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     filing date.

 1        IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO

 2 PAUL EDDIE HICKS,

 3          Plaintiff-Appellant,

 4 vs.                                                                         NO. 31,740

 5   KOLLAR CONSTRUCTION, INC.,
 6   a New Mexico Corporation, and MARK
 7   KOLLAR, individually and d/b/a KOLLAR
 8   CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, and
 9   KOLLAR ENTERPRISES; DARYL R. HARRELL
10   and SUE B. HARRELL, his wife,

11          Defendants-Appellees.


12 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BERNALILLO COUNTY
13 Theodore C. Baca, District Judge

14   Behles Law Firm, P.C.
15   Eric N. Ortiz
16   Deborah Moore
17   Jennie Deden Behles
18   Albuquerque, NM

19 for Appellants

20 Madison, Harbour & Mroz, P.A.
21 Michael J. Dekleva
22 Jacqueline Olexy
 1 Albuquerque, NM

 2 for Appellees


 3                            MEMORANDUM OPINION

 4 GARCIA, Judge.

 5        Plaintiff appeals from a district court order granting Defendant Susan B.

 6 Harrell’s motion for summary judgment. We issued a calendar notice proposing to

 7 affirm. Plaintiff has filed a memorandum in opposition. We affirm.

 8        “Summary judgment is appropriate where there are no genuine issues of

 9 material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Self v. United

10 Parcel Serv., Inc., 1998-NMSC-046, ¶ 6, 126 N.M. 396, 970 P.2d 582. “We review

11 these legal questions de novo.” Id.

12        In this case, there is no dispute that Defendant Harrell hired Defendant Kollar

13 Construction to paint her house. [MIO 1] Plaintiff, working for Kollar, was assigned

14 the work and was injured when he fell off a ladder. [MIO 1-2] Plaintiff sued

15 Defendant Harrell under a premises liability theory, and asserted that she (by way of

16 her boyfriend) exercised a sufficient degree of control over the work that a separate

17 duty of care was created. [RP 1] The central claim by Plaintiff related to the

18 imposition of this additional duty by way of a “right to control” analysis. However,

19 even if we assume that Defendant exercised a sufficient degree of control to satisfy

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 1 this test, “[p]laintiff must also show that his injury was proximately caused by the

 2 owner's failure to exercise that control in a reasonable manner, that the owner knew

 3 or by the exercise of reasonable care should have discovered the dangerous condition,

 4 that such hazard involved an unreasonable risk of harm to plaintiff, and the landowner

 5 should have expected that the employee would not discover or realize the danger[.]”

 6 Requarth v. Brophy, 111 N.M. 51, 54-55, 801 P.2d 121, 124-25 (Ct. App. 1990).

 7        In our calendar notice, we noted that it was undisputed that Defendant Kollar

 8 instructed Plaintiff to retrieve a Kollar Construction ladder from the back of his truck

 9 for use in the painting work. [RP 62-63] Plaintiff’s complaint alleged that he fell

10 because this ladder “was either defective or in a poor state of repair and thereby

11 defective and the ladder simply broke and gave way.” [RP 2, ¶ 4.] Plaintiff appears

12 to be trying to impose liability by showing that Defendant exercised control by

13 requiring the use of a brush, necessitating the use of a ladder. However, there is

14 nothing inherently negligent in requesting that a home be painted by brush, and we

15 proposed to hold that Defendant was not required to inspect the soundness of the

16 Kollar tools used to perform that job. Also, contrary to Plaintiff’s contentions, there

17 is nothing unusual or inherently dangerous in the type of method employed here that

18 would by itself raise questions of negligence. To the extent that Plaintiff believed that

19 the ground was uneven, or that the height of the ladder was not sufficient, these were


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1 risks that Plaintiff knew about at the time, and therefore these facts did not satisfy the

2 test for liability (lack of disclosure) set forth above.

3         Accordingly, we affirm the district court.

4        IT IS SO ORDERED.



5                                                  _______________________________
6                                                  TIMOTHY L. GARCIA, Judge

7 WE CONCUR:



8
9 JAMES J. WECHSLER, Judge



10
11 RODERICK T. KENNEDY, Judge




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