medical assistant who works at one of Northwestern Hospital’s outpatient

locations in Chicago. On the morning of her fall, Mickens and her daughter were at the Metra

Station for a 6:59 a.m. train into Chicago. As usual, Mickens drove to the Metra Station and

parked in the paid parking lot. To pay for parking, customers use stand-alone pay boxes.

Mickens and her daughter walked toward the train platform together, but because Mickens was

paying, she stopped at a pay box while her daughter continued toward a nearby concrete ramp

down to the platform. After paying, Mickens walked down the ramp behind her daughter.

¶6 While walking down the ramp, she described noticing “slush” on the ground. To her, “it

looked like it could have snowed like maybe the weekend and it was starting to melt.” As she

was walking, she fell and seriously injured her ankle. According to her, the ground “didn’t feel

slippery. It felt like a lump. Like my foot hit something, which I’m assuming it probably was the

ice I thought that was slush, so it probably hit the ice.” She said “it appeared to be just wet, like a

wet slush. It didn’t appear to be slippery at all.” She tried to get up but couldn’t. While on the

ground, she “felt ice. It felt, hard ice. Not the slush that I thought was there. It was like, hard

ice.” Mickens was unable to get up and was taken to the hospital by ambulance.

¶7 Mickens stated that she never saw a lump her foot hit. To her, the ground just looked like

“slush.” It was not until after she had fallen that she realized the “slush” was actually a solid

sheet of ice “maybe one inch or so” thick. She said “it looked like it had snowed and the ice—the

-2- No. 1-18-0156

snow had hardened and it hadn’t been shoveled. Like, it looked untreated.” She estimated the

sheet of ice covered the entire width of the ramp, though she couldn’t be certain.

¶8 Mickens sued Northeastern Illinois Regional Commuter Railroad Corporation, d/b/a

Metra (Metra), CPS Chicago Parking, LLC (CPS), and Four Seasons Services, Inc. (Four

Seasons). Metra owned and operated the Metra Station where Mickens was injured. CPS served

as the property manager per its contract with Metra. CPS, in turn, contracted with Four Seasons

to perform snow and ice removal at the Metra Station.

¶9 At the time of Mickens’s fall, David Hayes was the fleet supervisor at Four Seasons. In

addition to his supervisory duties, he also performed plowing services and personally performed

all plowing and salting operations at the Metra Station. At his deposition, Hayes testified that

there is no regular schedule for inspecting the Metra Station or providing services; instead,

services are provided depending on the weather. To determine when plowing and salting is

required, he constantly monitors various weather reports and discusses the course of action with

CPS employee Eric Bowman.

¶ 10 Hayes acknowledged that Mickens slipped at a location where he was required to provide

snow and ice removal services. He testified that the last time he plowed and salted the Metra

Station was the night of Wednesday, February 4—several days before the accident on the

morning of Monday, February 9. The work took about four hours; he finished sometime in the

early morning of February 5. Hayes stated that he would have spent about five minutes shoveling

and salting the area where Mickens fell.

¶ 11 In the afternoon of February 5, Hayes returned to the Metra Station. He listed two reasons

for doing so. One was to ensure that the premises still “look[ed] good.” That’s something he

typically does after a plowing job, he said: “I check stations to make sure that the ice melted and

-3- No. 1-18-0156

everything else looks good, snow doesn’t need to be ever removed to provide more room for

another snowfall coming.” A second reason, related to the first one, was to determine whether

any “loader” work was necessary, meaning if it was necessary to transport the plowed snow from

the platforms and pay stations to the rear of the station, in case another snowfall were to soon

occur.

¶ 12 Hayes testified that during this February 5 inspection of the Metra Station, “there was no

snow on the sidewalks, in the parking lot left from the prior storm.” At another point, he testified

(albeit more generally, not specific to this February 5 plowing) that when he shovels a walkway,

he shovels the snow “[a]way from the walk areas, the common area.”

¶ 13 After doing his look-over on February 5, Hayes did not return to the Metra Station until

February 26, when he was required to plow and salt it again.

¶ 14 The defendants moved for summary judgment, claiming that they owed no duty to

remove natural accumulations of snow and ice, and there was no evidence in the record that the

ice on which Mickens fell was anything but a natural accumulation. In response, Mickens argued

that due to the Metra, CPS, and Four Seasons contracts, the defendants had undertaken the duty

to remove even natural accumulations of snow and ice. Alternatively, she argued that a question

of fact existed as to whether her fall was caused by an unnatural accumulation of snow and ice.

As part of her response, Mickens referenced a complaint made to Metra by another person,

Fiesha Burge, about the icy conditions of the station on February 5—after Hayes would have

performed snow and ice removal services.

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2026 IL App (1st) 242303-U (Appellate Court of Illinois, 2026)
Mickens v. CPS Chicago Parking, LLC
2019 IL App (1st) 180156 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 2019)

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Bluebook (online)
2019 IL App (1st) 180156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mickens-v-cps-chicago-parking-llc-illappct-2019.