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Date: 10-04-2017

Case Style: Elaine Christen v. Fiesta Shows, Inc.

Case Number: 2016-0528

Judge: Dalianis

Court: Supreme Court of New Hampshire

Plaintiff's Attorney: Jared Green

Defendant's Attorney: Debra L. Mayotte

Description: Plaintiff Elaine Christen, individually and as administrator of the estate of Sophia Christen, appeals the order of the Superior Court (Smukler, J.) granting summary judgment to defendant Fiesta Shows, Inc. (Fiesta), on the ground that Fiesta did not owe Sophia Christen a duty of care. We affirm.
The trial court recited the following facts, set forth in the light most favorable to the plaintiff. On May 3, 2013, 15-year-old Sophia attended a carnival operated by Fiesta in a fenced-in area of the Ocean State Job Lot
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(Ocean State) parking lot located on the western side of Manchester Road in
Derry. After Sophia and her friends shared cotton candy, they began searching
for a bathroom to wash their sticky hands. The carnival had bottled water,
napkins, and “port-a-potties” equipped with hand sanitizer dispensers, but it
lacked public facilities with running water. The girls decided to leave the
carnival and search for a bathroom.
Although there were two nearby restaurants located on the same side of
Manchester Road as the carnival, the girls decided to cross Manchester Road to
go to a Burger King. At the intersection of the Ocean State access road and
Manchester Road, the girls found that the pedestrian crossing signal was
inoperative, but they decided to cross the road without the walk signal. While
crossing the road, Sophia was struck by a vehicle and suffered fatal injuries.
Approximately one week before the carnival, Fiesta had contacted the
Derry Police Department to arrange for the presence of officers to provide
“general public safety” at the carnival. Unlike organizers of other large events
in Derry, Fiesta did not instruct the officers to engage in traffic control,
pedestrian assistance, or other similar duties. One day after the accident, at
the suggestion of the Derry Police Department, Fiesta arranged for additional
police coverage to direct traffic and assist with pedestrian crossing on
Manchester Road. Two days after the accident, two Fiesta employees reported
to a Derry police officer investigating the signal that “they crossed the
crosswalk regularly and had never seen the pedestrian crossing signal
activate.” (Quotation omitted.)
The plaintiff brought a wrongful death action against Fiesta, claiming
negligence and also alleging that Fiesta’s conduct was wanton and reckless,
entitling her to enhanced compensatory damages.1 Fiesta successfully moved
for summary judgment, asserting that it violated no duty of care owed to
Sophia. The plaintiff unsuccessfully sought reconsideration, and this appeal
followed.
On appeal, the plaintiff argues that Fiesta “owed a common law duty of
care to Sophia” because it was “foreseeable to Fiesta that customers with sticky
fingers, including unsupervised teenagers, would seek running water, soap,
and towels or a mounted blow dryer to effectively wash the stickiness off their
fingers” and that Fiesta “should have expected that these customers . . . would
leave the amusement area . . . to go to a fast food restaurant directly across
from the entrance to the carnival site” to wash their hands. (Capitalization and
bolding omitted.) The plaintiff also argues that, even if Fiesta was not subject
to a common law duty of care, Fiesta voluntarily assumed such a duty by: (1)
requiring in the company “Safety Manual” that its employees report all
1 Although the plaintiff also sued the State of New Hampshire, that claim has been settled and the
State is not a party to this appeal.
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observed unsafe conditions; (2) hiring local police officers to provide “general
public safety”; and (3) choosing to hold a carnival in Derry, “a town that
expressly mandated a Public Gathering License for such events.”
In reviewing a trial court’s ruling on a motion for summary judgment, we
consider the evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party and, if
no genuine issue of material fact exists, we determine whether the moving
party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Gray v. Leisure Life Indus.,
165 N.H. 324, 327 (2013). “We affirm a trial court’s decision if our review of
the evidence discloses no genuine issue of material fact and the moving party is
entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Estate of Joshua T. v. State, 150 N.H.
405, 407 (2003). We review the trial court’s application of the law to the facts
de novo. Id.
To recover for negligence, a plaintiff must show that the defendant owes
a duty to the plaintiff and that the defendant’s breach of that duty caused the
plaintiff’s injuries. Manchenton v. Auto Leasing Corp., 135 N.H. 298, 304
(1992). Absent a duty, there is no negligence. Walls v. Oxford Management
Co., 137 N.H. 653, 656 (1993). Whether a duty exists in a particular case is a
question of law. Id.
“Ordinarily there is no duty to control the conduct of a third person to
prevent the third person from causing harm to another person.” 1 J.D. Lee &
Barry A. Lindahl, Modern Tort Law: Liability & Litigation, § 3:12, at 3-31 to
3-32 (2d ed. 2003). “This rule is grounded in the fundamental unfairness of
holding private citizens responsible for the unanticipated criminal acts of third
parties.” Walls, 137 N.H. at 657. “In certain limited circumstances, however,
we have recognized that there are exceptions to the general rule where a duty
to exercise reasonable care will arise.” Remsburg v. Docusearch, 149 N.H. 148,
154 (2003). “We have held that such a duty may arise because: (1) a special
relationship exists; (2) special circumstances exist; or (3) the duty has been
voluntarily assumed.” Id.
The plaintiff argues that “the trial court’s analysis in support of its
conclusion that Fiesta . . . did not owe a duty of care was flawed,” contending
that the court “placed too much emphasis” upon Chouinard v. New Hampshire
Speedway, 829 F. Supp. 495 (D.N.H. 1993), and instead “should have relied
upon” Kellner v. Lowney, 145 N.H. 195 (2000). According to the plaintiff, the
federal district court’s conclusion in Chouinard, that a defendant does not owe
a duty of care to one injured by a third party on a public road if the defendant
has no control over the road, was “implicitly rejected by this Court in its
unanimous decision in Kellner.” We disagree.
In Chouinard, the plaintiff went to the defendant’s speedway to pick up
race tickets. Chouinard, 829 F. Supp. at 497. The speedway, including its
parking lot, was located entirely on one side of the adjacent highway. See id.
4
Not wanting to pay a parking fee or walk a long distance to the ticket booth
from the parking lot, the plaintiff parked on the opposite side of the highway.
See id. While crossing the highway, the plaintiff was struck by a motor vehicle.
Id.
Applying New Hampshire law, the district court concluded that the
defendant owed no duty to the plaintiff when a third party directly caused her
injury on a public way that was not in the defendant’s control. Id. at 498, 502.
The court noted that other jurisdictions have reached the same conclusion and
that “[t]he key factor to finding that a property owner owes no duty to an
injured party is that the owner has no control over the property where the
injury occurred or the instrumentality causing the injury.” Id. at 500
(quotation and emphasis omitted); see Ferreira v. Strack, 636 A.2d 682, 686
(R.I. 1994) (explaining that the “great weight of authority” holds that there is no
duty owed “by a landowner to one who is struck by a vehicle while crossing an
adjacent public way”); Newell v. Montana West, Inc., 154 A.3d 819, 824 & n.9
(Pa. Super. Ct. 2017) (citing cases holding that there is no duty of care owed to
a pedestrian who is injured when “seeking to cross the adjoining highway from
or to the landowner’s property, including pedestrians who were the landowner’s
business invitees”).
Unlike in Chouinard, where the property was located entirely on one side
of the adjacent highway, the defendant in Kellner owned a motel that consisted
of a series of buildings divided by a public highway. Kellner, 145 N.H. at 196.
Because of this layout, motel guests had to cross the highway to use all of the
motel’s facilities. Id. The plaintiff’s son, who was staying with his family at the
motel living quarters located on the south side of the highway, was struck by a
vehicle when he darted into the highway after having attended religious
services in the motel game room located on the north side of the highway. Id.
at 196-97. We recognized that, given the special relationship between the
innkeeper and a guest, the case fell within one of the limited exceptions to the
general rule that there is no duty to control the conduct of a third person. Id.
at 198.
On those facts, we concluded that the defendant owed a duty of care
because the defendant could anticipate a risk of injury to guests who were
required to cross the highway to return to their living quarters after attending
religious services on motel property. Id. As we stated, “by choosing to operate
her motel on both sides of [the highway] and by permitting religious services to
be held on the opposite side of the highway from where her guests’ living
quarters were located, the defendant created an artificial and potentially
hazardous condition on her property which gave rise to a duty of care.” Id. at
199. In doing so, we distinguished Chouinard, noting “two important factual
differences . . . : first, the special relationship of innkeeper-guest was not
present in Chouinard; second, the public highway in that case was not
bordered on both sides by the defendant’s property.” Id.
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In this case, we agree with the trial court that the facts presented “are
readily distinguishable from the ‘unique facts’ leading to the determination of a
duty in Kellner and [are] more analogous to the determination of no duty in
Chouinard.” It is undisputed that the premises upon which Fiesta operated its
carnival were located on only one side of Manchester Road. In addition, it is
undisputed that the public way where Sophia’s injury occurred was not in
Fiesta’s control and that Fiesta likewise did not control the vehicle that caused
her injuries. Under those circumstances, Fiesta did not owe Sophia a duty of
care as she attempted to cross Manchester Road.
Alternatively, the plaintiff argues that Fiesta voluntarily assumed a duty
of care. The plaintiff first asserts that Fiesta voluntarily assumed a duty of
care toward its customers because its so-called safety manual requires its
employees to report “all unsafe acts and conditions as observed.” Fiesta
counters that “[t]he Safety Manual applies to the workplace, i.e. the carnival,”
and that the plaintiff’s “interpretation of [the manual] that it applies anywhere
in the world is not consistent with [its] plain language . . . and is an
unreasonable interpretation.”
The safety manual sets out the “general responsibilities” of Fiesta’s
employees. Its plain language limits its application to Fiesta’s workplace. The
“Company Safety Policy Statement” states that Fiesta “strive[s] to protect the
safety of [its] employees and [its] goal is to provide an environment that is free
from all recognized hazards,” and that its “entire management team is firmly
committed to providing a safe and healthful workplace for all employees and
. . . will make every effort to comply with applicable safety and health laws,
regulations and standards.” We agree with the trial court that “[a] review of the
Safety Manual reveals a clear implication that an employee’s responsibility to
report ‘unsafe acts and conditions’ is limited to those observed on the carnival
premises.”
Next, the plaintiff asserts that Fiesta “voluntarily assumed a duty of care
when it chose to hire police details for ‘general public safety.’” Fiesta counters
that the “Derry Police Department was solely responsible for the assignment,
placement and establishment of duties of [its] police officers regarding traffic
and pedestrian control on Manchester Road, . . . which is a public way,” and
that “Fiesta had no responsibility for the motor vehicle and pedestrian traffic
on public roads or highways and never agreed or assumed any duty with
respect to the roadway.”
The trial court rejected the plaintiff’s assertion, finding that Fiesta “did
not assume a duty merely by hiring Derry Police Department officers to provide
‘general public safety’ at the carnival.” As the trial court correctly determined,
“it is clear from the record that the officers did not conduct traffic and
pedestrian control on Manchester Road until after Sophia’s unfortunate death.
Moreover, there is no evidence in the record that either Fiesta’s employees or
6
its agents exercised any control over the road before Sophia’s death.” Cf.
Carignan v. N.H. Int’l Speedway, 151 N.H. 409, 413 (2004) (holding that,
although the defendant lacked control over the adjacent public road, because it
undertook to direct traffic by placing an employee on its property to signal
potential patrons from the public road onto its property, it “was required to
exercise reasonable care to avoid exposing persons to risk of injury that
occur[red] offsite”).
Finally, the plaintiff contends that Fiesta voluntarily assumed a duty “to
apply for a Public Gathering License so that town officials could consider the
carnival’s likely impact on the orderly and safe movement of traffic” and impose
conditions to minimize hazards to pedestrian traffic. The plaintiff fails,
however, to establish any nexus between Fiesta’s alleged failure to apply to the
town for a public gathering license and Fiesta’s duty to protect Sophia against
the dangerous road crossing. Cf. Marquay v. Eno, 139 N.H. 708, 714 (1995)
(explaining that “[i]f no common law duty exists, the plaintiff cannot maintain a
negligence action, even though the defendant has violated a statutory duty”).
We hold that Fiesta did not owe Sophia a duty of care, or voluntarily
assume such a duty. Accordingly, Fiesta is entitled to judgment as a matter of
law and, therefore, we affirm the trial court’s ruling granting Fiesta’s motion for
summary judgment.

Outcome: Affirmed.

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