20231130_C365370_25_365370.Opn.Pdf

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 30, 2023
Docket20231130
StatusUnpublished

This text of 20231130_C365370_25_365370.Opn.Pdf (20231130_C365370_25_365370.Opn.Pdf) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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20231130_C365370_25_365370.Opn.Pdf, (Mich. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

JEFFREY DANIEL LAPORTE, Personal UNPUBLISHED Representative of the ESTATE OF JOANNE November 30, 2023 LAPORTE,

Plaintiff-Appellant,

v No. 365370 Oakland Circuit Court THE KROGER COMPANY OF MICHIGAN, LC No. 2022-193071-NO

Defendant-Appellee.

Before: GLEICHER, C.J., and SWARTZLE and YATES, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Joanne LaPorte was struck by an automatic sliding door as she entered a Kroger Company store. Her complaint alleges that the automatic doors were defective and dangerous, and that Kroger knew or should have known of the hazard the doors created.

The trial court granted summary disposition to Kroger, finding that although Kroger’s store manager knew that the doors had “blind spots” that would not always detect the presence of an entering customer, LaPorte failed to establish that “this actually occurred prior to the accident.” We reverse and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I. BACKGROUND

LaPorte, who was in her 80s and used a cane to walk, fell as she entered a Kroger Company store in Commerce Township.1 LaPorte testified that as she walked into the store, the automatic sliding doors at the entrance unexpectedly closed and knocked her to the ground. LaPorte recounted, “I was walking in the door and all of a sudden the door just pushed me as I walked in,”

1 Joanne LaPorte, the plaintiff in the trial court, died on June 6, 2023. We refer to her personal representative as “plaintiff,” and to Joanne as “LaPorte.”

-1- causing her to lose her balance and fall. According to LaPorte, the right sliding door hit her as it “was just starting to close.”

Oscar Blaser, the store manager, testified that he did not see LaPorte fall, but responded to the scene shortly after. Blaser expressed that the automatic doors were working properly. He elaborated, “I had to physically turn the doors off on[]to the open position so that people could walk in and out, because the doors were doing what they’re supposed to do, opening and closing [automatically].” Blaser reiterated that he observed “no issue” with the doors where LaPorte fell. But Blaser also stated:

But the way she fell into the lobby, she was on the south side inside that lobby, and the sensors don’t pick up that strong of an angle. So it’s closing and opening while we’re trying to tend to her and I turned [the doors] off.

Blaser acknowledged regarding the sensor that “if you’re at a sharp side angle it may not pick you up.” He said this blind spot existed “[o]ff to the side” and “[a]t the extreme opening” of the doors.

Blaser testified that employees check that all automatic doors are properly working each morning before opening the store, and any problems detected are referred to a technician. Daniel Temerowski, Kroger’s in-house door technician, testified that he services about 70 store locations in the area, including the Commerce Township store. Most of his work dealt with the same type of automatic doors as those involved here. Temerowski explained the automatic doors’ motion sensing system as follows: “Motions sensors, as the customer approaches [they] sense[] them[,] engaging the motor to open or close the door for the customer if there’s nobody in the pickup zone.” “[The sensor system] has multiple zones. There’s like seven different zones, so it can pick them up anywhere from 15 feet away to within inches of the door[s].” Temerowski explained that sensors cover these doors’ thresholds, which he termed “the blue zone.”

LaPorte’s counsel and Temerowski engaged in the following colloquy:

Q. When you say within inches of the door, so right at the threshold is there any sensor that picks up anything in the threshold?

A. Yes.

Q. Okay.

A. It’s called the blue zone. It crosses over, each sensor will pick up that area. . . .

Q. Okay. When I’m talking about the threshold, I’m talking about where the track actually runs.

Q. There’s a sensor for that particular area?
A. Correct.

-2- Temerowski explained that his job sometimes requires adjusting the zones and the sensors’ coverage, as well as physical repairs and maintenance to the doors themselves.

Temerowski testified that maintenance and repair records showed numerous problems with the automatic doors in the past, though none related to the doors’ sensors. He recalled that he had repaired the doors 11 days before LaPorte’s fall because someone knocked the doors off the top track. Temerowski had never been called for a repair involving an injury caused by a door. He acknowledged that Kroger’s maintenance records lacked any notes regarding routine checkups, as opposed to specific repairs, but he maintained that he conducted such checkups whenever called for repairs at a store he had not visited recently.

Kroger moved for summary disposition pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(10), contending that LaPorte could not establish a genuine issue of material fact that the automatics doors malfunctioned or were defective, and that Kroger had neither actual nor constructive notice of the alleged defect or malfunction. Kroger characterized LaPorte’s theory that some defect in the doors caused her fall as mere speculation.

In response, LaPorte first argued that the doors clearly malfunctioned at the time of her fall because they violated safety standards published by the American National Standard Institute (the ANSI standards) concerning the operation of automatic door sensors. LaPorte also argued that because Kroger created and maintained this dangerous condition, she need not prove actual or constructive notice. Nevertheless, Blaser’s testimony that he knew of a blind spot in the sensors for the automatic doors established actual notice, LaPorte argued. Kroger also had constructive notice because viewed in LaPorte’s favor, the evidence established the hazard’s existence for a sufficient time before her fall. Further, LaPorte contended that Kroger’s motion completely ignored its separate duty to inspect the premises, and that a reasonable inspection would have revealed the defect. Last, LaPorte asserted that her claim was not improperly speculative. At the very least, she urged, this case presented questions of fact concerning whether Kroger had notice of the automatic doors’ defective and dangerous condition.

LaPorte submitted an affidavit from professional engineer Thomas Livernois to support her claims. Livernois averred:

I tested the doors in question by standing next to the right door while it was in the fully-opened condition, and the door closed, striking me on my right side. . . . Industry standards require this type of door to remain open when a person or object is in the position I was during my inspection, and the doors violated this industry standard. The doors’ presence sensors do not cover the entire open area between the doors, in violation of industry standards. Specifically, [the ANSI standards] require[] that the activation detection area be a minimum width equal to the width of the clear opening of the doors. Also, [they] require[] presence sensors for the doors to prevent a fully-opened door from closing when a person is in the space between two non[]overlapping activation detection areas. The doors in question violate these industry standards and are otherwise defective. These defects caused the doors to close while Joanne LaPorte was [between them] at the time of her accident, causing the accident and Ms. LaPorte’s fall.

-3- * * *

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