A recent Michigan Court of Appeals decision held that retrieving mail is an “extenuating circumstance” that leaves one “with no choice but to” confront the risk posed by any hazard blocking access to it.
In Spigner v Yarmouth Commons Ass’n, the plaintiff slipped and fell on snow and/or ice after retrieving mail from her mailbox located along the edge of a road in her condominium complex. After the fall, the plaintiff brought a suit against the condominium association, its management company, and the company responsible for plowing the condominium complex, alleging, in part, a premises liability claim.
The defendants argued that the snow and ice presented an open and obvious danger with no special aspects such that they could not be liable for the plaintiff’s claims. The trial court disagreed and denied the defendants’ motion for summary disposition because it concluded that the hazard at issue was effectively unavoidable.
On appeal, the appellate court agreed with the defendants that the snow and ice was an open and obvious danger such that “an average user with ordinary intelligence acting under the same conditions as [plaintiff] would have discovered the snow and ice at issue and realized the risk presented on casual inspection.”
However, the court, in relying on Hoffner v Lanctoe, stated that “a premises possessor may be liable for injuries caused by wintry conditions, even though the wintry conditions are open and obvious, if the conditions have special aspects that make them unreasonably dangerous.” The court noted that a special aspect exists when a condition is effectively unavoidable, which the plaintiff can prove by showing that he or she “for all practical purposes, [was] required or compelled to confront [the] dangerous hazard.”
The court then went on to hold that “[b]ecause mail often includes communications and items of significant import, persons have a unique need to retrieve their mail that cannot be equated with a simple desire to avail oneself of the services or products offered by a particular business. Rather, the need to retrieve one’s mail is an ‘extenuating circumstance[]’ that leaves one ‘with no choice but to’ confront the risk posed by any hazard blocking access to the mail.”
Accordingly, the appellate court held that the allegedly dangerous condition encountered by the plaintiff was effectively unavoidable and affirmed the trial courts dismissal of the defendants’ motion for summary disposition.
Remarkably, this case appears to broaden the scope of what constitutes an “effectively unavoidable” hazard as previously illustrated by the Michigan Supreme Court in Lugo v Ameritech Corp, Inc.
In Lugo, the Supreme Court stated that a situation where the only exit from a building was covered with standing water would present an “effectively unavoidable” hazard. This is because anyone seeking to leave the building would be forced to encounter the hazard. If there was another way out, the hazard would not be deemed “effectively unavoidable.”
Notably, the Lugo court set a very high standard for determining when something constitutes an “effectively unavoidable” hazard and courts since Lugo have rarely found an allegedly dangerous condition that meets this standard. As such, the Spigner court’s decision may be ripe for an appeal to clarify this issue.
Of course, we will continue to monitor the Spigner case to see if it is appealed and accepted by the Michigan Supreme Court.
Add a comment
Subscribe
RSSTopics
- Premises Liability
- Contractor Liability
- Civil Litigation
- Construction Contractors
- Construction Law
- Property Liability
- Litigation Discovery
- Contracts
- Insurance
- Appellate Law
- Residential Liability
- Fire Claims
- General Liability
- Traumatic Brain Injury
- Motor Vehicle Liability
- Commercial Liability
- Retail Liability
- Water Loss Claims
- insurance policy
- Fraud Activity
- Investigations
- Governmental Immunity
- Commercial Real Estate
- Open & Obvious Doctrine
- Snow & Ice Claims
- Marine Liability
- Maritime Law
- Artificial Intelligence
- Design Defect
- Lost Earnings
- Industrial Liability
- Video Recording
- Defamation
- Open & Obvious
- Risk Management
- Liquor Liability
- Business Risk Management
- Professional Liability
- Negligence
- Independent Medical Examinations (IME)
- Sports-liability
- Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR)
- Auto Liability
- Bankruptcy
- Intoxication
- Judicial Estoppel
- No Fault Liability
- Trucking Liability
- Wrongful Death
- Real Estate
- FDA Regulations
- Food Law
- Foodservice & Hospitality
- Regulatory Law
- Constructive Notice
Recent Updates
- Appellate Court Faults Construction Company for Halting Work for Nonpayment in Breach of Agreed Upon Contract
- New Scope of Ohio Home Construction Suppliers Services Act Takes Effect
- The Skeptical Brain Injury – How Do You Prepare to Defend it?
- Post-Open and Obvious: What Property Owners Can Do to Protect Themselves
- Lessons in Civil Procedure and Civility from a Surprising Source: Barbie
- ‘Open and Obvious’ Falls, Restoring Focus on ‘Notice’ Defense in Michigan Premises Liability Cases
- Insurance Provider’s ‘Satisfaction’ Maketh the Proof of Loss
- The High Seas and High Risks of Lithium Batteries
- Uniform Trade Practices Act Requires Timely Payment of Property Claims
- Michigan Supreme Court Eliminates 'Open and Obvious' Defense in Premises Liability Cases