Beggs v. Harrah's New Orleans Casino

158 So. 3d 917, 2014 La.App. 4 Cir. 0725, 2015 La. App. Unpub. LEXIS 30, 2015 WL 268501
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 21, 2015
DocketNo. 2014-CA-0725
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 158 So. 3d 917 (Beggs v. Harrah's New Orleans Casino) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beggs v. Harrah's New Orleans Casino, 158 So. 3d 917, 2014 La.App. 4 Cir. 0725, 2015 La. App. Unpub. LEXIS 30, 2015 WL 268501 (La. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

JAMES F. McKAY III, Chief Judge.

| jThis is a personal injury suit arising out of a slip-and-fall. On March 24, 2014, the First City Court for the City of New Orleans rendered judgment in favor of the plaintifflappellee, Gregory Beggs (“Mr. Beggs”), and against the defendanVappel-lant, Jazz Casino' Company, LLC d/b/a Harrah’s New Orleans Casino (“Har-rah’s”), awarding Mr. Beggs a total of .$26,222.56 in damages 1. Mr. Beggs was assessed with 50% comparative negligence. Thus, his award was reduced to $18,111.28, plus court costs and judicial interest.

For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the trial court’s findings of fault. However, because the amount awarded is in excess of the First City Court’s jurisdictional limit, we amend the judgment to award Mr. Beggs an initial $25,000.00 (the maximum amount allowed2), reduced to $12,500.00 plus court costs and judicial interest, due to his 50% comparative negligence.

[.FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Mr. Beggs filed a petition for damages alleging that he sustained personal injuries as a result of a slip-and-fall in a Harrah’s restroom. The petition alleges that on July 19, 2011, Mr. Beggs entered the men’s restroom nearest the blackjack table, where he slipped in a puddle of water on the floor; causing injuries to his back.

At trial, Mr. Beggs testified that on the night in question he and his friend Johnnie Todaro (“Ms. Todaro”) had a couple of drinks and appetizers in the Harrah’s VIP lounge before going to play blackjack. After an hour of play, Mr. Beggs used the restroom closest to the blackjack table (the “Smuggler’s Cove” restroom). .Upon returning to the table, Mr. Beggs commented to Ms. Todaro and the blackjack dealer that the restroom was a mess. Specifically, he stated that there was water all over the floor, no wet floor signs, and no attendant present. Mr. Beggs explained that the blackjack dealer shrugged his shoulders and gave no response. In her testimony, Ms. Todaro acknowledged that Mr. Beggs complained about the condition of the restroom when he returned to the table.

Approximately an hour and thirty minutes later (around 1:80 a.m.), Mr. Beggs used the Smuggler’s Cove restroom a second time, wherein he noted its condition was worse and still there was no attendant. He stated that he saw water scattered throughout 50% of the floor. Mr. Beggs testified that he walked in “paying attention so I wouldn’t slip because I had flip-flops on. I walked up and I Rwalked into the urinal. 1 got my right foot up and I slipped and I twisted my upper torso and grabbed the partition dividing the urinals. I broke my fall. I might have touched the floor, but I don’t remember, but I broke my fall with the partition.” Mr. Beggs described having immediate pain in his back. He did not recall seeing a wet floor sign. He explained that he was not thinking about the condition of the restroom, which he noted on his first visit. Rather, he chose that restroom because it was the closest and he “had to go,” explaining that he “had no choice.”

Upon leaving the restroom, Mr. Beggs stated that he approached a female Har-rah’s employee, telling her that he slipped [920]*920and fell in the bathroom, which he described to her as “a disaster.” Mr. Beggs went back to the blackjack table and resumed play. Ms. Todaro testified that she could see that Mr. Beggs’ bottom was wet. She also stated that he complained about pain in his back from the fall. Shortly thereafter, Harrah’s employees came to speak with him about the accident. Mr. Beggs did not know the names of any of the Harrah’s employees.

Mr. Beggs and Ms. Todaro were escorted by Harrah’s employees to an area of the casino known as the Masquerade. Once there, EMTs assisted Mr. Beggs, and an ambulance was called. EMT Johnny McBride testified that Mr. Beggs was in pain at the time. Mr. Beggs was taken by ambulance to Touro Hospital.

At Touro Hospital, x-rays were taken of Mr. Beggs’ back; he was given pain medication and released. Thereafter, Mr. Beggs treated with chiropractor Dr. Nicholas Digerolano for approximately seventy-six visits over seven months. Dr. Digero-lano testified that Mr. Beggs first visited on July 19, 2011, wherein he |4related the fall at Harrah’s. At that time, Mr. Beggs complained of neck pain radiating to the right arm, as well as mid and lower back pain radiating to the right leg. Mr. Beggs was also seen by medical doctors, Dr. Ash-fot Qureshi and Dr. Barrett Day, both employed by Dr. Digerolano. Mr. Beggs testified that the chiropractic treatment helped to relieve the pain.

Nathan Tyson (“Mr. Tyson”), a janitor with Harrah’s at the time of the incident, testified that he was inside the Smuggler’s Cove restroom maintenance closet when he heard Mr. Beggs fall. When he came out into the restroom, Mr. Tyson asked Mr. Beggs if he was okay.' He saw Mr. Beggs walk out limping.

Mr. Tyson’s shift that night started at 10:00 p.m. At that time, he noted that the floor of the restroom was kind of damp and there were no wet floor signs in place. He further stated that the Smuggler’s Cove restroom is “a mess.” Mr. Tyson explained: “I mean if I come on the shift and I clean the bathroom, it’s so busy that if I leave out and clean the area and come back, it don’t take that long for the floors to get like — maybe ten minutes for it to be messed up again. So the floors become completely wet with anything. It don’t take that long.” In her trial testimony, Ms. Todaro stated that the Smuggler’s Cove restrooms are referred to as the “ghetto bathrooms” because “they always have a lot of homeless people and they get pretty wrecked over there. We usually don’t like to go to those, but when you need to go you go to the closest one you can.”

Mr. Tyson was shown a photograph of the Smuggler’s Cove restroom, depicting a wooden wet floor sign in place. He explained that he did not put the | ¡¡sign there. Mr. Tyson further stated that the wooden sign “is not supposed to be used for the inside of the bathroom, you can’t see it.” He explained that the yellow signs are used inside the restroom and the wooden ones are used at the front entrance to the restroom.

In reference to the wooden sign depicted in the photograph, Mr. Tyson did not recall if the sign was there when he started his shift, but he did say that the sign is not visible because of the way it is faced away. Specifically, he stated that “if the sign is placed towards the stalls, [which are located past the urinals] a person that is coming in, you’re not going to see it unless its facing you and it’s yellow and it’s visible. This sign is not visible and it’s facing towards the stall. You need to walk past that sign.”

Derek Montgomery (“Mr. Montgomery”), a security officer for Harrah’s, testified that on the night in question, he was [921]*921responding to his dispatcher’s call regarding a slip-and-fall when he was approached by Mr. Beggs. After speaking with Mr. Beggs, Mr. Montgomery called for the on-duty EMT. Mr. Montgomery and another employee, Joseph Marino (“Mr. Marino”), waited with Mr. Beggs at the blackjack table until the EMT arrived. At that time, Mr. Montgomery investigated the Smuggler’s Cove restroom. He stated that there was nothing on the floor but some “droplets” of water and a wet floor sign in the second stall. Mr. Montgomery then returned to Mr. Beggs and stayed with him until he was taken away by ambulance. At that time, Mr. Montgomery and Mr. Marino went back to the restroom where he again noted the droplets of water on the floor and the Rwooden wet floor sign. Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
158 So. 3d 917, 2014 La.App. 4 Cir. 0725, 2015 La. App. Unpub. LEXIS 30, 2015 WL 268501, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beggs-v-harrahs-new-orleans-casino-lactapp-2015.