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Court Determines Plaintiff’s Evidence of Black Ice “Conjecture” in Dismissing Complaint

June 12, 2026
By Charles F. Holmgren

In December, 2020, Plaintiff Gwenevere Love (Love) walked out of an Acme in Audubon and sustained a serious knee injury when she stepped off the curb and slipped. She went to the hospital four hours later and told the ER nurses, as seen in the ER records, she had slipped and fell on black ice. She filed suit against the Acme (and others) for failure to maintain their premises. In her deposition she testified she did not see black ice, or any ice or snow, in the area, but the ground was cold when she landed and she surmised she slipped on black ice. Love produced weather reports that suggested the weather warmed up during the day, melting earlier snow, then re-froze, causing black ice. Acme moved for summary judgment, claiming there was no evidence of notice or that her fall was caused by a dangerous condition. After the trial court granted the motion and Love appealed, the Appellate Division in Love v. Acme Mkts., Inc., 2026 N.J. Super. Unpub. LEXIS 1041 (App. Div. May 20, 2026) had to determine whether the trial court applied the proper standard in reviewing evidence and making inferences in Love’s favor when deciding the motion for summary judgment.

Long-standing New Jersey law holds that summary judgment should be granted if the facts in the matter show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. An issue of fact is not a “genuine” issue of fact if, for the purposes of the motion, it has a single, unavoidable resolution. In reviewing a summary judgment motion, the trial court must consider the competent evidence and draw all reasonable inferences from that evidence in a light most favorable to the non-moving party.

Love’s position was that the evidence established there was a genuine issue of material fact “beyond mere conjecture, speculation, surmise, or guess” that black ice on Acme’s property, and their failure to inspect for it, caused her to fall. She argued that the facts from her deposition testimony and statements she made to ER personnel that she fell on ice, and the weather reports met the standard. She also argued that the trial judge did not properly apply the standard in drawing all reasonable inferences in her favor and to stay out of resolving factual disputes.

The Appellate Division upheld the trial court, finding that it correctly ruled on the evidentiary issues and concluded there was no genuine issue of material fact that Acme was entitled to summary judgment. The Court agreed that Love’s statement in the ER records that she slipped on ice, made four hours after she fell, was inadmissible hearsay. While those records would be admissible for her statements of pain, they would not be admissible for something non-treatment related, such as the presence of snow or what caused her fall. Further, they found her deposition testimony that she slipped on ice speculative. She only concluded she slipped on black ice circumstantially (the ground was cold, her foot slipped) and, more importantly, she did not see any snow or ice on the ground in the area she fell or in the parking lot. The Court found that while the non-moving party is entitled to the benefit of all favorable inferences, there’s a difference between a favorable inference and speculation. Her testimony that she slipped on black ice was mere conjecture and not based on competent evidence to present a genuine issue of fact. As for the weather reports, without an expert to interpret the data included in the weather reports to link it directly to a thaw and refreeze, the court was under no obligation to use that evidence to draw an inference in her favor. This evidence only established the mere possibility that ice caused her fall, and this was not enough to resolve the issue in her favor.

Importantly, the Appellate Division was satisfied with the role the trial court took to distinguish between inferences and conjecture, and did not intrude on the fact-finding duties of the jury. The Court held that when a trial court’s ruling depends on certain evidentiary issues, the trial court must decide on the admissibility of that evidence. The Appellate Division here approved of the trial court’s weighing and sifting of evidence (determining the ER record to be hearsay, the deposition testimony inadmissible speculation, and the weather report’s need to be supported by an expert opinion), and its function here appropriately stopped short of interfering in fact-finding responsibility that is the sole domain of the jury.

About the Author:

Charles F. Holmgren

Mr. Holmgren focuses his practice in general defense litigation through the federal and state courts of New Jersey and Pennsylvania with a concentration on tort defense, premises liability, products liability, individual liability, New Jersey Tort Claims Act defense, motor vehicle accidents (UIM/bad faith), construction, estates, employment and professional malpractice. His clients include insurance companies, large and small business owners, municipalities, governmental entities and manufacturers. He has tried and argued cases at many levels within New Jersey and Pennsylvania courts from municipal courts and arbitration through appellate courts.

In February 2025, Mr. Holmgren was appointed as Capehart Scatchard’s Hiring Shareholder.

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