NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court." Although it is posted on the
internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.
SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
DOCKET NO. A-0346-17T4
PAMELA PLATVOET,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
CATHERINE MANCINI,
Defendant-Respondent.
________________________________
Argued November 13, 2018 – Decided November 30, 2018
Before Judges Fasciale and Rose.
On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
Division, Bergen County, Docket No. L-7935-15.
Alan K. Albert argued the cause for appellant (Brandon
J. Broderick, attorney; Alan K. Albert, on the brief).
Frank J. Kunzier argued the cause for respondent
(Zimmerer, Murray, Conyngham & Kunzier, attorneys;
Frank J. Kunzier, of counsel and on the brief; Sidney E.
Goldstein, on the brief).
PER CURIAM
In this personal injury case, plaintiff Pamela Platvoet appeals from an
August 18, 2017 order denying reconsideration of summary judgment entered in
favor of her mother, defendant Catherine Mancini. Before defendant left for
vacation, she asked her adult children to cover a pool located in her backyard.
Plaintiff – who was thoroughly familiar with the pool configuration – broke her
left hand as she fell into the pool while pulling a tarp over it. We conclude that
there are no genuine issues of material fact and that defendant is entitled to
summary judgment as a matter of law. We therefore affirm.
When reviewing an order granting summary judgment, we apply "the
same standard governing the trial court . . . ." Oyola v. Xing Lan Liu, 431 N.J.
Super. 493, 497 (App. Div. 2013). A court should grant summary judgment
when the record reveals "no genuine issue as to any material fact" and "the
moving party is entitled to a judgment or order as a matter of law." R. 4:46-
2(c). We owe no special deference to the motion judge's conclusions on issues
of law. Manalapan Realty, LP v. Twp. Comm. of Manalapan, 140 N.J. 366, 378
(1995). We therefore consider the facts in a light most favorable to plaintiff.
Brill v. Guardian Life Ins. Co. of Am., 142 N.J. 520, 523 (1995).
The oval-shaped pool is twenty-three feet long and twelve-to-fifteen feet
wide. A wooden deck encircles approximately half of the pool, leaving the
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remaining area, which is thirty-two inches aboveground, exposed. Plaintiff's
brother installed the deck three years before the accident. The entire pool is
sixteen inches below ground.
Plaintiff and her fiancé arrived on the day of the accident to put a tarp on
the pool. They noticed that a black mesh fence was on the ground near the pool.
They stood on opposite sides of the pool, with plaintiff on the deck side and the
fiancé on the other, and as plaintiff pulled the tarp towards her, she fell into the
pool. Plaintiff was wearing flip flops at the time, and she was standing on the
deck side of the pool when the accident occurred.
Plaintiff alleged that a dangerous condition on the property existed, about
which defendant failed to warn her. To support those allegations, plaintiff
retained a professional engineer, who inspected the property and rendered an
expert report. Defendant also retained an engineering expert. The experts
rendered conflicting opinions about whether a dangerous condition existed,
whether defendant should have warned plaintiff about any danger, and the cause
of the accident.
Plaintiff's expert – who had not reviewed any written discovery about how
the accident occurred – opined that defendant violated multiple sections of the
Town's Property Maintenance Code and the State Uniform Fire Code by failing
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3
to maintain the deck. Based upon a reasonable degree of engineering certainty,
he further explained that the condition of the deck deviated from common
construction and maintenance practice. The Codes required defendant to keep
the deck "in sound condition" and the general area safe and clear of hazards.
Plaintiff's expert opined that the absence of a guard along the deck
constituted a dangerous condition on the property. He concluded that defendant
failed to inspect and safely maintain the property or warn against the dangerous
condition. He also concluded that defendant violated applicable codes. He
wrote in his report:
The code requires that the pool have a fence
surrounding the pool. Additionally, the [New Jersey
International Residential Code] requires a guard on
surface having heights above [thirty] inches. The deck
where [plaintiff] fell stood over [thirty-one] inches
[plus or minus] above the ground below. The deck
should have had a guard installed to provide for
protection for anyone using the pool area. The presence
of a guard could have prevented the hazardous
condition that caused [plaintiff's] fall.
. . . A safe, code compliant fence along the open portion
of the deck should have been provided. The exterior of
the premises are to be kept in a proper state of repair
and maintained free from hazardous conditions.
While warnings are not substitutes for adequate
maintenance, the means to have warned of the hazard
(i.e.[,] warning signs, fence, no handrail[]) once
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discovered, had been readily available by means of a
proper inspection, warning, and scheduled repair.
Defendant's expert concluded that plaintiff caused her fall. He disagreed
that a fence, guardrail, or warnings were necessary. He pointed out that a fence
around the perimeter of the pool is intended to keep unsupervised children away
from the pool. The guardrail around the deck – as required per plaintiff's expert
– would have solved nothing because the accident did not occur in the area where
plaintiff's expert said the guard should be. And as for warnings, plaintiff had
been to the site before the date of the accident and knew about the conditions
before she arrived.
On appeal, plaintiff argues that the conflicting expert opinions created
genuine issues of fact that precluded summary judgment. She emphasizes that
the failure to set up the pool's mesh fence – which her expert said was required
to protect against injury – contributed to the accident. Plaintiff maintains that
the absence of a guardrail around the deck, pursuant to her expert's opinion,
would have provided protection against the accident. And finally, she contends
that her mother failed to warn her about dangerous conditions at the site of the
accident.
The duty of a landowner to a person who has been injured because of a
dangerous condition on private property is based on the status of the person at
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the time of the injury. Hopkins v. Fox & Lazo Realtors, 132 N.J. 426, 433
(1993).
An owner or possessor of property owes a higher
degree of care to the business invitee because that
person has been invited on the premises for purposes of
the owner that often are commercial or business related.
A lesser degree of care is owed to a social guest or
licensee, whose purposes for being on the land may be
personal as well as for the owner's benefit.
[Ibid.]
"Only to the invitee or business guest does a landowner owe a duty of reasonable
care to guard against any dangerous conditions on [the] property that the owner
either knows about or should have discovered." Id. at 434. We consider plaintiff
to be a social guest.
A social guest is someone invited to . . . her host's
premises. The social guest must accept the premises of
. . . her host as . . . she finds them. In other words, the
host has no obligation to make . . . her home safer for
. . . her guest than for . . . herself. The host also is not
required to inspect . . . her premises to discover defects
that might cause injury to . . . her guest.
If, however, the host knows or has reason to
know of some artificial or natural condition on the
premises which could pose an unreasonable risk of
harm to . . . her guest and that . . . her guest could not
be reasonably expected to discover it, the owner . . .
owes the social guest a duty to exercise reasonable care
to make the condition safe or to give warning to . . . her
guest of its presence and of the risk involved. In other
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words, although a social guest is required to accept the
premises as the host maintains them, . . . she is entitled
to the host's knowledge of dangerous conditions on the
premises. On the other hand, where the guest knows or
has reason to know of the condition and the risk
involved and nevertheless enters or remains on the
premises, the host cannot be held liable for the accident.
[Model Jury Charges (Civil), 5.20F(4), "Social Guest
– Defined and General Duty Owed" (rev. Dec 2014).]
As to the alleged dangerous conditions on the site – the rolled up mesh
fence and no guardrail – there is absolutely no evidence whatsoever
demonstrating that either one had anything to do with the accident. The purpose
of the fence around the pool is to keep people away from the pool, but plaintiff
herself admits that the mesh fence had to be rolled up so that she could tarp the
pool. This is not a situation where she fell into the pool because there was no
fence. And as to the guardrail, she fell on the opposite side of the pool from
where her expert says the guard should have been. Even if we applied the higher
degree of care that landowners generally owe to business invitees, we conclude
that defendant is entitled to summary judgment.
Importantly, it is undisputed that plaintiff was thoroughly familiar with
the pool configuration in her mother's backyard. She had sat at that pool almost
every day for three preceding summers. Plaintiff understood that the normal
procedure for winterizing the pool was to remove the mesh fencing around the
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pool, place the tarp over the pool, then put the fencing back up. Plaintiff
conceded that her two brothers – who usually winterized the pool in prior years
– placed a tarp over the deck furniture, and "moved everything [including a
storage box] so they [themselves] could tarp the pool." Plaintiff, however,
attempted to place the tarp over the pool with her fiancé because her brothers
"never got a chance to tarp the pool."
Thus, she had been familiar with the site, which her brothers cleared for
her. There was no need for any warnings – not only because there were no
dangerous conditions that had anything to do with the accident – but especially
because plaintiff knew of the conditions and the potential risks involved in
placing a tarp over the pool. Nevertheless, plaintiff entered or remained in her
mother's backyard.
Affirmed.
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