STEVEN J. McAULIFFE, District Judge.
Edwin and Louise Hunt bring two common law claims against Target Corporation, seeking compensation for injuries sustained as a result of Target's alleged negligence. Specifically, they claim that Target negligently maintained property adjacent to one of its stores by failing to properly remove accumulated ice and snow. While Mr. Hunt was making a delivery to that store, he stepped out of his truck, slipped on that accumulated ice, and severely injured his back, right hip, and knee. Louise Hunt seeks compensation for loss of consortium.
Target moves for summary judgment, advancing two arguments. First, it says the property on which Mr. Hunt was injured is Limited Common Area of the Monadnock Condominium and, therefore, not part of Target's condominium unit. In simple terms, Target says it is not the owner of the property on which Mr. Hunt was injured and, therefore, owed no duty of care to him. Next, says Target, even if it did owe some duty to Mr. Hunt to ensure the area was clear of snow and ice, there is no evidence to support plaintiffs' claim that Target breached that duty. So, Target argues, it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law on both of plaintiffs' claims. Plaintiffs object.
For the reasons discussed, Target's motion for summary judgment is granted
When ruling on a motion for summary judgment, the court is "obliged to review the record in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, and to draw all reasonable inferences in the nonmoving party's favor."
Target is the owner of Unit 5 in the Monadnock Condominium, on which it constructed one of its stores. That store is located in a shopping center known as Monadnock Marketplace, in Keene, New Hampshire. According to plaintiffs' complaint,
Complaint (document no. 1-1) at para. 5. At his deposition, Mr. Hunt testified that, on the date of his accident, he arrived at the Target store around midnight. Deposition of Edwin Hunt (document no. 13-8) 50. He backed up his truck to the elevated loading dock at the rear of Target's store, "got out of the truck, and walked around the front."
The property on which Mr. Hunt fell is a concrete pad on which delivery trucks park,
Under New Hampshire's Condominium Act, N.H. Rev. Stat. Ann. ("RSA") chapter 356-B, all unit owners in a condominium share an undivided ownership interest in the "common areas." RSA 356-B:3. "Common areas" are defined as "all portions of the condominium other than the units."
RSA § 356-B:41 (emphasis supplied).
In the Monadnock Condominium, "units" are parcels of land, rather than physical structures. After purchasing a unit, the owner constructs its building(s) within the bounds of that unit. The unit owner is then responsible for maintenance and repair of everything located within the defined boundaries of its unit. Common Area (and designated Limited Common Area) is all land that has been dedicated to the condominium that falls outside the metes and bounds descriptions of the units. Here, Target bought the land described as Unit 5 and then constructed its store on that land.
Consistent with the provisions of New Hampshire's Condominium Act, The Declaration of Monadnock Condominium provides that: "The Unit Owner's Association shall maintain, repair and replace the Common Area,
If that were the extent of the relevant documents, the court's inquiry would end there. "Loading docks" — at least those that extend beyond the boundaries of an owner's unit — are defined as Limited Common Area. So, even if (as plaintiffs suggest) the phrase "loading dock" includes the ground-level concrete parking pad adjacent to Target's unit, it would be defined as Limited Common Area. And, under both the Condominium Act and the Declaration, Limited Common Area must be maintained by the Unit Owners' Association, not individual unit owners.
But, prior to Mr. Hunt's injuries, the developer of the Monadnock Condominium (also known as the "Declarant") amended the Declaration several times, creating new types of Limited Common Area and imposing new responsibilities on unit owners with respect to those new types of Limited Common Area. Most of those amendments to the Declaration are not relevant to the parties' dispute. The Sixth Amendment to the Declaration, however, dated February 17, 2005, made several substantive changes, some of which are central to plaintiffs' assertion that Target, not the Unit Owners' Association, was responsible for the maintenance and repair of the concrete pad.
In February of 2005, the Declarant still owned nearly all the Units in Monadnock Condominium. At that point, only two units had been sold: one to Home Depot (Unit 1) and another to Berkshire-Keene, LLC (Unit 6). At that time, it would seem that Target was interested in purchasing Unit 5. Prior to that purchase, however, the Declarant made several significant amendments to the Declaration (some of which may have been at Target's urging). Among other things, the Sixth Amendment created what was called "Special Limited Common Area." That new form of Limited Common Area was defined as: "the portions of a Building (including fixtures attached thereto)
The Sixth Amendment goes on to authorize (but not require) each Unit Owner to alter, improve and/or modify designated Special Limited Common Area.
As part of the Sixth Amendment to Declaration (and as required by the Condominium Act), the condominium's site plans were revised and recorded in the Cheshire County Registry of Deeds. Although neither party has provided the court with original-size copies of the Second Amended Site and Floor Plans, those plans are available online and the court has reviewed them.
Plaintiffs advance two theories under which they assert that Target owed Mr. Hunt a legal duty to maintain the ground-level concrete parking pad in a reasonably safe condition. First, they say the Declaration (in particular, the Sixth Amendment) itself imposes that obligation on Target. Next, they claim that New Hampshire's common law imposes a duty of care upon Target because it had a "special relationship" with Mr. Hunt as a "business invitee."
Under New Hampshire law, condominium declarations, amendments, and related documents are contracts that govern the legal rights between the declarant, unit owners, and the unit owners' association. Consequently, the interpretation of those documents is a question of law for the court to resolve.
All parties to the Declaration, as amended, join in saying the phrase "loading dock" is unambiguous and does not include the ground-level concrete pad on which delivery trucks park. That concrete area, they agree, is Limited Common Area that must be properly maintained and repaired by the Unit Owner's Association.
Plaintiffs disagree with that interpretation of the Declaration and the narrow construction of the phrase "loading dock." That, in turn, gives rise to a somewhat unusual situation in which plaintiffs — who are not parties to the contract — wish to impose upon the contracting parties a different, broader definition of one of the contract's terms. That is, plaintiffs say the parties to the contract have it wrong: the phrase "loading dock" encompasses
In support of their argument, plaintiffs rely exclusively upon the language contained in the Declaration and its various amendments. They say that although the Declaration defined "loading docks" (again, to the extent they extend beyond the boundaries of an owner's unit) as Limited Common Area, Declaration at section 2.1(x), and imposed upon the Unit Owners' Association the obligation to maintain and repair all Limited Common Area,
But, even if there were some evidence to support plaintiffs' claim that Target's "loading dock" is "Special Limited Common Area" (there is not), plaintiffs do not point to
Target, on the other hand, says the Declarant, the unit owners, and the Unit Owners' Association all agree that the ground-level concrete parking pad adjacent to Target's elevated loading bay is Limited Common Area for which the Owners' Association bears maintenance and repair responsibilities. Indeed, the Owners' Association undertook the substantial financial responsibility to contract with a third party to provide snow and ice removal services for that specific area, along with all other Common Area in the condominium (services estimated to cost $285,000 for the 2014/2015 snow-removal season during which Mr. Hunt was injured).
Moreover, while the site plans recorded with the Sixth Amendment do not label the location of Target's (then unbuilt) loading dock and concrete parking pad, they do show the "loading dock" and "concrete pad" for the adjacent unit, Unit 6 (owned by Berkshire-Keene, LLC).
Even if the court were to accept plaintiffs' implicit suggestion that the Declaration's use of the phrase "loading dock" is ambiguous, it still could not adopt plaintiffs' broad interpretation of that phrase. The intent of all parties to the Declaration, as expressed in their actions, is clear: "loading dock," as used in both the Declaration and the site plans, refers to the elevated loading bay, from which merchandise is moved between delivery vehicles and a unit owner's store. It does not include within its scope the adjacent ground-level concrete pad on which delivery trucks park.
In light of the foregoing, it is plain that the property on which Mr. Hunt was injured is Limited Common Area of the Monadnock Condominium. Consequently, Target was not obligated — either by the Condominium Act or the Declaration of Monadnock Condominium — to remove accumulated snow and ice from that area. That obligation was borne by (and properly assumed by) the Unit Owner's Association.
Next, plaintiffs assert that even if Target does not own the ground-level concrete pad on which Mr. Hunt was injured, it was an "occupier" of that land (since it had the exclusive right to use that Limited Common Area). Consequently, say plaintiffs, Target owed Mr. Hunt "a duty of reasonable care under all the circumstances in the maintenance and operation of [that] property." Plaintiffs' Memorandum (document no. 15-1) at 7 (quoting
There are, however, a few problems with plaintiffs' position. First, one would have to assume that the New Hampshire Condominium Act (which imposes maintenance and insurance responsibilities for Common Area on the Unit Owners' Association) does not supplant the common law principles upon which plaintiffs rely. Then, to hold Target liable for Mr. Hunt's injuries, the trier-of-fact would have to have evidence upon which to base the conclusion that (a) those injuries were foreseeable, and (b) Target did not act in a manner reasonably calculated to prevent them.
Here, the record is devoid of any evidence even suggesting that Target could have (or should have) foreseen Mr. Hunt's injuries (e.g., some evidence of when it last snowed prior to Mr. Hunt's injury; some evidence that Target was (or should have been) aware that ice and snow tended to accumulate on the concrete parking pad; some evidence that Target knew or suspected that BDM Services was doing a poor job of maintaining that area on behalf of the Unit Owners' Association, etc.). Nor is there evidence that Target failed to act reasonably under the circumstances by relying upon the Unit Owners' Association and its contractor, BDM Services, to remove snow and ice from the area.
In order to defeat Target's motion for summary judgment, plaintiffs must present some evidence to support their theories of liability and demonstrate that there are genuinely disputed material facts warranting a trial. They have not done so.
Target, the Declarant of the Monadnock Condominium, and the other unit owners at Monadnock Condominium all interpret the provisions of the Declaration to define the phrase "loading dock" to mean the elevated platform or loading bay, up to which delivery trucks would back, and from which merchandise would be moved between those trucks and the unit owners' stores. Those parties to the contract plainly do
Equally unavailing are plaintiffs' efforts to demonstrate some basis in the record upon which a jury could plausibly rest the conclusion that Target owed, and breached, a duty of care to Mr. Hunt by unreasonably failing to mitigate the risk of foreseeable injuries of the sort Mr. Hunt sustained. Plaintiffs have pointed to no evidence suggesting how long the ice had been present before Mr. Hunt fell, or that Target was aware that snow and/or ice tended to accumulate on the concrete pad, or that Target acted unreasonably in relying upon the Unit Owners' Association (and its agent, BDM Services) to remove snow and spread salt in that area. Absent some evidence on one or more of those points, plaintiffs cannot withstand summary judgment.
For the foregoing reasons, as well as those set forth in Target's legal memorandum, Target's motion for summary judgment (document no. 13) is granted. The Clerk of Court shall enter judgment in accordance with this order and close the case.