Brown v. Alliance Real Estate Group

Citation976 P.2d 1043,1999 OK 7
Decision Date09 February 1999
Docket NumberNo. 90,135,90,135
PartiesLinda Gaye BROWN and LeRoy Eugene Brown, Appellants, v. ALLIANCE REAL ESTATE GROUP, d/b/a Prudential Properties of Oklahoma; Defendants, Marolyn Pryor; Roger Pryor; and B.A.S.S. Unlimited, Inc., d/b/a Prudential Properties Of Oklahoma, Appellees.
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma

On Certiorari to the Court of Civil Appeals, Division 2.

¶0 Plaintiffs/appellants filed suit to recover damages for personal injury resulting from a slip and fall on a patch of "black ice" on the business premises the defendants/appellees. The Honorable Edward C. Cunningham, District Judge, Canadian County, Oklahoma, entered summary judgment in favor of defendants/appellees. Plaintiffs appealed. The Court of Civil Appeals affirmed. We previously granted certiorari review.

OPINION OF THE COURT OF CIVIL APPEALS VACATED; JUDGMENT OF THE DISTRICT COURT REVERSED; CAUSE REMANDED FOR FURTHER PROCEEDINGS.

Lynn B. Mares, Abel, Musser, Sokolosky, Mares and Kouri, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, for appellants.

S. Marc Walls, Angela D. Ailles & Associates, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, for appellees, Marolyn and Roger Pryor.

Christian S. Huckaby, Looney, Nichols & Johnson, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, for appellee, B.A.S.S. Unlimited, Inc.

PER CURIAM:

¶1 The issue presented is whether the district court's summary judgment was proper. We find that the plaintiffs' summary judgment evidence raises a genuine issue of the material fact of defendants' duty to protect plaintiff from a hidden danger and therefore, we hold that summary judgment was improper.

¶2 Linda Brown was injured when she slipped and fell on an patch of ice outside the door of Marolyn Pryor's real estate office. Brown and her husband filed suit against the premises owners alleging that they were negligent in that they failed to clear the path of ingress and egress to their place of business and failed to protect plaintiff from the slick condition of the path of ingress and egress. On summary judgment, the defendants asserted that the ice was the result of a natural accumulation; the defendants had done nothing to enhance the accumulation of the ice; and the plaintiff's injury was caused by her own negligence. The plaintiffs responded submitting evidentiary material tending to establish that the ice was invisible and the defendants had knowledge of the hazardous ice. Relying on Buck v. Del City Apartments, Inc., 1967 OK 81, 431 P.2d 360, the district court granted summary judgment in favor of the defendants.

¶3 Buck v. Del City Apartments, Inc. determined that a motel owner had no legal duty to warn an invitee, who knew or should have known the condition of a property, against patent and obvious dangers. In Buck, a heavy snowfall was on the ground the day of the injury. Although a co-manager of the motel had cleaned the snow off the walkway, steps and the porch, there was ice remaining on the porch and steps and Mrs. Buck slipped and fell. In Buck, this Court said:

The owner or person in charge of the premises has no obligation to warn an invitee, who knew or should have known the condition of a property, against patent and obvious dangers. The invitee assumes all normal or ordinary risks incident to the use of the premises, and the owner or occupant is under no legal duty to reconstruct or alter the premises so as to remove known and obvious hazards, nor is he liable to an invitee for an injury resulting from a danger which was obvious and should have been observed in the exercise of ordinary care.

The duty to keep premises in a reasonably safe condition for the use of the invited public applies solely to defects or conditions which may be characterized as in the nature of hidden dangers, traps, snares, pitfalls, and the like--things which are not readily observable. The law does not require the owner or occupant of land to warrant that the invitee shall suffer no injury upon the premises; his duty is discharged when reasonable care is taken to prevent the invitee's exposure to dangers which are more or less hidden, and not obvious. In the absence of a duty neglected or violated, there can be no actionable negligence. Beatty v. Dixon, Okl., 408 P.2d 339; Herndon v. Paschal, Okl., 410 P.2d 549; Sullins v. Mills, supra, [Okl., 395 P.2d 787 (1964) ] Pruitt v. Timme, Okl., 349 P.2d 4.

Buck, 1967 OK 81, pp 21, 22, 431 P.2d at 365.

¶4 Apparently, the district court regarded the rule of Buck as an inflexible and absolute rule of law--that under no circumstances may a premises liability claim be maintained for an accident attributable to a natural accumulation of ice or snow. The Buck opinion does not hold that natural accumulations of ice and snow constitute open and obvious hazards as a matter of law. Instead, Buck reasoned that perceptible hazards created by the elements, such as the accumulation of ice and snow, are universally appreciated by all reasonable people using due care and circumspection. Buck teaches that an accumulation of ice or snow, visible upon due care and circumspection, does not constitute a hidden danger such that the premises owner is under a duty to give warning.

¶5 In this case, there is evidentiary material tending to establish that the patch of ice was not visible upon due care. The evidentiary material shows that on the day of the accident, the weather was cold and clear but there was no indication of any ice in the vicinity; the sidewalk appeared to be dry but there was a patch of clear and virtually invisible ice, which is known as "black ice"; and, another person had slipped and fallen on the same patch of "black ice" earlier the same day and had informed an employee in the real estate office of the dangerous invisible patch of ice. "Black ice" is not an ordinarily perceptible hazard, nor is it within ordinary knowledge such as an ordinary accumulation of ice and snow. 1 This summary judgment evidentiary material tends to show that the patch of ice that allegedly caused injury to Brown is an exception to the ordinary accumulations of ice and snow dealt with in Buck. 2

¶6 The summary judgment evidentiary material tends to show not only that the...

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