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Milatz v. City of Cincinnati
Brannon & Associates, Dwight D. Brannon and Matthew C. Schultz, Dayton, for Plaintiff-Appellant.
Paula Boggs Muething, City Solicitor, and Peter J. Stackpole, Deputy City Solicitor, for Defendant-Appellee City of Cincinnati, Ohio.
Douglas J. May, Cincinnati, for Defendant-Appellee Cincinnati USA Regional Chamber of Commerce.
Reminger Co., L.P.A., and Ian D. Mitchell, Cincinnati, for Defendant-Appellee Loud and Clear, Inc.
{¶1} A night at Oktoberfest in downtown Cincinnati went awry when a patron fell and injured herself. As the culprit for the fall, the patron zeroed in on a safety utility box (placed over wires on the ground to prevent people from tripping), which appeared haphazardly assembled when the patron returned to the scene a day after the accident. In the ensuing lawsuit, the trial court granted summary judgment based on the "open and obvious" nature of the box—a conclusion that the plaintiff does not seriously dispute at this point. Instead, she claims that attendant circumstances distracted her attention, thereby granting her entitlement to a trial. But her position would represent a substantial expansion of the attendant-circumstances doctrine, which is a step we are unwilling to take on this record, particularly in light of the lack of evidence of actual causation. For the reasons detailed below, we affirm the grant of summary judgment.
{¶2} In September 2015, plaintiff-appellant Margaret Milatz traveled to Cincinnati to attend the annual Oktoberfest celebration with a friend. Enjoying the festival (and the funnel cake she was holding), the night ended abruptly when Ms. Milatz fell and injured herself. After picking herself up off of the ground, she noticed pain in her chest and that her sandal strap had snapped apart. Embarrassed by the episode and in pain, Ms. Milatz decided to leave the event with her friend and returned to her hotel.
{¶3} The next day, Ms. Milatz returned to the scene of the accident and took pictures of an incorrectly-assembled safety utility box, which she believed caused her fall. Scattered throughout the event, safety utility boxes covered the cables supplying power to the various vendor booths and event stages. These boxes consisted of raised, elongated rectangles with sloped edges which allowed the power cables running along the ground to fit safely underneath (to prevent tripping). Covered in bright yellow to attract attention, the top of the box also contained an anti-skid, texturized surface. Ms. Milatz's photograph of the scene depicted an incorrectly assembled box. Instead of the power cables running neatly underneath the box, the top of the safety utility box had popped open, allowing the power cables to spill out. Because sometimes a picture is worth a thousand words, we include a photo below.
{¶4} Based on her observations, Ms. Milatz brought suit alleging negligence against the organizers of Oktoberfest, the city of Cincinnati and the Cincinnati USA Regional Chamber of Commerce (the "Chamber"), as well as Loud and Clear, Inc., the independent contractor that assembled the safety utility boxes. Though Loud and Clear initially missed the deadline for filing its answer to the complaint, the trial court granted it leave to submit its answer out of time. Eventually, all three parties moved for summary judgment, which the court granted. The court concluded that the safety utility box constituted an "open and obvious" hazard, negating any duty that the parties owed to Ms. Milatz.
{¶5} Ms. Milatz now appeals from the grant of summary judgment, raising two assignments of error. She challenges the grant of summary judgment as erroneously premised on the "open and obvious" doctrine and additionally challenges as improper the grant of leave to Loud and Clear to file its answer out of time.
{¶6} Construing the facts in the light most favorable to Ms. Milatz, summary judgment is appropriate where no genuine question of material fact exists and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. See Armstrong v. Best Buy Co., Inc. , 99 Ohio St.3d 79, 2003-Ohio-2573, 788 N.E.2d 1088, ¶ 15. We review a grant of summary judgment de novo. Ligon v. Winton Woods Park , 1st Dist. Hamilton No. C-180073, 2019-Ohio-1217, 2019 WL 1474210, ¶ 6.
{¶7} A claim of negligence requires the plaintiff to show (1) a duty of care running between the plaintiff and defendant, (2) a breach of that duty by the defendant, and (3) injury suffered by the plaintiff proximately caused by the breach. Id. at ¶ 8. As an attendee of the festival Ms. Milatz was considered an invitee, which meant that the organizers—the city and the Chamber—generally her owed a "duty of ordinary care" to maintain the premises in a reasonably safe condition and warn of any latent or hidden dangers. Duell v. City of Cincinnati , 2018-Ohio-4400, 122 N.E.3d 640, ¶ 5 (1st Dist.).
{¶8} Dangers deemed to be "open and obvious," however, vitiate this duty owed to those lawfully on the premises, Armstrong at syllabus, on the theory that the open and obvious nature of the condition itself serves as a warning of the danger. Ligon at ¶ 9 (). As a result, we have defined an open and obvious hazard as one that is not "hidden, concealed from view, or undiscoverable upon ordinary inspection." Esterman v. Speedway LLC , 1st Dist. Hamilton No. C-140287, 2015-Ohio-659, 2015 WL 929413, ¶ 7, quoting Thompson v. Ohio State Univ. Physicians, Inc. , 10th Dist. Franklin No. 10AP-612, 2011-Ohio-2270, 2011 WL 1842245, ¶ 12 ; Armstrong at ¶ 16 (). Finally, a party's subjective awareness of a hazard's existence is not determinative of whether the danger is in fact open and obvious; this evaluation instead utilizes an objective standard. Ligon at ¶ 9. Nevertheless, if a person actually sees and appreciates the hazard, that fact must be considered in the overall calculus.
{¶9} Ms. Milatz goes through the motions of challenging the open and obvious nature of the safety utility box in question, but wisely does not hinge her appeal on this issue. Suffice it to say, she faces an uphill battle here in light of the warning color of the box, its size, and relative prominence. Indeed, she concedes that she saw the box in question before approaching it.
{¶10} With that backdrop, Ms. Milatz takes a different tack and reframes the open and obvious inquiry by positing that faulty assembly of the box constituted an attendant circumstance, which obviated the open and obvious nature of the hazard. She suggests that because other safety utility boxes were properly assembled that night (which she saw), she let her guard down and did not fully appreciate the danger of the improperly-assembled box. These attendant circumstances, she maintains, created a question of fact. See Esterman at ¶ 11 ().
{¶11} Attendant circumstances, however, are "distractions that contribute to an injury by diverting the attention of the injured party and reduce the degree of care an ordinary person would exercise at the time." McLaughlin v. Andy's Coin Laundries, LLC, 2018-Ohio-1798, 112 N.E.3d 57, ¶ 15 (1st Dist.), quoting Galinari v. Koop , 12th Dist. Clermont No. CA2006-10-086, 2007-Ohio-4540, 2007 WL 2482673, ¶ 21. They reflect an "unusual circumstance of the property owner's [own] making." Esterman at ¶ 14, quoting McConnell v. Margello , 10th Dist. Franklin No. 06AP-1235, 2007-Ohio-4860, 2007 WL 2729429, ¶ 17 ; Lattimore v. K & A Market, Inc. , 1st Dist. Hamilton No. C-150753, 2016-Ohio-5295, 2016 WL 4211916, ¶ 7 (). We have not seen, nor has Ms. Milatz directed our attention to, a case where the attendant circumstance was actually the hazard itself.
{¶12} Unlike a prototypical attendant circumstance (i.e., some type of distraction), Ms. Milatz described the area around the safety utility box as well lit, with "lights lit up everywhere," and free from large crowds that might have obscured her view. She further acknowledged familiarity with the appearance of the safety utility boxes prior to her fall, having witnessed them throughout the event. And, importantly, Ms. Milatz admittedly saw the box immediately prior to trying to step over it:
Nothing in the record reflects that the safety utility box was either an unusual circumstance, or that she was distracted at the time of the fall. See Shepherd v. Cincinnati, 168 Ohio App.3d 444, 2006-Ohio-4286, 860 N.E.2d 808, ¶ 31 (1st Dist.) (). Thus, no attendant circumstance existed to distract Ms. Milatz's attention from the safety utility box.
{¶13} Attempting to frame the issue as one of faulty construction of the box, Ms. Milatz runs headlong into a causation problem, because she presented no evidence to establish that improper assembly actually caused her injuries:
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