Oaks v. Wai, Unpublished Decision (10-8-1999)
Oaks v. Wai, Unpublished Decision (10-8-1999)
Opinion of the Court
This case has sua sponte been removed from the accelerated calendar.
OPINION
In August 1995, plaintiff-appellant Ester Faye Oaks moved into a single-family home that she had rented from defendant-appellee, Wing Sang Wai. Prior to Oaks's occupancy of the premises, Wai had removed a washer and dryer from the basement. When Oaks moved into the home, she then placed her own washer and dryer in the basement. Oaks also used the basement as a bedroom and moved her bed and other personal items into the basement. Oaks stated that she used the basement stairs, which were made from wood and had metal toe strips, at least a dozen times a day. On November 18, 1995, as Oaks was retiring to her bed in the basement, she fell on the basement stairs and injured herself.A year later, Oaks brought a complaint against Wai, alleging that Wai had "negligently and carelessly permitted a hazardous condition to exist in the form of a protruding nail upon the poorly lit inside stairway." Essentially, Oaks claimed that, while she was descending the basement stairs, one of her slippers caught on a loose screw that held a toe strip in place and that Wai had been negligent in failing to warn her about or to repair the hazard. Wai moved for and was granted summary judgment.2
After the case was heard on appeal and remanded twice by this court, summary judgment was again granted in Wai's favor on December 3, 1998. In its December 1998 decision, the trial court held that because "there is no genuine issue of fact [and] there is no evidence to meet the notice requirement essential to [prove] liability underShroades v. Rental Homes, Inc. (1981),
At common law, a landlord is not ordinarily liable for injuries occurring on the premises once he has given up possession and control of the property.3 R.C.
In Oaks's memorandum in opposition to summary judgment and again on appeal, she has argued that Wai violated his duty under R.C.
Despite Wai's lack of knowledge or notice about the raised screw, Oaks nevertheless maintains on appeal that Wai is liable because he created the alleged defect himself. Oaks submits that when a property owner creates the hazardous condition, he has knowledge or notice of the condition causing the plaintiff's injury. In her view, this rule relieves her of the burden to demonstrate notice under the particular circumstances of this case. We disagree.
The rule obviating the requirement of knowledge or notice where an owner has created the hazardous condition has traditionally been applied in cases relating to the duty an owner owes its invitees.6 Oaks has cited no authority, nor has our research revealed any authority, standing for the proposition that the relaxed notice requirements applicable to invitees should be extended to the landlord-tenant relationship. In a landlord-tenant relationship, the lease traditionally transfers both possession and control to the tenant, thus relieving the landlord from a significant degree of tort liability, and although R.C.
As a result, we conclude that Oaks retained the burden to provide the trial court with evidence sufficient to show that Wai had notice of the alleged defect in the stairs. Because there is no evidence in the record to support a finding in Oaks's favor on this element of her claim, we hold that, even with the evidence construed in the light most favorable to Oaks, the trial court properly granted summary judgment to Wai.8 Accordingly, we overrule Oaks's sole assignment of error and affirm the judgment of the trial court.
Judgment affirmed. Gorman, P.J., concurs.
Painter, J., concurs in judgment only.
Please Note:
The court has placed of record its own entry in this case on the date of the release of this Opinion.
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