STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT
Cumberland, ss. Civil Docket
LAURA RHODES, individually and as personal representative of the Estate of David Rhodes,
Plaintiff
V. Docket No. CUMSC-CV-18-007
SEGEE REALTY, LLC et als.
Defendants
SUMMARY JUDGMENT DECISION
This case presents the question whether the owners of a funeral home business
on one side of a public road and an overflow parking lot for the funeral home on the
other side owed a common law duty of care to business invitees who parked in the lot
and were struck by a car as they walked across the road toward the funeral home.
Before the court are Motions for Summary Judgment filed by Defendants Segee
Realty, LLC; Segee Enterprises, Inc. (together "the Segee Defendants") and
Defendants Margaret Dolby and Dolby Family, LLC ("the Dolby Defendants"),
together with the oppositions of Plaintiff Laura Rhodes, individually and as personal
representative of the Estate of David Rhodes, and Defendants' reply memoranda.
The court elects to address the Motions without oral argument. See M.R. Civ.
P. 7(b)(7). FOR THE PLAINTIFF: REBECCA KLOTZLE, ESQ.
I JAMES O'CONNELL, ESQ.
FOR CONCORD GENERAL\ JONATHAN BROGAN, ESQ HEG;D CLU~B Cl.ERKS OF
FOR ~EGEE AND DOLBY DEFENDANTS J WILLIAM DRUARY JR, ESQ. / /
( (
Based on the material undisputed facts, this Summary Judgment Decision
determines as a matter oflaw that Defendants' duty of care to Mr. and Mrs. Rhodes
did not extend beyond their properties into the public road, and therefore grants
summary judgment to the Defendants.
Background
This case arises from a tragic accident during the evening of January 7, 2016,
in which Plaintiff Laura Rhodes and her husband, David Rhodes, were struck by a car
as they walked across the River Road in Windham to attend a memorial for a close
friend ofLaura Rhodes at the Dolby Funeral Chapel.
1. The Accident Location and Circumstances
The Rhodeses had parked in a paved parking lot across River Road from the
Dolby Funeral Chapel-a parking lot intended for the use of persons coming to the
Chapel for memorial services and other events.
The speed limit along that section of River Road is thirty miles per hour,
although vehicles are known to travel faster and traffic at times can be heavy.
It was after dark as the Rhodeses began to cross River Road. They got halfway
across the two-lane roadway, standing in front of a vehicle that had stopped to allow
them to cross. They saw what appeared to be an opening in the oncoming traffic and
started to cross the other lane when they were struck by a vehicle operated by Todd
Bidwell. Both were seriously injured and David Rhodes later died as a result of his
mJunes.
2 Dolby Funeral Chapel has been in business at 434 River Road, Windham,
Maine since 1953. Beginning in the 1960s, Dolby Funeral Chapel opened the parking
lot across River Road, located at 435 River Road, for the use of people coming to the
Chapel for memorial services and other events. In 1991, Dolby Funeral Chapel
purchased land next to the Chapel at 432 River Road and converted it into a parking
lot for the Chapel.
For decades, people visiting the Dolby Funeral Chapel for memorial services
and other events have parked in the lot across the road and walked across River Road
to the Chapel. At some point in the past, the crossing between the parking lot and
the chapel was improved with pedestrian crossing signs in ·each direction and a painted
crosswalk, between the Funeral Chapel and the parking lot across the road. There is
no evidence that the moving Defendants put up the signs or painted the crosswalk. In
2015, the Town of Windham repaved that section of River Road and did not repaint
the crosswalk. The pedestrian crossing signs remained.
Sporadically in past years, Dolby Funeral Chapel personnel have stood at the
crossing point to render assistance to people crossing the road. On the other hand,
the Dolby Funeral Chapel has never taken any formal or consistent safety measures
for its business invitees crossing River Road between the parking lot and the Chapel.
There is also no evidence that the Rhodeses knew ofor relied on the sporadic occasions
on which Funeral Chapel personnel helped people cross the road.
There are a variety of measures that could be undertaken to make it safer to
cross River Road at that location, including crossing guards, pedestrian-activated
3 crosswalk lights, repainting of the crosswalk, and additional pedestrian crossing signs.
However, as the Plaintiff's retained traffic safety expert acknowledged at his
deposition, all measures for controlling or stopping traffic on the road would have to
be implemented, or at least approved, by either the Town of Windham or the Maine
Department of Transportation, or both. In other words, it is undisputed that the
moving Defendants have never had any right to possess or occupy or control River
Road.
2. History of Ownership
In 2005, defendant Margaret Dolby and her husband Tim Dolby acquired
ownership ofDolby Funeral Chapel and both parking lots located at 432 and 435 River
On December 22, 2015, Defendant Segee Enterprises purchased the Dolby
Funeral Chapel business, and Defendant Segee Realty, LLC acquired the parking lot
and chapel properties at 432-434 River Road. Defendant Margaret Dolby retained
ownership of the 435 River Road parking lot property across the road from the
Funeral Chapel, and leased it to Defendant Segee Enterprises for overflow parking.
Defendant Segee Enterprises and Defendant Segee Realty, LLC are owned by
Eric Segee. Eric Segee worked at Dolby Funeral Chapel for at least two years prior
to his companies' purchase of the Chapel business and property.
Procedural History
Plaintiff Laura Rhodes filed a complaint on behalf of herself and as the personal
representative of her late husband's estate on January 5, 2018, alleging eight counts.
4 Count I was solely against Todd Bidwell, the driver of the vehicle that struck
the Rhodeses. Count I has been dismissed and Mr. Bidwell has been dismissed from
the case as a party Defendant.
Count II is a breach of contract claim against Plaintiffs msurer, Concord
General Mutual Insurance Company, based on the underinsured motorist provisions
of Plaintiffs Concord General policy.
Counts III and IV were also asserted against Defendant Concord General, and
have been dismissed by stipulation.
The Motions for Summary Judgment before the court pertain to Counts V
through VIII. Count V asserts a wrongful death claim; Count VI asserts a claim for
conscious pain and suffering; Count VII asserts a negligent infliction of emotional
distress claim, and Count VIII asserts a negligence/premises liability claim.
All remaining Defendants except Concord General filed motions for summary
judgment in January 2019, which became fully briefed as of March I, 2019.
The primary issue raised in the summary judgment motions is whether the
moving Defendants owed a duty of care to Laura and David Rhodes as they crossed
River Road from the parking lot to the Chapel. Defendant Dolby Family, LLC's
Motion raises the separate issue of its own liability, given that it was formed after the
accident that gives rise to this case.
5 , \
Discussion
I. Standard ef Review
Summary judgment is granted to a moving party where "there is no genuine
issue as to any material fact" and the moving party "is entitled to judgment as a matter
oflaw." M.R. Civ. P. 56(c). "A material fact is one that can affect the outcome of the
case, and there is a genuine issue when there is sufficient evidence for a fact-finder to
choose between competing versions of the fact." Lougee Conservancy v. CitiMortgage,
Inc., 2012 ME 103,, 11, 48 A.3d 774 (quotation omitted). To survive a defendant's
motion for summary judgment, the plaintiff must establish a prima facie case for every
element of the plaintiffs cause of action. See Savell v. Duddy, 2016 ME 139,, 18, 147
A.3d 1179.
On summary judgment, the court considers reasonable inferences that may be
drawn from the facts. Curtis v. Porter, 2001 ME 158, , 9, 784 A.2d 18. Additionally,
the nonmoving party benefits from all "favorable inferences that may be drawn from
the facts presented." Id. "When facts or reasonable inferences are in dispute on a
material point, summary judgment may not be entered." Id.
2 . Duty ef Care Generally
Plaintiff asserts that Defendants owed the Rhodese's a duty of care that applied
to the Rhodeses as business invitees as they crossed River Road. The moving
Defendants cannot dispute that the Rhodeses were business invitees, but they do
contend that as a matter of law none of them owed a duty of care that extended to
business invitees crossing a public road.
6 (
According to her memoranda in opposition, Plaintiffs position rests upon three
alternate theories ofliability: (1) premises liability, (2) creating a dangerous condition
on land that creates an unreasonable risk of harm to persons outside the land, see
RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF TORTS§ 364, 1 and (3) general negligence. All three
theories of liability sound in negligence, and therefore all presuppose the existence of
a duty of care.
"When a plaintiff alleges negligence, to survive a defendant's motion for
summary judgment, [the plaintifl] 'must establish a prima facie case for each element
of the cause of action."' Murdock v. Thorne, 2017 ME 136, ~ 11, 166 A.sd 119 (quoting
Mastriano v. Blyer, 2001 ME 134, ~ 11, 779 A.2d 961). To establish a prima facie case
of negligence the plaintiff must show "a duty owed, a breach of that duty, and an injury
to the plaintiff that is proximately caused by a breach of that duty." Canney v.
Strathglass Holdings, LLC, 2017 ME 64, ~ 19, 169 A.3d 330 (quotation marks omitted).
1 Restatement (Second) of Torts section 364, which is discussed below, reads as follows:
A possessor ofland is subject to liability to others outside of the land for physical harm caused by a structure or other artificial condition on the land, which the possessor realizes or should realize will involve an unreasonable risk of such harm, if
(a) the possessor has created the condition, or
(b) the condition is created by a third person with the possessor's consent or acquiescence while the land is in his possession, or
(c) the condition is created by a third person without the possessor's consent or acquiescence, but reasonable care is not taken to make the condition safe after the possessor knows or should know of it.
7 Whether a duty exists depends upon whether the defendant is "under any
obligation for the benefit ofthe particular plaintiff." (?niadek v. Camp Sunshine at Sebago
Lake, Inc., 2011 ME 11, , 17, 11 A.3d 308 (quotation marks omitted). "Even though
the issue is fact driven, the question of duty is a legal question decided by the court,
not the jury." Brown v. Delta Tau Delta, 2015 ME 75,, 9, 118 A.sd 789. Determining
whether a duty exists requires the court to conduct a "multi-factored analysis that
necessarily evokes policy-based considerations including the just allocation of loss."
Id.
The key issue in this case is one of control--whether the moving Defendants
had a sufficient degree of control over traffic on the River Road to establish a common
law duty of care to the Rhodeses as they crossed the road.
As indicated above, Plaintiffs memoranda in opposition propose three alternate
grounds for imposing a duty of care on the moving Defendants. Two of the three do
not require extended discussion.
Plaintiffs theory under Restatement (Second) of Torts section 364-imposing
liability for an artificial dangerous condition on a party's property that causes injury
or harm outside the property-does not apply here, See RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF
TORTS § 364 ("A possessor ofland is subject to liability to others outside of the land
for physical harm caused by a structure or other artificial condition on the land, which
the possessor realizes or should realize will involve an unreasonable risk of such harm,
...") (emphasis added). Plaintiffs have not alleged or shown that anything located on
the moving Defendants' properties created or constituted an artificial dangerous
8 condition. It is rather the location of the properties on either side of a busy public
road that is alleged to create or constitute the dangerous condition.
Plaintiffs theory of general negligence does apply, but in the context of this
case, it is not an alternative to the law of premises liability. This is because the
Plaintiffs claims are based entirely on the Defendants' ownership and operation of
business premises. The law of premises liability is simply a species of the law of
negligence. For that reason, Plaintiffs general negligence theory lends no additional
support beyond what her premises liability theory provides.
When the plaintiffs claim is based on ownership of property or operation of a
business, general negligence still requires a showing that the defendant had control
over the circumstances that were the proximate cause of the accident. See Stewart v.
Aldrich, 2002 ME 16, ,~11-14, 788 A.2d 603 (landlord did not have control over
tenant's dog for purposes of imposing negligence liability for dog bite). Thus, given
that Plaintiffs claims are based on the moving Defendants' ownership and operation
of business property, general negligence theory is not an alternative ground for
liability. If the moving Defendants owed a duty of care to the Rhodeses, it is under
the law of premises liability.
3 . Premises LiabiHty
In Maine, "the owner of business premises owes a legal duty to his business
invitees to protect them from those dangers reasonably to be foreseen." Stanton v.
Univ. ef Me. Sys., 2001 ME 96, 773 A.2d 1045. On a motion for summary judgment,
the court is required to "look to general principles of duty, with particular emphasis
9 on the undisputed facts relevant to foreseeability, control, and the relationship of the
parties, in determining whether a duty founded on premises liability exists." Brown,
2015 ME 75, ' 14, 118 A.3d 789.
Plaintiffs were business invitees of defendant Segee Enterprises. (Defs. Segee's
Supp.'g S.M.F. , 2.) This relationship satisfies the requirements for a duty based on
premises liability. See Budzko v. One City Ctr. Assocs., 2001 ME 37, , , 11-12, 767 A.2d
310.
The other moving Defendants are (or were) the owners of the two properties.
The Dolby Defendants were and are is the lessor of the parking lot located across
River Road from Dolby Funeral Chapel. (Defs. Segee's Supp.'g S.M.F. , 19.) "A
landlord is generally not liable for a dangerous condition that comes into being after
the lessee takes exclusive possession and control of the premises." Stewart v. Aldrich,
2002 ME 16,, 10, 788 A.2d 603. Here, however, the alleged dangerous condition
the location of the overflow parking lot across a busy road from the Chapel-came
into being while Margaret Dolby and her husband operated the parking lot and the
Chapel and before the sale of the Chapel and the Chapel property to the Segee
Defendants. Accordingly, this Decision treats the Dolby Defendants as being in the
same position as the Segee Defendants in terms of potential premises liability.
As to the foreseeability element of the Plaintiffs premises liability claim, the
Plaintiff has plainly presented prima facie admissible evidence that this accident was
foreseeable. "A consequence of negligence is reasonably foreseeable if the negligence
has created a risk which might reasonably be expected to result in the injury or
10 damage at issue, even if the exact nature of the injury need not, itself, be foreseeable."
Merriam v. Wanger, 2000 ME 159, , 9, 757 A.2d 778. In this case, there had been
two prior accidents in which pedestrians were hit by cars at the same crossing. The
crossing was signaled with pedestrian signs and had been marked with a painted
crosswalk prior to the repaving in 2015. Moreover, there is evidence that the Dolby
Defendants had taken steps in the past to help people across the road.
Defendants appear to argue that the accident was not foreseeable, but given the
two prior accidents involving pedestrians at the same location, foreseeability is an
issue for the factfinder. However, foreseeability alone is not sufficient to establish a
duty ofcare. See Brown v. Delta Tau Delta, 2015 ME 75,, 14 ("[W]e look to general
principles of duty, with particular emphasis on the undisputed facts relevant to
foreseeability, control, and the relationship of the parties, in determining whether a
duty founded on premises liability exists"}.
For purposes of premises liability, for there to be any duty, it must be shown
that the defendant owns, possesses or has some degree of control over the area of the
location of the accident: "In determining whether a defendant owed a duty of care and
may be liable for defects in land causing injury, the court must first establish that the
defendant was, in fact, the possessor of the land at the time of the injury. A possessor
ofland is one who, by occupancy, manifests an intent to control the land." Quadrino
v. Bar Harbor Banking & Trust Co., 588 A.2d 303, 305 (Me. 1991). It is the element
of control over the public road where the accident occurred that is at issue in this case.
In Quadrino, the Law Court decided that the defendant bank owed no duty of care to
11 a pedestrian who tripped over a curb maintained by the Maine Department of
Transportation as he passed by the defendant bank and landed in the bank's driveway.
588 A.2d 303, 304 (Me. 1991). The Law Court reasoned that the defendant bank did
not owe the plaintiff a duty of care because the defendant bank did not possess or
manifest an intent to control the curb that caused the plaintiff to fall. Id. at 305.
As Plaintiff points out, a business invitor may owe a duty to business invitees
that extends "beyond the precise boundaries of the premises under [the invitor's]
control or occupancy." Pelletier v. Fort Kent Golf Club, 662 A.2d 220, 222 (Me. 1995)
(quoting Libby v. Perry, 311 A.2d 527, 535 (Me. 1973)). In Pelletier, the plaintiff was
injured by a golf ball that ricocheted off of railroad tracks that crossed the defendant
Golf Club's golf course. 662 A.2d at 221. The railroad tracks and land immediately
surrounding them were owned by a railroad company and not under the absolute
control of the defendant Golf Club. Id. at 222. However, the defendant Golf Club had
promulgated a special "free lift" rule that allowed golfers to move balls that landed on
the railroad tracks and had "invited golfers to use the course, which necessarily
involved traversing the tracks." Id. The Law Court determined that the defendant
Golf Club owed the plaintiff a duty of care even though the railroad tracks involved in
the accident were not under the defendant Golf Club's absolute control. Id. ("the
[defendant Golf Club's] duty extends to land which it has invited golfers to use.").
The Libby v. Perry case is not truly a premises liability case, because the
defendants were not the owners of the property in question. The defendants were a
committee had rented the Augusta Armory for an event, and the plaintiff was an
12 r invitee who fell on an unsanded icy area at the bottom of the stairs leading out of the
Armory. S 11 A.2d 527, 529 (Me. 1973). Id. at 5S5. The accident in Liblry occurred
in a privately owned area that the defendants could have, and in the Law Court's view,
should have had sanded. Id. at 5SO ("[T]e failure in the instant case to take any
precautions to protect these guests from the hazardous icy conditions of the exit area
amounted to a breach of duty subjecting the defendants to liability for the plaintiffs
injuries proximately resulting therefrom"). The Law Court decided that the
defendants' duty ofcare extended beyond the four corners ofthe Armory building they
had rented to "the immediate area way which the plaintiff business invitee was either
invited to use, or which he would be reasonably expected to use, to make his exit from
the premises upon which he had been invited to come." Id.
Although these three cases are the Maine Law Court decisions arguably most
on point, none is controlling here. Quadrino is not on point because the plaintiff was
a passerby, not a business invitee of the defendant bank. Pelletier and Liblry are not on
point, because they both involved injuries on adjacent private property that the
defendants had extended an invitation for their invitees to use. The accident occurred
on a public road that the Rhodeses had to use, not in the privately owned parking lot
that they were invited to use. Thus, the question presented in this case is different
from that in Quadrino, Pelletier or Liblry.
The question of law presented is whether a business has a duty of care to its
invitees who are injured as they foreseeably cross a public road to get to the business.
13 (
See Gniadek v. Camp Sunshine At Sebago Lake, Inc., 2011 ME 11, ~ 17, 11 A.sd 308 (""The
existence of a duty and the scope of that duty are questions oflaw").
If the Segee Defendants had a duty to the Rhodes that applied to their passage
across River Road, the duty would apply regardless of whether the Rhodeses had
parked in the Dolby Defendants' lot or elsewhere. If the Rhodeses had parked along
the opposite side of the road, for example, the duty that Plaintiff says applies here
would still apply. Thus, the fact that the Dolby Defendants' parking lot is across River
Road from the Chapel is oflittle relevance.
Thus, the duty ofcare that Plaintiff advocates would require any business whose
invitees foreseeably use a public road to take steps to warn or otherwise provide safe
passage for them along and across the public road. Presumably the duty would also
require the business to warn and/or provide safe passage along any public sidewalks
that its business invitees foreseeably use to get to the business.
If such a duty were to exist, the problems in defining and applying it are
obvious. How far along the road next to the business premises does the duty extend?
Does the duty apply only along the stretch of the foreseeably dangerous road that
abuts the business premises or does it extend beyond? Does the duty extend to
foreseeably dangerous intersections and public sidewalks that business invitees must
pass through or along to access the business? Does the duty extend to drivers or only
to pedestrians? If the business is located in a mall, does the duty extend to the
foreseeably dangerous public road that invitees must use to get to the mall? Does a
business violate the duty if it fails to attempt to get the public agency responsible for
14 , l
the road to fix potholes that can injure a pedestrian or damage a vehicle, or to install
the signs, flashing lights, crosswalks, speed bumps and other measures that can make
a road safer to use or cross?
In a case bearing a close resemblance to this one, the Supreme Court of
California decided that a church that maintained an overflow parking lot across a
public road from the church owed no duty to its invitees to provide safe passage across
the street. See Vasilenko v. Grace Fami"ly Church, 3 Cal. 5th 1077, 404 P.sd 1196 (2017).
The court phrased its holding as follows:
We conclude that a landowner does not have a duty to assist invitees in crossing a public street when the landowner does no more than site and maintain a parking lot that requires invitees to cross the street to access the landowner's premises, so long as the street's dangers are not obscured or magnified by some condition of the landowner's premises or by some action taken by the landowner. Because Vasilenko does not allege that the Church did anything other than maintain a parking lot on the other side of that street, we find that the Church did not owe him a duty to prevent his injury.
s Cal. 5th at 1082, 404 P.sd at 1198 (internal ellipses omitted).
This case plainly stands for the proposition that a business (or church) that
provides parking on the other side of a public road does not thereby assume a duty of
care to its invitees who must cross the road to get to the business.
The Restatement (Second) of Torts codifies that very principle. See
RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF TORTS§ 349:
A possessor ofland over which there is a public highway or private right of way is not subject to liability for physical harm caused to travelers upon the highway or persons lawfully using the way by his failure to exercise reasonable care
15 (
(a) to maintain the highway or way in safe condition for their use, or (b) to warn them of dangerous conditions in the way which, although not created by him, are known to him and which they neither know nor are likely to discover.
RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF TORTS§ .349.
The moving Defendants' memoranda in support cite numerous other cases
supporting their contention that no duty exists in these circumstances.
The relatively few cases in which the courts have found a duty to safeguard
access across public roads tend to involve situations in which the defendant has
exercised, or has a legal duty to exercise, some degree of control over the road. Thus,
for example, in Alhambra School District v. Superior Court, the Arizona Supreme Court
decided that a school district that had applied for and created a marked crosswalk had
assumed a common law duty of care. 165 Ariz . .38, 796 P.2d 470, 474 (1990) ("We
conclude, therefore, that in creating the marked crosswalk where none previously
existed, the District created a relationship with those who would use the crosswalk
and thereby assumed a duty of reasonable care with respect to its operation.") The
court also decided that the District had a duty of care established by statute. See id.,
165 Ariz. SS, 796 P.2d 474-475.
Neither of these circumstances applies to the moving Defendants in this case.
The closest the facts of this case come is in the record evidence that the Dolby Funeral
Chapel staff, years before the accident, occasionally helped people cross the road, but
there is no evidence that this was more than sporadic and no evidence that the
Rhodeses were aware of or relied on this sporadic past assistance.
16 , (
'
There is also no evidence that any condition on the moving Defendants'
property made it less safe for business invitees to cross the River Road to get to the
Funeral Chapel. It was purely the risks associated with the road itself, risks over
which the moving Defendants had no right of control and thus no duty to control, that
caused this tragic accident.
Imposing a duty of care on businesses that extends to their invitees' foreseeable
use of public roads and sidewalks over which the businesses have no ownership or
property rights or rights of control would effectively eliminate the element of control
from premises liability law. It is a fundamental principle of the law of negligence that
a person does not have a duty of care as to that over which the person has no control.
See Brown v. Delta Tau Delta, 2015 ME 75 at ~14.
Conclusion
Based on the undisputed fact that the accident in this case occurred on a public
road over which the moving Defendants had no control or right of control, the court
concludes that the moving Defendants have demonstrated that there are no genuine
issues as to any material fact and that they are entitled to judgment as a matter oflaw,
on the ground that they did not owe a duty of care to the Rhodeses under the
circumstances.
This outcome makes it unnecessary to address the separate arguments raised
by Defendant Dolby Family, LLC.
It is hereby ORDERED AND ADJUDGED:
17 ( (
I. The Motions for Summary Judgment filed by Defendants Segee Realty, LLC
and Segee Enterprises, Inc. and by Def~ndants Margaret Dolby and Dolby Family,
LLC are hereby granted.
2. Judgment on the Plaintiff's Complaint is granted to Defendants Segee
Realty, LLC and Segee Enterprises, Inc. and to Defendants Margaret Dolby and
Dolby Family, LLC.
Pursuant to M.R. Civ. P, 79( a), the Clerk is hereby directed to incorporate this
Dated April 19, 2019
A. M. Horton, Justice
4/1 '1 Entered on the Docket: i+{ Z.