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Premises Liability

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Title: Premises Liability


1
Premises Liability
2
Foreseeability
  • Foreseeability may be regarded as the most
    significant consideration in determining the
    extent to which a person is owed a duty of
    reasonable care (Rodriguez v. Sabatino, 1997).

3
Foreseeability
  • Foreseeability is considered to be the degree to
    which the university knew, or should have known,
    that an invitee may be exposed to the probability
    of injury.
  • Foreseeable danger, lies at the foundation of
    the duty to use care that is the risk of injury
    to another person, reasonably within the range of
    apprehension that is taken into account in
    determining the existence of the duty to exercise
    care (American Jurisprudence, 2004, p. 39).

4
Foreseeability
  • The courts are using foreseeability as an
    important aspect specific to the area of premises
    liability (Esper Keating, 2006).
  • Although a land possessor is not an absolute
    insurers of the visitors safety, premises
    liability holds landowners and/or possessors of a
    property liable for injuries occurring on their
    property including land areas and facilities
    (Sharp, 2003).

5
Court Findings
  • Traditionally, courts have held that there was no
    duty to protect individuals from criminal
    activity on the premises.
  • However, litigation has grown regarding this
    issue in recent years, with an increasing trend
    against land possessors (Bates Bates, 2005).

6
Categories
  • The duty of the owner varies depending on the
    status of the party on the premises (Wong, 2002).
  • Generally, there are three types of entrants
    trespassers, licensees, and invitees, and, with
    each classification, the owner owes a different
    standard of care owed to each individual.

7
Trespassing
  • A trespasser is an individual who enters the
    premises without the permission of the owner
    (Maloy, 2001 Wong, 2001).
  • Normally, a landowner does not owe a duty of
    reasonable care to a trespasser (Dobbs, 2001).
  • In fact, unless it is an exceptional situation,
    the landowner is not required to even keep a
    lookout for the trespasser if the trespasser is
    involved in dangerous activities on the land
    (Wolf v. National Railroad Passenger Corp.,
    1997).

8
Trespasser
  • A broad definition of a trespasser would include
    any individual who entered a property without the
    landowners express or implied consent (Dobbs,
    2000).
  • Although a trespasser is owed no duty of
    reasonable care, a duty exists in which the
    landowner cannot cause intentional injury, to
    set a trap, or cause wanton injury (Dobbs, 2000,
    p. 592).

9
Licensee/Invitee
  • Generally 2 types of individuals which a facility
    owner may have a duty to
  • Licensee a person who enters the property, with
    the owners consent, for the licensees own
    purpose
  • Owner only owes a duty of ordinary care
  • No obligation to inspect the area for unknown
    dangers or to warn against conditions that are
    open and obvious
  • Owner only owes a duty to warn when a risk is
    known or should be known under the reasonable
    care standard, which the licensee is unaware

10
Licensee
  • Licensees are individuals who have the express or
    implied consent of the owner to be on the
    premises (Dobbs, 2000).
  • When a landowner gives permission or extends an
    invitation to a guest, no assurances the premises
    is entirely safe is given (Dobbs, 2000).
  • As such a licensee is owed only an ordinary
    standard duty of care (Wong, 2002).

11
Licensee
  • This standard of ordinary care for a licensee
    involves reasonable care regarding only when the
    possessor is aware or possesses a reason to know
    of concealed conditions (The American Law
    Institute, 1965, 330).
  • Licensees do not rise to the same status level of
    an invitee " because they are not on land open
    to the public generally and not present for any
    potential economic transaction with or benefit to
    the landowner." (Dobbs, 2000, p. 596).

12
Invitee
  • Invitee one who has been invited by the
    property by the owner/supervisor of the property
  • The invitee is owed a greater duty of care than
    a licensee
  • The basis of liability is the implied
    representation at the time of the invitation that
    the premises are safe to enter

13
Invitee
  • An invitee who enters the premises is different
    from a licensee in that there is an implied
    assurance to the invitee that the area has been
    prepared and is in reasonably safe condition
    while the person is there (The American Law
    Institute, 1965, 332).
  • Invitees are generally regarded as those
    individuals who are users, participants or
    spectators of sport activities (Maloy, 2001).

14
Invitee
  • The invitee status of entrants may be divided
    into two classifications public invitee and
    business invitee.
  • Whereas the public invitee who gains access to
    the area as member of the general public, the
    business invitee is invited to enter the area due
    to some business relationship, though not
    necessarily monetary in nature, with the land
    possessor (Dobbs, 2000).

15
Business Invitee
  • A distinction between a public and business
    invitee may be one of determining why the person
    is on the premises.
  • A business invitee, as applied to athletic
    contests, may be considered to be any fan
    attending an intercollegiate contest conducted on
    university/college owned premises may be
    considered a business invitee (Mallen, 2001).

16
Business Invitee
  • Since fans who go onto property owned by a
    university/college and pay to watch a football
    game or any other athletic event are business
    invitees, a land owner has a greater level of
    duty to protect patrons attending sport events
    from negligent behavior (Mallen, 2001).
  • A business invitee who enters the land for
    business purposes establishes a duty of ordinary
    care against known harms (Restatement (Second) of
    Torts 344 (1979).

17
Duty to Protect
  • The "special relationship" or duty to protect
    patrons at sporting event is required if a
    criminal attack was reasonably foreseeable
  • Recently, the courts have realized that extending
    liability could have a significant effect on
    sports organizations, towns, sport sponsors, and
    private individuals who own the premises where
    the sporting events take place (Docheff Conn,
    2004).

18
Duty to Protect
  • The Restatement (Second) of Torts (The American
    Law Institute, 1965, 342) recognized the general
    duty owed by landowners to their business
    invitees to provide reasonable protection from
    foreseeable criminal assaults.

19
Duty to Protect
  • The courts have recognized that a business
    invitee is owed the duty to
  • use reasonable care in keeping up the property in
    a reasonably safe condition as
  • duty to warn of dangers of which the owner has or
    should have known,
  • dangers which are not known to the invitee as
    well as dangers of which the invitee would be
    able to ascertain from reasonable care

20
Duty to Protect
  • There is no duty to exercise reasonable care
    until the landowner recognizes or has reason to
    know from previous experience that there is a
    possibility that the conduct of third parties may
    endanger the safety of the visitor (Dobbs, 2000).

21
Duty to Protect from Third Parties
  • When a possessor of land opens it for use to the
    general public, the landholder becomes subject
    for liability of the public if harm, occurring to
    a member of that public, is caused accidentally,
    intentionally or negligently by the act of a
    third person and the landholder fails to exercise
    reasonable care (The American Law Institute,
    1965, 344).

22
Duty to Protect from Third Parties
  • Reasonable care of a landholder is identified as
    discovering that such acts are being done or
    likely to be done or give an adequate warning so
    that the visitor may avoid the harm (Dobbs,
    2000).

23
Hayden v. Notre Dame
  • The plaintiff claimed that the university was
    negligent in failing to protect Mrs. Hayden.
  • The lone factor at question was is whether Notre
    Dame owed Letitia Hayden a duty under the
    circumstances.
  • The plaintiffs argued that premises liability was
    essential in the case and that Letitia Hayden's
    position as an invitee and resulting standard of
    care by the landowner was a pertinent standard.
  • Neither party challenged that Mrs. Hayden was a
    business invitee of Notre Dame University.

24
Hayden v. Notre Dame
  • Notre Dame stated that it owed no duty to protect
    Hayden from a third party's criminal act.
  • It argued that the third party's action was
    unforeseeable, thus preventing it from
    anticipating the third partys action and
    protecting Letitia Hayden, a business invitee.

25
Hayden v. Notre Dame
  • The court applied the totality of the
    circumstances which ascertained that Notre Dame
    should have foreseen that harm would likely
    result from the actions of a third party in
    diving for the football after it landed in the
    seating area.

26
Hayden v. Notre Dame
  • As the plaintiff and her husband were seated in
    the universitys football stadium to watch a
    game, the court stated that the university knew
    full well the enthusiastic actions of its
    football fans.
  • The university had evidence from previous
    situations at football games that resulted in
    individuals being shoved or harmed by others
    attempting to retrieve the football.

27
Hayden v. Notre Dame
  • The court held Notre Dame University owed Letitia
    Hayden a duty based on the totality of the
    circumstances.
  • The duty owed should have been taking reasonable
    steps in protecting her from harm due to the
    actions of other fans.

28
Bearman v. Notre Dame
  • It was reported that since the owner is not an
    insurer of the visitor's safety, there would be
    no duty to exercise any care until it becomes
    known or there is reason to recognize that the
    acts of the third person are occurring, or are
    about to occur.

29
Bearman v. Notre Dame
  • This recognition may come from past experience,
    that there is a likelihood of conduct on the part
    of third persons in general which is likely to
    endanger the safety of the visitor, even though
    there may be no reason to anticipate it on the
    part of any particular individual.

30
Bearman v. Notre Dame
  • If the place or character of business, or past
    familiarity, is such that could reasonably
    foresee careless or criminal conduct on the part
    of third persons, either in general or at some
    specific time, the organization may be under a
    duty to take precautions against it, and to
    provide a reasonably sufficient warning or
    security to afford a reasonable protection
    (Dobbs, 2001).

31
Bearman v. Notre Dame
  • Although the university did not possess any
    previous knowledge of a specific danger in the
    form of the drunken individual, it did have the
    understanding that people become intoxicated at
    tailgate parties who then posed a general threat
    to the safety and well being of other patrons.

32
Bearman v. Notre Dame
  • The University is aware that alcoholic beverages
    are consumed on the premises before and during
    football games. The University is also aware that
    "tailgate" parties are held in the parking areas
    around the stadium.

33
Bearman v. Notre Dame
  • Thus, even though there was no showing that the
    University had reason to know of the particular
    danger posed by the drunk who injured Mrs.
    Bearman, it had reason to know that some people
    will become intoxicated and pose a general threat
    to the safety of other patrons.
  • Therefore, Notre Dame is under a duty to take
    reasonable precautions to protect those who
    attend its football games from injury caused by
    the acts of third persons
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