03/29/2019
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
AT NASHVILLE
March 6, 2019 Session
BONNIE SHAW v. METROPOLITAN GOVERNMENT OF NASHVILLE
AND DAVIDSON COUNTY, TENNESSEE
Appeal from the Circuit Court for Davidson County
No. 14C700 Thomas W. Brothers, Judge
___________________________________
No. M2018-01157-COA-R3-CV
___________________________________
This premises liability action involves allegations of negligence and negligence per se.
The trial court dismissed the case at summary judgment, opining that no duty was owed
to the plaintiff and holding that the plaintiff’s negligence per se claims were legally
insufficient. For the reasons stated herein, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.
Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Affirmed and
Remanded
ARNOLD B. GOLDIN, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which J. STEVEN
STAFFORD, P.J., W.S., and KENNY ARMSTRONG, J., joined.
Rocky McElhaney and Justin Hight, Hendersonville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Bonnie
Shaw.
Andrew D. McClanahan, Christopher M. Lackey and Jennifer Bonilla Moreno, Nashville,
Tennessee, for the appellee, Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson
County, Tennessee.
OPINION
BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
This case stems from an incident in 2013 when Bonnie Shaw, then a school bus
driver for the school system operated by the Metropolitan Government of Nashville and
Davidson County, Tennessee (“Metro”), arrived at Antioch Middle School for a driver
training session. After pulling into a large parking lot beside the school’s football field,
Ms. Shaw exited her bus and began walking across the parking lot to board a shuttle bus
that would take her and other drivers to attend the scheduled training session. Ms. Shaw
subsequently tripped and fell onto the pavement, however, precipitating the present
lawsuit.
Because the initial procedural history of this case was covered by this Court in a
previous appeal, we reproduce our prior overview below:
On February 19, 2014, Ms. Shaw filed the instant action in the
Davidson County Circuit Court (“trial court”), alleging negligence by
Metro and its employees in Metro’s maintenance of the parking lot and
seeking compensatory damages for her injuries. Ms. Shaw asserted that the
parking lot existed in a state of disrepair and had been in such a state for a
sufficient length of time that Metro knew or should have known of its
dangerous condition. Ms. Shaw further asserted that Metro had breached
its duty of care owed to her by failing to repair or warn her of this
dangerous condition. Metro filed an answer, denying that the parking lot in
question was in a dangerous condition or that it had been negligently
maintained. Metro asserted that the instant action was controlled by the
Governmental Tort Liability Act . . . and also subject to principles of
comparative fault.
Metro filed a motion for summary judgment on August 4, 2016. On
September 23, 2016, Ms. Shaw sought by motion to amend her complaint
to include allegations of negligence per se. In her proposed amended
complaint, Ms. Shaw asserted that Metro had violated various applicable
building codes by failing to properly maintain the lot at issue. Metro
subsequently filed a statement of material facts and additional documents in
support of its motion for summary judgment. Ms. Shaw filed a response as
well as her own statement of material facts. Ms. Shaw also attached an
affidavit from an engineering expert, who opined that Metro had violated
various building codes by failing to adequately maintain the parking lot.
The record does not demonstrate that the trial court ever considered or
acted on Ms. Shaw’s motion to amend, a point that Metro concedes in its
appellate brief.
On October 28, 2016, the trial court conducted a hearing regarding
Metro’s motion for summary judgment. The court entered an order
granting summary judgment in favor of Metro on November 21, 2016,
stating in pertinent part:
The case of Coln v. City of Savannah is controlling in this matter.
There the Supreme Court explained that the fact that a danger to
plaintiff was “open or obvious” does not automatically relieve a
premises owner or possessor of [a] duty of care. Coln v. City of
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Savannah, 966 S.W.2d 34 (Tenn. 1998). . . . In order to impose legal
liability, a thing must be dangerous according to common
experience. Rye v. City of Nashville, 156 S.W.2d 460, 461 (Tenn.
Ct. App. 1941).
Tennessee court cases that have refused to require property owners
to warn of or repair minor aberrations in surface conditions are still
good law. Batts v. City of Nashville, involved a three inch deviation,
and the Tennessee Supreme Court held that “slight holes or
depressions which are not in the nature of traps, and from which
danger could not be reasonably anticipated, are not defects for which
an action will lie.” 123 S.W.2d 1099, 1103 (Tenn. 1938). Similarly,
City of Memphis v. McCrady, involved a two and a half inch
deviation and the Court held that a “municipality cannot be held as
an insurer, nor can it be charged with the duty to correct slight
defects in sidewalks resulting from inequality in the expansion
joints, produced by natural causes, where the inequality or
unevenness does not make a dangerous obstruction calculated to
produce injury to persons exercising reasonable care.” 124 S.W.2d
248, 249 [ ] (Tenn. 1938); see also Rye at 461 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1941)
(holding the probability that a concrete sidewalk block about two
inches higher than the adjacent concrete block will cause injuries to
pedestrians using the sidewalk with reasonable care is too remote to
impose on the city the burden and expense of preventing such
injuries, or the duty to guard against them).
Considering the foregoing, the Court finds that there are no genuine
issues of material facts and this is a question of law to be decided by
the Court. The parking lot at issue was uneven due to buckled
pavement and contained a fifty-four foot crack that amounted to a
deviation of up to one and a half inches. However, a property owner
is not required to maintain a parking lot in the same condition as a
billiard table; a parking lot does not have to be absolutely smooth. It
will have some uneven surfaces and potentially dangerous areas, but
the key question is whether the irregular surface at issue was
unreasonably dangerous. The Court finds it was not.
The defect in question was open and obvious and the Plaintiff could
have become aware of it through normal exercise of her senses as it
was broad daylight and the lengthy crack was clearly visible. The
obvious nature of the condition at issue is applicable to the Plaintiff
as well as the Defendant. The foreseeable risk of harm caused by
the minor aberration in [the] parking lot due to a slight elevation
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change and the obviousness of the defect in the form of [the] crack
does not outweigh the obvious nature of the aberration.
Accordingly, the Metropolitan Government owed no duty to Ms.
Shaw. The Court finds there are no genuine issues of material fact
and the Metropolitan Government’s Motion for Summary Judgment
is well taken.
Ms. Shaw timely appealed.
Shaw v. Metro. Gov’t of Nashville & Davidson Cnty., Tenn., No. M2016-02455-COA-
R3-CV, 2017 WL 6398341, at *1-2 (Tenn. Ct. App. Dec. 14, 2017) (footnote omitted).
In the first appeal, which challenged the trial court’s entry of summary judgment
in favor of Metro, we focused squarely on the fact that the trial court had not addressed
Ms. Shaw’s motion to add allegations of negligence per se to her complaint. Opining
that this necessitated a remand, we explained as follows:
Regarding the trial court’s failure to rule on the pending motion to
amend, a similar situation was addressed by our Supreme Court in
Henderson v. Bush Bros. & Co., 868 S.W.2d 236 (Tenn. 1993), wherein the
plaintiff’s motion seeking to amend his complaint was never ruled upon
prior to the trial court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the
defendant. On appeal, the High Court considered that Tennessee Rule of
Civil Procedure 15.01, governing the amendment of pleadings, provides
that leave to amend “shall be freely given when justice so requires.” See
Henderson, 868 S.W.2d at 237. The Court also considered persuasive
federal precedent construing the similar Federal Rule of Civil Procedure
15(a), in which the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals had held that “it was an
abuse of discretion for a district court to dismiss a suit on the basis of the
original complaint without first considering and ruling on a pending motion
to amend.” Id. at 238 (quoting Ellison v. Ford Motor Co., 847 F.2d 297,
300 (6th Cir. 1988) (in turn citing Marks v. Shell Oil Co., 830 F.2d 68, 69
(6th Cir. 1987)).
The Henderson Court thus vacated the trial court’s grant of summary
judgment, reasoning that:
the trial court must give the proponent of a motion to amend a full
chance to be heard on the motion, must consider the motion in light
of the amendment policy embodied in T.R.C.P. 15.01, that
amendments must be freely allowed; and in the event the motion to
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amend is denied, the trial court must give a reasoned explanation for
[its] action.
Henderson, 868 S.W.2d at 238. See also Cumulus Broad., Inc. v. Shim, 226
S.W.3d 366, 375 (Tenn. 2007) (explaining that before summary judgment
was granted, “the amendment [to the complaint] should have been
considered,” but finding the error to be harmless due to the circumstances);
Reynolds v. Tognetti, No. W2010–00320–COA–R3–CV, 2011 WL 761525,
at *6 (Tenn. Ct. App. Mar. 4, 2011) (vacating the trial court’s grant of
summary judgment and remanding to the trial court for a full hearing
regarding an unadjudicated motion to amend the complaint “in light of the
policy that amendments are to be freely given”).
....
In the instant action, the trial court similarly failed to properly
exercise its discretion. The court neither ruled upon the pending motion to
amend nor undertook analysis . . . in order to determine whether the sought
amendment should have been granted pursuant to Tennessee Rule of Civil
Procedure 15.01. See [Lowery v. Faires, No. 03A01-9605-CV-00177, 1996
WL 718290, at *2 (Tenn. Ct. App. Dec. 16, 1996)]. Due to the trial court’s
lack of sufficient consideration of Ms. Shaw’s motion to amend, summary
judgment was improperly granted. See Henderson, 868 S.W.2d at 238. We
therefore vacate the grant of summary judgment to Metro and remand this
matter to the trial court for consideration of the motion to amend and entry
of an order presenting a “reasoned explanation” for the grant or denial of
the amendment. See Henderson, 868 S.W.2d at 238; Lowery, 1996 WL
718290, at *2. Following such action regarding the motion to amend, the
trial court may consider the motion for summary judgment. See id.
Id. at *3–5.
After the case was remanded to the trial court, Ms. Shaw filed a “Notice of
Hearing,” indicating that her motion to amend was set to be heard on April 13, 2018.
Subsequently, the parties each submitted filings with the court regarding the propriety, or
lack thereof, of the requested motion to amend. In a response filed on April 9, 2018,
Metro contended that the proposed amendments were futile and that the court should
affirm its prior grant of summary judgment. First, Metro argued that the parties’ previous
summary judgment arguments had been presented as though the proposed amendments to
Ms. Shaw’s complaint had been granted; according to Metro, therefore, the prior grant of
summary judgment had contemplated the additional negligence per se claims. Metro also
took issue with the legal sufficiency of the allegations that Ms. Shaw wanted to add.
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Through her proposed amended complaint, Ms. Shaw desired to add negligence per se
claims based on alleged violations of Metro Code 16.24.330 and Metro-adopted
American National Standard ICC/ANSI A117.1. According to Metro, the amendment
related to Metro Code 16.24.330 was futile “because the language of that code section
does not establish a sufficiently specific standard of conduct that would trigger the
negligence per se doctrine.” Moreover, in rejecting the applicability of the adopted
ICC/ANSI A117.1 standard, Metro noted that, whereas the relied-upon standard was
designed to protect persons with disabilities, there was “no evidence or allegation that
Plaintiff is an individual with a disability.” On April 11, 2018, Ms. Shaw filed a reply to
Metro’s April 9 response, arguing generally that no articulated reason had been given to
deny her motion to amend.
Following a hearing on Ms. Shaw’s motion to amend, the trial court entered an
order on April 30, 2018 granting the motion, albeit while acknowledging Metro’s point
that the motion to amend had previously been treated as presumptively granted:
Metro’s Motion for Summary Judgment was heard on October 28,
2016. Though no order granting Plaintiff’s motion to amend was submitted
before that time, the Court treated the Motion to Amend as presumptively
granted, and the Court considered the motion granted. Moreover, it must
be noted that Plaintiff’s response to Metro’s Motion for Summary judgment
referenced the newly added negligence per se claims, and both parties
addressed the newly added negligence claims at oral argument, as reflected
in the video transcript from the summary judgment hearing. However, the
Court’s oral ruling and final order granting summary judgment did not
explicitly address Plaintiff’s negligence per se claims. As a practical
matter, these claims were raised and discussed and considered in the
Court’s ruling.
In order to provide further clarification, and for the foregoing
reasons, Plaintiff’s Motion to Amend the Complaint is hereby GRANTED.
The Court further orders that continuing summary judgment argument on
Plaintiff’s two negligence per se claims raised in the motion to amend . . .
be set for May 11, 2018[.]
Consistent with the trial court’s direction, continuing summary judgment argument
on the added negligence per se claims was held on May 11, 2018. A few weeks later, on
May 31, 2018, the trial court entered an order granting Metro summary judgment on the
negligence per se claims, as well as reaffirming the prior summary judgment ruling.
With respect to the negligence per se claims specifically, the court concluded as follows:
Plaintiff’s Amended Complaint asserts two negligence per se claims:
one based on Metro Code 16.24.330 and another based on American
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National Standard ICC/ANSI A117.1. The threshold question in
determining whether the violation of a statute can trigger the negligence per
se doctrine is whether the injured party is within the class of persons
intended to benefit from, or to be protected by, a statute. Here, the
American National Standard ICC/ANSI A117.1 is meant to protect
individuals with disabilities. Plaintiff has never claimed or set forth proof
that she is disabled, therefore the American National Standard ICC/ANSI
A117.1 cannot trigger a negligence per se claim.
Another threshold question to determine whether a statute triggers
the negligence per se doctrine is whether [it] establishes a specific standard
of conduct. Metro Code 16.24.330 contains only general guidance on
maintaining driveways and parking lots “free from hazardous conditions,”
and is posed in non-specific terms such as “safe.” Since Metro Code
16.24.330 contains no specific standards of conduct, it does not trigger the
negligence per se doctrine.
(internal citations omitted). Faced once again with the dismissal of her action, Ms. Shaw
timely appealed to this Court.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
Our task in this appeal is to determine whether the trial court erred in granting
summary judgment in Metro’s favor. Ms. Shaw prays that the trial court’s grant of
summary judgment be reversed and that the case be remanded for a trial on the merits. In
assessing whether such relief is warranted, we are guided by the following law:
A motion for summary judgment may be granted only if “the pleadings,
depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together
with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any
material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter
of law.” Tenn. R. Civ. P. 56.04. “The moving party has the ultimate
burden of persuading the court that there are no genuine issues of material
fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”
Martin v. Norfolk S. Ry., 271 S.W.3d 76, 83 (Tenn. 2008) (citation
omitted). When the moving party does not bear the burden of proof at trial,
“the moving party may satisfy its burden of production either (1) by
affirmatively negating an essential element of the nonmoving party’s claim
or (2) by demonstrating that the nonmoving party’s evidence at the
summary judgment stage is insufficient to establish the nonmoving party’s
claim or defense.” Rye v. Women’s Care Ctr. of Memphis, MPLLC, 477
S.W.3d 235, 264 (Tenn. 2015). Because resolving a motion for summary
judgment is a question of law, we review the trial court’s disposition on the
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issue de novo without a presumption of correctness. Martin, 271 S.W.3d at
84 (citation omitted). Indeed, we must make a fresh determination that the
requirements of Rule 56 have been satisfied in each case. Green v. Green,
293 S.W.3d 493, 514 (Tenn. 2009) (citations omitted). In assessing the
propriety of the motion, “we are required to review the evidence in the light
most favorable to the nonmoving party and to draw all reasonable
inferences favoring the nonmoving party.” Martin, 271 S.W.3d at 84
(citation omitted).
Bobo v. City of Jackson, 511 S.W.3d 14, 18-19 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2015).
DISCUSSION
This case involves allegations of negligence, as well as specific claims of
negligence per se. We turn first to the trial court’s dismissal of Ms. Shaw’s articulated
negligence per se claims, which were added in her amended complaint and which were
the specific subject of the trial court’s May 31, 2018 order.
Liability under the negligence per se doctrine can arise when a party fails to
perform a duty imposed by statute or ordinance. See Little v. Nashville, Chattanooga &
St. Louis Ry. Co., 281 S.W.2d 284, 292 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1954) (“It is well settled that a
failure to perform a statutory duty or duty imposed by ordinance is negligence per se, and
if the injury is the proximate result or consequence of the negligent act, there is
liability.”). Specifically, the following elements must be established in order for a party
to recover under the theory of negligence per se:
First, the defendant must have violated a statute or ordinance that imposes a
duty or prohibition for the benefit of a person or the public. Second, the
injured party must be within the class of persons intended to benefit from or
be protected by the statute. Finally, the injured party must show that the
negligence was the proximate cause of the injury.
Harden v. Danek Med., Inc., 985 S.W.2d 449, 452 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1998) (citations
omitted).
Although declaring conduct negligent per se renders the conduct negligent as a
matter of law, the negligence per se doctrine “is not a magic transformational formula
that automatically creates a private negligence cause of action for the violation of every
statute.” Rains v. Bend of the River, 124 S.W.3d 580, 590 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2003). “To
trigger the doctrine, the statute must establish a specific standard of conduct.” Id.
Indeed, this factor and many others must be considered by a court to determine whether
the negligence per se doctrine is applicable. As we have noted previously:
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The two threshold questions in every negligence per se case are whether the
plaintiff belongs to the class of persons the statute was designed to protect
and whether the plaintiff’s injury is of the type that the statute was designed
to prevent. Affirmative answers to these questions do not end the inquiry.
Courts also consider (1) whether the statute is the sole source of the
defendant’s duty to the plaintiff, (2) whether the statute clearly defines the
prohibited or required conduct, (3) whether the statute would impose
liability without fault, (4) whether invoking the negligence per se doctrine
would result in damage awards disproportionate to the statutory violation,
and (5) whether the plaintiff’s injury is a direct or indirect result of the
violation of the statute.
Id. at 591 (footnote omitted) (citations omitted).
Here, there are two bases upon which Ms. Shaw seeks to advance a negligence per
se theory of liability. In addition to citing to Metro Code 16.24.330, Ms. Shaw relies on
Metro-adopted American National Standard ICC/ANSI A117.1. In our opinion, neither
of these bases is legally sufficient to support a valid negligence per se claim in this case.
The relied-upon portion of Metro Code 16.24.330 provides in relevant part that
“[a]ll sidewalks, walkways, stairs, driveways, parking spaces, and similar areas shall be
kept in a proper state of repair, shall be maintained free from hazardous conditions, and
shall be kept in a safe, clean, and sanitary condition.” The trial court reasoned that this
provision cannot trigger the negligence per se doctrine because it contains only “general
guidance” and is “posed in non-specific terms.” We agree with the trial court’s
conclusion. Because there is no specific standard of conduct established pursuant to
Metro Code 16.24.330,1 the negligence per se doctrine is inapplicable. See id. at 590-91
(noting that the court must consider “whether the statute clearly defines the prohibited or
required conduct” and stating that in order “[t]o trigger the doctrine, the statute must
establish a specific standard of conduct”).
Metro-adopted American National Standard ICC/ANSI A117.12 is also
unavailable to establish a negligence per se claim on Ms. Shaw’s behalf. As we have
noted, one of the threshold questions in a negligence per se case is whether “the plaintiff
belongs to the class of persons the statute was designed to protect.” Id. at 591. In
concluding that this threshold question was not satisfied, the trial court noted as follows:
“Here, the American National Standard ICC/ANSI A117.1 is meant to protect individuals
with disabilities. Plaintiff has never claimed or set forth proof that she is disabled,
1
Although counsel for Ms. Shaw did not waive the claim predicated on Metro Code 16.24.330,
he did acknowledge at oral argument that a more specific standard of conduct could have been provided.
2
According to Ms. Shaw, this standard requires, among other things, that any ground surface
level changes greater than 1/4 inch receive special attention.
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therefore the American National Standard ICC/ANSI A117.1 cannot trigger a negligence
per se claim.” There is no reason to disturb the trial court’s ruling on this issue. At oral
argument of this appeal, counsel for Ms. Shaw conceded that Ms. Shaw’s ability to
proceed pursuant to American National Standard ICC/ANSI A117.1 was not supported.
In doing so, Ms. Shaw’s counsel candidly acknowledged that the standard had, in fact,
been adopted for persons with disabilities.
Having dispensed with Ms. Shaw’s negligence per se theories of liability, we turn
to the issue of whether her general negligence claim was appropriately dismissed by the
trial court. The pivotal question here is whether Metro owed Ms. Shaw a duty of care
under the facts of this case. If there is no duty, there can be no liability for negligence.
See Rice v. Sabir, 979 S.W.2d 305, 308 (Tenn. 1998) (noting that a “duty of care owed by
the defendant to the plaintiff” is a necessary part of a negligence claim).
“Duty . . . is the legal obligation a defendant owes to a plaintiff to conform to the
reasonable person standard of care in order to protect against unreasonable risks of
harm.” Dobson v. State, 23 S.W.3d 324, 330 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1999). The question of
duty is one of law, and we review the matter de novo on appeal. Rice, 979 S.W.2d at
308. In evaluating whether a duty exists, we must determine whether the plaintiff’s
interest was entitled to legal protection at the hands of the defendant. Id.
“In cases involving premises liability, the premises owner has a duty to exercise
reasonable care under the circumstances to prevent injury to persons lawfully on the
premises.” Dobson, 23 S.W.3d at 330. Such a duty is based on the understanding that an
owner has “superior knowledge of any perilous condition that may exist on the property.”
Id. To assess whether a risk to a plaintiff is unreasonable so as to give rise to a duty to
act with due care, courts must employ a balancing approach. West v. E. Tenn. Pioneer
Oil Co., 172 S.W.3d 545, 551 (Tenn. 2005). Several factors must be considered to
evaluate the unreasonableness of a risk. McCall v. Wilder, 913 S.W.2d 150, 153 (Tenn.
1995). These factors include:
the foreseeable probability of the harm or injury occurring; the possible
magnitude of the potential harm or injury; the importance or social value of
the activity engaged in by defendant; the usefulness of the conduct to
defendant; the feasibility of alternative, safer conduct and the relative costs
and burdens associated with that conduct; the relative usefulness of the
safer conduct; and the relative safety of alternative conduct.
Id.; see also Rice, 979 S.W.2d at 308 (noting that a court “must balance the foreseeability
and gravity of the potential risk of harm to a plaintiff against the burden imposed on the
defendant in protecting against that harm”). A risk is deemed unreasonable if “the
foreseeable probability and gravity of harm posed by defendant’s conduct outweigh the
burden upon defendant to engage in alternative conduct that would have prevented the
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harm.” McCall, 913 S.W.2d at 153. “For the purpose of determining whether a duty
exists, the courts’ consideration of foreseeability is limited to assessing whether there is
some probability or likelihood of harm that is serious enough to induce a reasonable
person to take precautions to avoid it.” Satterfield v. Breeding Insulation Co., 266
S.W.3d 347, 367 (Tenn. 2008).
A duty may even be owed where the condition causing the injury is “open and
obvious,” Rice, 979 S.W.2d at 308, but “[t]he duty imposed on the premises owner . . .
does not include the responsibility to remove or warn against ‘conditions from which no
unreasonable risk was to be anticipated, or from those which the occupier neither knew
about nor could have discovered with reasonable care.’” Id. at 309 (quoting W. Page
Keeton, Prosser & Keeton on Torts, § 61 at 426 (5th ed. 1984)). In cases involving an
alleged defect, “[t]he test is the degree of danger, or possibility of injury, from the
defect.” Henry v. City of Nashville, 318 S.W.2d 567, 568 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1958). “Of
course, anything that in fact causes harm is to some degree dangerous; but to impose
liability, the thing must be dangerous according to common experience.” Id.
In this case, the trial court reasoned that Metro owed no duty because there was no
unreasonable risk of danger connected to the parking lot. It noted that the parking lot
“contained a fifty-four foot crack that amounted to a deviation of up to one and a half
inches,” but stated that the defect in question was “open and obvious” such that Ms.
Shaw “could have become aware of it through normal exercise of her senses as it was
broad daylight and the lengthy crack was clearly visible.” According to the court, “a
property owner is not required to maintain a parking lot in the same condition as a billiard
table; a parking lot does not have to be absolutely smooth.” We agree.
A number of cases, several of which were cited by the trial court, indicate that
minor pavement aberrations will not give rise to valid negligence claims. In City of
Memphis v. McCrady, the plaintiff was injured when, while walking along sidewalk
pavement, her heel “struck against a rise at the expansion joint which projected two and a
half inches above the adjacent block.” City of Memphis v. McCrady, 124 S.W.2d 248,
249 (Tenn. 1938). Our Supreme Court concluded that such facts did not present an issue
for the jury, opining that the only inference was that “it could not be reasonably . . .
anticipated that injury would result from use of the sidewalk by persons exercising
ordinary care.” Id. at 250. In commenting that a municipality cannot be “held as an
insurer,” the Supreme Court stated as follows:
[A municipality cannot] be charged with the duty to correct slight defects in
sidewalks resulting from inequality in the expansion joints, produced by
natural causes, where the inequality or unevenness does not make a
dangerous obstruction calculated to produce injury to persons exercising
reasonable care. And so, where the evidence is conflicting, or the facts
such as to authorize different inferences as to whether the defect is a
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dangerous obstruction calculated to cause injury, the case must be
submitted to the jury, but, where the defect or obstruction is such that
reasonable men would not differ in the conclusion that the obstruction or
defect was not dangerous to travel in the ordinary modes by persons
exercising due care, a verdict should be directed.
Id. at 249.
In Batts v. City of Nashville, the plaintiff was injured when she stepped into a
depression in a sidewalk and fell. Batts v. City of Nashville, 123 S.W.2d 1099, 1100
(Tenn. Ct. App. 1938). According to the plaintiff, the depression began at a fence and
extended north about five feet to the center of the sidewalk; she claimed it was about
twelve or fourteen inches wide and about three inches deep at the fence, and about
eighteen inches wide and one inch deep at the center of the sidewalk. Id. at 1101. Suit
was brought against the City of Nashville, and ultimately, the trial judge directed a
verdict for the City. Id. at 1100. In the course of affirming the trial judge’s action on
appeal, we noted that it was impossible to free a city from slight defects:
[It is] unreasonable to say, or permit a jury to say, that they are “obviously
dangerous,” which is the test of the city’s liability. We know that they are
not. If they were, thousands and thousands would be hurt by them
hourly.[3] That it is “possible” for some one out of many . . . to trip on
such a defect does not make it dangerous. Probability, not possibility,
governs.
. . . If the existence of such a defect is to be deemed evidence of negligence
on the part of a city, then there is scarcely any street in any city that is
reasonably safe, within the rule, and when accidents occur the municipality
must be treated practically as an insurer against accidents in its streets. The
law does not prescribe a measure of duty so impossible of fulfillment, or a
rule of liability so unjust and severe. It imposes upon municipal
corporations the duty of guarding against such dangers as can or ought to
be anticipated or foreseen in the exercise of reasonable prudence and care.
But when an accident happens by reason of some slight defect, from which
danger was not reasonably to be anticipated, and which, according to
common experience, was not likely to happen, it is not chargeable with
negligence.
3
We note that in the deposition of Taffy Marsh, the executive director of transportation for Metro
Nashville Public Schools, Ms. Marsh testified that there was not any documented evidence that anybody
had ever fallen on the parking lot before or after the date of the incident in this case, even though the
space had been used for training for “many years.”
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Id. at 1102-03 (citations omitted).
In Rye v. City of Nashville, the plaintiff was injured when her foot struck a block
of concrete on the sidewalk that was about two inches higher than the adjacent block.
Rye v. City of Nashville, 156 S.W.2d 460, 461 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1941). Although the
plaintiff sued the City of Nashville in order to recover for her injuries, the trial judge
directed a verdict for the City on the basis that the defect in the sidewalk was not
actionable. Id. On appeal, we affirmed the trial court’s action and noted that the case
was similar to both McCrady and Batts, stating as follows:
According to common experience defects like those in the McCrady and
Batts cases are not so dangerous that harm may reasonably be expected to
result from them. The probability that they will cause injury to pedestrians
using the sidewalk with reasonable care is too remote to impose upon
municipalities the burden and expense of preventing them or the duty of
guarding against them. We think this is true of the defect in the present
case.
Id. at 462.
Ms. Shaw attempts to distinguish Batts, McCrady, and Rye from the present action
by noting that, in those cases, “there was no expert testimony to the dangerousness of the
condition.” She also tries to assail those prior decisions as “outdated.” With respect to
this latter contention, we observe that the basic premise from Batts, McCrady, and Rye
remains good law. As we have noted, “[t]he duty imposed on the premises owner or
occupier . . . does not include the responsibility to remove or warn against ‘conditions
from which no unreasonable risk was to be anticipated.’” Rice, 979 S.W.2d at 309
(quoting W. Page Keeton, Prosser & Keeton on Torts, § 61 at 426 (5th ed. 1984)).
Further, we observe that the Batts decision, and several other cases of similar ilk, were
recently cited by this Court favorably in Green v. Roberts, 398 S.W.3d 172 (Tenn. Ct.
App. 2012).
In Green, the plaintiff sustained injuries after she tripped over a steel post that was
protruding just above the surface of a parking lot owned by the defendant. Id. at 174.
The disputed area was visible from a distance of up to eighty feet, and photographs
showed that steel posts in the parking lot protruded about 3/4″ from the surface. Id. at
174, 181. When the plaintiff brought suit to recover for her injuries, the case was
dismissed at summary judgment. Id. at 175. The trial court held, among other things,
that no duty was owed to the plaintiff. Id. We affirmed the trial court’s action when the
case was appealed, specifically noting the importance of the fact that the “area
complained of was only a minor ‘aberration’ in the parking lot.” Id. at 181. Referencing
Batts and other decisions, we emphasized that “both the Supreme Court of Tennessee and
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this Court have held that recovery will not lie because of the existence of minor defects
and depressions.” Id.
We also reject Ms. Shaw’s reliance on the fact that she proffered an expert on her
behalf at summary judgment. The record reveals that her expert concluded by affidavit
that Metro “had a duty to repair the parking lot or to warn pedestrians of the hazardous
and dangerous condition of the parking lot.” This conclusion is of no moment, of course,
because the determination of whether a duty exists is within the province of the courts.
See Rice, 979 S.W.2d at 308 (noting that duty is a question of law).
As it is, the facts of this case simply do not justify a determination that Metro
owed a duty to repair or warn of the minor aberrations of the parking lot’s surface. The
parking lot may not be perfectly flat across its area, but common experience suggests that
its conditions do not pose any likely danger.4 The trial court observed that cracking in
the pavement had resulted in a mere “deviation of up to one and a half inches,”5 and
photos submitted in the record confirm the conclusion that any injury from the area in
question is remote. Specifically, we refer to those “reenactment” photos that Ms. Shaw
testified to in her deposition, which allegedly depict the general area she fell in the
parking lot. Although we certainly do not intend to be insensitive to or dismissive of Ms.
Shaw’s claimed injuries, we must conclude that, based on common experience, danger is
not likely to be anticipated from the slight defects and unevenness shown on the parking
lot.
Metro cannot be an insurer of every injury that occurs. In order to be liable for
negligence, it must first have a legal duty of care. Here, we simply conclude that no legal
duty arose as a result of the minor depressions that existed on the parking lot. There
being no duty, the trial court did not err in dismissing Ms. Shaw’s claim for negligence.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
_________________________________
ARNOLD B. GOLDIN, JUDGE
4
In addition to the fact that the minor defects of the parking lot do not justify the imposition of a
duty, which is of course dispositive, we observe that some of Ms. Shaw’s deposition testimony
underscores the notion that an injury was not likely to be anticipated. Although Ms. Shaw testified in her
deposition that she had been to the parking lot once a year in the four years leading up to the incident at
issue and had noticed that the lot was then in disrepair, she did not believe it was dangerous. When asked
if she saw anything wrong with the parking lot on the date of her injury, she replied, “Just looked like a
parking lot.”
5
Emphasis in quoted language added.
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