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Utah Court of Appeals hears dispute over sidewalk snow pile, pauses for more briefing

3743438 · June 4, 2025
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

The Utah Court of Appeals heard oral argument on whether a district court erred by granting summary judgment after Kathy Andrews slipped on a pile of snow and ice on a condominium sidewalk, and the panel invited supplemental briefing on whether Utah’s "open‑and‑obvious" doctrine applies beyond traditional premises‑liability claims.

The Utah Court of Appeals heard oral argument on whether a district court erred by granting summary judgment in a slip‑and‑fall case after the plaintiff, Kathy (Cathy) Andrews, fell on a pile of snow and ice allegedly created by neighbor William Thomason at the Stony Brook Condominium Association.

The issue that consumed most of the argument was whether the district court correctly applied the open‑and‑obvious danger doctrine and removed questions of duty and causation from the jury. Attorney Ryan Schreiber, representing Andrews, told the panel that "there are some, really straightforward facts in this case that were undisputed. The is that miss miss Andrews fell on the pile of snow and ice." Schreiber contended the district court prematurely decided factual questions—particularly whether ice under the snow was reasonably observable—and said those questions should go to a jury.

Why the case matters: the court pressed both sides on whether the open‑and‑obvious rule is confined to traditional premises‑liability claims against land possessors or whether it can be applied to ordinary negligence claims when the negligence alleged is creating an unsafe condition on land. If the appeals court clarifies that boundary, it could change how future…

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