Court Opinion

ID: 4034086
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-09-15 21:06:21.296748+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:36:43.371623
License: Public Domain

2016 IL App (2d) 160015
                                  No. 2-16-0015
                         Opinion filed September 14, 2016
______________________________________________________________________________

                                             IN THE

                             APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

                              SECOND DISTRICT
______________________________________________________________________________

ROSA PEREZ, Individually and as        ) Appeal from the Circuit Court
Independent Administrator of the Estate of
                                       ) of Du Page County.
Edgar Ivan Fernandez Perez, Deceased,  )
                                       )
      Plaintiff-Appellant,             )
                                       )
v.                                     ) No. 14-L-104
                                       )
STEVE HEFFRON,                         ) Honorable
                                       ) Dorothy French Mallen,
      Defendant-Appellee.              ) Judge, Presiding.
______________________________________________________________________________

        JUSTICE ZENOFF delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
        Justices Jorgensen and Spence concurred in the judgment and opinion.

                                             OPINION

¶1      Plaintiff, Rosa Perez, the mother of Edgar Ivan Fernandez Perez, appeals from an order

of the circuit court of Du Page County granting summary judgment in favor of defendant, Steve

Heffron, in this wrongful death action arising from Edgar’s drowning in defendant’s swimming

pool.   We affirm.

¶2                                     I. BACKGROUND

¶3      The following undisputed facts are taken from depositions, photographs, and affidavits in

the record.   On Friday, June 14, 2013, defendant held a yard sale at his home in Bartlett,
2016 IL App (2d) 160015

Illinois.    Miguel Fernandez attended the sale along with his 34-month-old son, Edgar. 1

Miguel’s sister, Socorro Fernandez, and their parents (“grandparents”) also attended the sale.

Socorro’s two-year-old granddaughter, Kristy, was with her.

¶4      Color photographs show the condition of the front, side, and back yards of defendant’s

home on that Friday.        Items for sale were on the ground and on tables in the front yard.     A

walkway two pavers wide, which would accommodate single-file pedestrians, led to the

backyard through a narrow side yard, bounded on one side by the house and shrubs and on the

other by a large aboveground swimming pool.            The pool appeared to be constructed of durable

material and installed in the yard as a permanent and dominant fixture.          Large hoses snaked

through and around pool filters and pumps on the side of the pool facing the pedestrian walk.      A

very narrow strip of lawn separated the pool from the walk.        Nothing obstructed a pedestrian on

the walk from seeing the pool. A deck with a gate giving access to the pool was adjacent to one

side of the pool.     Stairs led from the deck down to a back patio area, where items were grouped

for sale. A wooden fence with a gate separated the back and front yards.

¶5      Defendant had deliberately placed a clothes rack in front of the deck stairs to prevent

yard-sale patrons from going onto the deck.          According to defendant, on the previous day he

ascertained that the deck gate to the swimming pool was latched.           On that Friday morning, a

blue plastic solar cover, used to heat the water in the pool, covered the entire inner perimeter

surface area of the pool.      According to defendant, a child standing on the deck looking at the

solar cover would not be able to see the water.         That Friday morning, defendant again checked

the gate, saw that it was closed, and assumed that it was still latched.

        1
            Edgar is plaintiff’s decedent in this litigation.

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¶6      In the early afternoon, Edgar was playing in defendant’s front yard in the company of the

Fernandez family and defendant.       Defendant told Miguel, Socorro, and the grandparents that

there were more items for sale in the backyard.       Miguel had Edgar by the hand.       Socorro,

Kristy, and the grandparents went into the backyard, but Miguel stopped at the gate in the fence,

uncertain if he wanted to look at more merchandise. 2    Miguel decided not to follow the others

into the backyard. Edgar pulled on him, wanting to go with Socorro, Kristy, and the

grandparents.     Miguel called to the others to let them know that he was leaving Edgar in their

care.   They did not hear and did not realize that Edgar was no longer with Miguel. Miguel

returned to the front of the house.

¶7      While Socorro was looking at the merchandise, Kristy walked away from her.

According to Socorro, that was when she noticed the swimming pool. She found Kristy on the

deck by the pool.     The solar cover was “like a ball floating around,” and it covered only a

“corner” or a “quarter” of the water.     The cover was moving.       Socorro did not investigate

further, thinking that a filter caused the movement. Socorro, Kristy, and the grandparents

returned to the front of the house, where they found Miguel standing in the street by the car,

ready to leave.    When Miguel asked where Edgar was, Socorro screamed, and she, Miguel, and

defendant ran into the backyard.      Edgar had drowned in the pool.     The police investigation

revealed that there was no functioning latch on the pool gate.

¶8      Plaintiff filed suit against defendant for wrongful death and survival.       The second

amended complaint alleged that defendant was negligent in that he failed to install a self-latching

pool gate, failed to erect an enclosure making his pool inaccessible to children, and failed to

        2
            Miguel’s movements and statements were recounted by Socorro at her deposition.

Miguel was never deposed, having been deported to Mexico.

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warn invitees of the pool’s presence.        Each allegation was accompanied by the further

allegation that the danger of the water in the pool was concealed by the solar cover. On

September 22, 2015, defendant filed a motion for summary judgment on the grounds that he

owed no duty to plaintiff and that the proximate cause of Edgar’s death was Miguel’s failure to

supervise him. On December 9, 2015, the trial court granted summary judgment in favor of

defendant, finding that the pool posed an open and obvious danger, relieving defendant of any

duty.   This timely appeal followed.

¶9                                        II. ANALYSIS

¶ 10    Plaintiff contends that summary judgment was not appropriate, for the following reasons:

(1) the solar cover hid the danger of drowning from Edgar, and neither Miguel nor Socorro knew

of the pool’s presence; (2) defendant created a “distraction” by cluttering the backyard with

merchandise and hiding the stairway entrance to the pool; and (3) the law imposing upon

children of tender years the duty to recognize and protect themselves from the danger of

drowning is absurd and should be changed.

¶ 11    Summary judgment is a drastic means of disposing of litigation and should be granted

only when the right of the moving party is clear and free from doubt. Stevens v. Riley, 219 Ill.

App. 3d 823, 829 (1991).    Summary judgment will be granted when the pleadings, depositions,

admissions, and affidavits on file show that there is no genuine issue of material fact and that the

movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Stevens, 219 Ill. App. 3d at 829.            We

review de novo a trial court’s grant of summary judgment. Duffy v. Togher, 382 Ill. App. 3d 1,

7 (2008).

¶ 12    Owners and occupiers of land are not ordinarily required to foresee and protect against

injuries resulting from dangerous conditions that are open and obvious.          Suchy v. City of

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Geneva, 2014 IL App (2d) 130367, ¶ 22.           A condition is “open and obvious” where a

reasonable person exercising ordinary perception, intelligence, and judgment would recognize

both the condition and the risk involved. Suchy, 2014 IL App (2d) 130367, ¶ 22.          Open and

obvious dangers include fire, height, and bodies of water and are considered to be apparent to

young children. Suchy, 2014 IL App (2d) 130367, ¶ 22.           The legal concept of reasonable

foreseeability of injury from drowning in swimming pools takes into account that even young,

unsophisticated, or immature people are assumed to appreciate the risks associated with such

conditions. Bezanis v. Fox Waterway Agency, 2012 IL App (2d) 100948, ¶ 28.              Where the

physical nature of the condition is undisputed, courts can decide whether a danger is open and

obvious as a question of law. Suchy, 2014 IL App (2d) 130367, ¶ 22.        Specifically, swimming

pools have been held to be open and obvious dangers as a matter of law.     Mt. Zion State Bank &

Trust v. Consolidated Communications, Inc., 169 Ill. 2d 110, 118 (1995).      Whether a condition

is open and obvious depends not on subjective knowledge but on the objective knowledge of a

reasonable person confronted with the same condition. Park v. Northeast Illinois Regional

Commuter R.R. Corp., 2011 IL App (1st) 101283, ¶ 14.

¶ 13   If a child is too young, mentally or chronologically, to be “at large,” the duty to supervise

the child so as to protect against obvious risks lies primarily with the accompanying parent.

Stevens, 219 Ill. App. 3d at 832.     Failure of a parent to supervise his or her child is not

foreseeable, and the law does not require a landowner to anticipate negligence on the parent’s

part and guard against it. Englund v. Englund, 246 Ill. App. 3d 468, 476 (1993).

¶ 14   Plaintiff argues that the open-and-obvious doctrine is inapplicable because the solar cover

hid the danger of drowning.    Plaintiff also maintains that neither Miguel nor Socorro knew of

the pool’s existence. Although a plaintiff is not required to prove his or her case at summary

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2016 IL App (2d) 160015

judgment, to survive a motion for summary judgment, the plaintiff must present a factual basis

that would arguably entitle him or her to a judgment. Bank of America, N.A. v. Adeyiga, 2014

IL App (1st) 131252, ¶ 54.    Although defendant testified at his deposition that the solar cover

overlaid the entire interior surface of the pool in the morning, there is no evidence that it was in

the same position when Edgar encountered the pool in the early afternoon.       Socorro testified at

her deposition that the solar cover was balled up over a “corner” or a “quarter” of the water when

she pulled Kristy away from the deck.      To infer that Edgar balled up the plastic cover is not

reasonable, because of its size.   Also, it appears from defendant’s deposition testimony that

there were other people on the premises.

¶ 15   Socorro testified at her deposition that she first saw the pool when she noticed Kristy on

the deck, but she also testified that she had not paid attention to her surroundings as she walked

toward the merchandise in the backyard.          Because Miguel was not deposed, plaintiff’s

argument that Miguel did not know of the pool’s presence is speculation.        Photographs show

that the pool was highly visible from the paved walk leading into the backyard and was

immediately identifiable as an aboveground swimming pool. A person of ordinary perception

in Socorro’s position, walking into the backyard, would have immediately seen the pool.         See

Sandoval v. City of Chicago, 357 Ill. App. 3d 1023, 1028 (2005) (open and obvious conditions

include those where the condition and risk are apparent to and would be recognized by a

reasonable person exercising ordinary perception).

¶ 16   Plaintiff’s reliance on T.T. v. Kim, 278 Ill. App. 3d 11 (1996), is misplaced.   In T.T., the

minor plaintiffs were injured on a tarp, in itself dangerous due to accumulated leaves, dirt, and

water, that completely covered an in-ground pool.    T.T., 278 Ill. App. 3d at 17.   This court held

that the dangerous tarp was not the type of condition that young children would be expected to

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recognize and appreciate.    T.T., 278 Ill. App. 3d at 17.   Here, there is no evidence that the solar

cover either attracted Edgar or injured him. Also, as noted above, there is no evidence that the

solar cover completely covered the water in the pool when Edgar encountered it.        Further, there

is no evidence that the solar cover was in a dangerous condition.

¶ 17    Another case upon which plaintiff relies, Pasierb v. Hanover Park Park District, 103 Ill.

App. 3d 806 (1981), is also distinguishable.     The issue in that case was the sufficiency of the

complaint, not summary judgment. Pasierb, 103 Ill. App. 3d at 807.           The court held that the

complaint stated a cause of action for wrongful death where it alleged that the plaintiff’s

seven-year-old decedent drowned in a creek hidden by snow.          Pasierb, 103 Ill. App. 3d at 809.

The court reasoned that it was foreseeable that a child who played in a park where a water-filled

drainage ditch was “completely concealed” from view would encounter the ditch unintentionally

and suffer injury.   Pasierb, 103 Ill. App. 3d at 809. Here, the pool was not hidden from view,

and there is no evidence that the water in the pool was hidden when Edgar encountered it.

Indeed, when Socorro noticed the pool, three-quarters of the water was visible.

¶ 18    Plaintiff argues that the solar cover made the pool resemble a trampoline rather than a

body of water. However, this case is distinguishable from Duffy v. Togher, 382 Ill. App. 3d 1

(2008), where a swimming pool presented an optical illusion of depth. In Duffy, the plaintiff

dove headfirst into the homeowner defendants’ pool, sustaining serious injuries. Duffy, 382 Ill.

App. 3d at 3. The appellate court held that the danger was not open and obvious as a matter of

law, because the pool was designed to give the illusion of depth where none existed.       Duffy, 382

Ill. App. 3d at 9.   Here, the aboveground pool looked just like an aboveground pool, with solid

walls, hoses, and filters.   In common experience, trampolines are not solid, enclosed structures

from which hoses run and decks are attached.

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¶ 19     If the pool was open and obvious, plaintiff urges that the distraction exception to the

open-and-obvious doctrine applies. There are two exceptions to the open-and-obvious rule: the

distraction exception and the deliberate-encounter exception.     Prostran v. City of Chicago, 349

Ill. App. 3d 81, 88 (2004).      A property owner will owe a duty of care if it is reasonably

foreseeable that the plaintiff’s attention might be distracted so that he or she would not discover

the obvious, dangerous condition. Prostran, 349 Ill. App. 3d at 88. Plaintiff argues that

defendant created a distraction by placing the clothes rack in front of the stairs to the deck and by

cluttering his yard with merchandise.       Defendant contends that the distraction exception is

inapplicable because it does not relieve a parent from his or her duty to adequately supervise the

child.

¶ 20     We agree with defendant that the distraction exception is inapplicable, but for different

reasons.    First, the record does not demonstrate the presence of a distraction.   According to the

photographs in the record, the clothes rack in front of the deck stairs did not hide the pool. The

photographs show plastic bins stuffed with sale items placed on the ground around the backyard

patio area, as well as other items stacked on the lawn very near the pool.             Viewing the

photographs, it would be impossible for anyone in the backyard to miss the pool’s presence.

Anyone shopping or looking at merchandise that was stacked on the ground in front of the pool

would be looking right at the pool.

¶ 21     Second, the record shows that Socorro was not distracted.    She testified at her deposition

that, even though she was shopping, she was aware when Kristy walked away from her.

Socorro was unaware of Edgar’s absence, not because she was distracted with shopping, but

because she did not know that Miguel had left Edgar in her care.       Had she known that she was

in charge of Edgar, she would have been as attentive to him as she was to Kristy.

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2016 IL App (2d) 160015

¶ 22   The present case boils down to defendant’s inability to foresee that Edgar would be

unattended.    Edgar was accompanied by his father, aunt, and grandparents.            Through a

completely unforeseeable and tragic misunderstanding, Socorro did not hear Miguel say that he

was leaving Edgar with her and the grandparents, and Miguel did not realize that Socorro and the

grandparents had not heard him.        We are persuaded that this case is similar to Englund and

Stevens, where this court held that it was not foreseeable that the plaintiffs would fail to

supervise their children adequately.

¶ 23   In Englund, the plaintiff’s three-year-old daughter, Lauren, drowned in the defendants’

backyard aboveground swimming pool during a party.        Englund, 246 Ill. App. 3d at 470.   The

plaintiff was seated out of sight from where Lauren was playing in some sand.       Englund, 246

Ill. App. 3d at 471.   When the plaintiff caught her two-year-old son running toward the pool

deck, she found Lauren drowned inside the pool.         Englund, 246 Ill. App. 3d at 471.     The

plaintiff sued the defendant homeowners, alleging that they were negligent for failing to

supervise the children at the party and for constructing the pool with no self-locking gate.

Englund, 246 Ill. App. 3d at 472. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of the

defendants, and this court affirmed, holding that the defendants had no duty to protect Lauren

from obvious dangers, especially those that were apparent to Lauren’s parents, who undertook

her supervision.   Englund, 246 Ill. App. 3d at 474.    We emphasized that it was the plaintiff’s

responsibility to position herself where she could watch Lauren play and that it was not

foreseeable that the plaintiff would fail to supervise Lauren adequately.   Englund, 246 Ill. App.

3d at 476.    We held that it is more desirable to place the burden of supervision upon parents

rather than homeowners.    Englund, 246 Ill. App. 3d at 476.

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¶ 24     In Stevens, the 17-month-old plaintiff, Michelle, fell into a retention pond surrounded by

high prairie grass on the defendants’ property and was injured.        Stevens, 219 Ill. App. 3d at

825-26.    While Michelle’s parents were visiting with members of the defendants’ family

outside the defendants’ home, Michelle’s mother saw Michelle go inside the house.           Stevens,

219 Ill. App. 3d at 826.    However, no one inside the house saw Michelle.         Stevens, 219 Ill.

App. 3d at 826.    When it became apparent that Michelle was missing, the two families searched

the premises.     Stevens, 219 Ill. App. 3d at 826. Michelle was found lying face down in the

retention pond.    Stevens, 219 Ill. App. 3d at 827.    The plaintiffs sued the defendants, alleging

that they failed to exercise ordinary care for Michelle’s safety by failing to fence or barricade the

water.    Stevens, 219 Ill. App. 3d at 828.    The trial court granted summary judgment in the

defendants’ favor, finding no legal duty. Stevens, 219 Ill. App. 3d at 828.     This court affirmed,

noting that the prairie grass around the pond and the pond itself were visible.     Stevens, 219 Ill.

App. 3d at 830.      Further, the existence and location of the pond were known to Michelle’s

parents. Stevens, 219 Ill. App. 3d at 831.     We held that the responsibility for a child’s safety

lies primarily with his or her parents and that a person who is merely in possession and control of

the property is not required to indemnify against every possibility of injury.     Stevens, 219 Ill.

App. 3d at 831.

¶ 25     Stevens is indistinguishable from the present case. As in Stevens, Edgar had been under

his father’s supervision until Edgar left his father to go with Socorro and the grandparents.

Miguel, like the parents in Stevens, wrongly assumed that Socorro and the grandparents knew of

Edgar’s presence. Plaintiff attempts to distinguish Stevens and similar cases by arguing that

there is no evidence that Miguel and Socorro knew of the pool’s presence.              However, as

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2016 IL App (2d) 160015

discussed above, the pool was a large, aboveground fixture, was adjacent to the paved walk, and

was not obscured from view.

¶ 26   Contrary to plaintiff’s argument, there is no genuine factual dispute that creates a jury

question over the pool’s visibility. At her deposition, Socorro did not say that she could not

have seen the pool had she looked; she testified that she was not paying attention.        Socorro

testified at her deposition that she was concentrating on her elderly mother as they walked into

the backyard. We stress again that whether a condition is open and obvious depends not on

subjective knowledge but on the objective knowledge of a reasonable person confronted with the

same condition. Park, 2011 IL App (1st) 101283, ¶ 14.          The photographs dispel any doubt

over whether the pool would be seen and recognized by a reasonable person in Socorro’s

position.

¶ 27   Even if we were to find a duty, we would be constrained to hold that the sole proximate

cause of Edgar’s death was Miguel’s unforeseeable failure to supervise Edgar adequately.       The

fact that the deck gate had no latch was a condition that merely made Edgar’s drowning possible

(assuming that this is how Edgar gained access to the pool; the record does not so demonstrate).

See O’Clair v. Dumelle, 735 F. Supp. 1344, 1352 (N.D. Ill. 1990) (alleged defective conditions

of swimming pool merely made minor’s drowning possible; the objectively unforeseeable failure

of the minor’s mother to lock the door leading to the pool or to take other precautions was the

cause of the drowning).   Furthermore, the fact that defendant placed a rack with clothes in front

of the deck stairs has no legal significance.   The clothes did not conceal the pool or the stairs.

Indeed, two-year-old Kristy made it up onto the deck, where Socorro found her.

¶ 28   Lastly, plaintiff asks us to revisit the open-and-obvious doctrine and to hold, in

accordance with Justice Harrison’s dissent in Mt. Zion, that children under the age of seven

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cannot comprehend and avoid the risks posed by an aboveground pool.       Mt. Zion, 169 Ill. 2d at

128 (Harrison, J., dissenting). Even if we could overrule supreme court precedent, we would

not do so here.      This case turns on the unforeseeability of the lack of parental supervision,

which not only relieved defendant of a duty but also was the sole proximate cause of Edgar’s

unfortunate death.

¶ 29                                    III. CONCLUSION

¶ 30   For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the circuit court of Du Page County is

affirmed.

¶ 31   Affirmed.

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