Sundermann v. Hy-Vee

306 Neb. 749, 947 N.W.2d 492
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 14, 2020
DocketS-18-250
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 306 Neb. 749 (Sundermann v. Hy-Vee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sundermann v. Hy-Vee, 306 Neb. 749, 947 N.W.2d 492 (Neb. 2020).

Opinion

Nebraska Supreme Court Online Library www.nebraska.gov/apps-courts-epub/ 11/09/2020 02:10 AM CST

- 749 - Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets 306 Nebraska Reports SUNDERMANN v. HY-VEE Cite as 306 Neb. 749

Rita Sundermann, appellant, v. Hy-Vee, Inc., and Sweetbriar II, LLC, appellees. ___ N.W.2d ___

Filed August 14, 2020. No. S-18-250.

1. Summary Judgment: Appeal and Error. An appellate court affirms a lower court’s grant of summary judgment if the pleadings and admitted evidence show that there is no genuine issue as to any material facts or as to the ultimate inferences that may be drawn from the facts and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. In reviewing a summary judgment, an appellate court views the evidence in the light most favorable to the party against whom the judgment was granted, and gives that party the benefit of all reasonable inferences deducible from the evidence. 2. Negligence. The question whether a legal duty exists for actionable negligence is a question of law dependent on the facts in a particu- lar situation. 3. Judgments: Appeal and Error. When reviewing questions of law, an appellate court has an obligation to resolve the questions independently of the conclusion reached by the trial court. 4. Negligence: Damages: Proximate Cause. In order to prevail in a neg- ligence action, a plaintiff must establish the defendant’s duty to protect the plaintiff from injury, a failure to discharge that duty, and damages proximately caused by the failure to discharge that duty. As such, the threshold issue in any negligence action is whether the defendant owes a legal duty to the plaintiff. 5. Negligence. Not every negligence action involving an injury suffered on someone’s land is properly considered a premises liability case. 6. Negligence: Liability: Proximate Cause. A possessor of land is subject to liability for injury caused to a lawful visitor by a condition on the land if (1) the possessor either created the condition, knew of the condi- tion, or by the existence of reasonable care would have discovered the condition; (2) the possessor should have realized the condition involved - 750 - Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets 306 Nebraska Reports SUNDERMANN v. HY-VEE Cite as 306 Neb. 749

an unreasonable risk of harm to the lawful visitor; (3) the possessor should have expected that a lawful visitor such as the plaintiff either (a) would not discover or realize the danger or (b) would fail to protect himself or herself against the danger; (4) the possessor failed to use rea- sonable care to protect the lawful visitor against the danger; and (5) the condition was a proximate cause of damage to the plaintiff. 7. Negligence: Liability: Proof. The first element of the premises liability test may be met by proving any one of its three subparts, namely, that the defendant created the condition, knew of the condition, or would have discovered the condition by the exercise of reasonable care. 8. Negligence: Words and Phrases. An unreasonable risk of harm means a risk that a reasonable person, under all the circumstances of the case, would not allow to continue. 9. Negligence: Liability. A land possessor is not liable to a lawful entrant on the land unless the possessor has or should have had superior knowl- edge of the dangerous condition. 10. ____: ____. Even where a dangerous condition exists, a premises owner will not be liable unless the premises owner should have expected that a lawful visitor such as the plaintiff either would not dis- cover or realize the danger or would fail to protect himself or herself against the danger. 11. Negligence. Generally, when a dangerous condition is open and obvious, the owner or occupier is not liable in negligence for harm caused by the condition. 12. ____. Under the open and obvious doctrine, a possessor of land is not liable to invitees for physical harm caused by any activity or condition on the land whose danger is known or obvious to the invitee, unless the possessor should anticipate the harm despite such knowledge or obviousness. 13. ____. A condition on the land is considered open and obvious when the risk is apparent to and of the type that would be recognized by a reason- able person in the position of the invitee exercising ordinary perception, intelligence, and judgment. 14. ____. A determination that a risk or danger is open and obvious does not end the duty analysis in a premises liability case. A court must also determine whether the possessor should have anticipated that lawful entrants would fail to protect themselves despite the open and obvi- ous risk. 15. Judgments: Appeal and Error. Where the record demonstrates that the decision of the trial court is ultimately correct, although such correctness is based on a ground or reason different from that assigned by the trial court, an appellate court will affirm. - 751 - Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets 306 Nebraska Reports SUNDERMANN v. HY-VEE Cite as 306 Neb. 749

Petition for further review from the Court of Appeals, Pirtle, Riedmann, and Arterburn, Judges, on appeal thereto from the District Court for Douglas County, Horacio J. Wheelock, Judge. Judgment of Court of Appeals reversed and remanded with directions. Matthew A. Lathrop, of Law Offices of Matthew A. Lathrop, P.C., L.L.O., and Kathy Pate Knickrehm for appellant. Raymond E. Walden and Michael T. Gibbons, of Woodke & Gibbons, P.C., L.L.O., for appellees. Jason Ausman, of Ausman Law Firm, P.C., L.L.O., and Benjamin I. Siminou, of Siminou Appeals, Inc., for amicus curiae Nebraska Association of Trial Attorneys. Brian J. Fahey and Robert W. Futhey, of Fraser Stryker, and Cathy S. Trent-Vilim, of Lamson, Dugan & Murray, L.L.P., for amicus curiae The Nebraska Defense Counsel Association. Miller-Lerman, Cassel, Stacy, Funke, Papik, and Freudenberg, JJ. Stacy, J. This is a personal injury action arising from an accident between a pickup truck and a pedestrian in a convenience store parking lot. The pedestrian sued the convenience store, alleg- ing the accident was caused by a dangerous condition on the land. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of the convenience store, finding the driver’s negligence was not reasonably foreseeable. The Nebraska Court of Appeals reversed, and remanded for further proceedings. 1 We granted further review, and although our reasoning differs from that relied upon by the district court, we reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals and remand the cause with directions to affirm the judgment of the district court. 1 Sundermann v. Hy-Vee, 27 Neb. App. 287, 929 N.W.2d 919 (2019). - 752 - Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets 306 Nebraska Reports SUNDERMANN v. HY-VEE Cite as 306 Neb. 749

I. BACKGROUND On March 2, 2012, as it was becoming dusk, Rita Sundermann was struck by a pickup truck while she was inflating her car’s tires at a Hy-Vee, Inc., gas station and convenience store in Omaha, Nebraska. Because the layout of the property is central to the issues on appeal, we include an aerial photo- graph received as an exhibit, and we describe the property in some detail. 1. Property The relevant design features of the property are not disputed. The front of the convenience store faces east, and there are marked parking stalls along the entire store front. There are two access drives into and out of the property, but the one at issue in this case is located just north of the convenience store. That access drive is 24 feet wide and has two lanes which the parties’ experts referred to as “drive aisles.” One drive aisle accommodates eastbound traffic entering the convenience store, and the other accommodates westbound traffic leaving the property. Perpendicular to the westbound drive aisle are six marked parking stalls. Convenience store employees are asked to park in the stalls along the drive aisle rather than the stalls in front of the store.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
306 Neb. 749, 947 N.W.2d 492, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sundermann-v-hy-vee-neb-2020.