J. Hinerman & R. Hinerman v. Westmoreland County Airport Auth. d/b/a Arnold Palmer Regional Airport ( 2023 )


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  •            IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Janet Hinerman and Richard             :
    Hinerman,                              :
    Appellants            :
    :
    v.                               : No. 732 C.D. 2022
    :
    Westmoreland County Airport            :
    Authority d/b/a Arnold Palmer          :
    Regional Airport                       : Submitted: May 8, 2023
    BEFORE:      HONORABLE ANNE E. COVEY, Judge
    HONORABLE ELLEN CEISLER, Judge
    HONORABLE MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, Senior Judge
    OPINION BY JUDGE CEISLER                                  FILED: June 15, 2023
    Janet and Richard Hinerman appeal from a June 15, 2022 Order of the Court
    of Common Pleas of Westmoreland County (Trial Court), which granted the Motion
    for Summary Judgment (Motion) filed by Westmoreland County Airport Authority
    (Airport Authority). The Hinermans argue that a genuine issue of material fact
    remains in their negligence action against the Airport Authority, and, therefore, the
    Trial Court improperly granted the Motion. Upon review, we affirm.
    I. Background
    On the morning of January 20, 2020, the Hinermans arrived at Arnold Palmer
    Regional Airport, which is owned and maintained by the Airport Authority, to pick
    up a vehicle from a car rental agency located on the premises. Reproduced Record
    (R.R.) at 196a-97a. After collecting the keys to the vehicle, the Hinermans exited
    the terminal building and walked out to a parking area. Id. at 207a. Snow had
    recently fallen, but had been cleared from the paved surfaces. Id. at 247a. While in
    the parking lot, Mr. Hinerman sounded the remote-control lock button on the
    vehicle’s key in order to pinpoint where it was parked. Id. at 221a-22a. When the
    car’s horn sounded, the Hinermans determined that the sound emanated from a
    separate parking lot, located farther from the terminal building and separated by a
    grassy area from the lot on which they were standing. Id. at 231a. Connecting the
    two parking lots were a driveway and a paved walkway, both of which had been
    cleared of snow. Id. at 247a, 250a. The grass between the two parking lots was still
    snow-covered, but Mrs. Hinerman recalled seeing grass blades poking through the
    snow. Id. at 247a.
    Instead of using the paved walkway or the driveway, the Hinermans opted for
    the most direct route toward the parked car, which was across the snow-covered
    grassy area. Id. at 232a. Mr. Hinerman crossed the snow and reached the other
    parking lot without incident. Id. at 233a. While Mrs. Hinerman followed along a
    slightly different path, her feet stumbled into a depression in the ground, several
    inches deep, which had been obscured by the snow cover. Id. at 224a. Mrs.
    Hinerman landed on her knees; feeling severe pain in her left foot, she was unable
    to stand for approximately five minutes. Id. at 234. Mr. Hinerman helped his wife
    up to her feet and into the rental car, which she drove to their home on her own. Id.
    at 237a.
    Approximately two hours after the incident, Mrs. Hinerman drove herself to
    a nearby hospital due to persistent pain in her left foot. Id. at 237a, 114a. Two days
    later, an orthopedist confirmed that Mrs. Hinerman had ruptured her left Achilles
    tendon, for which she underwent surgery on February 4, 2020.             Id. at 134a.
    Following the surgery, Mrs. Hinerman attended weekly physical therapy sessions to
    treat her left foot from June 16, 2020 until August 14, 2020. Id. at 241a.
    The Hinermans filed a Complaint against the Airport Authority with the Trial
    Court on February 26, 2021. See id. at 4a-15a. In Count I, the Hinermans alleged
    2
    that there existed on Airport Authority property “a dangerous, defective,
    hazardous[,] and/or unsafe condition . . . characterized by an unmarked hole and/or
    drop in elevation, located adjacent to a broken, cracked, and uneven parking lot
    area.” Id. at 9a. The Hinermans alleged that the Airport Authority was therefore
    liable for negligence due to its alleged failure to “remove, repair[,] or cordon off the
    unsafe condition” leading to Mrs. Hinerman’s injury. Id. at 11a-12a. In Count II,
    the Hinermans alleged liability for loss of consortium due to Mr. Hinerman’s
    expenditures for his wife’s medical care, as well as the loss of her “services,
    assistance, companionship[,] and society.” Id. at 12a. The Hinermans requested
    damages, along with court costs and any other relief the Trial Court deemed just and
    equitable. Id. at 12a-13a.
    The Airport Authority filed an Answer and New Matter on April 14, 2021, in
    which it denied the allegations. See id. at 16a-26a. The Airport Authority averred
    that Mrs. Hinerman had “voluntarily departed from a paved, cleared street adjacent
    to the Lot, and was instead deliberately traversing a grassy, unpaved, snow-covered
    area that she took as a shortcut,” and that she had thereby fallen “upon a dangerous
    condition that was known, open, obvious, and avoidable.” Id. at 22a. The Airport
    Authority asserted that the Hinermans’ claims were therefore barred by the doctrines
    of assumption of the risk, choice-of-ways, contributory negligence, and failure to
    mitigate damages. Id.
    The Hinermans offered several exhibits into evidence, including medical
    records and photographs of the location where Mrs. Hinerman was injured. The
    photographs, which were taken when no snow was present, depict a rectangular field
    of grass in between two asphalt-paved parking lots. Id. Near the field’s edge is a
    muddy depression in the ground; a yard stick, held vertically at the center of the
    3
    depression, shows that the depression has a maximum depth of about five inches.
    See generally 161a-86a. Some photographs show a large puddle where rainwater
    had collected, with a maximum depth of about three inches, near the middle of the
    depression in the ground. Id. In addition to the exhibits, the Hinermans offered
    their own deposition testimony. See generally id. at 97a-110a; id. at 187a-257a.
    In its defense, the Airport Authority offered the deposition testimony of
    Gabriel Monzo, its Executive Director, and Moe Haas, its Operations and Public
    Safety Director. Mr. Monzo testified that, although he had no knowledge of the
    depression in the ground where Mrs. Hinerman fell, it “eventually would be filled
    in” as part of the Airport Authority’s routine maintenance duties. Id. at 141a-42a.
    In addition, Mr. Monzo testified that the grassy area was never intended for
    pedestrian travel, and that he had never seen anyone take shortcuts across it. Id. at
    142a-43a. Also at the November 18, 2021 deposition, Mr. Haas testified that he
    never believed the depression in the ground to pose a threat to anyone, because “we
    have the pavement area up above” for walking between the parking lots, rather than
    the grassy area. Id. at 148a. Finally, the Airport Authority offered into evidence
    surveillance camera footage of the January 20, 2020 incident. Id. at 112a.
    The Airport Authority filed its Motion on January 3, 2022. See id. at 39a-45a.
    Therein, it maintained that the Hinermans cannot “make out any claim of negligence
    . . . as a matter of law,” because the injury occurred as Mrs. Hinerman was taking a
    shortcut on “grassy, unimproved, snow-covered” land. Id. at 42a. The Airport
    Authority cited numerous cases in which courts have ruled against plaintiffs who
    were similarly injured after voluntarily taking shortcuts on land not intended for
    pedestrian travel. Id. at 42a-44a.
    4
    The Trial Court held a hearing on the Motion on March 23, 2022. Id. at 294a.
    At the hearing, the Hinermans argued that the cases cited by the Airport Authority
    are inapposite because they concern instances where pedestrians were injured after
    purposely leaving a paved sidewalk. Id. at 301a. Mrs. Hinerman, they argued, could
    not have recognized that she had made a similar detour because the lawn and the
    parking lot appeared under the snow to form a flat, uninterrupted surface. Id. at
    302a. The depressed area, according to the Hinermans, constituted “a substantial
    defect on this premises that the [Airport Authority] should have been aware of and
    should have protected business invitees from.” Id.
    On June 15, 2022, the Trial Court granted the Motion. See id. at 305a-18a.
    The Trial Court explained that as a matter of law, the Airport Authority “owed no
    duty relative to conditions that may have existed in an unimproved shortcut that [the
    Hinermans] elected to take.” Id. at 317a. The Trial Court cited Gilligan v. Villanova
    University, 
    584 A.2d 1005
    , 1008 (Pa. Super. 1991), in which the Superior Court held
    that a landowner owed no duty to a business invitee “where the record showed the
    existence of a roadway adjacent to the place where [the plaintiff] fell and [the
    plaintiff] offered no evidence that the sidewalk or the roadway [was] improperly
    maintained or inadequate.” R.R. at 317a. The Trial Court noted that in their
    deposition testimony, both Mr. and Mrs. Hinerman acknowledged that they were
    aware of a paved, cleared walkway to the parking lot, but traversed the snow-covered
    grassy area simply because it was a shorter distance to the car. 
    Id.
     at 318a. The Trial
    5
    Court ultimately concluded that the Hinermans had “failed to state a cause of action
    in negligence.” 
    Id.
     at 318 (citing Gilligan, 
    584 A.2d at 1008
    ). This appeal followed.1
    II. Issues
    On appeal, the Hinermans argue that the Trial Court abused its discretion by
    “usurping the role of the jury to decide” the genuine issue of fact as to whether the
    hazardous condition and resulting risk of harm was known to Mrs. Hinerman.
    Hinermans’ Br. at 4. The Hinermans also maintain that the Trial Court erred as a
    matter of law in concluding that the Airport Authority had no duty to protect Mrs.
    Hinerman, a business invitee, from dangerous conditions on its property.
    III. Discussion
    It is settled Pennsylvania law that landowners are liable to business invitees
    for defective conditions only if they:
    (a) know or by the exercise of reasonable care would discover the
    condition, and should realize that it involves an unreasonable risk of
    harm to invitees;
    (b) should expect that business invitees will not discover or realize
    the danger, or will fail to protect themselves against it; and
    (c) fail to exercise reasonable care to protect them against the
    danger.
    Carrender v. Fitterer, 
    469 A.2d 120
    , 123 (Pa. 1983) (citing Restatement (Second)
    of Torts (2nd Restatement) § 343). Conversely, a landowner is not liable for physical
    harm to invitees caused by “any activity or condition on the land whose danger is
    1
    Our standard of review on appeal from the grant or denial of summary judgment is de
    novo, and our scope of review is plenary. Clean Air Council v. Sunoco Pipeline L.P., 
    185 A.3d 478
    , 485 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2018). Our review is limited to determining whether the trial court
    committed an error of law or abuse of discretion. 
    Id.
     A court shall enter summary judgment
    whenever there is no genuine issue of any material fact as to a necessary element of the cause of
    action or defense that could be established by additional discovery. Fine v. Checcio, 
    870 A.2d 850
    , 857 (Pa. 2005) (citing Pa.R.Civ.P. 1035.2(1)).
    6
    known or obvious to them, unless the possessor should anticipate the harm despite
    such knowledge or obviousness.” 
    Id.
     (citing 2nd Restatement § 343A). A danger is
    known if it is “recognized that it is dangerous,” and obvious if “both the condition
    and the risk are apparent to and would be recognized by a reasonable man, in the
    position of the visitor, exercising normal perception, intelligence, and judgment.”
    Id. at 123-24 (citing 2nd Restatement § 343A cmt. b).
    Instantly, the Hinermans argue that the depression in the ground where Mrs.
    Hinerman fell was not obvious and that the Airport Authority had a duty to protect
    business invitees such as Mrs. Hinerman from that danger. The Hinermans maintain
    that, while the hazard was concealed by snow on the morning of Mrs. Hinerman’s
    fall, it was prominent enough in clearer weather that the Airport Authority knew or
    should have known of the danger and should have either repaired the defect or
    installed signs warning individuals of the dangers of traversing grassy areas.
    Furthermore, the Hinermans dispute the proposition that “snow and ice, located on
    a grassy area, constitutes an open and obvious risk of harm to individuals.”
    Hinermans’ Br. at 17. Rather, they argue that Mrs. Hinerman’s injuries were the
    “result of a dangerous condition on the premises that was concealed by snow and
    which the [Airport Authority] should have known of and could have repaired.” Id.
    (emphasis in original). The Hinermans contend that because reasonable minds may
    still differ as to whether the danger was obvious, a genuine issue of material fact
    remains in this case.
    In granting summary judgment, the Trial Court relied primarily on the
    Superior Court’s decision in Gilligan. In that case, the plaintiff was walking across
    the university’s land on a winter evening to attend a basketball game. 
    584 A.2d at 1006
    . The plaintiff reached a point on a sidewalk where the most direct route to the
    7
    basketball arena did not continue along the sidewalk but, rather, across a grassy area
    that the plaintiff described as snow-covered and uneven. 
    Id.
     Rather than take the
    longer route along the sidewalk, the plaintiff opted to walk across the snow-covered
    grassy area, tripped on bumpy ground underneath the snow, and was injured. 
    Id.
    Affirming the trial court’s order of compulsory nonsuit, the Superior Court explained
    that the plaintiff “merely established that he voluntarily chose to walk upon an
    allegedly snow-covered grassy area, not intended to be traversed by pedestrians, and
    subsequently fell.” 
    Id. at 1008
    . Finding the facts in the instant matter substantially
    similar to those in Gilligan, the Trial Court concluded that the Hinermans had “failed
    to state a cause of action for negligence.” R.R. at 318 (citing Gilligan, 
    584 A.2d at 1008
    ).
    Although Gilligan is not binding on this Court, we conclude that the Trial
    Court properly applied its holding in this case. Like the university in Gilligan, the
    Airport Authority maintained a pedestrian walkway in the midst of snowy
    conditions, which the Hinermans acknowledge had been cleared of snow. Like the
    plaintiff in Gilligan, the Hinermans elected to forego the walkway and walk instead
    across an unimproved area that had not been intended for pedestrian use.        As in
    Gilligan, it was the snow itself, due to its inherent tendency to cover uneven patches
    of ground or other tripping hazards, which constituted the open and obvious danger.
    By walking onto an area not intended for their use for the sole purpose of taking a
    shortcut, the Hinermans accepted the risk that the underlying ground would be less
    than optimally suitable for walking upon.        See Carrender, 469 A.2d at 125
    (explaining that, by “voluntarily proceeding to encounter a known or obvious
    danger, the invitee is deemed to have agreed to accept the risk and to undertake to
    look out for himself”) (emphasis added).
    8
    The Hinermans contend that Gilligan is inapposite for three reasons. First,
    the uneven ground that caused Mrs. Hinerman’s injury was a hazardous condition
    that “existed for an extended period of time and could have been repaired.”
    Hinermans’ Br. at 18. Second, unlike the plaintiff in Gilligan, Mrs. Hinerman was
    unfamiliar with the Airport Authority’s premises and therefore reliant on warning
    signs or fences to protect her from any defects. Third, unlike the Gilligan plaintiff
    (who testified that the snow-covered ground before him appeared uneven), Mrs.
    Hinerman testified that the grassy area between the parking lots “appeared perfectly
    level.” Id. at 19. Thus, the Hinermans claim that Mrs. Hinerman “could not have
    appreciated the risk of harm posed to her by crossing this section of the premises.”
    Id.
    We conclude that the Hinermans’ attempts to distinguish Gilligan are
    unavailing. First, the fact that the depression in the ground had existed for “an
    extended period of time” is irrelevant. By their very nature, unimproved areas of
    land contain defects that may result in tripping or falling when being crossed on foot.
    The Airport Authority fulfilled its duty to protect Mrs. Hinerman and other business
    invitees from those defects by creating a paved walkway and by clearing that
    walkway of snow on the morning of the Hinermans’ visit. Next, Mrs. Hinerman’s
    lack of experience with the Airport Authority’s premises is immaterial. A business
    invitee does not need to be intimately familiar with a property in order to recognize
    the danger that snow cover conceals underlying bumps, depressions, or other
    hazards. Thus, it does not matter whether Mrs. Hinerman perceived the ground to
    be smooth or bumpy, since the uncertainties inherent in walking on snow-covered
    ground are obvious in either case. Had Mrs. Hinerman wished to avoid those
    9
    uncertainties, she could have and should have used the walkway that the Airport
    Authority provided and kept clear of snow to reach the outer parking lot.
    While the question of whether a danger was known or obvious is usually a
    question for a jury, the question may be decided by the court if reasonable minds
    could not differ as to the conclusion. Carrender, 469 A.2d at 124. In this case, Mrs.
    Hinerman’s testimony clearly established that she voluntarily departed from the area
    intended for her use in order to take a shortcut across snow-covered, unimproved
    land to her destination. Consequently, the Trial Court did not abuse its discretion in
    concluding that the Airport Authority breached no duty to the Hinermans.
    Next, the Hinermans argue that the Trial Court applied a legally erroneous
    theory of landowner duty. In support, the Hinermans cite the Superior Court’s
    observation in Treadway v. Ebert Motor Co., 
    436 A.2d 994
    , 998 (Pa. Super. 1981),
    that landowners owe business invitees a duty “to inspect the premises and to discover
    dangerous conditions.” In Treadway, a business invitee was injured when he slipped
    and fell on a snow-covered metal plate that had been installed to cover a worksite
    ditch, near the doorway to the landowner’s building. 
    Id. at 995
    . The trial court
    granted nonsuit, reasoning that the metal plate did not create an especially dangerous
    condition. 
    Id. at 997
    . On appeal, the Superior Court reversed, holding that the trial
    court failed to consider evidence that the metal plate was in a position where visitors
    were required to walk on it while entering or exiting the building. 
    Id.
     The precise
    location was important “because [the metal plate] was at a place which the defendant
    knew would be traveled by invitees.” 
    Id. at 999
    . The Hinermans argue that the
    Airport Authority had a similar duty to discover and remedy dangerous conditions
    and that its failure to do so was the proximate cause of Mrs. Hinerman’s injuries.
    10
    Contrary to the Hinermans’ arguments, Treadway does not stand for the
    proposition that landowners have a duty to remove all dangers from any part of their
    premises. In Treadway, the metal plate on which the plaintiff fell lay in the clear
    path of “ingress and egress” to and from the defendant’s offices. 
    436 A.2d at 998
    .
    It was “impossible not to step on the plate when exiting from the door”;
    consequently, the risk of injury was increased “[s]imply by where the plate was
    located.” 
    Id. at 999
    . Here, by contrast, the depression in the ground over which Mrs.
    Hinerman tripped formed part of an unimproved area that was never intended for
    pedestrian use. Mr. Monzo and Mr. Haas both testified, and the Hinermans do not
    dispute, that pedestrians were never observed walking across the area where Mrs.
    Hinerman was injured. See R.R. at 142a-43a, 148a. Unlike the metal plate in
    Treadway, the depression in the ground where Mrs. Hinerman fell did not lie in a
    path foreseeably used for ingress and egress to or from any Airport building. Rather,
    it merely lay in the path of a shortcut that Mrs. Hinerman had elected to take instead
    of the walkway that had been created and maintained for her safe passage between
    the parking lots. Thus, Treadway does not support the conclusion that the Trial
    Court applied a legally erroneous definition of landowner duty to business invitees.2
    2
    The Hinermans also argue that the Trial Court implicitly applied two legal theories that
    were inapplicable to this case. First, they maintain that, by concluding that the Airport Authority
    breached no duty to Mrs. Hinerman, the Trial Court appeared “to imply the application of the
    Assumption of Risk defense, which acts as a bar to recovery.” Hinermans’ Br. at 21. As an
    affirmative defense for which the defendant carries the burden of proof, assumption of the risk is
    a complete bar to recovery. See Reott v. Asia Trend, Inc., 
    55 A.3d 1088
    , 1096 (Pa. 2012)
    (explaining that the Supreme Court “has unfailingly described assumption of the risk as an
    affirmative defense”). Contrary to the Hinermans’ belief, there is no indication in the record that
    assumption of the risk played any role in the Trial Court’s decision. Rather, the Trial Court simply
    concluded that the evidence failed to support a prima facie case of negligence.
    (Footnote continued on next page…)
    11
    IV. Conclusion
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the Trial Court’s Order.
    __________________________________
    ELLEN CEISLER, Judge
    Next, the Hinermans argue that the Trial Court’s decision implies “that the theory of
    contributory negligence is controlling, which is not applicable to the case at hand.” Hinermans’
    Br. at 24 (capitalization altered).      Like assumption of the risk, contributory negligence is a
    complete bar to recovery. Grim v. Betz, 
    539 A.2d 1365
    , 1366 n.1 (Pa. Super. 1988). Again, there
    is no indication in the record that contributory negligence was an implicit factor in the Trial Court’s
    decision.
    12
    IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Janet Hinerman and Richard         :
    Hinerman,                          :
    Appellants        :
    :
    v.                           : No. 732 C.D. 2022
    :
    Westmoreland County Airport        :
    Authority d/b/a Arnold Palmer      :
    Regional Airport                   :
    ORDER
    AND NOW, this 15th day of June, 2023, the Order of the Court of
    Common Pleas of Westmoreland County in the above-captioned matter, dated June
    15, 2022, is hereby AFFIRMED.
    __________________________________
    ELLEN CEISLER, Judge
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 732 C.D. 2022

Judges: Ceisler, J.

Filed Date: 6/15/2023

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 6/15/2023