Pacey v. Penn Garden Apartments, Unpublished Decision (2-19-1999)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 19, 1999
DocketC.A. Case No. 17370. T.C. Case No. 97-7196.
StatusUnpublished

This text of Pacey v. Penn Garden Apartments, Unpublished Decision (2-19-1999) (Pacey v. Penn Garden Apartments, Unpublished Decision (2-19-1999)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pacey v. Penn Garden Apartments, Unpublished Decision (2-19-1999), (Ohio Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.] OPINION Plaintiff-appellant Jack B. Pacey appeals from a summary judgment rendered in favor of defendant-appellee Penn Garden Apartments, in Pacey's slip-and-fall action. Pacey argues that the trial court erred in rendering summary judgment, since material issues of fact remain in this case regarding whether Penn Garden owed its business invitees, like himself, a duty to remove ice and snow from its walkways, and whether Penn Garden can be held liable for an allegedly defective condition on the portion of the walkway where Pacey fell.

We conclude that Penn Garden had no responsibility to remove from its walkway a patch of ice that may have caused Pacey's fall, since the patch of ice was the result of natural accumulation, and there was no evidence that that natural accumulation of ice created a condition on Penn Garden's premises that was substantially more dangerous than Pacey could have anticipated, given the weather conditions prevailing on the day he fell. We further conclude that the alleged defect on the walkway — small concrete pebbles — that Pacey claims to have caused his fall, constitutes a minor defect, and the attendant circumstances surrounding the incident were insufficient to elevate that minor defect into a substantial one, for which Penn Garden could be held liable. Accordingly, the judgment of the trial court is Affirmed.

I
In January, 1997, Pacey slipped and fell on the sidewalk of Penn Garden Apartments, injuring his right arm, hip, and other parts of his body. According to his deposition testimony, Pacey arrived at the apartment complex at approximately 11:00 a.m. on the day of the incident. Pacey went there to visit his friend, Timothy Nelson. Nelson lived at Penn Garden Apartments, and was employed there as a maintenance worker. Pacey remembers visiting with Nelson for about 30 minutes. As he was returning to his car to leave, Pacey fell on the sidewalk. Pacey called out to Nelson for help. Timothy Weneck, another maintenance worker at Penn Garden, who, at that moment, was salting the sidewalks of the apartment complex, heard Pacey's call for help, and went over to assist him. Nelson and Weneck took Pacey to the office of the apartment complex, where an ambulance was called. Nelson testified in his deposition that as he and Weneck were taking Pacey to the office, Pacey indicated to him that he had fallen on some ice.

In July, 1997, Pacey was questioned about the incident by a representative from Penn Garden's insurer, American States Insurance Company, as follows:

Q. And what caused you to fall?

A. My opinion, like I told the doctor at the hospital, and everything else, that it must be the little ugh, concrete that was broken. Cause [sic] there was very little snow, I mean ice on, on that side, hardly any ice on the side, on the one fell on [sic]. Ice on the sides yes, in the middle, no. But a lot of crumbly concrete, so ugh, that's what I saw, what I told the doctor * * *.

* * *

Q. O[kay], so you say that, that there was only ice on the side of the sidewalk?

A. Yes sir.
Q. And there was no ice in the center?
A. No sir.
Q. And that the sidewalk was crumbling, the concrete?
Q. Can you describe the concrete crumbling? What do you mean it's crumbling?

A. Like in the center, like, ugh, it was breaking away and little tiny balls of concrete on the sidewalk.

Q. O[kay], did you notice these when you walked in?
Q. And you noticed them when you walked out?
Q. O[kay], and you didn't slip on the ice, you slipped because of the concrete?

In September, 1997, Pacey filed a complaint against Penn Garden in the Common Pleas Court of Montgomery County, alleging that, among other things, Penn Garden had failed to maintain its premises in a reasonably safe condition, thereby causing him to fall and seriously injure himself.1

During Pacey's deposition, counsel for Penn Garden questioned Pacey about the incident as follows:

Q. What caused you to fall?

A. "I think the pebbles on the sidewalk. No thinking, I know. The pebbles on the sidewalk."

Q. Do you think that you slipped and fell on ice?

Q. Do you think that there was any accumulation of ice on the sidewalk that caused you to slip and fall?

Q. Do you think that there was an accumulation of any snow on the sidewalk which caused you to slip and fall?

A. There was definitely no snow.

Pacey further testified that the pebbles evidently had been produced by the crumbling of the concrete sidewalk. Pacey described the pebbles as "real tiny" and "real small," and stated there were "quite a few" of them in the middle of the square of the sidewalk upon which he fell. Pacey also testified that he did not see the pebbles until after he had fallen, thereby contradicting his earlier statements made to Penn Garden's insurance company. When the issue of causation was again brought up later in the deposition, Pacey began equivocating about the cause of his fall:

A. And what caused it, I don't know. I really don't know whether I, the pebbles would have caused it. I know that around the edges to my — now again I'm guessing, there looked like there was a very little bit of ice, because the sun was out that time of day.

Q. Okay. I don't want you to guess and I don't want you to speculate. Because you already told me * * * that snow and ice had no part in this.

A. No, no snow at all.
Q. Okay. So I don't want to guess about that.
A. All right.

Q. * * * Now what, what was it about those pebbles on the sidewalk that caused you to fall; I mean were they slick?

MR. MANNING [Pacey's attorney]: Do you understand what he's asking you?

THE WITNESS: You know, what caused, what caused me to fall is exactly what he's asking me.

MR. MANNING: In other words did you slip on them like marbles, did they cause you to fall?

MR. OXLEY [Penn Garden's attorney]: Other than the fact that your attorney is now giving you some language to use.

THE WITNESS: No, no.

MR. MANNING: What about the pebbles caused you to fall is what he's asking.

THE WITNESS: Let me say this to both of you, sir. It happened so rapidly, before I knew it I was on the ground, I was moaning and groaning and everything else, and I said I broke my arm. I don't know. I wore sneakers like he wears sneakers, like you wear sneakers, like everybody wears sneakers. I was under the assumption they had good tread on them, but obviously they did not. I don't know what caused me to fall, I'm not going to lie, but I fell. I couldn't move. I couldn't get up or anything like that.

Nelson stated in his deposition that the incident occurred around 9:00 a.m to 9:30 a.m., rather than around 11:30 a.m., as Pacey had indicated. Nelson also stated that, contrary to Pacey's recollection, he did not see Pacey on the morning of the incident until after he (Pacey) had fallen.

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Bluebook (online)
Pacey v. Penn Garden Apartments, Unpublished Decision (2-19-1999), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pacey-v-penn-garden-apartments-unpublished-decision-2-19-1999-ohioctapp-1999.