J-E03001-21
2022 PA Super 197
AISHA MONROE : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
: PENNSYLVANIA
Appellant :
:
:
v. :
:
:
CBH20, LP, D/B/A CAMELBACK SKI : No. 1862 EDA 2019
RESORT D/B/A CAMELBACK SKI :
CORPORATION :
Appeal from the Order Dated May 16, 2019
In the Court of Common Pleas of Monroe County Civil Division at No(s):
8184-CV-2016
BEFORE: PANELLA, P.J., BENDER, P.J.E., BOWES, J., OLSON, J., STABILE,
J., KUNSELMAN, J., NICHOLS, J., KING, J., and McCAFFERY, J.
DISSENTING OPINION BY BENDER, P.J.E.: FILED NOVEMBER 21, 2022
I respectfully dissent. Though I agree that Ms. Monroe waived any
argument that Camelback’s motion for judgment on the pleadings/motion for
summary judgment was untimely or otherwise improper, unlike the Opinion
Per Curiam, I would conclude that Ms. Monroe failed to adequately plead
recklessness in her complaint. As such, I would determine that the trial court
properly entered judgment on the pleadings in favor of Camelback and
correctly dismissed Ms. Monroe’s claims with prejudice. Moreover, even if
judgment on the pleadings was inappropriate, I would affirm the trial court’s
entry of summary judgment in favor of Camelback, as I disagree that Ms.
Monroe produced sufficient evidence to enable a fact-finder to conclude that
Camelback acted recklessly in this matter. I address each of these points
further in turn.
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I.
Upon examining whether Ms. Monroe adequately pleaded recklessness
in her complaint, I would ascertain that she did not do so, such that
Camelback’s motion for judgment on the pleadings should have been
granted.1 I recognize that an apparent split in authority as to the proper
pleading of recklessness has developed, which has led to inconsistent rulings
in the trial courts and understandable confusion amongst litigants. See Daniel
E. Cummins, PLEADING FOR CLARITY: Appellate Guidance Needed to Settle
the Issue of the Proper Pleading of Recklessness in Personal Injury Matters,
Vol. XCIII, No. 1 P.B.A. QUARTERLY 32 (Jan. 2022). Due to this controversy, I
think it useful to briefly review the current state of the law on this issue.
As the Opinion Per Curiam acknowledges, Pennsylvania Rule of Civil
Procedure 1019 addresses the contents of pleadings and the specificity
required for factual averments. Pertinent to this matter, Rule 1019(a)
provides that “[t]he material facts on which a cause of action or defense is
based shall be stated in a concise and summary form.” Pa.R.Civ.P. 1019(a).
Additionally, Rule 1019(b) sets forth that “[a]verments of fraud or mistake
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1 I am mindful that, when ruling on a motion for judgment on the pleadings,
this Court may only consider the pleadings and any documents properly
attached to them. See Commonwealth v. All that Certain Lot or Parcel
of Land Located at 4714 Morann Avenue, Houtzdale, Clearfield County,
261 A.3d 554, 559-60 (Pa. Super. 2021); see also Pa.R.Civ.P. 1017(a).
Accordingly, I do not consider Mr. Wolf’s expert report in my analysis, as his
expert report was not attached to a pleading, but instead was produced by
Ms. Monroe in opposition to Camelback’s motion for judgment on the
pleadings/motion for summary judgment.
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shall be averred with particularity. Malice, intent, knowledge, and other
conditions of mind may be averred generally.” Pa.R.Civ.P. 1019(b). Thus,
although Pennsylvania is a fact-pleading jurisdiction, our Rules of Civil
Procedure permit parties to aver conditions of the mind generally.
Nearly fifty years ago, this Court confronted the issue of how to properly
plead a condition of the mind in Ammlung v. City of Chester, 302 A.2d 491
(Pa. Super. 1973). In that case, the plaintiff pleaded the following in her
complaint:
At about 11:00 p.m. on January 24, 1970, Russell G. Ammlung,
Jr., an 18-year-old[] of whose estate [the] plaintiff is
administratrix, was discovered out of doors in subfreezing
weather, semi-clothed and only partly conscious. He was arrested
by an officer of the Chester City Police Department, defendant
Lawrence Platt, for being drunk and disorderly in spite of the fact
that he was, and appeared to be, simply ill.
Mr. Ammlung was removed to the Chester City Police Station by
Officer Platt and Officers Joseph Friel and Michael Brown of the
Chester Police Department, also defendants, and there confined
to a cell. No medical examination was afforded him; no effort was
made to ascertain his identity or to notify his relatives. He died
the following morning, sometime after 10 o’clock, in his cell.
In the interim, he remained in a chilled state and without adequate
clothing; he was unattended until 8:45 of the morning following
his arrest. A[t] some point, water was thrown upon, or otherwise
applied to, him in an effort to revive [him]; the water caused him
to contract pneumonia. At 8:45 of the morning following his
arrest, he was observed to be still unconscious by Sergeant Paul
L. Morgan of the Chester Police Department, a defendant, who
heard a gurgling sound in his throat. The incident was not
reported.
Shortly before his death, mucus was seen coming from his mouth.
Death resulted from the ‘grossly negligent and wanton’
treatment of the defendants, who were acting within the scope
of their employment and who included Captain John Welc, in
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charge of the police station, and Roy Dixon, an employee of the
police department in whose custody the decedent was while
confined.
Id. at 493-94 (emphasis added).
The defendants filed preliminary objections in the nature of a demurrer
to the plaintiff’s complaint, which the trial court sustained. Id. at 492. In
sustaining the defendants’ preliminary objections, the trial court determined
that “the defendants named in the complaint would not be liable in the
absence of ‘intentional, wanton, [or] malicious conduct’ and that such conduct
had not been sufficiently alleged.” Id. at 494 (footnote omitted).
The plaintiff appealed, and we reversed the trial court’s decision,
explaining:
Under Pa.R.C[iv].P. … 1019(b), ‘(m)alice, intent, knowledge, and
other conditions of mind may be averred generally.’ Wantonness,
being in principle a state of mind, has been regarded as included
within the rule.[2] The permissibility of pleading a condition
of the mind generally, in a fact[-]pleading state, is, of
course, founded upon necessity. The allowance of such
pleading was not meant, however, to dispense with the
requirement that material facts constituting the conduct of
a defendant also be pleaded.
The plaintiff has alleged that the decedent was in the custody of
the defendants, that he was ill and semiconscious, that he was
allowed to lie in that state a full night, without adequate clothing
and without medical care, that he died the next morning in his
cell, and that the defendants in so confining and treating him acted
wantonly—i.e., with a realization of the danger he was in and with
a reckless d[i]sregard of that danger. Although it may be that the
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2 “‘(W)antonness,’ in Pennsylvania, ‘exists where the danger to the (injured
party), though realized, is so recklessly disregarded that, even though there
be no actual intent, there is at least a willingness to inflict injury, a conscious
indifference to the perpetration of the wrong.’” Ammlung, 302 A.2d at 497
(citation omitted).
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amended complaint lacks sufficient specificity, and is thus
susceptible to the motion for a more specific pleading included in
[the] defendants’ preliminary objections, we do not believe that a
demurrer should have been sustained and the amended complaint
dismissed. A preliminary objection in the nature of a demurrer is
not to be sustained and the complaint dismissed unless ‘the law
says with certainty that no recovery is possible.’ Under the facts
alleged, we are not prepared to say that no recovery is possible.
Id. at 497-98 (citations and footnotes omitted; emphasis added).
Hence, following Ammlung, this Court has issued decisions determining
that — even though conditions of mind may be pled generally — supporting
factual allegations must also be pled. See Valentino v. Philadelphia
Triathlon, LLC, 150 A.3d 483, 489 (Pa. Super. 2016) (en banc), aff’d by
equally divided court, 209 A.3d 941 (Pa. 2019) (ascertaining that the plaintiff’s
allegations in her complaint “averred nothing more than ordinary negligence
arising from inadvertence, mistake, or error in judgment; they do not support
a claim involving outrageous behavior or a conscious disregard for risks
confronted by [t]riathlon participants”); Toney v. Chester Cnty. Hosp., 961
A.2d 192, 203 (Pa. Super. 2008) (concluding that the complaint did not supply
any factual allegations to support the legal conclusion of recklessness or
intentional acts); Cable & Assocs. Ins. Agency, Inc. v. Commercial Nat’l
Bank of PA, 875 A.2d 361, 365 (Pa. Super. 2005) (“Pennsylvania Rule of Civil
Procedure 1019(b) provides that malice, intent, knowledge, and other
conditions of mind may be averred generally, but this permissive pleading rule
did not obviate the central requirement of our fact-pleading system, i.e., that
the pleader must define the issues and every act or performance essential to
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that end must be set forth in the complaint.”) (citations omitted); Waklet-
Riker v. Sayre Area Educ. Ass’n, 656 A.2d 138, 141 (Pa. Super. 1995)
(“[The a]ppellant insists that bad faith is a state of mind, and thus, may be
pled generally. However, her failure to plead any material facts upon which a
claim of bad faith could be based is fatal to her cause of action.”) (citations
omitted).
Despite this line of cases, confusion about how to properly plead
recklessness began to emerge following this Court’s decision in Archibald v.
Kemble, 971 A.2d 513 (Pa. Super. 2009), appeal denied, 989 A.2d 914 (Pa.
2010). There, the plaintiff brought a negligence action against a fellow hockey
player in his adult “no-check” ice hockey league after the fellow player
allegedly checked the plaintiff in violation of the league’s rules, causing
injuries to the plaintiff. Id. at 515. The trial court granted summary judgment
in favor of the defendant, noting that “[i]n order to recover the relief
requested, recklessness or intentional conduct must be shown. Had the words
‘reckless’ or ‘intentional conduct’ even appeared within [the plaintiff’s
c]omplaint, [the d]efendant’s position that [the plaintiff has] failed to state a
cause of action for which relief can be granted would be erroneous.” Id. at
517 n.1.
The plaintiff appealed. Initially, we held that the defendant must have
engaged in reckless conduct to be subject to liability for the injuries sustained
by the plaintiff. Id. at 517. Next, we considered whether the plaintiff was
required to specifically plead recklessness in his complaint, which he had not
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done, instead pleading only negligence. See id. at 515-16, 519. We
explained:
The Restatement provides:
The actor’s conduct is in reckless disregard of the safety of
another if he does an act or intentionally fails to do an act
which it is his duty to the other to do, knowing or having
reason to know of facts which would lead a reasonable man
to realize, not only that his conduct creates an unreasonable
risk of physical harm to another, but also that such risk is
substantially greater than that which is necessary to make
his conduct negligent.[3]
…
Special Note: The conduct described in this Section is often
called “wanton or willful misconduct” both in statutes and
judicial opinions. On the other hand, this phrase is
sometimes used by courts to refer to conduct intended to
cause harm to another.
Restatement (Second) of Torts § 500 (1965).
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3 As I discuss further infra, in addition to the lesser degree of risk involved,
negligence differs from recklessness in that negligence suggests “unconscious
inadvertence” or “mere inadvertence, incompetence, unskillfulness, or a
failure to take precautions to enable the actor adequately to cope with a
possible or probable future emergency[.]” Tayar v. Camelback Ski Corp.,
Inc., 47 A.3d 1190, 1200 (Pa. 2012); see also id. (“Recklessness is
distinguishable from negligence on the basis that recklessness requires
conscious action or inaction which creates a substantial risk of harm to others,
whereas negligence suggests unconscious inadvertence.”); Pa. Suggested
Standard Civil Jury Instructions 13.60 (“Reckless conduct is significantly worse
than negligent conduct. The risk that harm will be caused by conduct that is
reckless is higher than the risk that harm will be caused by conduct that is
negligent.”); Subcommittee Note to Pa. Suggested Standard Civil Jury
Instructions 13.60 (“Pennsylvania decisions clearly differentiate between
ordinary negligence and recklessness, not only in degree but also in kind, with
the emphasis on the knowledge and intent of the perpetrator with respect to
the risk of substantial physical harm.”).
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Recklessness, or willfulness, or wantonness refers to a degree of
care Prosser describes as “aggravated negligence.” Nevertheless,
“[t]hey apply to conduct which is still, at essence, negligent,
rather than actually intended to do harm, but which is so far from
a proper state of mind that it is to be treated in many respects as
if it were so intended.” W. PAGE KEETON ET AL., PROSSER AND
KEETON ON TORTS § 34 (5th ed. 1984). In this case, even though
we hold [the plaintiff] must prove [the defendant] acted
recklessly, the cause of action remains sounding in negligence.
Cf. Stubbs v. Frazer, … 454 A.2d 119 ([Pa. Super.] 1982).
Therefore, merely determining the degree of care is recklessness
does not give rise to a separate tort that must have been pled
within the applicable statute of limitations. The trial judge was
correct in ruling the degree of care is recklessness. He erred in
concluding that [the plaintiff’s] cause of action was not subsumed
within the negligence count pled in [his] Complaint.
Pennsylvania Rule of Civil Procedure 1019(b) provides: “Malice,
intent, knowledge, and other conditions of the mind may be
averred generally.” An example of a condition of the mind that
may be averred generally is wanton conduct. See Ammlung…,
… 302 A.2d [at] 497 … (citations and quotation marks omitted)
(explaining “[u]nder Pa.R.C[iv].P. … 1019(b), (m)alice, intent,
knowledge, and other conditions of mind may be averred
generally. Wantonness, being in principle a state of mind, has
been regarded as included in this rule[]”). Because recklessness
is also known as “wanton and willful misconduct,” “recklessness”
is a condition of the mind that may be averred generally.
In acknowledging the burden is recklessness, [the plaintiff’s]
Complaint is not being changed at all[,] let alone being changed
to add new facts or new parties. [The defendant] suffers no
prejudice because he is already aware of the facts. The
heightened burden from simple negligence to recklessness hinders
[the plaintiff], not [the defendant]. Lastly, [the defendant] is not
prejudiced considering in his Answer and New Matter [he]
provided: “[The defendant] was not negligent, reckless or careless
with respect to any conduct regarding the injuries and damages
alleged by [the p]laintiff….”
Id. at 519-20 (footnote and citation omitted; emphasis in original).
Having concluded that the standard of care was recklessness, and that
the plaintiff’s negligence count subsumed his recklessness claim, we then
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examined the record and discerned that the plaintiff had produced evidence
to support each element of his cause of action. Id. at 520-21. Accordingly,
we vacated the trial court’s order granting summary judgment in favor of the
defendant and remanded the case for further proceedings. Id. at 521.
Since Archibald, it has been advanced that negligence actions
encompass recklessness claims, such that recklessness and the material facts
supporting a defendant’s recklessness need not be pled. I disagree and, to
the extent Archibald stands for this proposition, I think it should be
overruled. See Commonwealth v. Morris, 958 A.2d 569, 580 n.2 (Pa.
Super. 2008) (“It is well-settled that this Court, sitting en banc, may overrule
the decision of a three-judge panel of this Court.”) (citation omitted).
I disagree with Archibald for the following reasons. First, Archibald’s
suggestion that recklessness need not be pled conflicts with Rule 1019(b).
Although Rule 1019(b) allows for conditions of the mind to be averred
generally, such conditions must nevertheless be averred. See Pa.R.Civ.P.
1019(b) (“Malice, intent, knowledge, and other conditions of mind may be
averred generally.”); see also Valentino, 150 A.3d at 489 (noting that a
complaint must, inter alia, “give the defendant notice of what the plaintiff’s
claim is”) (citation omitted). While I do not espouse that any certain magic
words must be used to plead recklessness, I do not think that it should be
enough to plead only negligence and say that those allegations inherently
incorporate claims of recklessness.
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Second, I believe a plaintiff must plead facts supporting a defendant’s
reckless state of mind. As this Court declared nearly fifty years ago, “[t]he
permissibility of pleading a condition of the mind generally, in a fact[-]pleading
state, is, of course, founded upon necessity. The allowance of such pleading
was not meant, however, to dispense with the requirement that material facts
constituting the conduct of a defendant also be pleaded.” Ammlung, 302
A.2d at 497-98 (citation and footnotes omitted). Therefore, contrary to
Archibald, I opine that a complaint sounding only in negligence does not
sufficiently plead recklessness. Instead, a plaintiff should have to supply
factual allegations to support recklessness claims. Accord Valentino, supra;
Toney, supra; Cable & Assocs. Ins. Agency, Inc., supra; Waklet-Riker,
supra; Ammlung, supra.
Thus, based on the foregoing, I would determine that a plaintiff must
plead recklessness, and the material facts supporting a defendant’s reckless
state of mind, in the complaint. In my opinion, if the facts alleged do not
support a claim for recklessness, the recklessness claim should not be
permitted to proceed.4
Having reached that conclusion, I turn now to Ms. Monroe’s complaint
to evaluate if she sufficiently pled recklessness. Our Supreme Court has
explained the difference between recklessness and negligence as follows:
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4 In contrast, under the Opinion Per Curiam’s position, a plaintiff would be able
to plead recklessness in any negligence case, regardless of the facts
underlying the matter.
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Recklessness is distinguishable from negligence on the basis that
recklessness requires conscious action or inaction which creates a
substantial risk of harm to others, whereas negligence suggests
unconscious inadvertence. In Fitsko v. Gaughenbaugh, … 69
A.2d 76 ([Pa.] 1949), we cited with approval the Restatement
([First]) of Torts definition of “reckless disregard” and its
explanation of the distinction between ordinary negligence and
recklessness. Specifically, the Restatement (Second) of Torts
defines “reckless disregard” as follows:
The actor’s conduct is in reckless disregard of the safety of
another if he does an act or intentionally fails to do an act
which it is his duty to the other to do, knowing or having
reason to know of facts which would lead a reasonable man
to realize, not only that his conduct creates an unreasonable
risk of physical harm to another, but also that such risk is
substantially greater than that which is necessary to make
his conduct negligent.
Restatement (Second) of Torts § 500 (1965). The Commentary
to this Section emphasizes that “[recklessness] must not only be
unreasonable, but it must involve a risk of harm to others
substantially in excess of that necessary to make the conduct
negligent.” Id., cmt. a. Further, as relied on in Fitsko, the
Commentary contrasts negligence and recklessness:
Reckless misconduct differs from negligence in several
important particulars. It differs from that form of negligence
which consists in mere inadvertence, incompetence,
unskillfulness, or a failure to take precautions to enable the
actor adequately to cope with a possible or probable future
emergency, in that reckless misconduct requires a conscious
choice of a course of action, either with knowledge of the
serious danger to others involved in it or with knowledge of
facts which would disclose this danger to any reasonable
man…. The difference between reckless misconduct and
conduct involving only such a quantum of risk as is
necessary to make it negligent is a difference in the degree
of the risk, but this difference of degree is so marked as to
amount substantially to a difference in kind.
Id., cmt. g; see also AMJUR Negligence § 274 (“Recklessness is
more than ordinary negligence and more than want of ordinary
care; it is an extreme departure from ordinary care, a wanton or
heedless indifference to consequences, an indifference whether or
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not wrong is done, and an indifference to the rights of others[.]”).
Our criminal laws similarly distinguish recklessness and
negligence on the basis of the consciousness of the action or
inaction. See 18 Pa.C.S.[] § 302(b)(3), (4) (providing that a
person acts recklessly when he “consciously disregards a
substantial and unjustifiable risk,” while a person acts negligently
when he “should be aware of a substantial and unjustifiable risk”).
This conceptualization of recklessness as requiring conscious
action or inaction not only distinguishes recklessness from
ordinary negligence, but aligns it more closely with intentional
conduct.
Tayar, 47 A.3d at 1200-01 (emphasis in original).
Here, Ms. Monroe alleged that Camelback acted recklessly by: failing to
properly monitor the speed of the zip-line; failing to use reasonable prudence
and care by leaving her to land with no help; failing to use reasonable
prudence and care to respond to her safety concerns during the zip-lining,
specifically when Ms. Monroe asked Camelback to slow down the zip-lining
machine; and failing to inspect and/or properly monitor the zip-lining
machine’s engine. See First Amended Complaint, 1/25/17, at ¶ 21(a)-(e).
She also averred that Camelback’s employees — “knowing that there was a
high risk of injuri[es] during the landing process” — failed to assist her in
those ways and that, as a result of Camelback’s “consciously disregarding” her
safety, she suffered injuries. Id. at ¶¶ 12, 17.
While Ms. Monroe employed the terms ‘recklessness,’ ‘knowing,’ ‘high
risk,’ and ‘consciously disregarding’ in her complaint (i.e., language typically
associated with recklessness), the factual allegations she advanced therein do
not amount to reckless conduct in my opinion. For example, she averred that,
“[a]t the end of the [zip-lining] trip, [a] spotter is supposed to help customers
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land safely on a square wooden platform[,]” that Camelback left her “to land
with no help[,]” and that as a result of Camelback’s failing to assist her, she
“severely hit her legs.” Id. at ¶¶ 11, 12, 21(b). While Ms. Monroe vaguely
claimed that Camelback knew that there was a ‘high risk’ of injury ‘during the
landing process,’ she did not allege that Camelback knew, or had reason to
know, that it needed a spotter to help riders land or riders would face a
substantial risk of injury, and that it consciously withheld such help. In
addition, she did not set forth how the spotter was supposed to help her land
safely on the platform, what exactly the spotter did instead, and how such
lack of assistance caused her injuries. Similarly, with respect to her request
to slow down the zip-line, Ms. Monroe did not allege that Camelback knew, or
had reason to know, that the zip-line was going so fast as to be dangerous
and consciously elected to not slow down the zip-line. Instead, Ms. Monroe
simply alleged that she noticed the zip-line was going faster than it was on
her first ride and that she consequently made a request that it be slowed
down. Therefore, to me, the facts alleged by Ms. Monroe do not support that
Camelback exhibited a reckless state of mind at the time of her injuries.
Moreover, in my view, any of Camelback’s purported lapses in properly
monitoring the speed of the zip-line, prudently responding to Ms. Monroe’s
safety concerns, and using reasonable care in helping her land safely, without
more, do not establish “an extreme departure from ordinary care, a wanton
or heedless indifference to consequences, an indifference whether or not
wrong is done, and an indifference to the rights of others.” See Tayar, 47
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A.3d at 1201 (citation omitted). Instead, based on Ms. Monroe’s factual
allegations, I would characterize Camelback’s alleged conduct as constituting
“mere inadvertence, incompetence, unskillfulness, or a failure to take
precautions to enable the actor adequately to cope with a possible or probable
future emergency….” Id. (citation omitted). Accord Kibler v. Blue Knob
Recreation, Inc., 184 A.3d 974, 984-86 (Pa. Super. 2018) (concluding, on
summary judgment, that the defendants did not engage in grossly negligent
or reckless conduct as the defendants’ employees were only careless in
operating an ATV on a ski slope and creating the wheel ruts that caused the
plaintiff’s injuries); see also Valentino, 150 A.3d at 488-89 (determining
that the trial court properly dismissed the plaintiff’s allegations of outrageous
and reckless conduct where the plaintiff alleged that a triathlon organizer “was
inattentive to the needs of the contestants, failed to inspect or maintain the
event course, failed to warn of or remove dangerous conditions, failed to
properly plan or organize the event, failed to follow safety standards, and
failed to properly train and supervise its employees”). Indeed, Ms. Monroe
herself claims that Camelback’s “negligence” — not recklessness — was “the
proximate and sole cause of the injuries and damages to [her]….” First
Amended Complaint at ¶ 22. Accordingly, I would determine that Ms. Monroe
failed to plead recklessness and affirm the trial court’s order granting
Camelback’s motion for judgment on the pleadings.
II.
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Even if I had ascertained that judgment on the pleadings was improper,
I would affirm the trial court’s entry of summary judgment in favor of
Camelback. With respect to the trial court’s grant of summary judgment in
favor of Camelback, Ms. Monroe argues that the trial court erred in finding
that Mr. Wolf’s expert report was impermissible because it was not properly
attached to her response to Camelback’s motion for summary judgment. See
Ms. Monroe’s Brief at 28-29. Interestingly, while she insists that the trial court
should have considered Mr. Wolf’s expert report, she includes no discussion of
the content of Mr. Wolf’s expert report in her appellate brief. Instead, Ms.
Monroe argues that the record supports a finding of recklessness because:
[Ms.] Monroe was below the weight limit for the zip-line. The zip-
line was known to bob up and down for heavier people.
[Ms.] Monroe requested the zip-line engine be slowed down by the
first spotter.
The second spotter abandoned that spotter’s job duty to help
[Ms.] Monroe land safely.
Thereafter[, Ms.] Monroe land[ed] unsafely and suffered severe
injury.
[Ms.] Monroe was refused medical attention — the employee ran
off. See[] Morningstar v. Hoban, 55 Pa.D[.]& C[.] 4th 225
([Allegheny Cty.] 2002) (post-accident callousness warranting
punitive damages as reckless).
The operative Complaint (e.g., Motion for Judgment on the
Pleadings), all record facts (e.g., Motion for Summary Judgment),
in the light most favorable to [Ms.] Monroe (i.e., the operative
standard), finds [Ms.] Monroe presented (a simple case of)
[Camelback’s] recklessness. Rubin v. CBS Broadcasting, Inc.,
170 A.3d 560, 564 (Pa. Super. 2017) (citing Pa.R.C[iv].P. 1034);
Com. by Shapiro[ v. Golden Gate Nat’l Senior Care LLC, 194
A.3d 1010, 1030 (Pa. 2018)] (citing Yac[o]ub [v. Lehigh Valley
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Med. Assocs., P.C., 805 A.2d 579, 589 (Pa. Super. 2002) (en
banc)]); Pa.R.C[iv].P. 1034 & 1035.
Even if not factually simple (i.e., not requiring an expert), [Ms.]
Monroe supplied a trial court-directed expert: further amplifying
her recklessness claim.
The complaint merged with the record facts — which the trial court
originally held recklessness an issue of fact for the jury. See
generally[] Sullivan v. City of Phila., 460 A.2d 1191, 1192 (Pa.
Super. 1983) (citing Pa.R.C[iv].P. 1033)); see[] Bloom v.
Dubois v. Reg’l Med. Ctr., 597 A.2d 671, 677 n.7 (Pa. Super.
1991).
Both the pleadings and the record evidence evidenced an issue of
fact of recklessness for the jury — as was held upon the original
dispositive motion (denied by the Court of Common Pleas).
The trial court committed an error of law in granting
[Camelback’s] renewed dispositive motion.
Ms. Monroe’s Brief at 30-31.
Examining the arguments advanced by Ms. Monroe, both on appeal and
before the trial court, I would determine that the trial court did not err in
granting summary judgment in favor of Camelback. Assuming arguendo that
the trial court should have considered Mr. Wolf’s expert report and other
exhibits, Ms. Monroe does not discuss any of the substance of his report,
explaining how it establishes Camelback’s recklessness and connects to her
injuries, in her appellate brief. See Commonwealth v. Hardy, 918 A.2d
766, 771 (Pa. Super. 2007) (“[I]t is an appellant’s duty to present arguments
that are sufficiently developed for our review. … This Court will not act as
counsel and will not develop arguments on behalf of an appellant.”) (citations
omitted).
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Further, in my view, even upon looking back in the record, the
arguments Ms. Monroe made to the trial court with respect to Mr. Wolf’s report
also do not establish Camelback’s recklessness in this matter. There, Ms.
Monroe claimed, in relevant part, that:
[Ms. Monroe] was injured on her second run down the zip[-]line.
See Exhibit B, 37:1-37:6. On the second run, [Ms. Monroe]
attempted to sufficiently pick-up her feet, but was unable to do so
due to her weight. See Exhibit C, 15:18-15:24. [Ms. Monroe’s]
body impacted the landing deck twice. See Exhibit C, 11:14-
11:19.
The first impact occurred when [Ms. Monroe’s] feet impacted the
mats/carpets that were placed in front of the landing deck to
conceal the front face of the landing deck. See Exhibit C, 11:7-
11:13. See also Exhibit D (photograph). See also Exhibit A.
[Ms. Monroe’s] body swung and spun, due to the first impact,
when [Ms. Monroe] then impacted the landing deck a second time,
resulting in significant physical injuries. See Exhibit C, 11:4-
11:13.
[Camelback] is aware of the potential harm to a customer due to
impacting the front of the landing deck. [Camelback] placed a
sign, stating “Lift your fee[t]” at the bottom of the zip[-]line. See
Exhibit C, 26:17-26:18. [Camelback] also instructs its employees
to yell “Pick up your feet” as the customer is speeding down the
zip-line. See Exhibit C, 15:4-15:5. See also Exhibit E, 17:22-
18:1.
Further, [Camelback] is aware that a customer can impact the
face of the landing deck, which protrudes above ground level
significantly. In fact, [Camelback] placed mats/carpets on the
front face of the landing deck. See Exhibit D (photograph).
However, [Camelback] admitted that the mats are not designed
to prevent injury from a customer[’s] hitting the face of the
landing deck. See Exhibit F, 17:2-17:5. Finally, [Camelback] is
aware that customers may not be able to lift their feet. See
Exhibit C, 16:1-16:5.
[Ms. Monroe] has produced an expert report, authored by Steve
Wolf. See Exhibit A. Expert Wolf has built and operated
numerous private, industrial, and commercial zip[-]lines and, in
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fact, owns a recreational park that operates three zip[-]lines. Id.
at 1.
Expert Wolf explained that a zip[-]line is constructed with the
intention that no part of the rider is to collide with any hard surface
until the rider comes to a stop at the bottom of the zip[-]line. Id.
at 2. In fact, this is in line with [Camelback’s] agent’s testimony
that the rider should come to a complete stop, after which the
zip[-]line attendant walks the rider up the ramp to a point in which
the zip[-]line attendant can unhook the rider from the zip[-]line.
See Exhibit F, 51:22-54:24. However, the landing platform at
Camelback had a face that “protrudes sharply and vertically from
the ground around it, at a 90[-]degree angle to the ground”;
making the landing deck “perfectly positioned to cause an
injury[.”] See Exhibit A, at 4.
Expert Wolf explained that:
Given that contact with the ground prior to reaching the end
of the zip[-]line was likely to create injury, the solution to
that problem should have been an engineered solution,
rather than a solution requiring instruction and active
compliance…. It’s not reasonable to base a participant’s
safety on having them be able to perform a physical feat
such as raising their legs, or to be able to reliably listen to
and follow directions when in a heightened state of arousal
from experiencing an adrenaline[-]rich experience,
especially in cases where an engineered solution could have
easily been implemented.
An engineered solution takes the ability to cause an
accident, by virtue of an inability to execute a command,
away from the rider, and builds the safety into the
equipment.
Id. at 3-4. [Camelback] could have engineered a solution simply
by lowering the face of the landing deck to ground level or filling
in the gap between the ground and the face of the landing deck
with an aggregate material (dirt, sand, etc[.]). Id. at 4.
In fact, Expert Wolf determined that [Camelback] intentionally
concealed the risk. Expert Wolf explained that:
This must have been noted by one or more members of the
Camelback staff, because the condition was “remedied” by
covering the protrusion with a piece of carpeting. But the
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carpeting, being supple, conformed to the shape of the
underlying danger, rather than fixing it. It concealed, rather
than removed, the risk.
Id. Expert Wolf opined that [Camelback] recklessly ignored the
gross risks as a result of the face of the landing deck protruding
above ground level and actually attempted to conceal the risk by
placing a soft mat/carpet over the face of the landing. Id. at 5.
See also Exhibit D (photograph).
Ms. Monroe’s Memorandum of Law in Response to Camelback’s Motion for
Judgment on the Pleadings/Supplemental Motion for Summary Judgment,
5/16/19, at 2-4 (unnumbered pages; emphasis in original).
Relying on Mr. Wolf’s expert report, Ms. Monroe argued that, “[h]ad
[Camelback] taken a reasonable course of conduct in addressing the risk of
riders impacting the face of the landing pad, [she] would not have been
injured.” Id. at 9 (unnumbered pages; citation omitted). However, to support
that her initial impact with the face of the landing deck caused her injuries,
Ms. Monroe advanced the following argument:
[Ms. Monroe’s] body impacted the landing deck twice. See Exhibit
C, 11:14-11:19.
The first impact occurred when [Ms. Monroe’s] feet impacted the
mats/carpets that were placed in front of the landing deck to
conceal the front face of the landing deck. See Exhibit C, 11:7-
11:13. See also Exhibit D (photograph). See also Exhibit A.
[Ms. Monroe’s] body swung and spun, due to the first
impact, when [Ms. Monroe] then impacted the landing deck
a second time, resulting in significant physical injuries.
See Exhibit C, 11:4-11:13.
Ms. Monroe’s Memorandum of Law in Response to Camelback’s Motion for
Judgment on the Pleadings/Supplemental Motion for Summary Judgment at 2
(unnumbered pages; emphasis added).
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The portion of Exhibit C referenced by Ms. Monroe in her above-stated
argument sets forth the deposition testimony of Brett Dunphy, a former
Camelback employee who was working on the day of Ms. Monroe’s accident,
describing how she hit her feet. Mr. Dunphy testified:
[Ms. Monroe’s counsel:] Okay. Do you actually remember seeing
[Ms.] Monroe hit her feet in some way?
[Mr. Dunphy:] When she landed. That was it. Only when she
landed. And -- only when she landed really.
[Ms. Monroe’s counsel:] I understand -- I have seen your
statement. Can you just describe how [Ms. Monroe’s] feet
impacted whatever they hit?
[Mr. Dunphy:] So, first, they kind of dragged against the anti-
fatigue mats.[5] You saw that there. And then the impact really
came when she stopped and she swung up and when she actually,
like, hit the deck to land. Like, the actual landing part -- that’s
when her -- whatever it was broke.
[Ms. Monroe’s counsel:] Okay. … I am glad you said that because
that’s what I am going to want you to clarify. So[,] there were
two impacts. So, you are saying it was the second impact that
was the rough impact?
[Mr. Dunphy:] Yes.
See Dep. of Dunphy at 10:23-11:19.
Despite Ms. Monroe’s assertion, this testimony does not establish that
her initial impact with the landing deck’s mats caused her body to swing and
spin, leading to the second impact where she says she sustained her injuries.
____________________________________________
5 Mr. Dunphy described the anti-fatigue mat as “a mat that … you would just
walk on, kind of. It’s mats at the bottom of the zip[-]line that we would pretty
much just walk on.” See Ms. Monroe’s Response to Camelback’s Motion for
Judgment on the Pleadings/Supplemental Motion for Summary Judgment,
5/16/19, at Exhibit C (“Dep. of Dunphy”) at 19:8-19:11.
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Instead, Mr. Dunphy said that her injuries occurred when she came to a stop,
swung upward, and tried to land.6 Further, Mr. Dunphy testified that, upon
braking at the end of the trip, every zip-line rider proceeds forward and
pendulums up to a certain degree, and that he did not know if Ms. Monroe’s
dragging her feet on the mats would be a factor in causing her to pivot up at
the end of the zip-line. Dep. of Dunphy at 30:1-31:1. Thus, Mr. Dunphy’s
testimony does not establish to me that Ms. Monroe’s impact with the mats
on the front face of the landing deck caused her body to swing and spin, or
otherwise led to the second impact that she says resulted in her injuries.
Moreover, my review of the record shows that Ms. Monroe herself denied
at her deposition ever hitting the front face of the landing deck or otherwise
dragging her feet. There, she testified:
[Camelback’s attorney:] [Y]ou come to the end [of the zip-line]
and stop, and now you’re pushed backwards a little bit?
[Ms. Monroe:] Yes.
[Camelback’s attorney:] Is that what happened?
[Ms. Monroe:] Yes.
[Camelback’s attorney:] Before that point, had you hit your foot
or struck your foot or done anything with your foot as you were
coming in?
[Ms. Monroe:] No.
[Camelback’s attorney:] Okay.
____________________________________________
6 See also Ms. Monroe’s Brief at 18 (stating that Mr. Dunphy “testified that
the incident occurred because the zip-line lifted up and slammed [Ms. Monroe]
back to the ground (which broke her leg)”) (citation omitted).
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[Ms. Monroe:] The gentleman did tell me to lift my legs up at the
beginning of it and I [did] that. I was holding them up.
[Camelback’s attorney:] Okay. So[,] I don’t want to jump ahead,
but after you landed and -- we call it “landed” when you come into
the bottom, and you come backwards a little bit, does your body
pivot and your foot go up in the air, or does it go down and strike
the platform? …
[Ms. Monroe:] … It [spun] around, and I thought I was going back,
so my leg dropped, and I just felt a crunch. I can’t remember if
it was still moving back and forth or what happened. I just know
it [spun] around and I felt my leg crunch when it landed.
[Camelback’s attorney:] And when you say[,] “it landed,” it landed
on the top of the deck?
[Ms. Monroe:] Yes.
***
[Camelback’s attorney:] Do you recall as you were coming down
dragging your foot along the ground at any point in time before
you were on the deck?
[Ms. Monroe:] I had both my legs up. I was holding them up. I
made sure of that.
***
[Camelback’s attorney:] Okay. … I’m trying to … picture in my
mind, since I wasn’t there. Did your leg go in an up[-]and[-]down
motion and strike the deck, or did it catch the deck? What’s your
recollection of how that contact was made?
[Ms. Monroe:] I came down with my legs up, and when I spoke to
the gentleman and he said, “It’s almost over,” it came down and
jerked up and I [spun] back around and came back down, and the
force of me coming down, my leg was broken. I heard the crunch.
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See Ms. Monroe’s Response to Camelback’s Motion for Judgment on the
Pleadings/Supplemental Motion for Summary Judgment at Exhibit B (“Dep. of
Monroe”) at 52:8-53:20, 54:14-54:20, 84:8-84:22.7
Finally, Michael Baldaccini, another Camelback employee working on the
day of the incident, testified:
[Ms. Monroe’s attorney:] Okay. All right. Now, [Ms. Monroe and
her companion] were both coming down, and just if you
remember, tell me what happened.
[Mr. Baldaccini:] We were instructing them to lift their legs
verbally and physically, which they did, so they followed our
instructions. The braking system caught them, just like it always
does. There was no visible malfunction with that whatsoever.
The braking system caught them, and it’s up to the
customer to land on their feet when they get to the bottom, which
we instruct them at the top of the zip-line, we show them
physically how to land on their feet.
____________________________________________
7 In Ms. Monroe’s medical records, there are also various descriptions of how
her injuries occurred, none of which mention that her initial impact with the
front face of the landing deck caused her second impact with the landing deck.
See Ms. Monroe’s Response in Opposition to Camelback’s First Motion for
Summary Judgment, 3/12/18, at Exhibit B at 9 (stating that Ms. Monroe “was
out zip[-]lining with her husband when she failed to break [sic] the line prior
to arrival at a station within the trees and struck her leg up against the landing
platform where she was noted to have suffered a significant injury…”); id. at
36 (providing that Ms. Monroe “did not break [sic] the zip[-]line in time and
she was tossed around at the end of the cord with her extremities moving
quite violently in multiple different directions. She states that during this time
frame and that [sic] her right foot struck the platform while she was being
whipped around”); id. at 40 (“According to EMS, [Ms. Monroe] was coming to
the end of the [zip-]line when she didn’t get her right leg up high enough and
hit it against a board.”); id. at 140 (“The patient was on a zip[-]line. She had
difficulty at the end when she went back and forth and[,] at some point[,] she
had her right leg caught. It was twisted and she felt a snap.”).
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She landed on her feet. I guess she must have landed
awkwardly, because everything seemed to be normal when they
came down and when they landed.
So[,] there was no malfunction from the employee’s
standpoint, there was no malfunction of the braking system, the
customer[s] seemed to be pretty coherent with what we were
saying to them, they followed our instructions of lifting their legs
and preparing to be stopped by our braking system.
[Ms. Monroe’s attorney:] So what happened, though?
[Mr. Baldaccini:] Braking system caught her, she landed on her
feet just like she’s supposed to, and apparently she injured her
leg, which I’m not sure how she did it.
***
[Camelback’s attorney:] So[,] let me read this typewritten
statement [you gave with respect to this incident], and I’ll read it
slowly and then … I will have a couple questions about it.
It says, [a]t approximately 5:05 p.m., at the bottom deck
of the 1,000-foot zip-line, a guest on our left zip-line cable, which
we call lodge side, came in contact with our braking system,
period.
Did this accident happen on the 1,000-foot zip-line?
[Mr. Baldaccini:] Yes.
[Camelback’s attorney:] Okay. Let me continue on. As she did
that, her left foot slightly hit the beginning of our bottom deck.
When this occurred, her shoe came off.
Do you recall that or does that refresh your --
[Mr. Baldaccini:] Seeing it --
[Camelback’s attorney:] Well, let me ask you --
[Mr. Baldaccini:] Seeing it myself, no. That’s I was told [sic].
[Camelback’s attorney:] Does that refresh your recollection at to
this incident?
[Mr. Baldaccini:] If I know what incident we’re talking about, yes.
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[Camelback’s attorney:] Okay. When this happened, our braking
system did its normal procedure of braking and she swung up
approximately three feet in a pendulum motion.
Do you recall seeing that?
[Mr. Baldaccini:] No.
[Camelback’s attorney:] Okay.
[Mr. Baldaccini:] That is normal procedure, though.
See Ms. Monroe’s Response in Opposition to Camelback’s First Motion for
Summary Judgment at Exhibit C (“Dep. of Baldaccini”) at 22:23-24:2, 32:24-
34:7.
To me, none of the above-stated evidence supports Ms. Monroe’s claim
that her initial contact with the mats or the front face of the landing deck
caused her to swing and spin, leading her to impact the landing deck a second
time, sustaining injuries. Rather, even if Ms. Monroe’s feet dragged on the
mats or slightly hit the bottom of the landing deck, the deposition testimony
of witnesses to the incident — including Ms. Monroe’s own testimony —
indicates that she was injured after the zip-line came to a stop at the end of
the trip, at which point she swung and tried unsuccessfully to land on her feet.
Moreover, Ms. Monroe proffered no evidence to suggest that her initial contact
with the mats or landing deck caused her to swing more upon stopping, land
with greater force, etc. Thus, based on the argument advanced by Ms. Monroe
below, the evidence she cited in support, and my own review of the record, I
discern no connection between Ms. Monroe’s initial contact with the mats on
the front face of the landing deck and her subsequent injuries that she said
she sustained from her second impact with the landing deck.
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Consequently, even if Mr. Wolf’s report should have been considered, I
do not see a factual basis for Mr. Wolf’s opinion that “[t]he injuries sustained
by Ms. Monroe are attributable directly to [the] failure of Camelback to act to
prevent injury, and the intentional disregard for safety taken by Camelback in
[its] decision to conceal rather than to remove an obvious threat to the safety
of their trusting clients.” Ms. Monroe’s Memorandum of Law in Response to
Camelback’s Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings/Supplemental Motion for
Summary Judgment at 8 (quoting Mr. Wolf’s expert report) (unnumbered
pages); see also id. at 9 (arguing that “the record is sufficient to support a
jury finding that [Camelback’s] reckless course of conduct in attempting to
make the zip[-]line safe for riders caused [Ms.] Monroe’s injuries. Had
[Camelback] taken a reasonable course of conduct in addressing the risk to
riders impacting the face of the landing pad, [she] would not have been
injured”) (citations omitted; unnumbered pages). As such, and contrary to
the Opinion Per Curiam’s conclusion, I do not think Mr. Wolf’s report would
help Ms. Monroe establish Camelback’s recklessness in this matter, as she has
not shown that her initial contact with the front face of the landing deck led
to her second impact with the landing deck, which she explicitly claimed
caused her injuries below.
Finally, in my view, the actual argument Ms. Monroe advances on appeal
as to why the record supports a finding of recklessness also fails. See pages
15-16, supra (setting forth Ms. Monroe’s argument). Initially, Ms. Monroe
provides no citations to the record for many of the factual assertions in her
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argument. See Ms. Monroe’s Brief at 30-31; see also Pa.R.A.P. 2119(c) (“If
reference is made to the pleadings, evidence, charge, opinion or order, or any
other matter appearing in the record, the argument must set forth, in
immediate connection therewith, or in a footnote thereto, a reference to the
place in the record where the matter referred to appears….”); Pa.R.Civ.P.
1035.3(a)(2) (“[T]he adverse party may not rest upon the mere allegations
or denials of the pleadings but must file a response within thirty days after
service of the motion identifying … evidence in the record establishing the
facts essential to the cause of action or defense which the motion cites as not
having been produced.”); Milby v. Pote, 189 A.3d 1065, 1079 (Pa. Super.
2018) (“We shall not develop an argument for an appellant, nor shall we scour
the record to find evidence to support an argument….”) (citation omitted).
Even more troublesome, though, Ms. Monroe does not meaningfully
discuss authority pertaining to what constitutes reckless conduct, and how the
purported facts on which she relies establish Camelback’s recklessness in
connection to her injuries. See Coulter v. Ramsden, 94 A.3d 1080, 1088
(Pa. Super. 2014) (“We need not reach the merits of this issue because the
argument section of [the a]ppellant’s brief merely consists of general
statements unsupported by any discussion and analysis of relevant legal
authority.”); In re R.D., 44 A.3d 657, 674 (Pa. Super. 2012) (“[I]t is an
appellant’s duty to present arguments that are sufficiently developed for our
review. The brief must support the claims with pertinent discussion, with
references to the record and with citations to legal authorities.”) (citation
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omitted). Unlike the Opinion Per Curiam, I would decline to do such work for
her. See Commonwealth v. Williams, 782 A.2d 517, 532 (Pa. 2001)
(Castille, J., concurring) (“This Court is neither obliged, nor even particularly
equipped, to develop an argument for a party. To do so places the Court in
the conflicting roles of advocate and neutral arbiter. … The practice of
fashioning arguments for a party is also unfair to the would-be responding
party, which will only learn upon receipt of the Opinion that the Court
perceived the argument, and thus will have been deprived of an opportunity
to respond.”).8
____________________________________________
8 Moreover, even if not waived for failure to develop an argument on appeal,
I would deem meritless the argument concerning the weight limit that Ms.
Monroe advanced below in opposition to Camelback’s first motion for summary
judgment. There, she contended that Camelback “knew there was a
dangerous condition for heavy people on the zip[-]line, and knowingly ignored
that condition. Specifically, the weight limit was not low enough. There was
a known risk that the line would be rippling up and down for heavy people, so
that when [Ms. Monroe] approached the end of the line[, she] would not be
able to lift her feet high enough to avoid injury.” See Ms. Monroe’s
Memorandum of Law in Opposition to Camelback’s First Motion for Summary
Judgment, 3/12/18, at 9 (unnumbered pages). I would reject this argument.
First, as I have discussed supra, Ms. Monroe has not established that her feet’s
initial contact with the front face of the landing deck led to her second impact
with the landing deck, which she claimed caused her injuries. Second, while
Ms. Monroe averred that Camelback was reckless because Mr. Dunphy and
Mr. Baldaccini knew that the zip-line regularly rippled and/or swung up for
heavy people, posing a serious danger, my review of the record belies that
assertion. See Dep. of Dunphy at 23:18-25:24 (Mr. Dunphy’s stating that the
zip-line did not regularly swing up for heavy people, but would regularly swing
up for someone over the weight limit of 265 pounds); id. at 12:10-13:2,
23:10-23:17 (Mr. Dunphy’s testifying that he only saw one other person get
injured on the zip-line, and that injury took place a year after Ms. Monroe’s
incident); id. at 23:1-23:4 (Mr. Dunphy’s recounting how surprised he was
(Footnote Continued Next Page)
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Thus, even if judgment on the pleadings was improper, I would affirm the trial
court’s entry of summary judgment in favor of Camelback. It is well-
established that the “[f]ailure of a non-moving party to adduce sufficient
evidence on an issue essential to its case and on which it bears the burden of
proof … establishes the entitlement of the moving party to judgment as a
matter of law.” See Finder v. Crawford, 167 A.3d 40, 45 (Pa. Super. 2017)
(citation omitted). Here, in my opinion, Ms. Monroe failed to demonstrate that
Camelback acted recklessly in this matter, and therefore Camelback would be
entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Accordingly, I dissent.
____________________________________________
about Ms. Monroe’s incident); Dep. of Baldaccini at 26:13-28:9 (Mr.
Baldaccini’s acknowledging that there can be a “ripple effect” from a heavy
person going down the zip-line, but explaining that he has never seen anyone
sustain injuries from the zip-line’s “ripple effect” or be injured in the same
way as Ms. Monroe); see also Ms. Monroe’s Response to Camelback’s Motion
for Judgment on the Pleadings/Supplemental Motion for Summary Judgment
at Exhibit E (“Dep. of Susan Wiley”) at 13:14-15:16 (Ms. Wiley’s — a
Camelback employee — stating that she has never observed anyone else get
injured on the zip-line in a way similar to Ms. Monroe); Ms. Monroe’s Response
to Camelback’s Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings/Supplemental Motion
for Summary Judgment at Exhibit F (“Dep. of Clinton Frantz”) at 33:20-34:3
(Mr. Frantz’s — a Camelback employee — testifying that he is aware of no
other injuries on the zip-line other than Ms. Monroe’s injuries). Further, if
Camelback did not actually know of the danger posed to heavy people by the
rippling/swinging, Ms. Monroe did not develop an argument as to why
Camelback had reason to know that the rippling/swinging created a
substantial risk of harm. See Pa.R.A.P. 302(a) (“Issues not raised in the trial
court are waived and cannot be raised for the first time on appeal.”). Thus, I
would be unconvinced by Ms. Monroe’s argument that Camelback knew that
the rippling or swinging created a dangerous condition for heavy people, and
that Camelback knowingly ignored that condition. See Kibler, 184 A.3d at
984-86 (determining, as a matter of law, that the record does not reflect gross
negligence or reckless conduct on the part of the defendants, and affirming
the entry of summary judgment in the defendants’ favor).
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Judge Olson Joins.
Judge Stabile Concurs in the Result.
Judgment Entered.
Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary
Date: 11/21/2022
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