Manniso v. Taylor ( 2020 )


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  •        IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
    CHRISTOPHER MANNISO,                         )
    )
    Plaintiff,                     )
    )
    v.                                    )      C.A. No. N19C-02-118 AML
    )
    BRIAN TAYLOR and AINE TAYLOR,                )
    )
    Defendants.                    )
    Submitted: March 27, 2020
    Decided: June 16, 2020
    ORDER
    On Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment: Granted
    1.     The defendant home owners seek summary judgment on personal
    injury claims filed by an individual who fell and was injured on the defendants’
    driveway. At the time he fell, the plaintiff was helping the defendants’ family
    member move a mattress into the defendants’ garage for storage. The plaintiff
    contends the defendants were negligent in failing to maintain and clear their
    driveway of snow and ice, and that negligence was the actual and proximate cause
    of his injuries.
    2.     The defendants seek summary judgment on the basis of Delaware’s
    Guest Premises Statute, which insulates a property owner from liability for injuries
    sustained by trespassers or guests unless the injury was intentional or in willful or
    wanton disregard of others’ rights. I conclude the motion for summary judgment
    must be granted because (i) the plaintiff has not offered prima facie evidence that he
    was a business invitee on the property rather than a guest without payment under
    Delaware’s Guest Premises Statute, and (ii) there is no disputed issue of fact from
    which a jury could conclude that the defendants acted recklessly or with willful or
    wanton disregard of the plaintiff. My reasoning follows.
    BACKGROUND
    3.     The following facts are taken from the record, drawing all inferences in
    favor of the non-moving party. On December 16, 2017, Plaintiff Christopher
    Manniso assisted non-party Breda Buckley in moving to a new residence. Buckley
    had items, including a mattress, for which she did not have room in her new
    residence. At the end of the moving day, the mattress was loaded into the bed of
    Plaintiff’s truck to be moved into storage.
    4.     Before the moving date, Defendants Aine and Brian Taylor
    (collectively, the “Taylors”) gave Buckley permission to store at the Taylors’ home
    any items that would not fit in Buckley’s new residence. Buckley is Aine Taylor’s
    sister. Buckley did not provide the Taylors with the exact date or time she would be
    bringing the items to be stored at their home. The Taylors also were not aware
    Buckley would be bringing a mattress to their home. 1
    1
    See Defs.’ Mot. for Summ. J., Ex. C, Excerpts from the Dep. of Aine Taylor (hereinafter “A.
    Taylor Dep.”) 10-12.
    2
    5.     Plaintiff and Buckley arrived at the Taylors’ home at approximately
    6:30 p.m., after darkness had fallen. Plaintiff parked his truck in the Taylors’
    driveway. The Taylors did not know Buckley was coming over that evening, and
    only Brian Taylor was home at the time. Upon learning of Plaintiff’s and Buckley’s
    arrival, Brian Taylor came outside and pointed out a place in the garage where the
    mattress could be moved. It had been snowing throughout the day, and snow and
    ice had accumulated on the driveway. When he exited his truck and began undoing
    the straps securing the mattress to the truck bed, Plaintiff slipped and fell in the
    driveway. Brian Taylor asked if Plaintiff was okay and offered to move the mattress
    himself, but Plaintiff proceeded to move the mattress and related items into the
    garage. Plaintiff and Buckley then left the Taylors’ home.
    6.     Plaintiff brought a negligence claim against the Taylors alleging the
    Taylors negligently and/or recklessly caused Plaintiff’s injuries and willfully and
    wantonly disregarded the potential of harm to Plaintiff.       After discovery was
    complete, the Taylors moved for summary judgment on both of Plaintiff’s claims,
    and the parties briefed that motion.
    ANALYSIS
    7.     Under Superior Court Civil Rule 56, a party is entitled to summary
    judgment if there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and the moving party is
    3
    entitled to a judgment as a matter of law. 2 A material issue of fact exists if “a rational
    finder of fact could find some material fact that would favor the nonmoving party in
    a determinative way[.]” 3 The record must be viewed in the light most favorable to
    the non-moving party. 4
    8.     The initial burden is on the moving party to demonstrate that there is
    no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the movant is entitled to judgment
    as a matter of law. 5 If the moving party meets that initial burden, the burden shifts
    to the non-moving party to show that a genuine issue of material fact is in dispute. 6
    “It is not enough for the opposing party merely to assert the existence of such a
    disputed issue of fact[,]” and “[i]f the facts permit reasonable persons to draw from
    them but one inference, the question is ripe for summary judgment.” 7
    I.     Plaintiff’s claim fails under Delaware’s Guest Premises Statute.
    9.     Delaware’s Guest Premises Statute provides, in relevant part, as
    follows:
    No person who enters onto private residential . . . premises owned or
    occupied by another person, either as a guest without payment or as a
    trespasser, shall have a cause of action against the owner or occupier of
    such premises for any injuries or damages sustained by such person
    while on the premises unless such accident was intentional on the part
    2
    Super. Ct. Civ. R. 56(c).
    3
    Deloitte LLP v. Flanagan, 
    2009 WL 5200657
    , at *3 (Del. Ch. Dec. 29, 2009).
    4
    Gruwell v. Allstate Ins. Co., 
    988 A.2d 945
    , 947 (Del. Super. 2009).
    5
    Brzoska v. Olson, 
    668 A.2d 1355
    , 1364 (Del. 1995).
    6
    Id. (citing Moore
    v. Sizemore, 
    405 A.2d 679
    , 680 (Del. 1979)).
    7
    Id. (citing Wootten
    v. Kiger, 
    226 A.2d 238
    , 239 (Del. 1967)).
    4
    of the owner or occupier or was caused by the [willful] or wanton
    disregard of the rights of others.8
    This statute was intended to protect landowners from “suits by guests based on
    simple acts of negligence[.]”9
    10.     Delaware’s Guest Premises Statute is in derogation of the common law
    and therefore must be construed strictly against a defendant seeking its application. 10
    Nonetheless, it is settled that a plaintiff who argues the statute does not apply bears
    the burden of persuasion. 11 That is, a plaintiff must put forth evidence that he does
    not fall within the statute because he neither was a guest without payment nor a
    trespasser. As the party with the burden of persuasion, to survive a motion for
    summary judgment Plaintiff must point to facts that would support his prima facie
    case at trial.12
    A.     When he was on the Taylor’s property, Plaintiff was a guest without
    payment rather than a business invitee.
    11.     The Taylors argue Plaintiff’s claim is barred by Delaware’s Guest
    Premises Statute because Plaintiff cannot establish his status as a “business invitee”
    rather than a “guest without payment” since Plaintiff did not confer any benefit of
    value on the Taylors. Plaintiff contends he was a business invitee rather than a guest
    8
    
    25 Del. C
    . § 1501 (emphasis added).
    9
    Stratford Apartments, Inc. v. Fleming, 
    305 A.3d 624
    , 626 (Del. 1973).
    10
    Id. 11 Loper
    v. Street, 
    412 A.2d 316
    , 318 (Del. 1980) (citing DeJoseph v. Faraone, 
    254 A.2d 257
    , 259
    (Del. Super. 1969)).
    12
    Burkhart v. Davies, 
    602 A.2d 56
    , 59 (Del. 1991).
    5
    without payment, and that his moving of the mattress into the Taylors’ home
    conferred a benefit upon them. Plaintiff alternatively argues (1) because the Taylors
    admitted Plaintiff was not invited to the property, he was not a “guest” at all and
    therefore the statute does not apply; and (2) an agency relationship existed between
    Buckley and the Taylors, Plaintiff only was on the property to assist Buckley, the
    Taylors’ family member who was permitted on the property, and therefore Plaintiff
    conferred a benefit on the Taylors as Buckley’s “principal.”
    12.     Delaware courts have found a “guest without payment” to be akin to a
    “social guest,” or a person “who is present by invitation, express or implied, without
    economic or business benefit to the host.” 13 In order for a landowner to receive the
    benefit of this statute, the landowner must not have received or expected a benefit of
    value from the guest’s presence.14 The benefit need not be a financial one; a benefit
    is conferred when the landowner gets or expects to get “a benefit of value for which
    other persons would have to pay.” 15 Conferring a de minimis benefit on a landowner
    is not sufficient to convert a guest into a business invitee. 16
    13
    Facciolo v. Facciolo Constr. Co., 
    317 A.2d 27
    , 28 (Del. 1974); see Whitney v. Brann, 394 F.
    Supp. 1, 8 (D. Del. 1975).
    14
    Stratford 
    Apartments, 305 A.3d at 626
    (citing Richmond v. Knowles, 
    265 A.2d 53
    , 56 (Del.
    Super. 1970)).
    15
    Id. (citing Mumford
    v. Robinson, 
    231 A.2d 477
    , 479 (Del. 1967)) (comparing the guest without
    payment clause to the automobile guest statute).
    16
    See Bailey v. Pennington, 
    406 A.2d 44
    , 45 (Del. 1979). Compare
    id. (finding a
    de minimis
    benefit, if any, conferred by a plaintiff bringing a liquor bottle to a party), and Puglisi v.
    McDannell, 
    1985 WL 189338
    , at *2 (Del. Super. Dec. 23, 1985) (finding no benefit conferred by
    a plaintiff who allowed a defendant to keep his plumber’s vise in the plaintiff’s garage), with Short-
    6
    13.    Plaintiff has not put forward evidence that would establish at trial a
    prima facie case that he was the Taylors’ business invitee. First, the fact that the
    Taylors conceded they did not expressly invite Plaintiff to the property is not
    dispositive. A guest may be invited by implication according to cases interpreting
    the statute, which would include an expressly invited guest (here, Buckley)
    extending an invitation to another (here, Plaintiff). Second, the record evidence
    shows the only benefit conferred by Plaintiff was to Buckley, not the Taylors. There
    are no facts in the record to support a finding that a benefit of value was conferred
    upon the Taylors. Even if assisting Buckley and moving the mattress could be
    construed to be a benefit to the Taylors, it was “de minimis” and would not rise to
    the level required to be a business invitee.
    14.    Although Plaintiff argues Buckley was the Taylor’s “agent,” and
    therefore the benefit to Buckley is imputed to the Taylors, Plaintiff offers no material
    facts from which a jury could find an agency relationship existed. The party
    asserting the existence of an agency relationship bears the burden of proof. 17 The
    elements of that relationship include (1) the agent having the power to act on behalf
    of the principal with respect to third parties; (2) the agent doing something at the
    behest of the principal and for his benefit; and (3) the principal having the right to
    Karr v. RB Gyms, Inc., 
    2015 WL 7776734
    , at *3 (Del. Super. Nov. 20, 2015) (finding guest of
    gym member to be a business invitee when injured in the gym).
    
    17 Wilson v
    . Pepper, 
    1995 WL 562235
    , at *3 (Del. Super. Aug. 21, 1995).
    7
    control the agent’s conduct.18 Plaintiff has not pointed to any facts in the record that
    support any of these elements. Because the undisputed facts show Plaintiff was a
    guest without payment, he is barred from recovery under Delaware’s Guest Premises
    Statute unless he can establish the Taylors acted intentionally or with willful or
    wanton disregard for the rights of persons entering the property.
    B.     Plaintiff’s claim based on reckless and/or willful or wanton disregard
    fails.
    15.    As Plaintiff was a “guest without payment,” the statute bars recovery
    “unless such accident was intentional on the part of the owner or occupier or was
    caused by the willful or wanton disregard of the rights of others.” 19 Plaintiff does
    not contend the incident was intentional, but he argues the Taylors’ failure to remove
    or remedy the snow and ice in their driveway constitutes willful or wanton disregard
    of Plaintiff’s safety.     Plaintiff additionally argues the decision on whether the
    conduct was willful or wanton should be left to the jury.
    16.    In order for conduct to be deemed willful or wanton, it must “assume[]
    the character of maliciousness or wickedness” and include “the elements of
    consciousness of one’s conduct, realization of the probability of injury to another,
    and disregard of the consequences.” 20 Although willful or wantonness generally is
    18
    J.E. Rhoads & Sons, Inc. v. Ammeraal, Inc., 
    1988 WL 32012
    , at *4 (Del. Super. Mar. 30, 1988).
    19
    
    25 Del. C
    . § 1501.
    20
    
    Bailey, 406 A.2d at 46
    .
    8
    a question of fact for the jury, summary judgment is appropriate if the plaintiff
    cannot point to evidence from which a jury could find that the challenged conduct
    rose to the level of conscious indifference or an “I don’t care” attitude. 21 For
    example, in Bailey v. Pennington, a guest premises case, an oil-burning torch used
    to repel insects during an outdoor party fell over and spilled burning oil on the
    plaintiff.22 The Court held that the defendant’s use of the torch in the manner in
    which it was intended was not willful or wanton conduct and that the defendant did
    not act with “conscious realization of the probability of injury” to the plaintiff. 23
    17.    Here, there is no evidence in the record that the Taylors acted
    maliciously, wickedly, or consciously left the snow and ice in their driveway for the
    purpose of injuring Plaintiff or anyone else. The record demonstrates that it had
    been snowing throughout the day, and the Taylors were not aware of Buckley’s or
    the Plaintiff’s plans to move the mattress or other items that evening. There are no
    facts to suggest any malicious feelings or animosity between the parties, as they did
    not have any relationship with each other before this occasion. To the contrary,
    Plaintiff admits that Brian Taylor asked if Plaintiff was okay after the incident and
    21
    Estate of Rae v. Murphy, 
    956 A.2d 1266
    , 1270-71 (Del. 2008); see Francois v. Elom, 
    2017 WL 168867
    , at *2 (Del. Super. Jan. 17, 2017).
    
    22 406 A.2d at 45
    .
    23
    Id. at 46.
                                                 9
    offered to move the mattress himself. 24 Therefore, Plaintiff’s claim based on willful
    or wanton disregard must fail.
    CONCLUSION
    18.    For the foregoing reasons, Defendants Brian and Aine Taylor’s Motion
    for Summary Judgment is GRANTED. IT IS SO ORDERED.
    /s/ Abigail M. LeGrow
    Abigail M. LeGrow, Judge
    Original to Prothonotary
    cc: Tiffany M. Shrenk, Esquire
    Andres Gutierrez de Cos, Esquire
    24
    Defs.’ Mot. for Summ. J. 13.
    10