Barbara Krieger v. Walmart Stores East, L.P.

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Tennessee
DecidedApril 16, 2026
Docket2:24-cv-00171
StatusUnknown

This text of Barbara Krieger v. Walmart Stores East, L.P. (Barbara Krieger v. Walmart Stores East, L.P.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barbara Krieger v. Walmart Stores East, L.P., (E.D. Tenn. 2026).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF TENNESSEE AT GREENVILLE

BARBARA KRIEGER, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) No. 2:24-CV-171 ) WALMART STORES EAST, L.P., ) ) Defendant. ) )

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER Before the Court is a motion for summary judgment filed by Defendant Wal-Mart Stores East, LP (“Wal-Mart”), which is supported by a brief, documents referenced therein, and a statement of material facts. [Docs. 49-52]. Plaintiff Barbara Krieger (“Plaintiff”) filed a response in opposition, along with a brief, documents in support, a response to Wal-Mart’s statement of material facts, and a statement of facts that Plaintiff asserts are disputed. [Docs. 62-65]. Wal-Mart filed a reply. [Doc. 66]. Wal-Mart’s motion is now ripe for resolution. For the reasons stated below, Wal-Mart’s Motion for Summary Judgment [Doc. 49] is DENIED. I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND The dispute in this matter stems from an incident that occurred in the vestibule of Wal-Mart store number 678 located at 1075 Cosby Highway, Newport, Tennessee on or about December 1, 2023, during the busy Christmas shopping season. [Doc. 60; Doc. 50-1 p. 28; Doc. 50-4 p. 66]. It was raining that day and “everything was wet.” [Doc. 64]. Plaintiff and her husband went to Wal- Mart to do some shopping. [Doc. 64]. Surveillance video shows that Plaintiff walked through one of the two doors leading into Wal-Mart’s vestibule and across floor mats placed at that door. [Doc. 65]. There are four doors leading to the vestibule where the incident occurred, two connecting the vestibule to the outside and two leading into the store. [Doc. 64]. Mats were placed inside the vestibule at the ‘entry’ door leading from the outside into the vestibule where Plaintiff and her husband entered. [Doc. 65].

However, mats had not been placed at the ‘exit’ door where people typically exit the store into the vestibule after completing their shopping. [Doc. 65]. Additionally, there were no “caution- wet floor” signs in the vestibule at the time of Plaintiff’s fall. [Doc. 50-3 p. 265]. After walking across the mats, Plaintiff stepped off the mats into the center of the vestibule. [Doc. 64]. Plaintiff was moving through the center area of the vestibule near the ‘exit’ door with no mats when she fell. [Doc. 64]. Plaintiff’s expert witness, Ryan Radebach, opined that if there had been water on the rain boots Plaintiff was wearing that water likely would have been absorbed by the mat Plaintiff walked across as she entered the vestibule. [Doc. 63-13 p. 205]. He further opined that the liquid substance that Plaintiff slipped on would have been different from any water she had on the bottom

of her boots when she first entered the vestibule. [Doc. 63-13 p. 205]. Plaintiff’s husband, who was walking just slightly ahead of Plaintiff, did not see the beginning of Plaintiff’s fall. [Doc. 64]. He heard a sliding sound and then out of the corner of his eye saw Plaintiff slide across the floor approximately five to six feet before falling. [Doc. 64]. Plaintiff fell on to the floor face first. [Doc. 60]. Her right shoulder and head hit the floor, and a Wal-Mart sign fell onto her head. [Doc. 60].

Mr. Krieger testified that when he saw his wife “sliding across the floor into a sign” he stopped, took his hand off the shopping cart, and then took the sign off her. [Doc. 50-2 p. 23-24]. Mr. Krieger then held his wife and called his wife’s name multiple times before she responded. [Doc. 50-2 p. 23-24]. Mr. Krieger testified that he saw water on the floor while he was holding his wife. [Doc. 50-2 p. 23-24]. He further advised that “I wouldn’t say there were puddles, but you could tell the floor was wet. It has a sheen to it. I mean, if you wash your floors at home with a mop, you know what it looks like when it’s damp. But these were - - you could see there was just little pockets of water on the floor.” [Doc. 50-2 p. 32]. When asked if the sheen was a foot long,

Mr. Krieger stated that “[i]t could have been. It could have been six inches long. The floor was wet all in that area.” [Doc. 50-2 p. 32]. He further testified: “when I picked her up and put her in my arms, I looked down and - - I wanted to make sure, you know, she wasn’t bleeding or anything. I could see that the floor was wet.” [Doc. 50-2 p. 45]. When asked about his wife sliding and if he saw “any water in a - - like a trail of water?” [Doc. 50-2 p.53]. Mr. Krieger stated: “I didn’t see a trail of water, but I saw that the floor was wet.” [Doc. 50-2 p. 53].

Plaintiff described the fall stating: “all of a sudden, I found myself slipping on the floor, flying and falling down.” [Doc. 50-1 p. 68-69]. She further testified “I just flew. I couldn’t stop.” [Doc. 50-1 p. 69]. Plaintiff stated: I didn’t trip, because to me, when you trip, you can - - even if you lose a little bit of balance, you can come back to the balance. This wasn’t a trip, this was sliding and I was on the water, because the way that I fell, I flew. I didn’t just trip, I just flew and I kept going.

[Doc. 50-1 p. 84-85]. After Plaintiff fell, another customer offered assistance by retrieving an electric cart from outside for Plaintiff to sit on. [Doc. 64]. The electric cart had been sitting out in the rain and was wet. [Doc. 64-1 p. 79]. Plaintiff sat on the noticeably wet cart while an incident report was completed. [Doc. 64]. Wal-Mart employee Kassi Belcher prepared an Associate Witness Statement regarding the incident. [Doc. 50-11]. Ms. Belcher was not on the scene when Plaintiff fell and was not the first Wal-Mart employee to arrive on the scene. [Doc. 63-17 p.101]. The witness statement signed by Ms. Belcher states: “The customer said she thought she slipped on her rainboots.” [Doc. 50-11]. Plaintiff testified, however, that she does not believe that she ever told Ms. Belcher that she slipped

on her boots. [Doc. 50-1, p. 83]. After the wet cart was brought in for Plaintiff to sit on, Ms. Belcher took photographs to accompany the witness statement. [Doc. 63-17 p. 98]. Walmart maintains an Inclement Weather Guideline to prevent slip hazards during rain and a Floor Mat Program that identifies four types of mats including a carpeted mat, also called a wet mat, designed to absorb liquids to prevent slip and fall incidents in wet locations to be used in the store. [Doc. 63-5; Doc 63-6]. Ms. Belcher testified about the Wal-Mart maintenance team’s

responsibilities for placing mats in the vestibule. [Doc. 63-17 p. 43-44]. She admitted that the vestibule “does get really slick in there without rugs. So, it is easy to slip and fall . . ..” [Doc. 63- 17 p. 25-26]. The surveillance video shows that mats were placed in the vestibule at the door where Plaintiff first entered but that no mats were placed at the door near where Plaintiff fell. [Doc. 65]. Ms. Belcher testified that mats were supposed to be placed flush with the door so that a customer’s first step would be on to the mat and not the tile. [Doc. 63-17 p. 44-45]. “So that way, you got a carpeted path all the way into the store, past the cart return.” [Doc. 63-17 p. 80]. Ms. Belcher testified that mats should also have been placed in the same manner between the exit doors so that there would have been carpeted mats all the way between the two exit doors. [Doc. 63-17 p. 80-

81]. Ms. Belcher agreed that she had been trained to know that any amount of water on the floor could make the surface slippery and that someone could fall in just a couple of drops of water. [Doc. 63-17 p. 54-55 and p. 32]. Based on her experience, Ms. Belcher testified that water on the tile in the vestibule can create a significant slip risk. [Doc. 63-17 p. 61]. When asked if water dripping from umbrellas could cause an unsafe condition in the vestibule, Ms. Belcher said: “Yeah, it could cause a slip and fall.” [Doc. 63-17 p. 73].

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Barbara Krieger v. Walmart Stores East, L.P., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barbara-krieger-v-walmart-stores-east-lp-tned-2026.