ORR BY AND THROUGH ORR v. Turney
ORR BY AND THROUGH ORR v. Turney
Opinion
Brandon Orr and his mother Deborah appeal from a judgment based on a directed verdict against their claims, which were based on wantonness and negligence. Brandon Orr sued for his personal injuries; his mother sued for medical expenses paid on his behalf.
The facts are not disputed. Fifteen-month-old Brandon Orr was visiting the home of defendant Juanita Turney and while there was playing with some other children on a landing at the bottom of steps descending from Turney's kitchen. Turney *Page 151 had begun preparing lunch and had placed upon the stove a pan of grease. A grease fire ignited; Turney grabbed the pan and yelled for everyone to watch out, that she was coming with fire. As she flung open the kitchen door to run down the steps, the pan apparently became too hot for her to bear. Burning grease was spattered over Brandon's body, seriously injuring him.
The Orrs' complaint alleged that Turney was negligent or wanton in leaving a pan of grease unattended on a hot stove and in her attempt to dispose of the grease fire.
Each party concedes that Brandon held the status of a licensee by virtue of his visit as a social guest. The plaintiffs maintain, however, that an injured visitor's status is pertinent only when the injury-causing event is a consequence of the condition of the premises. The plaintiffs argue that a licensee is entitled to have the landowner exercise reasonable or ordinary care when the landowner'sacts may harm the licensee. In other words, the plaintiffs contend that when a licensee's injury is caused by the landowner's affirmative conduct, that is, without regard to the condition of the land, traditional negligence standards should apply.
Turney's position is that Alabama has not accepted this doctrine and should not do so in this case.
Historically, landowners have enjoyed isolation from traditional negligence standards relative to their ownership or possession of land. Instead, graduated classes, each to whom a separate duty was owed, based upon their relationship to the landowner, became determinative of the landowner's liability. Those trespassing on the land, for instance, took the land as they found it and, having no right to be there, could expect no one to look after their safety. At the other end of the scale were invitees, the class to whom the greatest protection extended; this group was treated more favorably because of the generally important and usually business-related purpose of their visit. This special privilege afforded landowners sprang from the lofty status land traditionally held in the minds of the English and of the early Americans, and the dominance and prestige of the landed — and, thus, the ruling — class of England during the genesis of this mindset. It was considered socially desirable and economically wise to freely use and exploit the land. These thoughts embraced values of a society bound in a heritage of feudalism, wherein breaking a man's close was a matter of exaggerated affront. See generallyKermarec v. Compagnie Generale Transatlantique,
We are not asked to depart, however, nor do we depart, from the system classifying visitors as invitees, licensees, or trespassers for determining what duty the landowner may owe in a particular circumstance; those classifications are still the law in Alabama. Whaley v. Lawing,
We have remained firmly committed to the principle that when a landowner is sued for an injury resulting from a natural or artificial condition of the land, the status of the injured party determines the duty owed. This concept is true in historical context, as well, in that landowners were given the special privilege of the invitee/licensee/trespasser scheme to diminish any burdens on their use and enjoyment of their land and to protect them from liability. The following provides an illustrative sampling of cases that have turned upon the status of the injured party: Knight v. Seale,
This special classification privilege is not generally regarded as applicable, however, when it is the affirmative conduct of the landowner, rather than the condition of his premises, that causes the injury. In this context, the justifications for determining liability based upon the classification of the injured party (which, while perhaps anachronistic, are yet viable in Alabama) do not attach. Where the injury is caused by some distinct act of the landowner, rather than by the mere condition of the premises, a different standard for determining liability may arise.
With this premise the scholars uniformly agree. " '[I]n cases involving injury resulting from active conduct, as distinguished from conditions of the premises, the landowner or possessor may be liable for failure to exercise ordinary care towards a licensee whose presence on the land is known or should reasonably be known to the owner or possessor.' " 5 Harper, James Gray, The Law of Torts § 27.10 (2d ed. 1986) (quoting Oettinger v. Stewart,
"Activities Dangerous to Licensees: A possessor of land is subject to liability to his licensees for physical harm caused to them by his failure to carry on his activities with reasonable care for their safety if, but only if,
"(a) he should expect that they will not discover or realize the danger, and
"(b) they do not know or have reason to know of the possessor's activities and of the risk involved."
We also note that among the majority of jurisdictions generally adhering to this rule, it has been applied to a variety of divergent circumstances, all unrelated to the condition of the land. See, e.g., Tims v. Orange StateOil Co.,
Alabama courts have likewise recognized this principle. InW. S. Fowler Rental Equip. Co. v. Skipper,
Skipper provided the precedent relied upon inFrederick v. Reed,
Perhaps by synthesizing two similar cases the distinction between affirmative-conduct liability and premises-condition liability can best be illustrated. In Bryant v.Morley,
Le Poidevin v. Wilson,
"We conclude that a properly instructed reasonable jury could, on the basis of the facts in the complaint, find that [the boyfriend and his brother-in-law present at the pier] could have reasonably foreseen that water poses inherent dangers, that rough or boisterous play, while not dangerous per se, poses reasonably foreseeable hazardous consequences when engaged in near water, that the plaintiff would try to extricate herself as best as she could from what appeared to her to be an embarrassing situation, and that her effort would of necessity be made in haste and without an accurate assessment of the nature of the risks to which she exposed herself. The jury could find [the boyfriend and his brother-in-law] negligent in engaging in affirmative conduct which they could anticipate would create a situation dangerous to the plaintiff because of her foreseeable conduct."
We now examine the defendant's directed verdict in light of the foregoing. Only if the Orrs failed to produce a scintilla of evidence in support of their claims would a directed verdict have been proper. Ala.R.Civ.P. 50(e).
The plaintiffs' case reveals that Turney knew that Brandon Orr had been at her house playing; Turney had received no indication that he had left. Furthermore, she knew that visiting children were playing on or near the steps; when she approached the door with the grease fire, Turney shouted for all to watch out. We think that this evidence is sufficient, given that Turney had a legal duty to exercise ordinary care toward Brandon, to indicate that a jury might conclude that Turney breached her duty to him. The trial court erred in directing the verdict on the negligence claim.
Turney also admitted that she knew that there were safer or more effective ways of extinguishing the grease fire than carrying it to the area in which children were playing. From this, the jury could conclude that Turney's acts were done consciously with reckless indifference for their consequences. Cf. Bishop v. Poore,
We reaffirm today the rule set out in W.S. FowlerRental Equip. Co. v. Skipper, supra. A landowner, if he undertakes any affirmative conduct creating a danger to an unwitting licensee,1 independent and distinct from the condition of the premises, must give reasonable notice or warning of the danger or exercise reasonable or ordinary care to safeguard against that danger.2 Ordinarily, as is the case before us today, the reasonableness of the warning given or the care extended are questions to be resolved by the jury.
Accordingly, the judgment of the trial court is reversed and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
MADDOX, ALMON, BEATTY and HOUSTON, JJ., concur.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Brandon Orr, a Minor Who Sues by and Through His Mother and Next Friend, Deborah Orr and Deborah Orr, Individually v. Juanita D. Turney.
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