2024 IL App (1st) 221453-U
SECOND DIVISION
March 12, 2024
No. 1-22-1453
NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and is not precedent except in
the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1).
___________________________________________________________________________
IN THE
APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT
____________________________________________________________________________
JONATHAN MOSCOVITCH, )
)
Plaintiff-Appellant, ) Appeal from the Circuit Court of
v. ) Cook County, Illinois, County
) Department, Law Division
WESTFIELD, LLC, WESTFIELD AMERICA )
G.P., INC., WESTFIELD PROPERTY )
MANAGEMENT, LLC, SNOW SYSTEMS, ) No. 2020 L 009288
INC., and OLD ORCHARD URBAN LIMITED )
PARTNERSHIP, )
) Honorable
Defendants. ) Gerald Cleary,
) Judge Presiding.
(Snow Systems, Inc., Defendant-Appellant). )
)
______________________________________________________________________________
JUSTICE ELLIS delivered the judgment of the court.
Presiding Justice Howse and Justice Cobbs concurred in the judgment.
ORDER
¶1 Held: Affirmed. Court properly entered summary judgment in favor of snow-removal
company. Undisputed facts showed that company complied in all respects with snow-
removal contract with shopping mall owner.
¶2 Plaintiff Jonathan Moscovitch suffered serious injuries after slipping and falling on an
accumulation of snow and ice outside a restaurant in a shopping mall in Skokie, Illinois. He sued
No. 1-22-1453
not only the owner of the shopping mall but the snow-removal company with whom the owner
contracted to remove snow and ice from the premises.
¶3 The snow-removal contractor moved for summary judgment, arguing that the scope of its
duty in tort was limited to its contractual undertaking with the mall owner, and the undisputed
evidence demonstrated that the contractor complied with the terms of that contract in full. The
trial court agreed and entered summary judgment in favor of the snow-removal contractor. We
agree as well and affirm.
¶4 BACKGROUND
¶5 On January 17, 2020, plaintiff ate dinner with his wife and some friends at the Roka Akor
restaurant in the Old Orchard shopping mall. He arrived at approximately 7:30 pm, by which
time snow had fallen for a few hours at least. He left the restaurant at around 10:45 pm. He had
not consumed any alcohol; as a rule he did not.
¶6 After dinner, he walked to his car in the nearby east parking lot. The lot had not been
salted or plowed. Plaintiff slipped on a smooth sheet of ice beneath the snow. The asphalt where
he slipped, it was later determined, contained a depression where water had filled, then frozen
into ice before being blanketed by snow.
¶7 Plaintiff fractured his shoulder in the fall and was taken to the hospital. His injury
required surgery, including the placement of a metal plate and screws in his shoulder.
¶8 Plaintiff sued the owner of the shopping mall, Westfield Property Management, LLC
(“Westfield”), as well as Snow Systems, Inc., a snow-and-ice-removal company with which
Westfield contracted to remove snow and ice from the Old Orchard property.
2
No. 1-22-1453
¶9 I. The Contract
¶ 10 Well before this incident, Westfield and Snow Systems had entered into a written
contract defining the terms and scope of the work. The contract contemplated the involvement,
as well, of an engineering firm hired by Westfield to supervise maintenance at the shopping mall,
Able Engineering (Able).
¶ 11 The contract provided that the “contractor,” Snow Systems, “agrees to perform the
services specifically described on Exhibit A, attached hereto and incorporated herein by
reference.”
¶ 12 Exhibit A, entitled “Scope of Services and Schedule of Performance,” provided that, if a
snowfall of greater than one inch were anticipated, “Able calls contractor who then dispatches
staff to site at specified time,” that “[c]ontractor responds within 2 hours of notification,” and
that “[c]ontractor is responsible for snow removal and salting of all parking lots, roads,
entrances, service yards, interior mall, and sidewalks.”
¶ 13 Exhibit A provided, for anticipated snowfall of one inch or less, that “Able calls
contractor to salt parking lots, roads, entrances, and service yards, as needed, determined by
Able. Contractor to be on site within 1 hour to ensure mall is maintained clear.”
¶ 14 The “general” terms of Exhibit A included the following:
▪ “Each contractor who works on property must sign in/out with security each time
there is a snow event.”
▪ “Contractor will provide labor for sidewalk cleaning and salting as directed by
Center Management.”
▪ “Work shall be performed during the night or early morning hours.”
¶ 15 The “general” terms of Exhibit A also contained this: “Snow to be plowed based on
3
No. 1-22-1453
priority map attached.” As promised, a priority map was attached to the exhibit and thus to the
contract. The areas given “priority 1” status included the ring road and roadway entrances into
the shopping mall. (The “ring road” is the road within the shopping mall property that encircles
the mall, allowing customers to reach different parts of it by car without traveling through the
parking lots.)
¶ 16 The various parking lots in the mall were also given various priorities; the Roka Akor
parking lot where plaintiff’s injury occurred was given “priority 2” status.
¶ 17 Finally, though Exhibit A to the contract contained “general” provisions, the contract
itself contained several “general” provisions as well. The “manager” referenced below meant
Westfield. Relevant here are the following:
▪ “Contractor agrees that its Services shall be scheduled and performed only as
authorized by Manager in Manager’s sole and absolute discretion. If Manager determines
that work proposed by Contractor will be disruptive if performed while the Shopping
Center is open for business, than Contractor shall perform the proposed work during
times when the Shopping Center is not open for business as Manager may direct.”
▪ “Contractor agrees to punctually, diligently and fully perform all of the Services at
the time scheduled by Manager, which shall be subject to change by Manager as it
deems, in its sole discretion, necessary or convenient to the overall operation and
maintenance of the Shopping Center.”
¶ 18 Snow Systems was granted this contract after a competitive bidding process. Snow
Systems had no input into any provisions of the contract but accepted the contract as is.
¶ 19 II. The Parties’ Performance of the Contract
¶ 20 The record includes deposition testimony from individuals from Westfield, Able, and
4
No. 1-22-1453
Snow Systems who had knowledge of the snow-removal process at the shopping mall. The
deponents agreed that the authority to determine when Snow Systems would dispatch to Old
Orchard for services was made by Westfield or its agent, Able—but not by Snow Systems. That
was the sworn testimony of Westfield’s general manager, Serge Khalimsky; Able’s assistant
maintenance supervisor for Old Orchard, Bill Knierim; and Tom Walsh, who at the relevant time
was the Snow Systems area manager responsible for the region including Old Orchard.
¶ 21 Khalimsky testified that he relied on the expertise of Able to coordinate snow and ice
removal with Snow Systems. He agreed that “Westfield gave Able the authority to deal with
Snow Systems and arrange snow and ice control services on a day-to-day basis[.]” He likewise
agreed that “Able managed the snow and ice control relationship with Snow Systems on
Westfield’s behalf so that Westfield didn’t have to do so on a day-to-day basis during winter
months[.]” To the extent that a Westfield employee engaged with Able, it was not Khalimsky but
Westfield’s facility director, Hugh Lafferty.
¶ 22 Bill Knierim of Able testified that typically, before Snow Systems would be dispatched to
Old Orchard, a representative of Westfield, Able, and Snow Systems would talk by conference
phone call. Westfield or Able, if Westfield were not present, would have the final say in when
Snow Systems would be deployed, how many Snow Systems employees would be deployed, and
what equipment they would use, consistent with the contract. But as the Westfield general
manager, Khalimsky, noted, Westfield and Able would sometimes solicit the input of Snow
Systems given its expertise in the matter.
¶ 23 Tom Walsh, the Snow Systems area manager, and Miguel Cabral, one of the Snow
Systems employees originally dispatched to Old Orchard on the night in question (and who had
worked for Snow Systems at Old Orchard since 2017 or 2018), each testified that they were
5
No. 1-22-1453
directed by Westfield as to how many Snow Systems employees would be dispatched and at
what time. They both also testified that Westfield would typically have Snow Systems bring only
two employees at first and then wait until later in the evening to bring in additional employees to
push the accumulated snow. They each were of the opinion that Westfield tended to call in Snow
Systems far later in the evening than many other commercial clients in the area.
¶ 24 III. The Night at Issue
¶ 25 On the night of plaintiff’s fall, January 17, 2020, two Snow Systems employees were
initially dispatched to Old Orchard, Miguel Cabral and his wife, Destiny. They signed in with
Old Orchard security at 6:30 pm. Per the priority map and direction of Westfield/Able, they
began by pre-salting the ring road and main roadways. Miguel drove the truck, Destiny was the
operator—meaning she filled and refilled the salt that was being dropped on the pavement.
Miguel testified that it was common to pre-salt roads before an impending snowstorm.
¶ 26 Between 2:00 and 3:00 am the following morning, seven additional Snow Systems
employees arrived. Miguel testified that it was not unusual for two workers to arrive first and
conduct pre-salting before additional employees arrived—particularly when, as that night, the
snowfall grew heavier as time wore on, resulting in greater accumulations. The decision to bring
additional employees, like the decision to initially bring the two employees, was made by
Westfield/Able.
¶ 27 It is undisputed that, at the time of plaintiff’s slip and fall—approximately 10:50 pm—the
Roka Akor parking lot had not been salted or plowed.
¶ 28 IV. Motion Practice
¶ 29 Westfield moved for summary judgment based on the “natural accumulation” rule, a
common-law doctrine whereby a landowner owes no duty to remove snow or ice that naturally
6
No. 1-22-1453
accumulates. The circuit court denied that motion, finding a question of fact as to the existence
of defects in the pavement—in other words, a question of fact as to whether the snow and ice
were the result of natural or unnatural accumulation. That ruling is not before us; the proceedings
against Westfield remain pending in the circuit court.
¶ 30 Relevant to this appeal is the motion for summary judgment filed by Snow Systems.
Among other things, Snow Systems argued that, under Section 324A of the Restatement
(Second) of Torts, the only duty Snow Systems owed to a third-party invitee like plaintiff was to
reasonably perform its contract with Westfield. Because the undisputed evidence showed that
Snow System reasonably performed its contract, summary judgment was proper. The circuit
court agreed and entered summary judgment in favor of Snow Systems.
¶ 31 ANALYSIS
¶ 32 Summary judgment is proper when the pleadings, depositions, and admissions on file,
together with any affidavits, construed in the light most favorable to the non-movant, show that
there is no genuine issue of material fact, and the movant is entitled to a judgment as a matter of
law. Id. To survive a motion for summary judgment, a plaintiff need not prove its case, but the
plaintiff must present some evidence that would arguably entitle it to judgment. Bruns v. City of
Centralia, 2014 IL 116998, ¶ 12; see Land v. Board of Education, 202 Ill. 2d 414, 432 (2002)
(“If the party moving for summary judgment supplies facts that, if not contradicted, would
warrant judgment in its favor as a matter of law, the opponent cannot rest on his pleadings to
create a genuine issue of material fact.”). Our review is de novo. State Bank of Cherry v. CGB
Enterprises, Inc., 2013 IL 113836, ¶ 65.
¶ 33 Illinois common law has created various rules regarding liability for the removal of snow
and ice. For example, generally, owners and occupiers of property owe no duty to remove natural
7
No. 1-22-1453
accumulations of snow and ice from their property. Murphy-Hylton v. Lieberman Management
Services, Inc., 2016 IL 120394, ¶ 19. The law relieves landowners of this obligation because,
given the harshness and unpredictability of winter weather in Illinois, it would be unreasonable
to force them to consistently, immediately, and effectively respond to snowfall and freezing
temperatures. Id.; Mickens v. CPS Chicago Parking, LLC, 2019 IL App (1st) 180156, ¶ 27;
Hussey v. Chase Manor Condominium Ass’n, 2018 IL App (1st) 170437, ¶ 18.
¶ 34 The law is different regarding snow-removal contractors—individuals or companies that
contract with landowners to remove their snow and ice. Illinois long ago adopted Section 324A
of the Restatement (Second) of Torts, which provides in pertinent part:
“One who undertakes, gratuitously or for consideration, to render services to another
which he should recognize as necessary for the protection of a third person or his things,
is subject to liability to the third person for physical harm resulting from his failure to
exercise reasonable care to protect his undertaking, if *** (c) the harm is suffered
because of reliance of the other or the third person upon the undertaking.” Restatement
(Second) of Torts § 324A (1965).
¶ 35 Under section 324A, if Party A contracts with Party B to perform a service that is
necessary for the protection of third parties or their property, Party A may be liable to that third
party for failing to perform with reasonable care. Id. Our supreme court applied section 324A,
for example, to a company’s contract with the city to provide security services for residents of
public housing; the security company owed a duty to those residents, though it had no contract
with them. Pippin v. Chicago Housing Authority, 78 Ill. 2d 204, 210 (1979). Likewise, a
company that installed and maintained a fire-warning system in a warehouse was liable to the
other tenants in that warehouse for the damage to their property by fire, though it had no contract
8
No. 1-22-1453
with them. Scott & Fetzer Co. v. Montgomery Ward & Co., 112 Ill. 2d 378, 390-91 (1986).
¶ 36 Illinois has long included snow-removal contracts within the ambit of section 324A,
recognizing that a contractor’s promise to remove snow from a landowner’s property is in large
part to protect third parties coming onto the land, particularly given that the landowner relies on
the snow-removal contractor and thus does not take other measures to remove the snow and ice.
Under Section 324A, a snow-removal contractor who fails to exercise reasonable care in
performing its contractual duties is liable to third parties injured as a result. See Mickens, 2019
IL App (1st) 180156, ¶ 61; Jordan v. The Kroger Co., 2018 IL App (1st) 180582, ¶ 30; Allen v.
Cam Girls, LLC, 2017 IL App (1st) 163340, ¶¶ 28-30; McBride v. Taxman Corp., 327 Ill. App.
3d 992, 996-97 (2002); Eichler v. Plitt Theatres, Inc., 167 Ill. App. 3d 685, 691-92 (1988).
¶ 37 In Mickens, 2019 IL App (1st) 180156, ¶ 58, we emphasized that a contractual
undertaking by a snow-removal contractor is no different than any other undertaking voluntarily
assumed—the scope of the duty is limited to the scope of the undertaking. See Frye v. Medicare-
Glaser Corp., 153 Ill. 2d 26, 32 (1992); Pippin, 78 Ill. 2d at 210. Thus, in determining the
liability of a snow-removal contractor to an injured third party who comes onto the land, the
contractor’s duty is defined and limited by the contractual terms, and its liability then depends on
whether it performed those contractual duties with reasonable care. Mickens, 2019 IL App (1st)
180156, ¶ 127; Restatement (Second) of Torts § 324A (1965). The natural-accumulation rule for
landowners has no bearing on the liability of a snow-removal contractor; it is the snow-removal
contract, and only that contract, that defines the duty of the snow-removal contractor. Id.
¶ 38 Ultimately, then, Snow Systems is liable to plaintiff here if Snow Systems failed to
perform its contractual obligations with reasonable care. Relevant here, Snow Systems is entitled
to summary judgment unless plaintiff presents some evidence that would arguably entitle it to
9
No. 1-22-1453
judgment—some evidence that Snow System failed to reasonably perform its duties under the
contract. Bruns, 2014 IL 116998, ¶ 12; Land, 202 Ill. 2d at 432.
¶ 39 We agree with the circuit court that the undisputed facts reveal no evidence that Snow
Systems failed to perform its contractual obligations with reasonable care. The contract between
Westfield and Snow Systems unquestionably appointed Westfield or its agent, Able, as the
decisionmaker as to (1) when Snow Systems should be dispatched to Old Orchard; (2) how many
Snow Systems employees should be dispatched; and (3) the sequence of the employees’ work.
¶ 40 The record reveals no evidence that Snow Systems failed to perform its work with
reasonable care. On the day in question, Snow Systems was told to arrive with two employees at
6:30 pm. There is no evidence that the Snow Systems employees (the Cabral spouses) arrived
late or at any time other than when they were told to arrive. There is no evidence in the record
that the Snow Systems employees did anything other than follow the (contractual) priority
sequence of the work, starting with pre-salting the ring road and the roadway entrances into the
shopping mall. Nor is there any evidence that the employees performed that initial “priority 1”
work slowly, negligently, or in any way inconsistent with the contract.
¶ 41 Plaintiff understandably goes to great lengths to establish a question of fact on the
reasonableness of Snow Systems’ performance. Among other things, plaintiff retained an expert,
Mr. Yandell, who testified via affidavit to a number of opinions, the summary of which we
borrow verbatim or nearly so from plaintiff’s brief:
• The salting and plowing at Old Orchard was unsafe and improper;
• “There should have been more than 2 people performing snow and ice control that
evening. To only have 2 people present from 6:30 (after the snow had started) to 2 or 3
am salting only the ring road and entrances is unsafe, improper, and a violation of
10
No. 1-22-1453
industry customs and standards;”
• “If the lot had been salted and/or plowed prior to 10:45, as it should have been,
there would have been no ice and/or [plaintiff] would have seen it;”
• “To not pre-salt, salt, and plow the Roka Akor east parking lot where [plaintiff]
fell prior to 10:30 pm was unsafe, improper, and a violation of industry customs and
practices;”
• “The way in which Westfield, Snow Systems (and apparently Able), planned for
and prepared for this winter weather event was unsafe and improper;”
• “Westfield and Snow Systems could, and should, have easily salted and plowed
the ring road and drives including Roka Akor parking lot drive prior to [plaintiff]
encountering the artificial accumulation of ice.”
¶ 42 Assuming that each and every one of these criticisms is valid, as we do at this stage of the
proceedings, not one of them can be attributed to Snow Systems, which had no control over the
order of the work or the time that it arrived. Perhaps the snow removal should have started
earlier, with more employees, but these decisions did not belong to Snow Systems.
¶ 43 It is likewise true that, in his deposition, Mr. Khalimsky at times blurred the distinction
between Westfield and Able in discussing which entity routinely made the decisions on
dispatching Snow Systems to Old Orchard. Aside from the fact that Khalimsky was not the one
who typically dealt with Able and Snow Systems—his facility director, Hugh Lafferty did—any
blurring of roles is immaterial, because the contract contemplated that either Westfield or Able
would direct Snow Systems. The salient and unrebutted point is that, whichever entity was
making the final decision on any given day, it was never Snow Systems.
¶ 44 Plaintiff also flags Khalimsky’s testimony that the contractual restriction on work being
11
No. 1-22-1453
performed at “night or early morning” was merely a preference, and Snow Systems had worked
at Old Orchard during the day during other snowstorms. Again, however, there is no dispute that
Snow Systems was at the beck and call of Westfield or its agent, Able; that is the only point that
matters.
¶ 45 Finally, plaintiff cites a passage from Khalimsky’s deposition to inject a question of fact
as to whether Snow Systems had a say in the sequencing or timing of the work. Plaintiff writes,
for example, that Khalimsky testified that “Westfield did not restrict Snow Systems[’] ability to
plow and salt to certain times and he disagrees with Mr. Walsh, the manager of Snow Systems.”
The passage plaintiff cites reads as follows:
“Q. Did Westfield restrict Snow Systems [sic] ability to plow and salt to certain times?
A. Not to my knowledge.
Q. If Tom Walsh used words to the effect of Westfield restricted the ability to do so or to
plow and salt at certain times, would you disagree with that?
A. Yes.”
¶ 46 That testimony does not strike as nearly as meaningful as plaintiff would read it. For one,
Khalimsky testified that it was typically Able, not Westfield, who directed Snow Systems, so he
could have disagreed with the premise on that point alone. Khalimsky repeatedly testified that
Westfield relied on Able’s expertise—though again, Khalimsky was not personally the one from
Westfield dealing with Able and Snow Systems during snowfalls. For another, the questions
were vague; whether Westfield “restricted” Snow Systems “to plow and salt at certain times”
could easily be read as asking whether there was a uniform time, every snowfall, that Snow
Systems was allowed to work, which obviously was not the case. More to the point, on several
occasions during his deposition, Khalimsky was clear, consistent with the testimony of the
12
No. 1-22-1453
deponents from Able (Bill Knierim) and Snow Systems (Tom Walsh), that either Westfield or
Able dictated to Snow Systems the time and sequence of the snow-removal work.
¶ 47 We understand our obligation to review the evidence in the light most favorable to the
plaintiff, but there is a limit to how far we will allow one statement, plucked from all context and
vague at best, to undermine the clear and consistent testimony of each deponent, which was also
consistent with the contractual language. We agree with the circuit court that, “[w]hile the
witness accounts plaintiff cites may conflict regarding the precise details by which Snow
Systems would be called in to clear precipitation, these disputes are not material to plaintiff’s
claims because the witnesses all agree that Snow Systems did not have the ability to decide when
and how it would perform its duties under the contract.”
¶ 48 As the unrebutted evidence shows that Snow Systems complied at all times with its
contractual duty and at the direction of the landowner or its agent, Snow Systems is entitled to
judgment as a matter of law.
¶ 49 CONCLUSION
¶ 50 The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
¶ 51 Affirmed.
13