NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
DOCKET NO. A-2111-18T3
ANGEL ALBERTO PAREJA,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v. APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION
April 9, 2020
PRINCETON INTERNATIONAL
PROPERTIES and LOWE'S APPELLATE DIVISION
LANDSCAPING AND LAWN
MAINTENANCE, LLC,
Defendants-Respondents,
and
PRINCETON INTERNATIONAL
PROPERTIES,
Defendant/Third-Party
Plaintiff,
v.
LOWE'S LANDSCAPING AND
LAWN MAINTENANCE, LLC,
Third-Party Defendants.
______________________________
Submitted December 2, 2019 – Decided April 9, 2020
Before Judges Fasciale, Moynihan and Mitterhoff.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey,
Law Division, Mercer County, Docket No. L-2283-16.
Garces, Grabler & LeBrocq, PC, attorneys for
appellant (David E. Rehe, on the brief).
William Pfister, Jr., attorney for respondent Princeton
International Properties.
The opinion of the court was delivered by
FASCIALE, P.J.A.D.
In this slip and fall case, we must address whether the ongoing-storm
rule applies in New Jersey. The ongoing-storm rule arbitrarily relieves
commercial landowners from any obligation to try to render their property safe
while sleet or snow is falling. The rule is premised on the ground that to do so
would always be "inexpedient and impractical." Such a bright-line rule,
however, ignores situations when it is reasonable for a commercial landowner
to remove or reduce foreseeable and known snow or ice hazards. Thus,
adherence to the rule frustrates a main function of tort law—deterring tortious
behavior and preventing accidents. 1
1
In his recent dissent from the Court's order denying a plaintiff's petition for
certification, Justice Barry Albin explained that in at least three unpublished
opinions, our court "mistakenly suggested [the Court] has spoken to this issue
through [the Court's] precedents." See Dixon v. HC Equities Assocs., LP, ___
N.J. ___, ___ (Feb. 13, 2020) (slip op. at 2) (Albin, J., dissenting). Justice
Albin stated that our court misapplied the Supreme Court's jurisprudence by
"misconstru[ing] [Qian v. Toll Bros. Inc., 223 N.J. 124 (2015), Mirza v.
A-2111-18T3
2
We hold that a commercial landowner has a duty to take reasonable steps
to render a public walkway abutting its property—covered by snow or ice—
reasonably safe. Such a duty—to remove or reduce a foreseeable hazard—
cannot be fulfilled by always waiting to act until after a storm ends, regardless
of the risk imposed to invitees and pedestrians. The commercial landowner's
liability may arise only if, after actual or constructive notice, it fails to act in a
reasonably prudent manner under the circumstances to remove or reduce the
foreseeable hazard. Whether it would be inexpedient or impractical to act is
one of many factors for the jury's consideration. Thus, reasonableness is the
polestar.
On appeal from the grant of summary judgment, plaintiff argues the
judge erred by: (1) Applying the ongoing-storm rule and determining that
defendant Princeton International Properties, the commercial landowner, had
no duty to remove or reduce the ice hazard until after the precipitation ended;
and (2) usurping the jury by finding that no de-icing or removal efforts would
have been successful until after the storm ended. We reverse.
I.
Filmore Corp., 92 N.J. 390 (1983), and Bodine v. Goerke Co., 102 N.J.L. 642
(E. & A. 1926)] [to] hold[] that a commercial landowner owes no duty to
tenants or the public to make a reasonable effort to remove snow or ice from a
sidewalk until sleet or snow ceases." Ibid.
A-2111-18T3
3
When reviewing an order granting summary judgment, we apply the
same standard the motion judge considered. Brill v. Guardian Life Ins. Co. of
Am., 142 N.J. 520, 540 (1995); see also R. 4:46-2(c). First, we determine
"whether the competent evidential materials presented, when viewed in the
light most favorable to the non-moving party, are sufficient to permit a rational
factfinder to resolve the alleged disputed issue in favor of the non-moving
party." Brill, 142 N.J. at 540. Once we resolve that question, we decide de
novo the legal question of whether the moving party is entitled to judgment as
a matter of law. Ibid.
The record does not reflect the anticipated number of people using
defendant's property on the morning of the accident. We do know, however,
that defendant's property consisted of two offices on the first floor, two
apartments on the second and third floors, and a paved parking lot with a
concrete driveway apron. The accident occurred at 7:50 a.m. on Monday,
January 12, 2015, so presumably the businesses were open, the residents who
lived on the second and third floors could come and go, and pedestrians were
using the public sidewalks.
A-2111-18T3
4
Defendant employed maintenance people and retained Lowe's
Landscaping (Lowe's) to perform snow and ice removal at the property. 2
However, it appears that no snow or ice pre-treatment or removal occurred on
the date in question. Weather conditions caused black ice to form on the
sloped apron, which caused plaintiff to slip as he walked to work. He was
seriously injured.
Defendant's forensic meteorologist, Matthew Potter, M.S., examined the
pertinent temperature trends, precipitation, and the residual snow and ice
present on the ground for the six days leading up to the accident. He stated
that three storms had occurred over those six days, such that at the time of the
accident there remained a trace to less-than-one inch of snow on undisturbed
ground surfaces, as well as piles of snow at street corners; the temperature
during that timeframe was colder than normal—characterized as sub-freezing;
and some ground surfaces remained at or below thirty-two degrees through the
time of the incident.
Potter's report is consistent with that of plaintiff's forensic meteorology
expert, Alicia C. Wasula, Ph.D, CCM, as well as plaintiff's recollection that it
had snowed days before the accident, but on the morning of his accident,
2
The motion judge granted Lowe's unopposed motion for summary judgment,
which is not under review on this appeal.
A-2111-18T3
5
"most of the ground [had] no snow" except for "big bunches of sno w" at street
corners.
Twenty-eight hours before plaintiff's accident, at 3:55 a.m. on January
11, 2015, the National Weather Service issued an advisory predicting a mix of
snow and sleet accumulations of around one inch, as well as trace amounts of
ice, expected between 1:00 a.m. and 10:00 a.m. on January 12. The advisory
warned that untreated surfaces might become slippery due to the precipitation.
Wasula reported that, consistent with the weather advisory, very light
sleet fell between 1:31 a.m. and 1:40 a.m., with Potter reporting pockets of
"freezing rain and sleet." According to Wasula, there was then "[a] mix of
sleet, rain and freezing rain" between 7:22 a.m. and 9:00 a.m. Potter
concluded it was reasonably certain, as a result of the precipitation and "sub-
freezing temperature[] in the prior six days," that "a glaze of ice . . .
develop[ed] on these colder ground surfaces."
Defendant conceded that it ordinarily prepared for upcoming storms.
Defendant's Vice President (the VP) gave deposition testimony about such
steps. The record reflects that the VP regularly watched the Weather Channel,
and informed Lowe's about expected storms so that "they" would be prepared.
At this point in the litigation, we therefore reasonably infer that defendant
A-2111-18T3
6
knew about the advisory's warning that untreated surfaces might become
slippery.
Defendant's maintenance supervisor (the supervisor) asserted that
Lowe's was responsible for salting the property. He did not know whether
Lowe's had been out on the day of the accident. However, that morning, the
supervisor was in the general area of the accident and confirmed that the
driving conditions were slippery.
At 7:50 a.m. on January 12, plaintiff parked across the street from
defendant's property, walked towards the property wearing slip-resistant shoes,
and without detecting ice on the roadway, stepped onto the driveway apron and
then slipped and fell on black ice. The meteorological documentation in the
record indicates that the temperature was thirty-two degrees, the sky was
overcast, and the wind was blowing between five and ten miles per hour from
the southwest. Plaintiff testified that it was not snowing when he fell, but it
was drizzling sleet.
Plaintiff retained Wayne F. Nolte, Ph.D., P.E., a professional engineer,
who opined that pre-treating the slippery conditions with anti-icing and de-
icing materials would have reduced the hazard. Nolte relied on the advisory;
the American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM) "Standard Guide for
[S]now and Ice Control for Walkway Surfaces," which describes techniques
A-2111-18T3
7
for snow and ice control, including preparatory, pre-storm application of anti-
icing, de-icing, and abrasive materials, and monitoring and treating walkway
surfaces for refreezing; and the American National Standards Institute
"Provision of Slip Resistance on Walking/Working Surfaces," which provides
that "[e]ffective snow management is anticipatory." He also concluded that
nothing in the local ordinance3 regarding snow and ice removal precluded a
commercial owner from exercising reasonable care to pre-treat dangerous
conditions as they develop.
II.
We now address our rejection of the ongoing-storm rule. We will
analyze: (i) The soundness of defendant's argument that our Supreme Court's
precedent imposed the rule; (ii) authority from other jurisdictions; (iii) our
rationale for imposing a duty of reasonable care on defendant; and (iv) the
details of that duty.
(i) Defendant's Erroneous Belief that the New Jersey Supreme Court Adopted
the Ongoing-Storm Rule
Our Court has not squarely addressed the ongoing-storm rule, let alone
explicitly held that it would categorically be "inexpedient and impractical " for
a commercial landowner to make reasonable efforts to remove or reduce
3
We will address the ordinance later in this opinion.
A-2111-18T3
8
known foreseeable snow or ice hazards on public sidewalks abutting its
property while precipitation is falling.
Relying on Bodine, defendant erroneously asserts that it is "clear and
well settled" that the duty of a commercial landowner to "keep a sidewalk
reasonably free and clear of snow and ice does not commence until after a
reasonable time passes following precipitation." In Bodine, the plaintiff
alleged that the commercial landowner allowed "snow to remain on the store
entrance . . . for an unreasonable length of time [after] having notice thereof
[and] that [doing so] would be slippery and dangerous[.]" 102 N.J.L at 643.
The Court of Errors and Appeals identified the only question on appeal:
"[W]hether negligence may be reasonably inferred from the testimony." Id. at
642. It concluded the judge erred by not entering a directed verdict of no
cause of action in the commercial landowner's favor. Id. at 644. The Court of
Errors and Appeals—in its two-page opinion written ninety-four years ago—
did not definitively hold that a commercial landowner has no duty to clear a
business entrance of snow and ice until precipitation has ceased, and no
reasonable reading of Bodine suggests such an expansive declaration of law.
Fifty-five years after Bodine, our Supreme Court addressed a
commercial landowner's obligation to maintain sidewalks. In Stewart v. 104
Wallace Street, Inc., 87 N.J. 146, 157 (1981), the Court held that "commercial
A-2111-18T3
9
landowners are responsible for maintaining in reasonably good condition the
sidewalks abutting their property and are liable to pedestrians injured as a
result of their negligent failure to do so." Pertinent to this appeal, in Mirza,
the Court held "maintenance" of a public sidewalk includes snow and ice
removal. 92 N.J. at 400.
Defendant mistakenly cites Mirza to support its contention that a
commercial landowner's duty to keep a sidewalk reasonably free and clear of
snow and ice does not commence until "cessation of precipitation." Defendant
argues Mirza plainly invoked the ongoing-storm rule. But that is not what the
Court stated in Mirza. Rather, the Court held
that maintenance of a public sidewalk in a reasonably
good condition may require removal of snow or ice or
reduction of the risk, depending upon the
circumstances. The test is whether a reasonably
prudent person, who knows or should have known of
the condition, would have within a reasonable period
of time thereafter caused the public sidewalk to be in
reasonably safe condition.
[Id. at 395-96 (emphasis added).]
Mirza does not mention the ongoing-storm rule. Instead, the Court concluded
the duty to reasonably remove or reduce the hazard is triggered once "a
reasonably prudent person . . . knows or should have known" about the
dangerous condition. Id. at 395. Notably, the Supreme Court also recognized
that "[t]o act non-negligently is to take reasonable precautions to prevent the
A-2111-18T3
10
occurrence of foreseeable harm to others." Fernandes v. DAR Dev. Corp., 222
N.J. 390, 404 (2015) (emphasis added) (quoting Weinberg v. Dinger, 106 N.J.
469, 484 (1987)). Here, defendant arguably had constructive notice of the
"dangerous condition" at least twenty-eight hours before the accident, which
was plenty of time to take reasonable precautions—as Nolte opined—to
"prevent the occurrence of foreseeable harm to others." Ibid.
Finally, Qian, does not support defendant's position. Like Mirza, Qian
did not mention the ongoing-storm rule nor did the Court hold that the duty is
triggered only after snow and ice stop falling. See Qian, 223 N.J. at 124. Qian
simply required a homeowners' association and its management company to
clear snow and ice from the community's private sidewalks. Id. at 142. Qian
is distinguishable.
Even though there is no Supreme Court case directly on point, our own
precedent has recognized a landowner's duty to remove ice and snow during an
ongoing storm. In Moore v. Schering Plough, Inc., 328 N.J. Super. 300, 303
(App. Div. 2000), the plaintiff was a security guard for the defendant's
property. He slipped and fell while walking on a sidewalk. Ibid. At the time
of his accident, snow had been falling for about seven hours, and the storm
was ongoing. Ibid. The sidewalk did not appear to have been cleared,
notwithstanding the defendant's knowledge of the hazardous condition. Id. at
A-2111-18T3
11
307. We reversed summary judgment to the defendant, holding that the
landowner owed a duty to use reasonable care for the security guard's safety.
Ibid. Whether the landowner acted reasonably presented a jury question. Id.
at 302. We stated that the jury should consider
the extent and timing of the snowfall, the time of day
or night, the nature of the efforts actually taken by the
owner to maintain the premises, the practicality of
cleaning up in stages or by priorities, the plaintiff's
care for his own safety including his foot wear, the
minimal usage consequent on the "closed" facility in
contrast to a normal work week, and any other
pertinent factors.
[Id. at 307.]
We acknowledge Moore is distinguishable from this case because the
plaintiff fell on a sidewalk located entirely on private property. By contrast,
this case involves a pedestrian's fall on a public sidewalk (concrete apron)
abutting private property. Moore is relevant, however, to the extent that it
recognized a landowner's duty to remove or reduce ice and snow hazards
during an ongoing storm.
(ii) Out-of-State Jurisprudence
Other jurisdictions have explicitly addressed the ongoing-storm rule. Of
course, we are not bound by those decisions, but they provide additional
support for our holding. The opinions rejecting a categorical application of the
ongoing-storm rule are most persuasive, as we will demonstrate. As for the
A-2111-18T3
12
jurisdictions embracing the ongoing-storm rule, we extrapolate general themes
important for the imposition of a landowner's duty of ordinary and reasonable
care while precipitation is falling and also for the jury's consideration of
whether a commercial landowner breached that duty.
(a) Jurisdictions Rejecting the Ongoing-Storm Rule
In Budzko v. One City Center Associates Ltd. Partnership, 767 A.2d
310, 314-15 (Me. 2001), the Supreme Judicial Court of Maine rejected an
argument that a commercial landowner never owes a legal duty to remove
freezing precipitation as it falls. The Court acknowledged its slip and fall
negligence jurisprudence that imposed a "positive duty [on business owners to]
exerc[ise] reasonable care in providing reasonably safe premises . . . when it
knows or should have known of a risk to customers on its premises." Id. at
314 (third alteration in original) (quoting Currier v. Toys 'R' Us, Inc., 680 A.2d
453, 455-56 (Me. 1996)). The Budzko Court held, such a duty cannot be
fulfilled by "wait[ing] until after [a] storm to take any action, regardless of the
risk [im]posed to its invitees during the storm." Id. at 315. It held that
"[b]usiness owners have a duty to reasonably respond to foreseeable dangers
and keep premises reasonably safe when invitees may be anticipated to enter
or leave the premises during a winter storm." Ibid. (emphasis added); see also
Gray v. United States, 845 F. Supp. 2d 333, 339 (D. Me. 2012) (following
A-2111-18T3
13
Budzko and acknowledging—even with Maine's snowy and icy winters—that
"a landowner cannot wait until a storm ends to take safety precautions").
The Supreme Court of Kentucky applied the same rationale when it
refused to follow the ongoing-storm rule, and instead remained faithful to the
gravamen of a tort claim. In Carter v. Bullitt Host, LLC, 471 S.W.3d 288, 299
(Ky. 2015), the Court refused to recognize "a separate category or special
status" for liability associated with falling snow and ice. The plaintiff fell on
ice near a hotel's entrance. Id. at 290. In reversing summary judgment to the
hotel, the Court acknowledged that the storm's ongoing nature is relevant to
"what reasonable conduct the hotel should have done in the exercise of
ordinary care," id. at 299, and then stated:
[I]t has always been the law that a landowner's duty of
reasonable care includes keeping the premises in a
reasonably safe condition. If a person owns or
occupies land, there are attendant responsibilities that
come with that possession, which the possessor is in
the best position to address. This is especially the
case where the landowner operates a business and
entices customers to the land where they encounter a
dangerous hazard.
....
It is true that no one controls the weather; but neither
is anyone reasonably expected to do so. A landowner
is held only to reasonable conduct. The gravamen of a
tort claim has always been that harm has come to a
plaintiff because of the unreasonable conduct of the
tortfeasor. Such conduct need only be the conduct
A-2111-18T3
14
that the ordinary person would not do under the same
circumstances, in order to be tortious.
[Id. at 299-300 (emphasis added).]
We completely agree. And that is precisely why we have emphasized that
reasonableness is the polestar.
The Court of Appeals of Indiana also rejected the ongoing-storm rule.
In Henderson v. Reid Hospital & Healthcare Services, 17 N.E.3d 311, 319
(Ind. Ct. App. 2014), the court stated:
[A] landowner has a duty to exercise reasonable care
under the circumstances to maintain its business
premises, including ensuring that the sidewalks and
parking lots are in a reasonably safe condition. This
duty includes clearing areas such as sidewalks and
parking lots of the natural accumulations of snow and
ice. Although we conclude that there is no
requirement that the storm or weather condition
causing the accumulation of snow or ice cease before
this duty attaches, we do recognize that the . . .
landowner is entitled to actual or constructive notice
of the presence of snow or ice and a reasonable
opportunity to remove it.
Notice of a dangerous condition is an important component in our holding too.
When addressing the ongoing-storm rule, the court emphasized, "particularly
the language requiring the storm or weather condition to cease before there is a
duty to remove the accumulated snow or ice, has not been adopted in Indiana
jurisprudence[.]" Id. at 317.
A-2111-18T3
15
The Court of Appeals of Michigan also rejected the ongoing-storm rule.
In Lundy v. Groty, 367 N.W.2d 448, 450 (Mich. Ct. App. 1985), the court
reversed summary judgment for the landowner and addressed the duty to
"shovel, salt, sand or otherwise remove the snow from the drive way." In
Lundy, the plaintiff worked for the landowner as a housekeeper and babysitter.
Id. at 449. She arrived at work, parked her car in the driveway, and—while
snow was falling—slipped on the driveway, which had not been shoveled or
salted. Ibid. The trial judge misinterpreted Michigan law to relieve the
landowner from taking any "reasonable measures" until after "all of the snow
had fallen." Ibid. The court of appeals corrected that misinterpretation:
[The] [d]efendant would owe [the] plaintiff a duty
because she should know that snow was falling on her
property and that it would create a dangerous
condition for the elderly plaintiff. The general
standard of care would require [the] defendant to
shovel, salt, sand or otherwise remove the snow from
the driveway.
....
The specific standard of care in the instant case would
be the reasonableness of [the] defendant's actions
regarding the snow. Whether it was reasonable to
wait for the snow to stop falling before [the defendant]
shoveled or whether salt or sand should have been
spread in the interim is a question for the jury.
[Id. at 450 (emphasis added).]
A-2111-18T3
16
See also Clink v. Steiner, 413 N.W.2d 45, 47-48 (Mich. Ct. App. 1987)
(stating that while the law imposes a duty on invitors to use reasonable
measures to diminish the hazard of snow and ice, the specific reasonable
actions that a defendant should have taken is a question for the jury).
The United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia
addressed the ongoing-storm rule. In Pessagno v. Euclid Inv. Co., 112 F.2d
577, 578 (D.C. Cir. 1940), the plaintiff—a guest of the apartment building's
tenant—slipped on ice located on the premises while it was raining and
freezing. The court addressed whether the landlord was "obligated to use
reasonable care, during the progress of a storm, to remove or render harmless
ice forming thereon from natural causes[.]" Ibid. The court concluded there
was such a duty. Id. at 579. It stated that to hold otherwise would overlook a
landlord's duty "to exercise ordinary care . . . [in areas] under his exclusive
control . . . [and] after notice, to exercise ordinary care to keep them free from
conditions, whether permanent or temporary, which make them dangerous to
the tenants or their guests." Ibid. Importantly, the Court of Appeals stated:
In adopting this rule, we are not, as counsel say,
imposing on the owner of the premises a burden
physically impossible to discharge or one which
makes the owner the guarantor of the safety of his
tenants and their guests. We do not hold there was an
absolute duty to provide a safe entrance or to keep it
safe by extraordinary or unusual means. If the storm
made the spreading of sand or ashes or some other
A-2111-18T3
17
preventive impossible or even useless, no reasonable
person would expect it to be done, or if the spreading
of sand every two or three hours might be expected to
accomplish reasonable safety, what appellee did in
that regard was sufficient.
[Ibid.]
No liability attaches without actual or constructive notice of a hazardous
condition. See Youssef v. 3636 Corp., 777 A.2d 787, 793 (D.C. 2001) (stating
that "weather predictions alone are not sufficient to establish constructive
notice of an allegedly dangerous condition").
In Nebraska, the Supreme Court reversed a judgment entered after the
jury returned a verdict of no cause of action in the landlord's favor. In Danner
v. Myott Park, Ltd., 306 N.W.2d 580, 583 (Neb. 1981), the Court concluded
the trial judge gave this erroneous charge to the jury: "You are instructed that
a landlord may . . . await the end of a snow storm and a reasonable time
thereafter before removing ice and/or snow from outside entrances, walks,
platforms or steps." The Court said the jury determines "under the evidence
whether [the] defendant was afforded a reasonable time to make the condition
safe or give adequate warning." Ibid. In remarking that the jury charge was
erroneous, the Court insightfully commented that one does not have to "reflect
long to think of situations where giving the challenged instruction results in
A-2111-18T3
18
injustice." Ibid. It pointed to the following State of Washington appeals
opinion to illustrate the problem.
The Court of Appeals of the State of Washington rejected the ongoing -
storm rule. In Cramer v. Van Parys, 500 P.2d 1255, 1262 (Wash. Ct. App.
1972), the court upheld the judge's refusal to give a charge similar to the one in
Danner, and addressed important factors for the jury's consideration when
determining the reasonableness of a landlord's efforts to remove or reduce
known foreseeable ice hazards while precipitation is falling.
In weighing the relevant circumstances, a jury might
consider the nature and size of the apartment, the age
and number of tenants expected to use the slippery
area, the size of the area in need of cleaning, the
current and anticipated weather conditions and the
practicality of other safety measures or methods of
ingress and egress. . . . To permit any landlord under
any circumstance to always wait until the end of a
storm before removing snow would create a rigidity in
the law inconsistent with the innumerable variables
that are possible.
[Ibid.]
Later in this opinion, we enumerate the factors that should be considered when
evaluating reasonableness.
(b) Jurisdictions Recognizing the Ongoing-Storm Rule
We are fully aware of those jurisdictions embracing the ongoing-storm
rule. See Kraus v. Newton, 558 A.2d 240, 243 (Conn. 1989); Laine v.
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19
Speedway, LLC, 177 A.3d 1227, 1228-34 (Del. 2018); Reuter v. Iowa Tr. &
Sav. Bank, 57 N.W.2d 225, 227 (Iowa 1953);4 Agnew v. Dillons, Inc., 822
P.2d 1049, 1054 (Kan. Ct. App. 1991); Mattson v. St. Luke's Hosp. of St. Paul,
89 N.W.2d 743, 745-47 (Minn. 1958); Solazzo v. N.Y. City Transit Auth., 843
N.E.2d 748, 749 (N.Y. 2005); Goodman v. Corn Exch. Nat'l Bank & Tr. Co.,
200 A. 642, 643-44 (Pa. 1938); Berardis v. Louangxay, 969 A.2d 1288, 1291-
93 (R.I. 2009); Clifford v. Crye-Leike Commercial, Inc., 213 S.W.3d 849, 853
(Tenn. Ct. App. 2006); Walker v. Mem'l Hosp., 45 S.E.2d 898, 902, 907 (Va.
1948). See also Hall v. Safeway Stores, Inc., 360 S.W.2d 536, 537-38 (Tex.
Civ. App. 1962) (stating "[i]t is unnecessary to a decision of this case, but it
has been held that . . . a defendant has a reasonable time after the end of a
storm to clean its lot"). Our holding does not overlook the premise for those
opinions: That action will be impractical and inexpedient during precipitation.
Our examination of this jurisprudence makes that abundantly clear.
The premise of the opinions invoking the ongoing-storm rule is that
categorically it would be factually inexpedient and impractical to attempt
reasonable efforts to remove or reduce known foreseeable snow or ice hazards
while precipitation is falling. We disagree. Sometimes it is impractical; other
4
The Iowa Supreme Court was recently asked to address the continuing
validity of the ongoing-storm doctrine, but declined to do so. Alcala v.
Marriott Int'l, Inc., 880 N.W.2d 699, 711-12 (Iowa 2016).
A-2111-18T3
20
times it is not. But an absolute judicial finding usurps the jury's consideration
of reasonableness (especially when weighed against the important risk
imposed to invitees and pedestrians) and "'suspends a property owner's general
duty to exercise reasonable care'" as to "'snow and ice hazards'" while
precipitation is falling. See Laine, 177 A.3d at 1233, n.19 (quoting Alcala,
880 N.W.2d at 711). In explaining and justifying the imposition of the
ongoing-storm rule, one court stated:
"It is patently unfair to make a landowner absolutely
liable for every slip-and-fall accident on snow in a lot,
especially as this would require the owner to spend the
entire winter clearing the lot on pain of losing a
liability suit. Moreover, it is equally unfair to require
the lot owner to shoulder the expense of plowing and
replowing the lot during the course of a continuous
storm. In this vein, many jurisdictions have ruled that
there is no liability for an accident that takes place
while a storm is still going on or a reasonable time
thereafter, to give the owner a chance to clear out the
lot."
[Id. at 1232-33, n.18 (quoting 74 A.L.R.5th 49
(originally published in 1999)).]
Of course, we are not imposing strict liability or any mandate that a
commercial landowner must always—under every circumstance—"shoulder
the expense of plowing and re-plowing" a parking lot (or any other part of the
commercial premises) during a "continuous storm" for the "entire winter."
That would be entirely unreasonable to do. Indeed, recognizing that
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21
landowners should be encouraged "'to try to clear all public areas of snow and
ice during and after snowstorms,'" Laine emphasized that landowners "'should
not fear legal liability for not clearing every inch of their property during an
all-day snowstorm.'" Id. at 1232, n.18 (emphasis added) (citation omitted).
Thus, our holding should not be misinterpreted to mean that commercial
landowners are "'absolutely liable for every slip-and-fall [injury sustained]
. . . . during the course of a continuous storm,'" or that such owners are
required to clear "'every inch of their property during an all-day snowstorm.'"
Ibid. (citations omitted). But even the court in Laine admitted—in response to
the plaintiff's argument that adherence to the ongoing-storm rule would make
the landowner "lax in its duty to make safe any dangerous condition on the
land"—that "[t]here is admittedly surface appeal to the argument that if a
business is open, it has to be diligent to make its premises safe." Id. at 1232.
In Laine, the court found—in not placing weight on that "surface appeal"—that
factually it would be impracticable and inexpedient to take any action because
"a thin coat of ice can be slippery and hard to eradicate even with salting or
chemicals." Ibid. We believe that should generally be a jury question,
especially like here where there is expert opinion evidence that suggests
otherwise.
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Imposing a rigid judicial declaration that all action would always be
useless or excessive, ignores the main aim of tort law, and overlooks situations
where a commercial landowner's ordinary effort to remove or reduce snow and
ice hazards would be reasonable. To permit commercial landowners under
every circumstance to wait until the end of a storm before taking any
reasonable precautions, or to attempt removing or reducing known
precipitation hazards, would arbitrarily create a rigidity in the law inconsistent
with the innumerable variables that are possible. That leads us to our next
section where we explain the duty's legal basis.
(iii) The Imposition of a Duty
"The fundamental elements of a negligence claim are a duty of care
owed by the defendant to the plaintiff, a breach of that duty by the defendant,
injury to the plaintiff proximately caused by the breach, and damages."
Shields v. Ramslee Motors, 240 N.J. 479, 487 (2020) (quoting Robinson v.
Vivirito, 217 N.J. 199, 208 (2014)). Whether to impose a common law duty
depends on an analysis of such factors as "the relationship of the parties," the
foreseeability and nature of the risk of harm, "the opportunity and ability to
exercise care" to avoid the harm, "the public interest," and ultimately "notions
of fairness" and "common sense." Hopkins v. Fox & Lazo Realtors, 132 N.J.
426, 439, 443 (1993). Our Supreme Court precedent establishes that whether a
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duty of care exists is a question of law that must be decided by the court.
Jerkins v. Anderson, 191 N.J. 285, 294 (2007).
The first Hopkins factor—the relationship of the parties—weighs in
favor of imposing a duty. Historically, a landowner's liability for injuries
sustained on its property was predicated on the injured person's status.
Hopkins, 132 N.J. at 433. That status depended on one of three classifications:
Business invitee, licensee, or trespasser. Ibid. (explaining what degree of care
is required for each classification). "Because public policy and social values
evolve over time, so does the common law." Id. at 435. The Court therefore
concluded that "[b]ased on the nature and circumstances surrounding an open
house . . . implicit in the broker's invitation to customers is some
commensurate degree of responsibility for their safety while visiting the
premises." Id. at 441. Here, tenants, visitors, and members of the general
public utilize public sidewalks, and a commensurate degree of responsibility
for their safety requires a commercial landowner act in a reasonably prudent
manner to remove or reduce known foreseeable snow and ice hazards.
The second Hopkins factor—the foreseeability and nature of the risk of
harm—weighs in favor of imposing a duty. The risk of injury from known
snow and ice is indeed foreseeable. Id. at 450 (stating "some hazards are
relatively commonplace and ordinary . . . for their danger to be understood by
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average persons"). Hazards from snow and ice are "much more common"
than, for example, dilapidated sidewalks. Mirza, 92 N.J. at 395. Thus, the
harm caused by failing to remove or reduce foreseeable and known snow or ice
hazards is obvious.
The third Hopkins factor—the opportunity and ability to exercise care—
weighs in favor of imposing a duty. "[T]he duty to remove snow and ice is
more important and less onerous than the general duty of maintenance imposed
in Stewart." Ibid. Tort law considers how imposing a duty would work in
practice. Hopkins, 132 N.J. at 443 (citing Weinberg, 106 N.J. at 469). The
consequences from imposing a duty of care would not be unreasonably
burdensome because the duty to remove or reduce foreseeable and known
snow or ice hazards is predicated on reasonableness.
The fourth Hopkins factor—the public interest—weighs in favor of
imposing a duty. Imposing a duty of care on commercial landowners serves
the public interest by protecting tenants, visitors, and the general public
against foreseeable and preventable dangers that arise from a failure to act in a
reasonably prudent manner under the circumstances to remove or reduce
known snow and ice hazards. "The many innocent plaintiffs that suffer injury
because of unreasonable accumulations should not be left without recourse."
Mirza, 92 N.J. at 395. As our Court has explained, "one of the main functions
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of tort law is to prevent accidents," and "[o]ne of the central rationales for
imposing liability in tort law is to deter tortious behavior." Hopkins, 132 N.J.
at 448. Imposing a duty of care on commercial landowners serves that aim.
Commercial landowners should be encouraged to eliminate or reduce the
dangers that may be reasonably, readily abated. Mirza, 92 N.J. at 395.
Ultimately, the Hopkins analysis comes down to "notions of fairness"
and "common sense." Hopkins, 132 N.J. at 443. We conclude it is fair to
impose a duty of ordinary and reasonable care on commercial landowners
because—under all the circumstances—they are well positioned to remove or
reduce foreseeable known snow and ice hazards.
Finally, "'municipal ordinances do not create a tort duty, as a matter of
law.'" Smith v. Young, 300 N.J. Super. 82, 95 (App. Div. 1997) (quoting
Brown v. St. Venantius Sch., 111 N.J. 325, 335 (1988)). "For example, a
plaintiff's cause of action cannot be based upon the specific duty to remove
snow and ice imposed by [a] municipal ordinance enacted pursuant to the
statute which empowers municipalities to require landowners or tenants 'to
remove all snow and ice . . . within twelve hours of daylight.'" Ibid. (second
alteration in original) (quoting N.J.S.A. 40:65-12). However, a municipal
ordinance may be used as a "basis for persuading the finder of fact that the
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defendant acted unreasonably [under] the circumstances." 5 Id. at 96. Thus, the
municipal ordinance here did not create a tort duty, and should a municipal
ordinance become evidential on this question, a concomitant limited
instruction should be given.
(iv) The Duty
We hold that a commercial landowner has a duty to take reasonable steps
to render a public walkway abutting its property—covered by snow or ice—
reasonably safe, even when precipitation is falling. The commercial
landowner's liability may arise only if, after actual or constructive notice, it
fails to act in a reasonably prudent manner to remove or reduce the foreseeable
hazard. This holding should not be misread to impose absolute liability for
every slip-and-fall injury sustained during a continuous storm, to require such
landowners to take unreasonable precautionary measures, or to immediately
clear every inch of their property from all amounts of snow or ice falling
during a storm. The duty of ordinary care requires nothing more than
expecting a commercial landowner to act in a reasonably prudent manner
under all circumstances.
5
Section 28-16 of the Borough's ordinance on removal of snow and ice from
sidewalks does not prohibit a landowner from "pre-treating or addressing
conditions as they develop," as explained by Nolte.
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Reasonableness is generally a jury question. To assess reasonableness
of a commercial landowner's conduct, a jury may consider: (1) Whether any
action would be inexpedient or impractical; (2) the extent of the precipitation,
including the amount of snow or ice accumulation; (3) the timing of the
precipitation, whether it's day or night; (4) the nature of the efforts, if any, to
prevent, remove, or reduce snow or ice accumulation, especially whether
conditions were so hazardous as to make it unsafe for the landowner or any
contractor to venture out in the elements; (5) the minimal usage consequent on
a "closed" facility in contrast to a normal work week; (6) the number of
individuals expected to use the public sidewalk, premises, and the area in need
of attention; (7) the past, current, and anticipated weather conditions, including
but not solely dependent on reliable weather predictions, and the practicality of
reasonable safety measures or methods of ingress or egress; and (8) any other
relevant factors.
III.
Having held that a commercial landowner has a duty to take reasonable
steps to render a public walkway abutting its property—covered by snow or
ice—reasonably safe, even when precipitation is falling, we conclude that
disputed issues of material fact preclude summary judgment in defendant's
favor.
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First, there are fact issues about whether defendant had actual or
constructive notice of the dangerous condition. At this point, we give plaintiff
the benefit of all reasonable inferences on the notice question. For example,
we accepted: (1) Defendant knew about the previous storms beginning on
January 6, and the sustained colder-than-usual sub-freezing temperatures; (2)
the VP regularly monitored weather conditions by watching the Weather
Channel, and informed Lowe's about upcoming storms so that "they" would be
prepared to address the elements; 6 (3) the advisory, together with the totality of
all the circumstances, warned of an upcoming mix of snow and sleet and that
icy conditions would likely exist on untreated surfaces, which defendant
received twenty-eight hours before the accident; and (4) the supervisor
experienced slippery road conditions on the morning of the accident near
defendant's property. On the other hand, we recognize that the VP had no
recollection of informing Lowe's about the storm, which may imply—even in
the face of everything else—that he did not know about the anticipated icy
conditions.
6
See N.J.R.E. 406 (setting forth the basis for the admissibility of evidence of
habit or routine practice to prove "on a specific occasion a person . . . acted in
conformity with the habit or routine practice").
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Second, there are genuine issues of material fact about whether
defendant acted reasonably under all the circumstances by not acting in any
way to prevent, remove, or reduce hazards associated with the precipitation.
Although the judge concluded defendant owned no duty of care to plaintiff, he
still resolved the question of reasonableness by finding:
It would not have been possible for . . . defendant[] as
a practical matter to remediate the ice . . . if it's still
raining.[7] If you put down anything it would get
washed away and then re-freeze. So, if you put down
sand, the ice is still forming. Sand would work if it
stays on top[,] but if it gets buried into the ice then
that doesn't work.
I'm trying to . . . think of some practical way to
say that something could have been done but as a
practical matter, nothing I could think of on my own
[would work.]
....
I just can't imagine what they would have done. If
you cleared the ice, it's still raining and still freezing.
The ice comes right back. . . . [T]here's no practical
way . . . to deal with any of this.
The judge might ultimately be correct, but whether defendant's inaction
was reasonable was a question for the jury. Nolte opined that the ASTM
describes numerous techniques for snow and ice control, including
preparatory, pre-storm application of anti-icing, de-icing, and abrasive
7
Plaintiff testified that it was "drizzling" sleet.
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materials, and monitoring and treating walkway surfaces for refreezing. He
also referred to other techniques noting that "[e]ffective snow management is
anticipatory." Thus, whether defendant acted reasonably under all the
circumstances by failing to take any precautionary measures and waiting for
the precipitation to end is a question for the jury.
Reversed.
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