SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
DOCKET NO. A-3018-00T5
MARY JANE CAMPBELL,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
VICTOR HASTINGS,
Defendant-Respondent.
_________________________________________________________________
Submitted February 6, 2002 - Decided March 4, 2002
Before Judges Conley, Lefelt and LisaSee footnote 11.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New
Jersey, Law Division, Gloucester County,
Docket No. L-1460-99.
Jeffrey A. Libert, attorney for
appellant.
David B. Wright, attorney for respondent
(Barbara A. Johnson, of counsel and on
the brief).
The opinion of the court was deliverd by
LEFELT, J.A.D.
Plaintiff Mary Jane Campbell, a 75-year old woman, visited a
friend who was living in defendant Victor Hastings' house.
Campbell fell while in Hastings' home and sued for her injuries.
The motion judge granted defendant summary judgment, concluding
that a poorly illuminated, sunken foyer into which Campbell fell
was not a dangerous condition, and therefore Hastings had no
obligation to warn his visitor. Campbell appeals, and we reverse
and remand.
I.
The pertinent facts and procedural history can be briefly
stated. Campbell arrived at Hastings' home shortly before dark,
entered through the front door into a sunken foyer and proceeded
to the back of the foyer and up two steps into the family room.
After viewing some photographs and visiting for about an hour
with her friend, Hastings escorted Campbell through the kitchen
and into the living room to look at paintings and other
collectibles. Defendant then took plaintiff through a different
pathway, into the same sunken foyer. It was dark outside and the
light in the foyer had not been turned on. Hastings did not
mention that there were two steps leading down to the foyer, and
as Campbell stepped forward, she fell into the sunken foyer.
The common law regarding premises liability was applied by
the motion judge. This law requires various degrees of care
depending upon the visitor's status while on the owner's or
occupier's land. Hopkins v. Fox & Lazo Realtors,
132 N.J. 426,
433-34 (1993). Under this law, the owner/occupier owes
increasing care depending upon whether the visitor is a
trespasser, licensee or social guest, invitee or business
invitee. Ibid.
The motion judge considered Campbell to be Hastings' social
guest. The parties have not supplied those portions of the
record that may describe Campbell's or Campbell's friend's
relation to Hastings. While not positive on this record,
Campbell probably was not a business invitee, requiring the
highest standard of care, id. at 433, or a trespasser, requiring
a lesser standard of care under the common law. Ibid. She
appears to be most likely a licensee or social guest, as
determined by the motion judge.
According Campbell the status of licensee or social guest
under the common law, Hastings should have warned Campbell of any
dangerous conditions known to him and unknown to Campbell. Id.
at 433; Hanna v. Stone,
329 N.J. Super. 385, 389 (App. Div.
2000). Because of this duty, the motion judge searched for a
dangerous condition, and according to the judge, found none. The
judge said "it's part of somebody's household and their household
because they don't have a light on doesn't make part of their
household a dangerous area or this foyer a dangerous condition."
Not believing the sunken foyer to be a dangerous condition, the
judge concluded that no duty to warn ever arose, under the common
law, and dismissed Campbell's complaint on Hastings's summary
judgment motion.
II.
There are recent Florida cases directly supporting the
motion judge's decision. In Rice v. Whitehurst,
778 So.2d 1027
(Fla. App.
4 Dist. 2001), for example, plaintiff fell into a
sunken living room. On appeal, the judge held that absent
evidence that the home's sunken living room was of uncommon
design or unusual construction, or created significant optical
illusion, defendant homeowner was not liable for injuries
sustained by plaintiff-guest. Id. at 1028. In Allen v. Young,
___ So.2d ___, 2
002 WL 84239 (Fla. App.
4 Dist. 2002), the court
concluded that a homeowner had "no duty to warn a guest of a
change in floor levels because multiple floor levels is not
itself a dangerous condition."
Under these Florida cases and most New Jersey cases, if a
particular condition of property is without defective design or
operation it is generally considered not dangerous. E.g., Vega
v. Piedilato,
154 N.J. 496, 505 (1998)(open air shaft); Oliver
Brown Trucking Co., v. Flexon Industries Corp.,
230 N.J. Super. 117, 121 (Law Div. 1988) (stored combustible material) Nosca v.
Queen City Sav. & Loan Assoc., Inc.,
122 N.J. Super. 336, 338
(App. Div. 1973) (set of doors); Tomney v. Ebeling,
105 N.J.
Super. 66, 71 (App. Div. 1969) (throw rugs).
The common law on premises liability in New Jersey, however,
has undergone transition toward "a broadening application of a
general tort obligation to exercise reasonable care against
foreseeable harm to others." Hopkins, supra, 132 N.J. at 435-36
(quoting Butler v. Acme Markets, Inc.,
89 N.J. 270, 277 (1982)).
As early as 1982, our Supreme Court noted that the "historical
classifications of the degree of care owing to visitors upon the
land are undergoing gradual change in favor of a broadening
application of a general tort obligation to exercise reasonable
care against foreseeable harm to others." Butler, supra, 89 N.J.
at 277.
The Court, in a more recent case involving injury to five
young adults tobogganing at night on a closed ski slope, found no
need to "struggle to place plaintiffs within one or another of
the common law classifications." Brett v. Great Am. Recreation,
Inc.,
144 N.J. 479, 509 (1996). Rather, the Court concluded that
its task was to consider the actual relationships between the
parties and all of the surrounding circumstances to determine
whether it was fair and just to impose upon the landowner a duty
of reasonable care commensurate with the risk of harm. Ibid.
After Hopkins and Brett, Judge Skillman, writing for another
panel of this court, clarified that the common law premises
liability rules may continue "to provide guidance in determining
whether a duty of reasonable care should be imposed in particular
circumstances." Ocasio v. Amtrak,
299 N.J. Super. 139, 149 (App.
Div. 1997). The common law principles may, therefore, still be
used to assess whether to impose a "landowner's general tort
obligation to avoid foreseeable harm to others." Brett, supra,
144 N.J. at 508. In addition, the common law classifications
must be flexibly utilized to assess landowners' liability for
negligently inflicting harm to trespassing children. Vega,
supra, 154 N.J. at 510.
In assessing whether to impose a duty of reasonable care to
avoid foreseeable harm when not dealing with trespassing
children, however, we must consider the standard four factors
normally assessed to determine whether imposition of a duty would
be fair and just. Ocasia, supra,
299 N.J. Super. 149-50. The
four factors, that must be weighed and balanced, include (1)the
relationship of the parties, (2)the nature of the attendant risk,
(3)the opportunity and ability to exercise care, and (4)the
public interest in the proposed solution. Hopkins, supra, 132
N.J. at 439; Ocasio, supra, 299 N.J. Super. at 149-50. In this
case, the question thus becomes whether under all of the
circumstances it is fair and just to impose a duty on Hastings to
exercise reasonable care to prevent foreseeable harm to Campbell,
and, if so, whether sufficient foreseeable harm was present to
raise a jury question regarding Hastings' breach of this
obligation.
III.
We proceed to analyze the four factors and address the
foreseeable harm question. Here, Campbell had never before been
in Hastings' house. While we are uncertain as to the exact
relationship Campbell had to Hastings, she was clearly on the
premises with his knowledge and willing participation. She knew
of the sunken foyer, but she did not know it was in front of her
when she fell. While there is some dispute over what Campbell
actually knew regarding the foyer's location and exactly how dark
the premises were, the defendant in this case was granted summary
judgment. Accordingly, we must view favorably the evidence
supporting plaintiff's position. Brill v. Guardian Life Ins. Co.
of Am.,
142 N.J. 520, 540 (1995).
We acknowledge that there is no indication in this record
that the sunken foyer itself contained any claimed defect. In
Hopkins, for example, plaintiff fell in a house because she was
unaware that a step down was necessary. The floors on both
levels were covered with the same pattern vinyl, and according to
plaintiff the levels were "camouflaged." Hopkins, supra, 132
N.J. at 432. The absence of any defect in the sunken foyer's
construction in this case was one of the reasons the motion judge
believed there was no dangerous condition.
Campbell supplied no expert to explain why the sunken foyer
was dangerous, and whether a "particular condition is dangerous
will vary with the myriad situations that pose hazards to persons
on property." Id. at 450. However, expert testimony is not
necessary when the subject can be understood by jurors utilizing
common judgment and experience. Wyatt v. Wyatt,
217 N.J. Super. 580, 591 (App. Div. 1987). This is such a case.
In Nelson v. Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co.,
48 N.J.
Super. 300 (App. Div. 1958), Justice, then Judge Schettino,
writing for the majority, with Judge Jayne dissenting, considered
an appeal from plaintiff who tripped and fell in defendant's
parking lot as she walked toward the store intending to make some
purchases. Id. at 302. Plaintiff knew her foot stumbled on
something but she did not know what because of darkness. Id. at
303. The area was dark because defendant had failed to replace a
broken light. Ibid.
In concluding that a jury question was present, the court
noted that it did not matter that plaintiff was "uncertain with
respect to what she tripped on since, if the property were not
adequately illuminated, defendant would be liable whether she
tripped on debris or stumbled on the edge of the raised walk or
curb or for that matter if she stumbled on any obstruction or
depression no matter how slight so long as the improper
illumination was to blame." Id. at 307.
The Nelson court quoted from 65 C.J.S. Negligence § 86, pp.
595-596 for the proposition that negligence can occur from a
failure to light the premises "to protect from injury by reason
of dangerous conditions which would not reasonably be discovered
in the absence of such light, as for example, in the case of the
. . . difference in floor levels." Id. at 307. That is what
occurred here.
Obviously, dangerousness is closely related to foreseeable
harm. If there is no danger, then there will be no reasonably
foreseeable harm. Campbell could not clearly see into the foyer
because it was dark, and a safely designed and constructed
walkway, parking lot, or room in a house can become dangerous if
poorly illuminated. In fact, Hastings recognized after Campbell
fell that he should have put the light on. Under these
circumstances, the sunken, darkened foyer could be likened to a
partially concealed, open pit.
The possibility of a seventy-five year old woman falling or
stumbling into the unlit foyer should have been reasonably
foreseeable under these circumstances. Moreover, Hastings could
have exercised reasonable care with minimum effort. Hastings
could have, for example, more closely escorted or guided Campbell
out of the house or warned her either verbally or by simply
putting on the light.
The imposition of homeowner liability for home-based social
activities should be undertaken with great caution. Besides
financial concerns, courts should be wary of imposing other
unreasonable burdens on homeowners. Given the modest effort that
would satisfy reasonable care to guard against dangers caused by
darkness, however, we do not conclude that imposition of such a
duty would be unjust or unfair. Such a modest obligation for
homeowners would protect against accidents and discourage
negligent conduct by encouraging the minimization of risks to
visitors. Therefore, we conclude that a duty of reasonable care
to safeguard against foreseeable harm is present in this case.
IV.
Summary judgment should not have been granted Hastings
based on the non-existence of any dangerous condition. A
sufficient prima facie case of foreseeable harm was presented by
Campbell to withstand summary judgment.
It was for a jury to assess whether Hastings's conduct,
including his failure to protect Campbell in any fashion,
breached the standard of reasonable care and constituted
negligence.
Reversed and remanded for further proceedings.
Footnote: 1 1 Judge Lisa, not originally assigned tohear this case, has joined in its consieration and in this opinion.