Court Opinion

ID: 9401253
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-06-12 15:06:10.147349+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:19:51.031087
License: Public Domain

2023 IL App (1st) 220266
                                    No. 1-22-0266
                              Opinion filed June 12, 2023
                                                                           First Division

                                        IN THE

                          APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

                                   FIRST DISTRICT

                                                 )
LISA BITSKY and THOMAS BITSKY,
                                                 )
                                                 )
      Plaintiffs,
                                                 )
                                                 )
v.
                                                 )
                                                 )
THE CITY OF CHICAGO, a Municipal
                                                 )
Corporation; CH2M HILL ENGINEERS, INC.;
                                                 )
EXP FEDERAL INC., f/k/a/ Teng & Associates,
                                                 )
Inc.; and ARCADIS U.S. INC., f/k/a The Rise
                                                 )
Group, LLC, All d/b/a/ CTR Joint Venture;
                                                 )
ENVIRONMENTAL DESIGN                                  Appeal from the Circuit Court
                                                 )
INTERNATIONAL, INC. (EDI), an Illinois                of Cook County.
                                                 )
Corporation; CH2M HILL ENGINEERS, INC.,
                                                 )
Individually; EXP FEDERAL, INC., f/k/a Teng
                                                 )
& Associates, Inc., Individually; and ARCADIS         Nos. 17 L 1845
                                                 )
U.S. INC., f/k/a The Rise Group, LLC,                 and No. 19 L 8025 (cons.)
                                                 )
individually; SANCHEZ CONSTRUCTION
                                                 )
SERVICES, INC., f/k/a Sanchez Construction
                                                 )
Company, an Illinois Corporation; RELIABLE            The Honorable
                                                 )
CONSTRUCTION AND EQUIPMENT                            Joan E. Powell,
                                                 )
COMPANY, an Illinois Corporation;                     Judge, presiding.
                                                 )
PRECISION CEMENT COMPANY, INC.; and
                                                 )
EDWARD A. MCGINLEY, Individually and
                                                 )
Director of Precision Cement Company, Inc.,
                                                 )
                                                 )
      Defendants
                                                 )
                                                 )
(Lisa Bitsky, Plaintiff-Appellant; Sanchez
                                                 )
Construction Services, Inc.; Reliable
                                                 )
Construction and Equipment Company; Precision
                                                 )
Cement Company, Inc.; and Edward A.
                                                 )
McGinley, Defendants-Appellees).
                                                 )
     1-22-0266

           JUSTICE HYMAN delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
           Justice Coghlan concurred in the judgment and opinion.
           Justice Pucinski specially concurred, with opinion.

                                                OPINION

¶1         In 2011, the City of Chicago (City) undertook a water restoration project to replace

        underground water mains and install sidewalks and ramps adhering to the Americans with

        Disabilities Act. The City hired CTR Joint Venture (CTR) as the project engineer and Sanchez

        Constructions Services (Sanchez) as project contractor. Sanchez subcontracted the sidewalk

        and ramp work to Reliable Construction and Equipment Company (Reliable), which verbally

        subcontracted the cement work to Precision Cement Company, Inc. (Precision).

¶2         After the water main work was completed at the intersection, the resulting sidewalk had an

        elevated section. The City and CTR inspected the work and approved it as compliant with the

        contract terms, the City’s specifications, and ADA requirements.

¶3         Several years later, Lisa Bitsky was injured when her husband, Thomas Bitsky, tripped and

        fell into her, while walking on the elevated sidewalk near that intersection. Believing the

        elevated sidewalk was responsible for her injuries, Bitsky brought construction negligence

        claims against the City and CTR Joint Venture, later adding Sanchez, Reliable, Precision, and

        Precision’s owner, Edward McGinley.

¶4         After settling with the City and CTR, Bitsky proceeded against Reliable, Sanchez, and

        Precision, which, after extensive discovery, filed separate motions for summary judgment.

        Among their arguments: (i) they followed the plans and specifications provided by the City

        and CTR when installing the sidewalk and, thus, owed no legal duty to Bitsky, (ii) Bitsky failed

        to show proximate cause between her injuries and their work, (iii) the elevated sidewalk was

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        an open and obvious condition, and (iv) they had no notice of the alleged dangerous condition

        created by the raised sidewalk.

¶5         After a hearing, the trial court granted summary judgment to defendants, finding that

        because they followed the requirements of their contracts and the plans, specifications, and

        instructions the City and CTR provided them, they had no duty to Bitsky, specifically citing

        the Illinois Supreme Court’s decision in Hunt v. Blasius, 74 Ill. 2d 203 (1978). Further, the

        court noted the City and CTR inspected and approved defendants’ work.

¶6         Bitsky argues that (i) a material question of fact exists as to whether defendants deviated

        from the plans when they constructed the sidewalk, (ii) the court erred in relying on Hunt and

        should have applied traditional negligence factors, and (iii) if summary judgment on the

        negligence counts is reversed, the court also should reverse summary judgment on her

        husband’s loss of consortium claims. We agree with the trial court that Hunt is controlling, and

        defendants had no duty to Bitsky where they followed the city’s plans, specifications, and

        instructions. So, we affirm.

¶7                                              Background

¶8         Lisa Bitsky and her husband, Thomas Bitsky, were leaving a restaurant on Milwaukee

        Avenue after dinner with friends Alan and Christine Brown. The couples were walking to their

        cars, with Lisa Bitsky and Christine Brown walking a few feet ahead of their husbands. While

        next to a building at 1286 N. Milwaukee Avenue, Thomas stumbled and fell forward, hitting

        the back of Lisa’s knee with his neck and shoulder. Lisa fell forward, hitting the sidewalk with

        her left leg, requiring surgery on her tibia and ankle.

¶9         Thomas did not know what caused him to fall, saying his left foot suddenly stumbled, and

        when he tried to put his right foot down to catch himself, “there was nothing under it.” A

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           photograph, introduced during depositions, shows the sidewalk abutting the building at 1286

           N . Milwaukee is elevated with a 2-foot-wide by 8.29-foot-long elevation that increased from

           zero inches up to 5.25 inches.

                                                                                          ~
                                                     •                                    ~
                                            Water Restoration Project

,i 11         The area of the accident was pait of a 2011 water restoration project the City of Chicago

           unde1took to replace and restore underground water mains and constmct sidewalks that comply

           with ADA requirements. The City's Depa1tment of Transportation (COOT) hired an ai·chitect

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          to prepare ADA design standards (CDOT standards) for contractors to use when constructing

          ADA sidewalks and sidewalk ramps.

¶ 12         The City hired CTR Joint Venture as an engineering consultant on the project. CTR was

          responsible for developing design and construction drawings and identifying corners that

          needed restoration to bring the sidewalks into compliance with ADA and CDOT standards.

          CTR contracted to ensure full compliance with ADA codes and standards.

¶ 13         Reliable was the general contractor. Reliable subcontracted with Sanchez to build ADA-

          compliant curbs and sidewalks. Sanchez verbally subcontracted the concrete work to Precision.

¶ 14         Saeed Siddiqui, CTR’s restoration inspection engineer, testified by deposition that

          restoration work on the project consisted of (i) pouring cement over the open trench area, after

          the water main pipe had been replaced, and (ii) fixing damaged streets and sidewalks. Siddiqui

          said the contractor and subcontractors did not build the elevated sidewalk, variously referred

          to as a “property line curb,” a “barrier curb,” or a “Type-B curb” (hereafter, “property line

          curb”). The property line curb preexisted the project and was part of the foundation of the

          building at 1286 N. Milwaukee Avenue. Siddiqui said that when coming across a preexisting

          property line curb, the practice is not to destroy it but to build a ramp around it. Siddiqui said

          a property line curb is covered under the City’s ADA standards (CDOT ADA standard B-1-6)

          and can be used, “where necessary,” when, for instance, a sidewalk has varying elevations or,

          as here, a building’s foundation is exposed. Standard B-1-6 does not specify exact sizes and

          dimensions for a property line curb, which depends on the needs at a specific corner.

¶ 15         Siddiqui testified he inspects the finished work to ensure it complies with ADA regulations

          and follows the specifications required by the contract. If the contractor did not follow plans,

          specifications, and instructions, the contractor would not get paid.

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¶ 16         A CTR engineer, Christopher May, testified he oversaw the repair sites and ensured the

          sidewalk ramps met CDOT specifications and ADA standards. After defendants completed the

          work, May conducted a quality control inspection of the sidewalk. His initial report indicated

          that the corner of Milwaukee Avenue and Paulina Street did not pass inspection. But in June

          2013, a CTR quality assurance inspector determined the corner to be ADA compliant.

¶ 17         Reliable was responsible for installing the water main but did not perform concrete or

          sidewalk installation work. According to Todd Chianelli, Reliable’s superintendent on the

          project, CTR forwarded quality control issues to Reliable, which sent them to Sanchez for

          making the repairs. CTR then returned to inspect and approve the work. For Reliable to receive

          final payment, which it did, CTR had to approve the sidewalks and ramps as compliant with

          ADA and CDOT standards.

¶ 18         Sanchez’s project manager, Michael Byrne, testified that the company used CDOT and

          ADA standards to construct the sidewalk and ramps in compliance with the City’s

          specifications. Byrne was not at the Milwaukee and Paulina intersection during the work but

          received quality control reports from Chris May at CTR and forwarded them to Precision, the

          concrete subcontractor. Byrne said property line curbs are common in sidewalk construction,

          and the one at Milwaukee and Paulina was consistent with similar repairs.

¶ 19         Joe Haughey, owner and president of Sanchez Construction, testified that the company

          installed nearly 100 property line curbs in Chicago. He said CDOT design standard B-1-6, used

          here, was a safe design, not dangerous or defective, and fully complied with the City’s

          specifications and ADA standards. He also said nothing in the CDOT standards requires a

          property line curb to be a certain height or width, and the contractor can decide based on the

          requirements of the specific situation.

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¶ 20         Edward McGinley owned Precision, the concrete subcontractor, until it went out of

          business in 2016. McGinley testified that Precision was responsible for installing the concrete

          and “poured the job *** per the ADA codes.” Precision used design standard B-1-6 at that

          corner because of the exposed foundation, the need to comply with slope specifications and

          placement of the keystone at that corner. He considers the design to be safe.

¶ 21         Precision’s foreman, Richard Bong, said after Sanchez removed the sidewalk, Precision

          installed the ramp and sidewalk. He chose design standard B-1-6 from the CDOT standards

          “because that’s really the only one you can use in that corner.” He further said the property

          line curb could not have been made five to six inches wide (rather than 24 inches) due to an

          obstruction from the building and because the running slope had a minimum size of four feet

          “so we matched the running slope sidewalk to the landing to the property line.” He

          acknowledged the property line curb at that corner was not intended for people to walk on. He

          also acknowledged that Chris May inspected the sidewalk and found it failed, but he thought

          May misunderstood that it was a property line curb. Nonetheless, Bong went to the site, fixed

          any deficiencies, and ensured compliance with ADA standards.

¶ 22         Bitsky submitted handwritten affidavits from the store owner and the store owner’s friend,

          attesting to the hazardous condition created by the elevated sidewalk. The store owner stated

          he asked the workers about the elevated sidewalk during construction and warned them it

          would be a tripping hazard, and they told him it was “in the plan.” He said pedestrians trip over

          the elevated sidewalk almost daily. He contacted the City and his alderman numerous times,

          asking that the sidewalk be leveled, but “gave up *** because nothing was being done.”

          Similarly, his friend stated he had seen people fall across the sidewalk and he fell on a winter

          day when snow covered the sidewalk. He also contacted the alderman’s office to no avail.

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¶ 23          Anthony Koldan, a CDOT employee, inspected the corner after the City received a call in

          August 2013. Koldan said the property line curb was necessary to protect the foundation and

          get the proper elevation for ADA compliant ramps. He said that, on inspection, “no

          construction issue was found” and “this would have been exactly the way that I would have

          instructed this to be built.”

¶ 24          Bitsky retained Dr. Elliot Dudnik, who has a Ph.D. in civil engineering, as an expert to

          review the circumstances of the fall. Dudnik issued a report that the intersection was unsafe

          and dangerous and that certain conditions there contributed to and proximately caused Thomas

          Bitsky’s fall. Specifically, he opined that Thomas Bitsky took a misstep and fell into his wife

          because of a change in elevation of the sidewalk, creating a hazardous condition with no

          warning. He further stated a barrier constructed to protect the exposed portion of a building’s

          foundation (i) should not exceed six inches in width (the area where Thomas fell was 24 inches

          wide) and should not be more than a quarter inch high to avoid creating a tripping hazard, (ii)

          should wrap around the side of the building rather than create a drop-off, and (iii) should have

          had a rounded top. In short, Dudnik asserted defendants deviated from the contract

          requirements and plans and the CDOT ADA standards.

¶ 25                                         Procedural History

¶ 26          Bitsky initially sued the City alone, alleging two counts of negligence in constructing the

          sidewalk and two counts on her husband’s behalf for loss of consortium. She later amended

          her complaint to add CTR and other defendants. On February 25, 2020, Bitsky filed a 24-count

          fourth amended complaint alleging, in part, negligence against Sanchez (count XV), Reliable

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          (count XVII), and Precision (count XIX). Counts XVI, XVIII, and XX, were derivative loss of

          consortium counts against each.

¶ 27         Each defendant filed a motion for summary judgment. Precision and Reliable argued, in

          part, that (i) they had no duty to a third party where the sidewalk met ADA plans,

          specifications, and standards, (ii) Bitsky could not prove proximate cause, and (iii) the alleged

          condition of the sidewalk was open and obvious. They also argued Thomas Bitsky’s

          intervening negligence by allegedly failing to keep a proper lookout. Sanchez similarly claimed

          they owed no duty to the Bitsky: (i) they followed the City’s plans and specifications, which

          did not create an unreasonably dangerous condition, (ii) their contract with Reliable created no

          duty to Bitsky, and (iii) traditional factors limit the scope of any duty. They also argued Bitsky

          presented no “affirmative proof” that the condition of the sidewalk caused her injuries.

¶ 28         Bitsky argued, in response, that material questions of fact remained to bar summary

          judgment, including (i) whether defendants had a duty to Bitsky to build an ADA compliant

          sidewalk, (ii) whether defendants failed to follow the contract plans and specifications and

          exercised their discretion in constructing a sidewalk that created a dangerous condition, (iii)

          whether the elevated sidewalk was the proximate cause of Bitsky’s injuries, and (iv) whether

          the elevation was open and obvious. Bitsky also argued that defendants owed them a duty of

          care under traditional negligence factors.

¶ 29         After a hearing, the trial court granted all three motions for summary judgment “for the

          reasons stated on the record.” The court said, “even if I were to agree *** that open and obvious

          is a jury question, and *** proximate cause is probably a jury question,” under the holding in

          Hunt v. Blasius, “an independent contractor *** is not liable to third persons for injuries once

          the completed work had been accepted by the state” with certain exceptions, including “if the

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          work done was imminently dangerous to life or health of third persons.” The court noted that

          defendants “had some discretion ·here, [but] it’s not discretion in a vacuum. Everything ·has

          to be *** compliant, and if it’s not, it’s supposed to be signed off on, approved, changed, or

          *** supervised by CTR, the City [and]***the CDOT people who even come up with the

          plans.”· The court concluded that because the City and CTR approved the work, defendants

          had no duty to third parties. The trial court denied Bitsky’s motion to reconsider.

¶ 30                                              Analysis

¶ 31                                          Standard of Review

¶ 32         Summary judgment applies where “the pleadings, depositions, and admissions on file,

          together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue regarding any material

          fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” 735 ILCS 5/2-

          1005(c) (West 2020). The court construes the pleadings, depositions, admissions, and

          affidavits strictly against the movant and liberally in favor of the opponent. Adams v. Northern

          Illinois Gas Co., 211 Ill. 2d 32, 43 (2004). “A triable issue precluding summary judgment

          exists where the material facts are disputed, or where, the material facts being undisputed,

          reasonable persons might draw different inferences from the undisputed facts.” Id. Summary

          judgment should be granted where the movant’s right is clear and free from doubt. Id. We

          review the grant of summary judgment de novo. Argonaut Midwest Insurance Co. v. Morales,

          2014 IL App (1st) 130745, ¶ 14.

¶ 33                               Hunt and Defendants’ Duty to Plaintiff

¶ 34         Bitsky argues the trial court erred in relying on Hunt, 74 Ill. 2d 203, and that Jarosz v.

          Buona Cos., 2022 IL App (1st) 21018,1 controls and supports reversal. Jarosz was issued after

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          the summary judgment order and thus not addressed by the trial court. Nonetheless, Jarosz is

          distinguishable, and the trial court properly relied on Hunt.

¶ 35          In Hunt, the State of Illinois hired Fosco Fabricators (Fosco) to construct and install a

          highway exit sign in strict conformity with standards set by the State. Hunt, 74 Ill. 2d at 206.

          Fosco followed those specifications, and the State approved and accepted the work. Id. at 206-

          07. More than three years later, a car veered off the highway and collided with the post, killing

          two occupants and injuring three. Id. at 206. A lawsuit for negligence and strict liability was

          filed against multiple parties, including Fosco. Id. Eventually, only Fosco remained. Id.

¶ 36          Fosco moved for summary judgment. Id. It submitted an uncontroverted affidavit

          establishing it designed, constructed, and installed the sign and post in strict conformity with

          the specifications required by the State of Illinois. Id. at 206-07. The trial court granted Fosco’s

          motion, finding that because Fosco was an independent contractor, it was relieved from

          liability to any third parties once the State approved and accepted the work it performed. Id. at

          207. The appellate court affirmed, and the plaintiffs appealed.

¶ 37          The court observed that the old “general rule of nonliability ha[d] been discarded” (id. at

          209), after reviewing the history of independent contractor liability to third parties for work

          completed and accepted by the contracting party. Instead, the court would examine the

          negligence claim under the traditional rules of liability for negligence actions—by analyzing

          whether there was a duty, a breach of that duty, and proximate causation of injury from the

          breach. Id. In addressing the duty prong, the court stated, “[a]n independent contractor owes

          no duty to third persons to judge the plans, specifications or instructions which he [or she] has

          merely contracted to follow.” Id. If the contractor performs the specifications provided to it

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          “carefully,” the contractor “is justified in relying upon the adequacy of the specifications

          unless they are so obviously dangerous that no competent contractor would follow them.” Id.

¶ 38          The court found the plaintiffs failed to allege the specifications the State gave Fosco for

          the exit sign were so flawed as to put Fosco on notice that the sign would be dangerous and

          likely to cause injury. Id. at 210. The court further found the plaintiffs failed to set forth facts

          from which the court could infer that the State’s specifications “were so glaringly dangerous

          Fosco should have refrained from complying with the specifications.” Id. Because the plaintiffs

          failed to make these allegations, no basis existed on “which Fosco can be held liable in

          negligence for merely complying with the State’s contract specifications.” Id.

¶ 39          Nearly 45 years later, in Jarosz, the appellate court followed the holding in Hunt (as it

          must) but denied summary judgment, absent uncontroverted evidence defendants were

          following specifications provided in a contract. Jarosz, 2022 IL App (1st) 210181 ¶ 36.

¶ 40          The plaintiff in Jarosz tripped and fell outside a Buona Beef restaurant. Id. ¶ 5. The plaintiff

          briefly lost consciousness and did not know what caused her to fall. A doorstep near where she

          fell had been installed by Mobile Lock and Safe, Inc. (Mobile Lock) Id. Mobile Lock moved

          for summary judgment, arguing that, as the installer of the doorstop for the property owner, it

          did not owe plaintiff a duty of care. Id. ¶ 17. The trial court agreed. Id. ¶¶ 17-18. The plaintiff

          argued on appeal that the completed and accepted work doctrine, on which Mobile Lock relied,

          was no longer valid, Mobile Lock owed her a duty of care as a matter of law, and genuine

          issues of material fact remained as to breach of duty and proximate cause.

¶ 41          In reversing the trial court, the appellate court noted that “in Illinois, the completed and

          accepted work doctrine no longer is determinative of the question of liability.” Id. ¶ 30. Citing

          Hunt, the court stated that, in assessing contractor liability toward a third party, “traditional

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          principles of negligence govern” (id.)—namely, whether (i) the defendant owed her a duty of

          care, (ii) the defendant breached that duty, and (iii) the breach proximately caused her injuries.

          Id. ¶ 32. The court further stated, “In Hunt, the defendant provided an uncontroverted affidavit

          establishing that the highway exit ‘sign and supporting posts were designed, constructed and

          installed by [the defendant] in strict conformity to specifications mandated by the State of

          Illinois.’ Id. at 206.” Id. ¶ 35.

¶ 42          The appellate court determined that, unlike in Hunt, “there is no uncontroverted evidence

          that Mobile Lock selected and installed the doorstop in strict conformity to specifications

          mandated by the Buona entities.” Id. ¶ 36. The court noted that Buona employees testified they

          did not give Mobile Lock employees instructions on where to put the doorstop, except to say

          which door needed the doorstop. Id. Rather, they relied on Mobile Lock’s employees to install

          the doorstop in a proper and safe location. Id. That testimony contradicted the deposition

          testimony of another employee, who was “certain” someone from the Buona corporate office

          decided the location. Id.

¶ 43          Absent “uncontroverted evidence,” “Mobile Lock cannot rely on the defense discussed in

          Hunt for contractors who merely follow plans, specifications, or instructions for which they

          were contracted.” Id. Accordingly, the appellate court applied the four duty factors to

          determine duty: “(1) the reasonable foreseeability of the injury, (2) the likelihood of the injury,

          (3) the magnitude of the burden of guarding against the injury, and (4) the consequences of

          placing that burden on the defendant” (id. ¶ 34). After discussing the factors, the appellate

          court determined Buona had a duty to the plaintiff and reversed summary judgment. Id. ¶ 47.

¶ 44          Relying on Jarosz, Bitsky contends the trial court erred in granting summary judgment

          because (i) the accepted work doctrine no longer applies to contractors and (ii) the court should

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          have applied traditional negligence principles. While true that the accepted work doctrine no

          longer shields contractors and subcontractors from all liability, the Jarosz court acknowledged

          that under Hunt, “[a]n independent contractor owes no duty to third persons to judge the plans,

          specifications or instructions which he has merely contracted to follow.” (Internal quotation

          marks omitted.) Id. ¶ 35. Thus, “[i]f the contractor carefully carries out the specifications

          provided him, he is justified in relying upon the adequacy of the specifications unless they are

          so obviously dangerous that no competent contractor would follow them” when there is

          uncontroverted evidence “[a]n independent contractor owes no duty to third persons to judge

          the plans, specifications or instructions which he has merely contracted to follow.” (Internal

          quotation marks omitted.) Id.

¶ 45         Here, as in Hunt, defendants presented uncontroverted evidence of having followed the

          City’s and CTR’s plans, specifications, and instructions. CDOT prepared ADA design

          standards, including design standard B-1-6, which defendants used. Standard B-1-6 allows for

          a property line curb “where necessary.” As multiple witnesses testified, property line curbs are

          used when, as here, a building’s foundation is exposed. Further, standard B-1-6 does not

          require specific dimensions. Although Bitsky’s expert issued a report that the elevated

          sidewalk did not meet CDOT ADA standards, as the trial court noted, the City and CTR

          inspected the area and approved all of the work as compliant with CDOT and ADA standards.

¶ 46         Furthermore, nothing in the record suggests the plans the City and CTR provided to

          defendants were “obviously dangerous.” An obviously dangerous condition has been found,

          where, for instance, a defendant manufactured and supplied an underground propane gas tank

          without a plug for the drain, allowing gas to escape that could lead to an explosion. See Paul

          Harris Furniture Co. v. Morse, 10 Ill. 2d 28 (1956). (The trial court discussed these cases

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          involving obvious danger and found them distinguishable.) Although Bitsky asserts that the

          elevated sidewalk was “unreasonably dangerous,” she does not argue the plans and

          specifications were so obviously dangerous that no competent contractor would follow them.

¶ 47         Bitsky’s contention that the trial court failed to consider all of the evidence presented,

          including the report and deposition of her expert, is without merit. The trial court considered

          the expert’s report and deposition testimony. Bitsky’s attorney cited both documents in her

          argument, and the trial court referred to them several times. Indeed, the trial judge read directly

          from the expert report’s conclusion that the elevated sidewalk did not meet CDOT ADA

          standards. The court held, however, that although defendants had some discretion in

          constructing the sidewalks under the guidelines provided, the City and CTR approved the work

          as compliant with contract requirements and CDOT ADA standards.

¶ 48         Given our agreeing with the trial court’s finding that defendants had no duty to Bitsky, we

          need not address her arguments regarding proximate cause, whether the elevated sidewalk was

          an open and obvious condition or the loss of consortium claims.

¶ 49         Affirmed.

¶ 50         JUSTICE PUCINSKI, specially concurring:

¶ 51         The confluence of necessary and welcome ADA sidewalks, with Chicago’s existing and

          sometimes very old sidewalks and buildings creates a menace that I have personally observed

          all over the city. I am actually surprised that more people are not injured walking normally and

          colliding with elevated or lowered sidewalks or elevated corners like this one. I emphatically

          urge the City of Chicago to review its codes and inspection procedures to improve warning

          marks for pedestrians encountering these hazards.

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                  Bitsky v. City of Chicago, 2023 IL App (1st) 220266

Decision Under Review:     Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County, Nos. 17-L-1845,
                           19-L-8025; the Hon. Joan E. Powell, Judge, presiding.

Attorneys                  Robert G. Black, of Law Offices of Robert G. Black, P.C., of
for                        Naperville, for appellant.
Appellant:

Attorneys                  Adam S. Kreuzer and Jeffrey S. Barger, of Esp Kreuzer Cores,
for                        LLP, of Wheaton, for appellee Sanchez Construction Services,
Appellee:                  Inc.

                           John J. Moroney and Michelle L. Bisognani, of Franco Moroney
                           Buenik, LLC, of Chicago, for appellee Reliable Construction and
                           Equipment Company.

                           Stephen Brandenburg, of Cameli & Hoag, P.C., of Chicago, for
                           other appellees.

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