Lois K. Champion v. Lowe's Hiw, Inc. ( 2014 )


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  •           IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    LOIS K. CHAMPION,                               NO. 70933-0-                       !~0           c i'i O
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    LOWE'S HIW, INC.,                               UNPUBLISHED OPINION                      3E         S?
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    Respondent.                 FILED: June 30, 2014                      c
    Lau, J. — Lois Champion alleges injuries sustained when she tripped and fell on
    a pallet lifter parked in the merchandise aisle of a Lowe's store. She appeals the
    summary judgment dismissal of her personal injury lawsuit. Because the evidence
    viewed in the light most favorable to Champion presents genuine material fact issues on
    whether Lowe's should have anticipated the harm to Champion despite the pallet's
    obvious hazard1 and on what caused her to fall, we reverse and remand for trial.
    FACTS
    The record viewed in the light most favorable to Champion establishes the
    following events.
    1We assume, without deciding, the pallet lifter constitutes an obvious hazard.
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    Eighty-five-year-old Lois Champion went to the Everett Lowe's store to shop for a
    toilet. A Lowe's employee walked Champion to the plumbing aisle where he pointed out
    the toilets displayed on an overhead shelf. As Champion walked down the aisle looking
    at the toilets, she tripped and fell on a pallet lifter placed in the aisle. She fell face-
    forward onto the pallet lifter and sustained head, knee, and foot injuries.
    Customers Cecilio Di Gino and Shelby Eaton witnessed portions of the incident.
    Di Gino testified at his deposition that Champion fell while looking up at merchandise a
    Lowe's employee pointed out to her. The employee later apologized to Champion.
    Q. So tell me what you recall from the moment you go into the Lowe's
    store, what you did to start shopping.
    A. We just went walking up and down the aisles looking at stuff. Then we
    got over to the area where the pallet was on the floor, and I remember telling
    Shelby to watch out for the pallet. She's not the most observant person when it
    comes to things. I made a comment that it was not a very bright place to leave
    something like that.
    We were looking up. A salesperson and Ms. Champion came, and—we
    moved back. They came in front. The guy was pointing, you know, We have
    this, we have that, we have this, you know, yada, yada, yada, pointing. She was
    looking up.
    Q. When you say "she," you mean Ms. Champion?
    A. Ms. Champion was looking up. The guy was looking up. He then slid
    back just a couple inches, almost like behind her, and then Ms. Champion hit the
    pallet and went over.
    Then he kept saying, "I'm sorry, I'm sorry. I should have told you it was
    there." I believe at one point he even said he didn't see it, but—there was just so
    much going on at that point, but I know he kept apologizing.
    Di Gino acknowledged that he did not see Champion's feet at the moment she fell. But
    he remembered what happened immediately after she fell:
    Q. And when you first saw her, when you turned to the incident, what did
    you see? Where was she lying?
    A. Face down on the pallet.
    Q. And was she fully on the pallet, you know, like, square on the pallet, or
    was part of her body on the—
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    A. Part of her body was off.
    Q. And so would that have been the right-hand part of her body partially
    off the pallet and her left side on the pallet?
    A. It would have been her right-hand on the pallet, and I believe her left-
    hand was, like, slightly off, but not much. It was, like almost like she was all the
    way—from waist over? She was like, boom, like that. It was something like this
    (indicating).
    Q. Sure so then her left-hand, left part of her body that was partially on
    the floor, that would have been between the pallet and the left shelf?
    A. Yeah.
    Eaton testified by deposition that Champion "was kind of looking up and—as she
    was walking along." She also described what she saw immediately after Champion's
    fall:
    Q. All right. How did you first become aware that an incident had first
    occurred involving Ms. Champion?
    A. So, I heard a noise of some kind.
    Q. Yes.
    A. And I was—I was not facing her at that point. I don't know if I had my
    side to her or my back to her—I'm not sure—but I know I had to turn to actually
    see where the noise was coming from.
    Q. And when you turned, what did you see?
    A. I saw her lying half—kind of almost half on the pallet and half off the
    pallet, and she was face-down. Maybe half isn't quite right. Maybe more like her
    leg, foot and leg, were on the pallet and the rest of her was off the pallet on the
    concrete.
    She testified about the pallet: "It was down low, and so when I was looking down the
    aisle from far away, I tended to look kind of at my height, and so I didn't really notice the
    pallet at first."
    Champion remembered she fell while looking up at the merchandise but not what
    caused her to fall:
    So there were the toilets (indicating), on the very top shelf, so I'm up there
    looking, looking, looking, and eventually I think I had made a selection. Anyway I
    turned around, and I didn't realize what happened, but afterwards I saw a big
    bruise—later on at home, I saw a big bruise across the top of my right foot.
    I don't really remember what happened, but I evidently fell.
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    After Champion regained consciousness, she found herself in a "twisted position," lying
    on her stomach and head.
    Champion sued Lowe's for negligence, alleging that she suffered injuries after
    she was "caused to come in contact with a stationary, unattended, pallet jack or other
    type of store equipment." Lowe's moved for summary judgment, arguing (1) the hazard
    that allegedly caused Champion's injury was obvious as a matter of law and (2)
    Champion submitted no evidence on the element of causation. The court granted the
    motion. It ruled, "The condition complained of by Plaintiff qualifies under the law and
    the undisputed facts as an open and obvious condition for which Lowe's owed no duty
    to warn or protect." It also ruled, "Plaintiff has failed in her burden of proof with regard
    to the negligence element of causation." Champion appeals.
    ANALYSIS
    Order Striking Summary Judgment Materials
    We first address the trial court's order striking certain materials Champion
    submitted in opposition to Lowe's summary judgment motion. We review this issue de
    novo. Rice v. Offshore Svs., Inc.. 
    167 Wash. App. 77
    , 85, 
    272 P.3d 865
    (2012).
    The record shows that the trial court struck 12 sentences contained in
    Champion's summary judgment response brief. Lowe's claimed various grounds
    warranted the relief—speculation, inadmissible hearsay, expert opinion, no personal
    knowledge, and conclusory statements. We conclude none of these grounds supports
    the court's order to strike legitimate arguments by counsel about the evidence
    presented on summary judgment. Lowe's mistakenly asserted grounds to strike that
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    generally apply to summary judgment evidence, not to arguments of counsel in a brief.2
    See CR 56(e).
    The trial court also struck the entire Di Gino declaration.3 Lowe's relied on
    Marshall v. AC&S Inc.. 
    56 Wash. App. 181
    , 185, 
    782 P.2d 1107
    (1989), to argue that
    Di Gino's declaration improperly contradicted his unambiguous deposition testimony.
    As a general rule, a party cannot create a genuine issue of material fact "'with an
    affidavit that merely contradicts, without explanation, previously given clear testimony.'"
    
    Marshall. 56 Wash. App. at 185
    (quoting Van T. Junkins & Assocs.. Inc. v. United States
    Indus.. Inc.. 
    736 F.2d 656
    , 657 (11th Cir. 1984)). This rule is tempered by the well-
    settled rule that all doubts must be resolved in favor of allowing the case to go to trial.
    The court should scrutinize the two versions and reject the second one only if a clear
    and material contradiction exists. Sun Mountain Prods.. Inc.. v. Pierre. 
    84 Wash. App. 608
    , 617-18, 
    929 P.2d 494
    (1997). Lowe's correctly abandons its reliance on Marshall
    on appeal. Di Gino testified in his declaration that he saw Champion "come in contact
    with a pallet lifter." He later acknowledged in his deposition that he did not see
    Champion's feet at the moment she fell. His deposition and declaration testimony
    2 In Cameron v. Murray. 
    151 Wash. App. 646
    , 658, 
    214 P.3d 150
    (2009), this court
    explained, "[Mjaterials submitted to the trial court in connection with a motion for
    summary judgment cannot actually be stricken from consideration as is true of evidence
    that is removed from consideration by a jury; they remain in the record to be considered
    on appeal. Thus, it is misleading to denominate as a 'motion to strike' what is actually
    an objection to the admissibility of evidence that could have been preserved in a reply
    brief rather than by a separate motion." We thus treat Lowe's motion to strike for what it
    is in substance—an objection to the evidence's admissibility.
    3 We also note the trial court mistakenly struck the entire declaration instead of
    the objected-to portions.
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    demonstrate no clear, material contradiction. The court improperly struck the
    declaration.
    Order Granting Summary Judgment
    Champion assigns error to the trial court's order granting Lowe's summary
    judgment on liability. For the reasons discussed below, we reverse and remand for trial.
    On appeal from an order granting summary judgment, we review de novo
    whether "the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file,
    together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material
    fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law." CR 56(c).
    "[T]he moving party bears the initial burden of showing the absence of an issue of
    material fact." Young v. Key Pharm.. Inc.. 
    112 Wash. 2d 216
    , 225, 
    770 P.2d 182
    (1989).
    We view all facts and reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to the
    nonmoving party. Eicon Constr.. Inc. v. E. Wash. Univ.. 174 Wn.2d 157,164, 273 P.3d
    965(2012).
    "The elements of a negligence cause of action are the existence of a duty to the
    plaintiff, breach of the duty, and injury to plaintiff proximately caused by the breach."
    HertoQ, ex rel. S.A.H. v. City of Seattle. 
    138 Wash. 2d 265
    , 275, 
    979 P.2d 400
    (1999).
    Proof of proximate causation requires a showing of cause in fact and legal causation.
    Ano v. Martin. 
    154 Wash. 2d 477
    , 482, 
    114 P.3d 637
    (2005). "Cause in fact is usually a
    question for the trier of fact and is generally not susceptible to summary judgment."
    Martini v. Post. 
    178 Wash. App. 153
    , 164, 
    313 P.3d 473
    (2013). "Negligence and
    proximate cause are ordinarily factual issues, precluding summary judgment." 4 Karl
    B. Tegland, Washington Practice: Rules Practice CR 56, at 418 (6th ed. 2013). In
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    ruling on a summary judgment motion, the court must resolve any doubts on the
    existence of a genuine issue of material fact against the moving party. Ventures Nw.
    Ltd. P'ship v. State. 
    81 Wash. App. 353
    , 361, 
    914 P.2d 1180
    (1996).
    "Under common law premises liability, a landowner owes differing duties to
    entrants onto land depending on the entrant's status as a trespasser, a licensee, or an
    invitee." Afoa v. Port of Seattle. 
    176 Wash. 2d 460
    , 467, 
    296 P.3d 800
    (2013). Lowe's
    acknowledges that Champion was a business invitee at the time of her alleged injury. A
    possessor is liable for harm to business invitees if it (1) knows of, or by the exercise of
    reasonable care would discover, a condition presenting an unreasonable risk of harm;
    (2) should expect that invitees would not discover the danger or would fail to protect
    themselves from it; and (3) fails to exercise reasonable care to protect invitees against
    the danger. Iwai v. State. 
    129 Wash. 2d 84
    , 93-94, 
    915 P.2d 1089
    (1996).
    If the hazard is obvious or is known to the invitee, the possessor is not liable.
    
    Iwai. 129 Wash. 2d at 94
    . But "an invitee's awareness of a particular dangerous condition
    does not necessarily preclude landowner liability." McDonald v. Cove to Clover.
    
    180 Wash. App. 1
    , 
    321 P.3d 259
    , 261 (2014). Liability exists where the possessor
    "'should anticipate the harm despite such knowledge or obviousness.'" 
    ]waj, 129 Wash. 2d at 94
    (quoting Restatement (Second) of Torts § 343A (1965)). The Restatement
    explains:
    Such reason to expect harm to the visitor from known or obvious dangers may
    arise, for example, where the possessor has reason to expect that the invitee's
    attention may be distracted, so that he will not discover what is obvious, or will
    forget what he has discovered, or fail to protect himself against it.
    Restatement (Second) of Torts § 343A cmt. f (1965).
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    Lowe's contends the pallet on which Champion allegedly tripped was obvious as
    a matter of law. Even if we assume without deciding that the pallet constitutes an
    obvious hazard, the record demonstrates genuine issues of material fact remain as to
    whether Lowe's "'should anticipate the harm despite such ... obviousness.'" 
    Iwai. 129 Wash. 2d at 94
    (quoting Restatement (Second) of Torts § 343A (1965)). The record
    evidence and inferences from the facts viewed in the light most favorable to Champion
    show she fell while walking down the aisle and looking up at merchandise called to her
    attention by a Lowe's employee. The pallet was lying flat on the floor, well below eye
    level. Here, reasonable minds can differ on whether Lowe's should have anticipated the
    harm to Champion posed by the pallet in spite of its obviousness. Restatement
    (Second) of Torts § 343A cmt. f (1965).4 The resolution of that fact-based inquiry is
    for a jury. The trial court improperly dismissed Champion's lawsuit on summary
    judgment.
    Lowe's also relies on Suriano v. Sears. Roebuck & Co.. 
    117 Wash. App. 819
    , 
    72 P.3d 1097
    (2003). Its reliance on Suriano is misplaced. There, Division Three of this
    court concluded that Restatement (Second) of Torts § 343A (1965) applies in the "retail
    store context." 
    Suriano. 117 Wash. App. at 826
    . It then upheld a jury instruction that
    allowed the plaintiff to argue that the defendant department store was liable
    notwithstanding its theory that the advertising sign on which she allegedly tripped was
    4 To make this point, the Restatement provides an example similar to the facts in
    the present case: "The A Department Store has a weighing scale protruding into one of
    its aisles, which is visible and quite obvious to anyone who looks. Behind and about the
    scale it displays goods to attract customers. B, a customer, passing through the aisle,
    is intent on looking at the displayed goods. B does not discover the scale, stumbles
    over it, and is injured. A is subject to liability to B." Restatement (Second) of Torts
    § 343A cmt. f, illus. 2(1965).
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    an obvious hazard. 
    Suriano. 117 Wash. App. at 829
    ("The instruction was an accurate
    version of Restatement (Second), supra. § 343A(1), not confusing, and allowed Ms.
    Suriano to argue Sears should have foreseen that an inattentive or disabled customer
    would careen into [the sign]."). As in Suriano, here, whether Lowe's should have
    foreseen that Champion's inattention would cause her to trip and fall onto the pallet is a
    jury question.
    Lowe's also argues that Champion "cannot meet her burden of proof under the
    proximate cause element of her negligence claim." Resp't's Br. at 37. It asserts that
    neither Champion nor her two witnesses provided any evidence of what caused
    Champion's fall. Lowe's argues that the undisputed evidence on this point indicates
    Champion's lack of memory and that the witnesses failed to see her fall.
    Lowe's ignores the circumstantial evidence and reasonable inferences on the
    cause of Champion's fall. The record viewed in the light most favorable to Champion
    supports a reasonable inference that she tripped on the pallet. Lowe's claims she
    tripped on her own feet. Di Gino acknowledged that he did not "see how [Champion]
    was walking when she fell." But he testified that he saw Champion lying "[f]ace down on
    the pallet." Eaton also acknowledged she did not see Champion at the moment she fell.
    She testified, however, that she immediately turned and saw Champion lying "face
    down." She recalled that Champion's "foot and leg ... were on the pallet and the rest of
    her was off the pallet on the concrete." Di Gino recalled that Champion "stayed on the
    pallet' until a bystander helped her into a chair. He testified, "I don't think we took her
    off the pallet right away." Finally, Champion testified that she sustained a "big bruise
    across the top of [her] right foot," a "swollen and blue" knee, and a "brain concussion."
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    Based on Champion's proximity to the pallet when she fell, the nature and location of
    her injuries, and her attention to the merchandise overhead as she walked, a
    reasonable jury could conclude that Champion tripped on the pallet. On the other hand,
    it could conclude she tripped on her own feet, as Lowe's claims.
    Lowe's cites Little v. Countrvwood Homes. Inc.. 
    132 Wash. App. 777
    , 
    133 P.3d 944
    (2006), and Moore v. Haoge. 
    158 Wash. App. 137
    , 
    241 P.3d 787
    (2010), but neither case
    controls. In Little, this court affirmed the summary judgment dismissal of a negligence
    action because the plaintiff had no memory of his jobsite accident and there were no
    eyewitnesses. We explained, "Without evidence to explain how his accident occurred,
    Little could not establish proximate cause and could not withstand summary judgment."
    
    Little. 132 Wash. App. at 784
    . In Moore, a pedestrian could not remember being struck by
    a vehicle on a city street, and nobody saw him immediately before the collision. We
    affirmed the summary judgment dismissal of the pedestrian's unsafe road design suit
    against the city, explaining that the evidence "showed, at best, that the [pedestrian]
    might not have been injured if the City had installed additional precautions." 
    Moore. 158 Wash. App. at 158
    . In both cases, summary judgment was appropriate because a
    reasonable trier of fact could only speculate as to causation. Unlike in Little and Moore.
    Champion presented sufficient evidence, summarized above, on causation in spite of
    her own lack of memory.
    Attorney Fees and Costs on Appeal
    Champion requests attorney fees and costs pursuant to RAP 18.1 and 18.9.
    RAP 18.9 provides in relevant part:
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    The appellate court on its own initiative or on motion of a party may order a party
    or counsel. . . who uses these rules for the purpose of delay, files a frivolous
    appeal, or fails to comply with these rules to pay terms or compensatory
    damages to any other party who has been harmed by the delay or the failure to
    comply or to pay sanctions to the court.
    We perceive no basis for an award of attorney fees under RAP 18.9. Lowe's requests
    "attorneys' fees and costs incurred pursuant to RAP 14.1, RAP 14.2, and RAP 14.3."
    Resp't's Br. at 43. Given our disposition, we deny Lowe's request.
    CONCLUSION
    Because genuine material fact issues remain on whether Lowe's should have
    anticipated the harm to Champion despite an obvious hazard and on what caused her
    to fall, we reverse the summary judgment order and remand for trial.
    WE CONCUR:
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