Lessmeister v. The City of Chicago , 2023 IL App (1st) 221047-U ( 2023 )


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    2023 IL App (1st) 221047-U
    No. 1-22-1047
    Order filed April 26, 2023
    Third Division
    NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and is not precedent except in the
    limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1).
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    IN THE
    APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
    FIRST DISTRICT
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    CHERON LESSMEISTER,                                            )   Appeal from the
    )   Circuit Court of
    Plaintiff-Appellant,                                 )   Cook County.
    )
    v.                                                         )   No. 19 L 9012
    )
    THE CITY OF CHICAGO,                                           )   Honorable
    )   Preston Jones, Jr.,
    Defendant-Appellee.                                  )   Judge, presiding.
    JUSTICE BURKE delivered the judgment of the court.
    Presiding Justice McBride and Justice Reyes concurred in the judgment.
    ORDER
    ¶1        Held: We affirm the grant of summary judgment in favor of defendant because the parties
    do not dispute that plaintiff was not using a crosswalk when she was injured while
    crossing a street in downtown Chicago. Defendant owed plaintiff no duty of care
    because she was not an intended and permitted user of the street outside the
    crosswalk, and plaintiff cannot establish defendant’s liability for negligence as a
    matter of law.
    ¶2        Plaintiff, Cheron Lessmeister, appeals the trial court’s grant of summary judgment to
    defendant, the City of Chicago (the City), in this negligence action. Plaintiff was injured when she
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    fell while attempting to cross West Adams Street in downtown Chicago. The parties do not dispute
    that plaintiff attempted to cross the street outside of a crosswalk. The trial court granted summary
    judgment for the City because plaintiff was not an intended and permitted user of the street where
    she attempted to cross it, so she could not establish that the City owed her a duty of care. On
    appeal, plaintiff argues that the trial court’s grant of summary judgment was in error because the
    location where she attempted to cross Adams was part of an “expanded” crosswalk that existed
    due to heavy foot traffic in the marked crosswalk. She also contends that the City had prior notice
    of a pothole near the location where she was injured. For the following reasons, we affirm.
    ¶3                                         I. BACKGROUND
    ¶4      Plaintiff sued the City for negligence, alleging that she tripped in a hole while crossing the
    street near the intersection of West Adams Street and South Wacker Drive in downtown Chicago
    on August 16, 2018. Plaintiff injured her leg and ankle. She claimed that the City negligently failed
    to maintain the pavement on which she fell.
    ¶5      During discovery, in response to the City’s demand for a bill of particulars, plaintiff
    identified the location of her injury as “on West Adams Street, near the building with the address
    of 150 South Wacker Drive.” 1 She attached 23 photographs that, according to her, show the
    condition that caused her injury. These photographs depict two defects in the pavement of a street
    abutting the curb. The defects are not in a crosswalk, but a crosswalk is visible some distance
    away. One defect is a triangular divot, and the other is a narrow crack parallel to the curb. The
    1
    Section 2-607 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that, “[w]ithin the time a party is to
    respond to a pleading, that party may, if allegations are so wanting in details that the responding party
    should be entitled to a bill of particulars, file and serve a notice demanding it.” 735 ILCS 5/2-607 (West
    2018).
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    defects appear to contain crumbled pavement, dirt, and cigarette butts. There are markings in red
    spray paint on the sidewalk above the defects.
    ¶6      At her deposition, plaintiff testified that she attended a work event in downtown Chicago
    on August 16, 2018. After the event, during the afternoon rush hour, she walked toward Union
    Station to take a train home to the suburbs. Plaintiff walked southbound on Wacker and reached
    the intersection with Adams. “[T]here were a lot of people in the crosswalk” at the intersection of
    Wacker and Adams, so plaintiff turned right and “walked a few steps west on Adams.” She stepped
    off the sidewalk to cross Adams and fell. Plaintiff testified as follows:
    “Q. Am I right that the reason why you didn’t use the crosswalk is because you
    thought it was crowded?
    A. Yes.
    Q. So because it was crowded, it was your intention to then walk a little bit more
    west on Adams and cross the street outside of the crosswalk?
    A. Yes.
    Q. And that is what you did?
    A. Yes.”
    Plaintiff fell “immediately” when she stepped off the curb and into the street. She did not know
    what caused her to fall. Plaintiff testified that there was “another crosswalk where [she] could have
    crossed the street to get to the entrance of the train station.” After plaintiff fell, her friend, who was
    walking with her, called 911. Plaintiff was transported to the emergency room at Rush University
    Hospital, where she had surgery to repair fractures in her leg. She also suffered a dislocated ankle.
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    ¶7      Plaintiff deposed Timothy Gatheright, an asphalt foreman employed by the City. Based on
    his review of City records, Gatheright testified that the City received a complaint of a pothole at
    400 West Adams on October 9, 2017, and dispatched a crew to repair it on October 18, 2017.
    However, no pothole at that location was filled because the foreman assigned to that job
    determined that no work needed to be done.
    ¶8      The City moved for summary judgment. First, the City argued that there was no dispute
    that plaintiff crossed the street outside of a crosswalk, so she was not an intended user of the street
    at the location and the City owed her no duty of care. Second, the City argued that plaintiff could
    not establish what proximately caused her fall. In response, plaintiff contended that the City had
    notice of a pothole near 400 West Adams approximately a year prior to her injury but failed to
    repair it. Plaintiff argued that this inaction was a breach of the City’s duty to her regardless of
    whether she was in a crosswalk. The court granted summary judgment, finding that the City did
    not owe plaintiff a duty of care because she was crossing the street outside the crosswalk.
    ¶9      Plaintiff timely appealed.
    ¶ 10                                       II. ANALYSIS
    ¶ 11    On appeal, plaintiff contends that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment for
    the City for two reasons. First, the area of the street in which she was injured was part of an
    “expanded” crosswalk due to heavy foot traffic in the marked crosswalk. Second, the City had
    notice of a pothole on the 400 block of West Adams in October 2017, but failed to repair it prior
    to plaintiff’s injury.
    ¶ 12    Summary judgment is warranted when the pleadings, depositions, admissions, and
    affidavits show that there is no genuine issue of material fact, and the moving party is entitled to
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    judgment as a matter of law. 735 ILCS 5/2-1005(c) (West 2018). Summary judgment should only
    be granted if the moving party’s right to judgment is clear and free of doubt. Forsythe v. Clark
    USA, Inc., 
    224 Ill. 2d 274
    , 280 (2007). It should not be granted if there is a dispute of material fact,
    or if the undisputed material facts could lead reasonable factfinders to different conclusions. 
    Id.
    We review the trial court’s grant of summary judgment de novo (id.), meaning that we perform the
    same analysis that the trial court performed (Khan v. BDO Seidman, LLP, 
    408 Ill. App. 3d 564
    ,
    578 (2011)). We construe the record strictly against the movant and liberally in favor of the
    nonmovant. Forsythe, 
    224 Ill. 2d at 280
    .
    ¶ 13   To establish that a defendant was negligent, a plaintiff must prove that (1) the defendant
    owed the plaintiff a duty of care, (2) the defendant breached that duty, and (3) the breach
    proximately caused the plaintiff’s injury. Vaughn v. City of West Frankfort, 
    166 Ill. 2d 155
    , 158
    (1995). “Absent a legal duty of care owed to the plaintiff, the defendant cannot be found
    negligent.” Ballog v. City of Chicago, 
    2012 IL App (1st) 112429
    , ¶ 20 (citing Washington v. City
    of Chicago, 
    188 Ill. 2d 235
    , 239 (1999)). Whether a defendant owed a plaintiff a duty of care is a
    question of law for the court to resolve. Vaughn, 
    166 Ill. 2d at 158
    . Pursuant to Illinois’ Tort
    Immunity Act, a municipality has a duty to
    “exercise ordinary care to maintain its property in a reasonably safe condition for the use
    in the exercise of ordinary care of people whom the entity intended and permitted to use
    the property in a manner in which and at such times as it was reasonably foreseeable that
    it would be used.” 745 ILCS 10/3-102(a) (West 2018).
    So, the City owes a duty of ordinary care only to those who are intended and permitted users of
    municipal property. See Alave v. City of Chicago, 
    2022 IL App (1st) 210812
    , ¶ 24 (not yet released
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    for publication and subject to revision or withdrawal); see also Vaughn, 
    166 Ill. 2d at 163
    (“[W]hether a municipality owes a duty *** depends on whether the municipality intended that
    the plaintiff-pedestrian walk in that part of the street where the injury occurred and permitted the
    plaintiff-pedestrian to do so.”) “ ‘[W]hether a particular use of property was permitted and intended
    is determined by looking to the nature of the property itself.’ ” Harden v. City of Chicago, 
    2013 IL App (1st) 120846
    , ¶ 19 (quoting Vaughn, 
    166 Ill. 2d at 162-63
    ). In general, the relevant factors
    are: “(1) foreseeability that the defendant’s conduct will result in injury to another; (2) likelihood
    of injury; (3) the magnitude of guarding against it; and (4) the consequences of placing that burden
    upon the defendant.” Curatola v. Village of Niles, 
    154 Ill. 2d 201
    , 214 (1993). “Because the [Tort
    Immunity] Act is in derogation of the common law, it must be strictly construed against the local
    public entity.” 
    Id. at 208
    .
    ¶ 14    This appeal turns on whether plaintiff was an intended and permitted user of the part of the
    street in which she was injured and, therefore, whether the City owed her a duty of care. The City
    first contends that plaintiff has forfeited this issue because her brief contains no argument or
    citation to authority addressing whether she was an intended and permitted user of the street
    outside of the crosswalk. Plaintiff’s brief makes only a perfunctory claim that “the street has the
    intended use of being an expanded crosswalk” and cites no authority in support of that claim.
    Underdeveloped contentions such as this one violate Supreme Court Rule 341(h)(7). See Ill. S. Ct.
    R. 341(h)(7) (eff. Oct. 1, 2020); Atlas Mayer Hoffman McCann, P.C., 
    2019 IL App (1st) 180939
    ,
    ¶ 36. However, plaintiff does attempt to analyze this case in terms of the Curatola factors. She
    suggests that the City’s prior notice of a pothole on Adams created a duty to her regardless of
    whether she used the crosswalk. Moreover, the issue in this appeal is straightforward and the record
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    is short, so the deficiencies in plaintiff’s brief do not hinder our review. See L.D.S., LLC v.
    Southern Cross Food, Ltd., 
    2011 IL App (1st) 102379
    , ¶ 29 (“[Forfeiture] is an admonition to the
    parties, not a limitation on the powers of courts of review.”). So, we will address the issue of the
    City’s duty to plaintiff on the merits.
    ¶ 15    Illinois courts have addressed whether pedestrians are intended and permitted users of city
    streets outside of marked crosswalks. “The general rule *** is that, since pedestrians are not
    intended users of streets, a municipality does not owe a duty of reasonable care to pedestrians who
    attempt to cross a street outside the crosswalks.” Vaughn, 
    166 Ill. 2d at 158
    ; see also Swain v. City
    of Chicago, 
    2014 IL App (1st) 122769
    , ¶ 16 (“It is well-settled law that a municipality owes no
    duty to a pedestrian who crosses a public street outside of the crosswalk.”). So, “local
    municipalities owe no duty to maintain streets and roadways in a reasonably safe condition for
    pedestrians who choose to cross the street outside the protection of the crosswalks.” Vaughn, 
    166 Ill. 2d at 164
    .
    ¶ 16    The parties do not dispute that plaintiff attempted to cross Adams outside of a crosswalk.
    This exchange from plaintiff’s deposition is decisive:
    “Q. So because it was crowded, it was your intention to then walk a little bit more
    west on Adams and cross the street outside of the crosswalk?
    A. Yes.
    Q. And that is what you did?
    A. Yes.”
    Even construing the record strictly in plaintiff’s favor, as we must (see Forsythe, 
    224 Ill. 2d at 280
    ), there is no way to interpret this testimony as anything other than an admission that plaintiff
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    saw a crosswalk for pedestrians to cross Adams but decided to cross Adams outside the crosswalk
    instead. As a matter of law, plaintiff cannot establish that she was an intended and permitted user
    of the area of the street in which she was injured. Therefore, she cannot establish that the City
    owed her a duty of care, and the City is entitled to summary judgment. See Scerba v. City of
    Chicago, 
    284 Ill. App. 3d 435
    , 438 (1996) (when the plaintiff “left the safety of the sidewalk and
    walked onto the middle of Sheridan Road, he was neither an intended [n]or [a] permitted user of
    the roadway. The City owed him no duty of ordinary care.”).
    ¶ 17   Plaintiff acknowledges that the City “has no duty to a pedestrian injured because of walking
    *** outside of the crosswalk.” However, she argues that “an intersection such as West Adams and
    South Wacker that is near Union Train Station *** has the intended use of being an expanded
    crosswalk” when the marked crosswalk is not large enough to accommodate rush hour foot traffic.
    Plaintiff cites no authority for her claim that a marked crosswalk can “expand” to include other
    areas of the street if the crosswalk is crowded with pedestrian traffic. We have found no such
    authority. Wojdyla v. City of Park Ridge, 
    148 Ill. 2d 417
     (1993), does suggest that an unmarked
    intersection can function as a crosswalk “by custom.” Wojdyla, 148 Ill. 2d at 426. However, that
    case also indicates that an unmarked midblock area of a street is never intended or permitted for
    pedestrian use. Id. To the extent that plaintiff suggests that she crossed Adams near enough to the
    intersection with Wacker such that she was using a crosswalk “by custom,” her deposition
    testimony indicates otherwise. Plaintiff testified that she reached the intersection of Wacker and
    Adams, turned the corner, walked west on Adams, and then entered the street midblock. So, even
    under Wojdyla, her crossing of Adams was not intended or permitted.
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    ¶ 18   Plaintiff also contends that the City received notice of a pothole on the 400 block of West
    Adams in October 2017, but failed to repair it before she was injured. Plaintiff cites Gatheright’s
    deposition testimony in support of this argument. She implies that her injury was foreseeable to
    the City, so, under Curatola, the City owed her a duty to repair the defect that caused her injury.
    Accepting this argument would essentially require us to overrule Vaughn, which established the
    clear rule that a pedestrian who crosses a city street outside of a crosswalk is not an intended or
    permitted user of the street. We decline to depart from the rule of Vaughn.
    ¶ 19   Harden guides our reasoning. In Harden, the plaintiff attempted to cross Adams near the
    intersection with Wacker “between the stop line and *** the furthest east marked white line of the
    crosswalk.” Harden, 
    2013 IL App (1st) 120846
    , ¶ 6. As the plaintiff stepped off the curb and into
    the street, she fell and was injured. 
    Id.
     The plaintiff believed that her foot got caught on a metal
    plate on the street but was not certain. 
    Id.
     She sued the City for negligence, and the City moved
    for summary judgment, arguing that she “was not an intended and permitted user of the street when
    she crossed Adams Street outside of the marked crosswalk lines.” 
    Id. ¶¶ 1, 9
    . In response, the
    plaintiff argued that she could not see the crosswalk because of heavy pedestrian traffic and a
    dusting of snow. 
    Id. ¶ 10
    . The trial court granted summary judgment for the City, finding that the
    plaintiff’s deposition testimony and photographs established that she crossed Adams outside of the
    marked crosswalk, so she was not an intended and permitted user of the street where she fell. 
    Id. ¶ 12
    . We affirmed on the same basis. 
    Id. ¶¶ 37, 41
    .
    ¶ 20   This case is almost identical to Harden. Both cases occurred at the same intersection,
    Wacker and Adams. Both plaintiffs admitted that they tried to cross Adams outside of a marked
    crosswalk. Both plaintiffs cited heavy pedestrian traffic in the crosswalk as a reason for not using
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    it. Both plaintiffs fell and were injured as soon as they stepped off the curb but could not pinpoint
    what caused their injury. The factual similarity that this case has with Harden warrants the same
    outcome. The City is entitled to summary judgment because plaintiff was not an intended and
    permitted user of Adams outside the marked crosswalk.
    ¶ 21    The cases that plaintiff cites are distinguishable and do not warrant reversal. Three such
    cases did not involve pedestrians crossing city streets. Monson v. City of Danville, 
    2018 IL 122486
    ;
    Ward v. K Mart Corporation, 
    136 Ill. 2d 132
     (1990); Christakes v. SP Plus Corporation, 
    2018 IL App (1st) 172675-U
    . 2 Waters v. City of Chicago, 
    2012 IL App (1st) 100759
    , did involve a plaintiff
    who tripped over a barricade at the entrance to a crosswalk, but it dealt with the applicability of
    the open and obvious doctrine and the distraction exception, neither of which are at issue in this
    case. See Waters, 
    2012 IL App (1st) 100759
    , ¶¶ 1-5. None of these cases support departing from
    the well-established rule of Vaughn and its progeny that, when a pedestrian crosses a city street
    outside of a crosswalk, the city does not owe that pedestrian a duty and cannot be held liable for
    negligence. Accordingly, we affirm the grant of summary judgment in favor of the City.
    ¶ 22                                        III. CONCLUSION
    ¶ 23    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the circuit court of Cook County.
    ¶ 24    Affirmed.
    2
    Christakes is an unpublished order under Supreme Court Rule 23, so we cannot rely on it, and
    plaintiff cannot cite it, “except to support contentions of double jeopardy, res judicata, collateral estoppel,
    or law of the case,” or as persuasive authority if the order was issued after January 1, 2021. See Ill. S. Ct.
    R. 23(e)(1) (eff. Jan. 1, 2021). Plaintiff does not cite Christakes for any of these purposes.
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