Brenda and John Stachowski v. Estate of Daniel Radman
Brenda and John Stachowski v. Estate of Daniel Radman
Opinion
[1] In this case we address the difference between (1) a negligence-per-se claim, in which a plaintiff argues that the defendant's violation of a statute or ordinance suffices to prove breach of an existing common-law duty of reasonable care, and (2) a private-right-of-action claim, in which a plaintiff asserts that a statute or ordinance, itself, created an enforceable duty.
[2] Brenda and John Stachowski have sued the Estate of Daniel Radman for negligence, claiming that Brenda fell *544 through an allegedly rotten handrail on the deck of a home in South Bend that the Stachowskis were renting from Radman (the Stachowskis originally named Radman as the defendant in their suit but substituted the Estate after learning that Radman had died). The Estate filed a motion for summary judgment, arguing that Radman did not have a duty to maintain the handrail. The trial court granted the Estate's motion, and the Stachowskis appeal.
[3] An action for negligence has three elements: "(1) a duty owed to the plaintiff by the defendant, (2) a breach of the duty, and (3) an injury proximately caused by the breach of duty."
Yost v. Wabash College
,
[4] But the doctrine of negligence per se doesn't concern the
duty
element of a negligence action; rather, the doctrine assumes the existence of a common-law duty of reasonable care, and the court is asked to adopt the standard of conduct set forth in a statute or ordinance (often a criminal or regulatory provision) as the standard of conduct required under that preexisting duty, so that a violation of the statute or ordinance serves to satisfy the
breach
element of a negligence action. In other words, a finding of negligence per se merely represents a judicial acceptance of "the legislative judgment that acts in violation of the statute constitute unreasonable conduct."
Cook v. Whitsell-Sherman
,
[5] The Stachowskis cite this Court's decision in
Dawson by Dawson v. Long
, where the majority concluded that a landlord's violation of various Marion County property-maintenance ordinances (including one relating to handrails) constituted negligence per se.
[6] When a plaintiff claims that the violation of a statute or ordinance gives rise to civil liability even in the absence of a common-law duty, the issue should be framed as whether the statute or ordinance confers a "private right of action"-a concept that is related to but distinct from the doctrine of negligence per se. Whereas a negligence-per-se plaintiff claims that a statute or ordinance should establish the applicable standard of conduct required under an existing duty of reasonable care,
see
Cook
,
[7] If the Stachowskis meant to assert that the South Bend handrail ordinance confers a private right of action, they missed the mark. As with negligence per se, we have a well-established standard for determining whether a legislative body intended to confer a private right of action. Absent an express right of action, the primary considerations are (1) whether the statute or ordinance was designed to protect particular individuals or the public in general and (2) whether it includes an independent enforcement mechanism.
*546
Doe #1 v. Ind. Dep't of Child Servs.
,
[8] Affirmed.
May, J., and Altice, J., concur.
There are exceptions to this general rule (repairs the landlord agrees to do, latent defects known to the landlord but not to the tenant, maintenance of common areas,
see
Zubrenic
,
But even if we were to analyze the Stachowskis' claim under
Dawson
, we would still affirm the trial court's grant of summary judgment in favor of the Estate. As already noted, a statute or ordinance can support a claim of negligence per se only if the provision protects the class of persons in which the plaintiff is included and protects against the type of harm that occurred as a result of the violation.
Parrish
,
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.