Colville v. Meijer Stores Ltd. , 2012 Ohio 2413 ( 2012 )


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  • [Cite as Colville v. Meijer Stores Ltd., 
    2012-Ohio-2413
    .]
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    MIAMI COUNTY
    SHARON COLVILLE                                    :
    :     Appellate Case No. 2011-CA-011
    Plaintiff-Appellant                        :
    :     Trial Court Case No. 10-204
    v.                                                 :
    :
    MEIJER STORES LIMITED                              :     (Civil Appeal from
    PARTNERSHIP, et al.                                :     (Common Pleas Court)
    :
    Defendant-Appellees                        :
    :
    ...........
    OPINION
    Rendered on the 1st day of June, 2012.
    .........
    JEFFREY G. CHINAULT, Atty. Reg. #0076723, Dyer, Garofalo, Mann & Schultz, 131 N.
    Ludlow Street, Suite 1400, Dayton, Ohio 45402
    Attorney for Plaintiff-Appellant, Sharon Colville
    ERIN B. MOORE, Atty. Reg. #0061638, and JARED WAGNER, Atty. Reg. #0076674,
    Green & Green, Lawyers, 800 Performance Place, 109 N. Main Street, Dayton, Ohio 45402
    Attorneys for Defendant-Appellee, Meijer Stores
    STEVEN F. STOFEL, Atty Reg. #0073332, and BRIAN R. McHENRY, Atty. Reg.
    #0065876, 130 West Second Street, Suite 1850, Dayton, Ohkiio 45402
    Attorney for Defendant-Appellee, Home City Ice Company
    2
    .........
    HALL, J.
    {¶ 1}     This is an appeal from a final order granting both Defendants’ respective
    motions for summary judgment in Plaintiff’s action claiming damages for personal injuries
    she suffered in a slip-and-fall accident.
    {¶ 2}    The action was commenced by Sharon Colville against Meijer Stores Limited
    Partnership (“Meijer”) and The Home City Ice Company (“Home City Ice”). The complaint
    alleged that Colville was injured as a proximate result of her slip and fall in a Meijer store that
    proximately resulted from a hazardous condition that Meijer and Home City Ice negligently
    permitted to exist.
    {¶ 3}     Meijer and Home City Ice each filed a responsive pleading denying the
    allegations of negligence and claims of liability. Thereafter, depositions were taken of the
    plaintiff, Sharon Colville, and two other witnesses, Claudia J. Bates and Ian Unger.
    {¶ 4}     Colville testified that on the morning of June 29, 2008, she drove to the
    Meijer store in Troy, Ohio, to purchase groceries and pay her credit-card bill. When she
    drove her car into the store parking lot, Colville “noticed a white panel truck in the parking lot
    in front of the east door * * * unloading ice.” (T. 20). Colville parked her car near the east
    entrance and entered Meijer around 11:50 a.m.
    {¶ 5}     Colville paid her credit-card bill at the service desk and then walked through
    the women’s clothing department, just to look. She then “walked to the grocery section and
    got * * * peaches, sunflower seeds, and a kind of berry juice and some Diet Coke and
    check[ed] out of the self-service lane.” (T. 21). The self-service lanes are near the store’s
    west entrance. Colville then made her way toward the east entrance, where she had entered,
    3
    pushing a grocery cart containing her purchases. The aisle she followed runs the width of the
    store, between the store’s front windows and the check-out lanes.
    {¶ 6}       Colville testified that she did not notice anything unusual. (T. 25). She
    said that she saw people in the check-out lanes and “was walking toward the door watching to
    make sure no one came out and got in my way.” (T. 26). Colville said she was focused on
    the door she was approaching: she “had the cart in front of [her]” and “wasn’t looking at the
    ground.” (T. 27). As she neared the east-exit door, Colville testified, “[w]hen I got in front
    of the ice machine, [I] slipped in something, went down hard on my right knee, all my weight,
    hanging onto my cart when I did it.” (T. 21). Colville said she immediately experienced
    “intense pain” in her right knee. (T. 29).
    {¶ 7}       Colville testified that she got up and sat on some nearby boxes. When she
    stood up from the boxes and looked where she had fallen, Colville “could see that there was
    water” on the floor. (T. 27-28). When asked whether she was able to determine that water
    was on the floor, Colville testified: “Well, yeah, after I looked.” (T. 28). Colville said she
    did not see the water as she approached the location. When asked whether anything had
    distracted her before she fell, Colville answered, “No.” (T. 33). She testified that the only
    reason she did not see the puddle was because her attention was focused on the door in front
    of her. (T. 71).
    {¶ 8}       Colville testified that the water was “[r]ight beside the ice machine. Maybe
    two feet from it.” (T. 26). She described the water as being in puddles extending “the
    length of the ice machine and two or three inches wide all along there.” (T. 30). She
    testified that the puddles were about three-feet long and extended out more than three inches
    4
    from the ice machine. Colville did not see that the water came from the ice machine, and
    couldn’t determine where it came from. (T. 31). And she had no idea how long the puddle
    was there before her fall. (T. 34). Colville said that initially she was not aware of the name
    of the ice company because “there was no Home City Ice on the truck,” but she said, “I’ve
    learned since then * * * because Meijer told me.” (T. 34-35). Colville further testified: “I
    knew that they were delivering ice, and I surmised from there as they loaded the bags, the
    water dripped from the bags.” (T. 34-35). She was unable to tell who created the puddle,
    (T. 35), and she did not know if Home City Ice was aware that there was a puddle on the floor.
    (T. 73).
    {¶ 9}     When a store employee approached her, Colville told him about the water on
    the floor. Colville said that the employee saw the water when she pointed it out. The
    employee then mopped it up. Colville declined ambulance assistance and drove home. She
    consulted her physician the following day, and he diagnosed a chipped patella and referred
    Colville to an orthopedic surgeon. An MRI revealed a torn meniscus in Colville’s right knee,
    and she underwent outpatient surgery to repair it. Colville continues to experience knee and
    hip pain that she attributes to her fall.
    {¶ 10}    Claudia J. Bates, who was a service-team leader at Meijer on the day Colville
    fell, was also deposed. Bates could recall only speaking with a woman who had slipped and
    fallen. Bates subsequently left Meijer’s employ.
    {¶ 11}    Ian Unger, who worked for Home City Ice and delivered ice to Meijer stores
    in July 2008, was deposed too. When asked what his job involved, Unger replied, “fill up the
    ice box, then you clean up all your messes.” (T. 9). The “messes” could include water on
    5
    the floor “right in front of the icebox if some ice fell out.” 
    Id.
     A towel was attached by a
    rope to each icebox for that purpose. However, Unger “rarely” found water on the floor
    around an icebox. (T. 10).
    {¶ 12}      Unger testified that Home City Ice had a contract with Meijer “to fill their
    icebox completely full and bill them.” (T. 14). Delivery persons would inspect the iceboxes
    they filled to make sure they were working properly. This included checking for water “at all
    times.”        (T. 15).     They were to clean up any water but were to call Home City Ice
    maintenance if there were any other problems.
    {¶ 13}      Unger testified that, in his experience, water didn’t drip from ice bags when
    they were loaded into an icebox because the ice was solidly frozen. He said that the time it
    took to transport the bags from the delivery truck to the icebox was too short to permit any
    melting. After watching a video at the offices of counsel for Home City Ice, which may have
    depicted Unger delivering ice to the Troy Meijer store on the day Colville slipped and fell,
    Unger testified that he saw no water on the floor that day.1
    {¶ 14}      Defendants each filed a motion for summary judgment. Meijer argued that
    it cannot be held liable to Colville for her injuries and losses proximately resulting from her
    fall on its premises because the puddle of water on which she allegedly slipped was an
    open-and-obvious condition as a matter of law. Meijer relied on the Ohio Supreme Court’s
    holding in Armstrong v. Best Buy Co., 
    99 Ohio St.3d 79
    , 
    2003-Ohio-2573
    , 
    788 N.E.2d 1088
    ,
    and the holding of this Court in Brant v. Meijer, Inc., 2d Dist. Montgomery No. 21369,
    
    2006-Ohio-6300
    . (Dkt. 25).
    1
    The video is not a part of the record of this proceeding.
    6
    {¶ 15}    In her opposition to Meijer’s summary-judgment motion, Colville relied on
    her own deposition testimony, arguing that the “attendant circumstances” exception to the
    open-and-obvious-condition rule applied. Relying on Godwin v. Erb, 
    167 Ohio St.3d 645
    ,
    
    2006-Ohio-3638
    , 
    856 N.E.2d 321
     (5th Dist.), and Hudspath v. Caffaro Co., 11th Dist.
    Ashtabula No. 2004-A-0073, 
    2005-Ohio-6911
    , Colville argued that her testimony, that she
    was pushing a grocery cart containing her purchases, a grocery cart that Meijer supplied for
    that very purpose, and was looking around to avoid colliding with shoppers coming from the
    check-out lanes is evidence that attendant circumstances were present. This evidence, she
    contended, creates a genuine issue of material fact with respect to whether the puddle of water
    was an open-and-obvious condition that Colville should have seen. (Dkt. 38).
    {¶ 16}    The trial court granted Meijer’s motion for summary judgment, relying on
    our holding in Brant v. Meijer to find that the puddles of water were an open-and-obvious
    condition as a matter of law. The court cited Colville’s testimony that she “could see the
    puddles after she slipped.” The court rejected Colville’s attendant-circumstances argument,
    stating: “Good grief, every shopper has to watch where they are pushing their cart so as not to
    run into others and store displays; and it is not as if the carts are moving at 25 mph.” The
    court noted that Colville did not say that the cart was so full that it blocked her view of the
    floor ahead of her; rather, she “simply indicated she was not looking at the floor.” The court
    further found: “The condition in this case was observable; they were the type of conditions
    (puddles of water) which are known to be located in front of ice vending machines in the
    summer, and there was nothing which distracted the Plaintiff from seeing the puddles and
    avoiding them.” (Dkt. 40).
    7
    {¶ 17}    In support of its motion for summary judgment, Home City Ice argued that
    Colville had no evidence that it was in any way negligent. Home City Ice contended that
    Colville’s belief that it was somehow responsible for the puddle of water was purely
    speculative. Home City Ice also relied on Unger’s testimony that on the day he was recorded
    putting ice into the icebox at the Troy Meijer there was no water on the floor. Finally, Home
    City Ice also argued that the puddle was an open-and-obvious condition, relieving it of any
    liability under premises liability theory. (Dkt. 30).
    {¶ 18}    Colville argued in her opposition to Home City Ice’s summary-judgment
    motion that, based on her testimony that she saw ice being delivered when she arrived at the
    Meijer store, reasonable minds could infer that Home City Ice was responsible for the puddle
    of water in front of the ice machine that had caused her to slip and fall. Colville relied on the
    holding of the Fourth District Court of Appeals in Hickman v. Wal-Mart Stores E., Inc., 4th
    Dist. Washington No. 07CA41, 
    2008-Ohio-1221
    , in which the appellate court found that
    genuine issues of material fact existed as to whether an employee who had earlier been
    working on a display with a clear, slick substance was the cause of the “clear waxy substance”
    directly in front of the display on which that plaintiff slipped. Colville also pointed to the
    same evidence of attendant circumstances that she cited in her opposition to Meijer’s motion
    to argue that a genuine issue of material fact existed regarding whether the puddles were an
    open-and-obvious condition.
    {¶ 19}    The trial court also granted Home City Ice’s motion for summary judgment.
    The court distinguished the holding in Hickman, noting that in that case there was testimony
    that Wal-mart’s vendor had been servicing the display in the store containing the waxy
    8
    substance that later caused the plaintiff to slip and fall.         The court rejected Colville’s
    attendant-circumstances argument for the same reasons that it rejected the argument when it
    granted Meijer’s motion for summary judgment. (Dkt. 43).
    {¶ 20}    Colville filed a notice of appeal in this Court from both grants of summary
    judgment. She now assigns two errors for our review. We will begin with the second
    assignment of error, an order that better facilitates our review.
    {¶ 21}    SECOND ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR
    THE       TRIAL         COURT         ERRED           IN     GRANTING
    DEFENDANTS-APPELLEES MEIJER AND HOME CITY SUMMARY
    JUDGMENT BASED ON THE OPEN AND OBVIOUS DOCTRINE.
    {¶ 22}    Summary judgment may not be granted unless the entire record demonstrates
    that there is no genuine issue of material fact and that the moving party is, on that record,
    entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Civ.R. 56(c). The burden of showing that no
    genuine issue of material fact exists is on the moving party.              Harless v. Willis Day
    Warehousing Co., 
    54 Ohio St.2d 64
    , 
    375 N.E.2d 46
     (1978). All evidence submitted in
    connection with a motion for summary judgment must be construed most strongly in favor of
    the party against whom the motion is made. Morris v. First National Bank & Trust Co., 
    21 Ohio St.2d 25
    , 
    254 N.E.2d 683
     (1970). In reviewing a trial court’s grant of summary
    judgment, an appellate court must view the facts in a light most favorable to the party who
    opposed the motion. Osborne v. Lyles, 
    63 Ohio St.3d 326
    , 
    587 N.E.2d 825
     (1992). Further,
    the issues of law involved are reviewed de novo. Nilavar v. Osborn, 
    127 Ohio App.3d 1
    , 
    711 N.E.2d 726
     (2d Dist.1998).
    9
    {¶ 23}     It is fundamental that in order to establish a cause of action for negligence
    the plaintiff must show (1) the existence of a duty, (2) a breach of that duty, and (3) an injury
    proximately resulting therefrom. Menifee v. Ohio Welding Prod., Inc., 
    15 Ohio St.3d 75
    , 77,
    
    472 N.E.2d 707
     (1984).
    A business owner owes an invitee a duty of ordinary care and must
    maintain the business premises in a reasonably safe condition so that invitees
    are not unnecessarily and unreasonably exposed to danger.            Campbell v.
    Hughes Provision Co. (1950), 
    153 Ohio St. 9
    , 
    41 O.O. 107
    , 
    90 N.E.2d 694
    .
    Whether an owner has breached that duty depends on the owner’s knowledge
    of the hazard and opportunity to remove it or warn of it. Anaple v. Standard
    Oil Co. (1955), 
    162 Ohio St. 537
    , 
    55 O.O. 424
    , 
    124 N.E.2d 128
    . Whether
    the owner acted with reasonable care under the circumstances is a question of
    fact for the jury. Keister v. Park Centre Lanes (1981), 
    3 Ohio App.3d 19
    , 3
    OBR 20, 
    443 N.E.2d 532
    .
    [Detrick v. Columbia Sussex Corp., 
    90 Ohio App.3d 475
    , 477, 
    629 N.E.2d 1081
     (2d
    Dist.1993).]
    {¶ 24}    In Sidle v. Humphrey, 
    13 Ohio St.2d 45
    , 
    233 N.E.2d 589
     (1968), a boy
    delivering newspapers slipped and fell on ice and snow that had accumulated on the front
    steps of the defendant’s building. The boy saw the accumulation when he approached the
    steps. Affirming a directed verdict for the defendant on the slip-and-fall claim, the Supreme
    Court held in its syllabus:
    1. An occupier of premises is under no duty to protect a business
    10
    invitee against dangers which are known to such invitee or are so obvious and
    apparent to such invitee that he may reasonably be expected to discover them
    and protect himself against them.
    2.     The dangers from natural accumulations of ice and snow are
    ordinarily so obvious and apparent that an occupier of premises may
    reasonably expect that a business invitee on his premises will discover those
    dangers and protect himself against them. (Debie v.Cochran Pharmacy-
    Berwick, Inc., 
    11 Ohio St.2d 38
    , 
    227 N.E.2d 603
    , approved and followed.)
    3. Ordinarily, an owner and occupier has no duty to his business invitee
    to remove natural accumulations of snow and ice from private walks and steps
    on his premises. (Paragraph two of the syllabus in Debie v. Cochran
    Pharmacy- Berwick, Inc., 
    11 Ohio St.2d 38
    , 
    227 N.E.2d 603
    , approved and
    followed.)
    {¶ 25}        In Brant v. Meijer, Inc., 2d Dist. Montgomery No. 21369, 
    2006-Ohio-6300
    ,
    the plaintiff slipped and fell in a puddle of water near the floral department inside a Meijer
    store. Id. at ¶ 1. The trial court granted summary judgment to Meijer on the plaintiff’s claim
    of negligence. We affirmed the trial court’s decision, stating:
    Brant’s testimony makes clear that she would have been able to
    discover and avoid the puddle if she had exercised ordinary care in watching
    where she was going.         Brant testified that her view of the floor was not
    obstructed. Her testimony that she saw the puddle after her fall establishes
    that it was visible to an ordinary observer looking directly where she was
    11
    walking.     By looking   elsewhere, Brant “abandoned the duty imposed to
    look.” Backus v. Giant Eagle (1996), 
    115 Ohio App.3d 155
    . Had she not
    done so, she would have seen the puddle.
    {¶ 26}     Subsequent to Brant, this Court decided two similar cases about the open and
    obvious doctrine.       In Trimble v. Frisch’s Ohio, Inc., 2d Dist. Clark No. 07CA18,
    
    2007-Ohio-4616
    , the plaintiff stepped onto the ceramic-tile floor around the breakfast bar of a
    restaurant and slipped and fell on water that was standing on the floor. The trial court
    granted the defendant’s motion for summary judgment on the plaintiff’s negligence claim.
    We reversed, stating:
    [R]easonable minds could reach different conclusions on whether the
    condition and the hazard associated with it that caused Trimble’s fall were
    open and obvious. Therefore, a genuine issue of material fact remains for
    determination, and the trial court erred when it granted Frisch’s motion for
    summary judgment.
    But, in Trimble there was a witness’s affidavit that indicated that the water on the floor “was
    clear and odorless and was not visible until I knelt down to help Mrs. Trimble.” Id. at ¶ 7.
    {¶ 27}     In Middleton v. Meijer, Inc., 2d Dist. Montgomery No. 23789,
    
    2010-Ohio-3244
    , the plaintiff walked to the rear of a Meijer store and picked up two gallons
    of milk, one in each hand. The plaintiff then walked through the main grocery aisle to look at
    sale displays. As he was walking, the plaintiff felt his left foot slide out from beneath him,
    causing him to “do the splits and hit his knee on the ground.” When he examined the floor,
    which was a light color, the plaintiff discovered that he had slipped on a puddle of clear,
    12
    liquid laundry detergent. The evidence showed that, “when on the floor, Middleton could see
    that the ‘substance had been all tracked through.’” Id. at ¶ 2. There was also evidence that
    another store patron saw the substance about ten minutes before the fall and went to inform
    store management about the spill. Id. at ¶ 3.
    {¶ 28}    Citing Brant v. Meijer, Inc., the trial court in Middleton granted summary
    judgment for the defendant, finding that the clear liquid laundry detergent was an
    open-and-obvious condition.     In a divided opinion, with both concurring and dissenting
    aspects, this Court reversed, stating: “Although store owners have no duty to protect its
    patrons from tracked-in water from snow or rain near the entrance to the stores, they do have a
    duty to protect patrons from clear substances on their store floors that are not open and
    obvious dangers. We believe a jury could find from the plaintiff’s evidence that the laundry
    detergent was not an open and obvious danger to the plaintiff Middleton and that the
    defendant had sufficient notice of its presence in order to protect the plaintiff from falling in
    it.” Id. at ¶ 17. Thus, the Middleton decision is a mixed analysis of the open-and-obvious
    doctrine and of whether a store’s actual notice of a hazard affects the store’s duty to eliminate
    it.
    {¶ 29} In the present case, we agree with the trial court that, on this record, there is
    no genuine issue of material fact that the hazard was open and obvious.
    {¶ 30}    Plaintiff argues, though, that the open-and-obvious defense should not apply
    in this case because there were “attendant circumstances.”            “As a corollary to the
    open-and-obvious doctrine, [this Court has] recognized that there may be attendant
    13
    circumstances [that] divert the individual’s attention from [a] hazard and excuse her failure to
    observe it.” Olivier v. Leaf & Vine, 2d Dist. Miami No. 2004 CA 35, 
    2005-Ohio-1910
    , ¶ 22.
    While there is no precise definition of “attendant circumstances,” it generally refers to “any
    distraction that would come to the attention of [the plaintiff] in the same circumstances and
    reduce the degree of care an ordinary person would exercise at the time.”            McLain v.
    Equitable Life Assur. Co. of the U. S., 1st Dist. Hamilton No. C-950048, 
    1996 WL 107513
    , *5
    (Mar. 13, 1996), quoting France v. Parliament Park Townhomes, 2d Dist. Montgomery No.
    14264, 
    1994 WL 151658
     (Apr. 27, 1994). Attendant circumstances do not, though, include
    regularly encountered, ordinary, or common circumstances. Cooper v. Meijer, 10th Dist.
    Franklin No. 07AP-201, 
    2007-Ohio-6086
    , ¶ 17.
    {¶ 31}    The plaintiff’s testimony is that she was not distracted at all. Accordingly,
    there is no factual basis on which to apply the attendant-circumstances exception. Moreover,
    she has not cited evidence of any circumstances that were out of the ordinary, uncommon, or
    not regularly encountered. We agree with the trial court that “there was nothing which
    distracted the plaintiff from seeing the puddles and avoiding them,” (Dkt. 40). There is no
    evidence, and therefore no genuine issue of material fact, to support a finding of attendant
    circumstances.
    {¶ 32}    We see no reason that, under the circumstances of this case, Home City Ice
    cannot also assert the open-and-obvious defense, even though their potential for responsibility
    is not derived from a premises-liability theory. Home City Ice concedes in its brief that it
    “owns and maintains an ice machine within the Meijer store [that] is located within the
    vicinity of Mrs. Colville’s fall.”    (Brief, p.11).   That concession is supported by the
    14
    deposition testimony of Ian Unger. But Home City Ice was not the owner of the premises,
    and although their equipment occupied part of the store, the fall occurred in front of the
    machine, not in or under it. Home City Ice’s concession does not display that degree of
    control over the premises necessary for it, as an occupier, to have an affirmative duty to
    discover and cure a danger that it may have created. If Home City Ice is liable to Colville for
    the injuries that proximately resulted from her slip and fall, it is for ordinary negligence – a
    breach of a duty of care that Home City Ice owed Colville that proximately resulted in
    Colville’s injuries and losses. But the open-and-obvious defense applies in product-liability
    cases too, the common law development of which has been codified in R.C. 2307.76(B). The
    defense further applies when the theory of liability is the creation of a nuisance. See Moody
    v. Coshocton Cty., 9th Dist. Wayne No. 05CA0059, 
    2006-Ohio-3751
    . Furthermore, Home
    City Ice’s duty, if it has any, would be co-extensive with that of Meijer, the actual owner of
    the premises. Accordingly, we believe the open-and-obvious defense applies and the trial
    court’s grant of summary judgment to Home City Ice on that basis should be affirmed.
    {¶ 33}    The second assignment of error is overruled.
    {¶ 34}    FIRST ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR
    THE      TRIAL        COURT         ERRED         BY       GRANTING
    DEFENDANT-APPELLEE HOME CITY SUMMARY JUDGMENT BASED
    ON LACK OF CREATION OR KNOWLEDGE OF THE HAZARD.
    {¶ 35}    A second argument raised by Home City Ice, and adopted by the trial court,
    is that the plaintiff presented no evidence that it created or was aware of the puddle.
    Therefore, Home City Ice argues, summary judgment was proper.
    15
    {¶ 36}    Colville testified that she saw bags of ice being delivered to the Meijer store
    when she arrived that day. The trial court found: “The Plaintiff’s perception leads to the
    inference that Home City delivered the ice on the morning in question.” (Dkt. 43). The
    court rejected Colville’s contention that Home City Ice had created the puddles as “simply a
    guess.” We agree.
    {¶ 37}    We assume, and the evidence supports, that Home City Ice delivered ice
    sometime that morning. But that fact alone, in our view, is insufficient to draw a reasonable
    inference that Home City must have therefore breached a duty by creating, or failing to
    remove, water on the floor in a public area adjacent to their machine. Undoubtedly, when
    considering a motion for summary judgment, the court must construe the evidence and
    pleadings “most strongly” in that party’s favor. Civ.R. 56(C). But an inference should not
    be drawn on a speculative or remote basis. The plaintiff did not see water coming from the
    machine.    (T. 31).   Nor did she know where the water came from.           
    Id.
     At best, she
    “surmised” that the water came from dripping bags of ice.     We agree with the trial court that
    this is “simply a guess.”
    {¶ 38}    Unger’s deposition testimony includes references to a video he viewed prior
    to his deposition testimony. The questions posed to him that referred to that video, and
    Unger’s responses, suggest that the video depicts Unger delivering ice to the machine at the
    Troy Meijer on the day Colville fell. The colloquy further suggests that the video shows that
    Unger didn’t clean the floor around the machine. Perhaps if the video itself had been offered
    in evidence, we could draw an inference that would preclude summary judgment. But we are
    unable to rely on Unger’s testimony about the video. The video is not part of the record.
    16
    Further, there is no indication from Unger’s testimony what time of day he was recorded
    making the delivery or even any positive statement that it was the same day that Colville fell.
    {¶ 39}    As the trial court did, we distinguish Hickman v. Wal-Mart Stores E., Inc.,
    4th Dist. Washington No. 07CA41, 
    2008-Ohio-1221
    . In Hickman there was evidence that a
    display technician had been working in the exact area of the fall. More importantly, there
    was testimony from the store manager who said that it was his (lay) opinion that the “clear,
    slick substance” on the floor was left by that display technician. Thus, in Hickman the link
    between the substance and person responsible for it was the subject of direct testimony rather
    than the “surmise” of the plaintiff.
    {¶ 40}    Because the plaintiff here has presented no admissible evidence that
    defendant Home City Ice created or was aware of the water, the trial court correctly granted
    the motion for summary judgment on that issue.
    {¶ 41}    The first assignment of error is overruled.
    {¶ 42}    The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
    ..............
    DONOVAN, J., concurring:
    {¶ 43}    In my view the dissent mischaracterizes the majority opinion by suggesting
    that our holding creates “further mischief.” The open and obvious nature of a hazard on any
    premises is analyzed by a fact-specific inquiry and must be determined on a case by case
    basis. For this reason, previously decided open and obvious cases tend to be of limited value.
    Although the dissent is critical of the Springer and Brant decisions, both cases affirmed a
    17
    finding by the trial court that the conditions at issue were “readily observable.” Thus, an
    objective test was ultimately utilized in both cases, supporting an affirmance of summary
    judgment for the defendants.
    {¶ 44}    Furthermore, the dissent unnecessarily urges a motion for enbanc review
    when a majority of the current court recently found no conflict in our open and obvious
    jurisprudence. Middleton v. Meijer, Inc., 2d Dist. Montgomery No. 23789, 
    2010-Ohio-3244
    .
    The dissent does not rely upon any case decided after Middleton to suggest a conflict now
    exists.
    ..........
    GRADY, P.J., dissenting:
    {¶ 45}   The majority perpetuates the erroneous test the Supreme Court expressly
    rejected for applying the “open and obvious” doctrine in premises liability cases in Armstrong
    v. Best Buy, Inc., 
    99 Ohio St.3d 79
    , 
    2003-Ohio-2573
    , 
    788 N.E.2d 1088
    . The Supreme Court
    wrote:
    We continue to adhere to the open-and-obvious doctrine today. In reaching this
    conclusion, we reiterate that when courts apply the rule, they must focus on the
    fact that the doctrine relates to the threshold issue of duty. By focusing on the
    duty prong of negligence, the rule properly considers the nature of the
    dangerous condition itself, as opposed to the nature of the plaintiff's conduct in
    encountering it. The fact that a plaintiff was unreasonable in choosing to
    encounter the danger is not what relieves the property owner of liability.
    18
    Rather, it is the fact that the condition itself is so obvious that it absolves the
    property owner from taking any further action to protect the plaintiff. Ferrell,
    Emerging Trends in Premises Liability Law: Ohio's Latest Modification
    Continues to Chip Away at Bedrock Principles (1995), 21 Ohio N.U.L.Rev.
    1121, 1134. Even under the Restatement view, we believe the focus is
    misdirected because it does not acknowledge that the condition itself is
    obviously hazardous and that, as a result, no liability is imposed. (Emphasis
    supplied).
    {¶ 46}        In the present case, the majority relies on two facts to find that the puddle of
    water that Plaintiff Colville claims caused her to fall presented an open and obvious hazard.
    First, Plaintiff was able to see the puddle after she fell.2 Second, because her attention was
    on the door she was approaching, Plaintiff failed to see the puddle of water before she fell.
    However, both matters involve Plaintiff’s conduct in encountering the hazardous condition,
    which Armstrong expressly rejected as a basis to find the condition was an open and obvious
    hazard.
    {¶ 47}        The genesis of the majority’s error appears to be the holding in Springer v.
    University of Dayton, 2d Dist. Montgomery No. 21358, 
    2006-Ohio-3198
    , in which we wrote
    that “the determinative issue is whether the condition is observable. Even in cases in which
    the plaintiff did not actually notice the condition until after he or she fell, [courts] have found
    no duty to exist in cases where the plaintiff could have seen the condition if he or she had
    2
    The fact that Colville, upon subsequent close examination, was able to see the puddle after she fell is, of course, not determinative
    of whether she should have seen it before she fell, in the exercise of ordinary care.
    19
    looked.” Id. at ¶ 5.
    {¶ 48}    Whether a condition is “observable” for purposes of the open and obvious
    doctrine is not determined by whether a plaintiff could have seen the condition if he or she
    had looked. That’s the very subjective test that Armstrong rejected in favor of an objective
    test, “the fact that the condition itself is so obvious that it absolves the property owner from
    taking any further action to protect the plaintiff.” Armstrong at ¶ 13.
    {¶ 49}    We explained the open and obvious standard in Armstrong in Trimble v.
    Frisch’s Ohio, Inc., 2d Dist. Clark No. 07CA0018, 
    2007-Ohio-4616
    , writing: “Hazards are
    open and obvious when they are inherent in the condition from which they arise and the
    condition itself is known to the invitee or by reason of its particular size or configuration the
    condition is readily discoverable.” Trimble at ¶ 27.
    {¶ 50}    The objective criteria for open and obvious hazards we explained in Trimble
    has been the basis for application of the open and obvious doctrine by the Supreme Court in
    multiple cases: Sidle v. Humphrey, 
    13 Ohio St.3d 45
    , 
    233 N.E.2d 589
     (1968), and Debie v.
    Cochran Pharmacy-Berwick, Inc., 
    11 Ohio St.2d 38
    , 
    277 N.E.2d 603
     (1967), natural
    accumulations of snow and ice; Armstrong, a metal guardrail fixed to a floor; and, more
    recently, Lang v. Holly Hill Motel, Inc., 
    122 Ohio St.3d 120
    , 
    2009-Ohio-2495
    , 
    909 N.E.2d 120
    , steps that failed to conform to a building code. None of those cases applied the
    subjective test the majority employs in the present case. Further, in none of these cases was
    the open and obvious doctrine applied to a transient condition involving a substance foreign to
    its location, such as the puddle of water in the present case.
    {¶ 51}    Plaintiff argues that “attendant circumstances” distracted her attention.
    20
    Unfortunately, that matter relates to Plaintiff’s conduct in encountering the hazard, which is
    the test that Armstrong rejects. To that extent, Plaintiff is the author of the error the majority
    commits. But, we should not ourselves create error merely because the error is invited.
    {¶ 52}   The further mischief this holding creates is that it continues a conflict in this
    court’s decisions applying the open and obvious doctrine. In Brant v. Meijer, Inc., 2d Dist.
    Montgomery No. 21369, 
    2006-Ohio-6300
    , we affirmed a summary judgment for a defendant
    on a plaintiff’s claim that she slipped and fell on a puddle of water on the floor of a retail
    store.   In Middleton v. Meijer, 2d Dist. Montgomery No. 23789, 
    2010-Ohio-3244
    , we
    reversed a summary judgment for a defendant on a plaintiff’s claim that he slipped and fell on
    a puddle of clear detergent on the floor of a retail store. Now, on similar facts, we affirm a
    summary judgment for a defendant. Each of those cases involved different collateral facts
    which were of nebulous significance. The problem is in our conflicting applications of the
    open and obvious doctrine based on the plaintiff’s conduct. I urge Plaintiff in the present
    case to seek an en banc review of this decision pursuant to App.R. 26(A)(2).
    ..........
    Copies mailed to:
    Jeffrey G. Chinault, Esq.
    Erin B. Moore, Esq.
    Jared Wagner
    Steven F. Stofel, Esq.
    Brian R. McHenry
    Hon. Robert J. Lindeman