Brown v. Cinemark U S A Inc

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Louisiana
DecidedJune 10, 2020
Docket5:19-cv-00346
StatusUnknown

This text of Brown v. Cinemark U S A Inc (Brown v. Cinemark U S A Inc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Cinemark U S A Inc, (W.D. La. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT WESTERN DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA SHREVEPORT DIVISION

JULIE FRAZIER BROWN CIVIL ACTION NO. 19-cv-0346

VERSUS MAGISTRATE JUDGE HORNSBY

CINEMARK USA, INC

MEMORANDUM RULING Introduction Julie Brown and her husband attended a movie at the Tinseltown theater in Shreveport. Mrs. Brown fell on the stairs inside an auditorium and suffered severe injuries to her knee. She filed this suit against Cinemark USA, Inc., the owner of the theater, and alleged that a lip on one of the stairs was an unreasonably dangerous condition that caused her to fall. Before the court is Cinemark’s Motion to Exclude Expert Testimony (Doc. 17) and Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. 15). Cinemark attacks the admissibility of the opinion of Mrs. Brown’s sole expert witness on liability and argues that—largely because the expert testimony should be excluded—it is entitled to summary judgment. For the reasons that follow, both motions will be denied. Relevant Facts Julie and Robert Brown attended some movies at the Shreveport Tinseltown theater over the years, but their afternoon trip in July 2017 to see “The House” starring Will Ferrell was their first visit since the theater made extensive renovations that added reclining seats and other amenities. Mrs. Brown, who was born in 1967 and was in good health, was wearing shorts, t-shirt, and tennis shoes, clothing that would not interfere with her ability to walk. She and her husband entered the auditorium and walked up the stairs on their right

side (when facing away from the screen) to their seats, which were a few rows up. Mr. Brown recalled at his deposition that, after they were seated, they discussed how much steeper the stairs were at this theater compared to the Boardwalk theater they usually patronized. A few minutes into the trailers, Mrs. Brown decided to go to the restroom. She

arose from her seat, walked to her left, and entered the same stairs that she walked up earlier. She placed her left hand on a railing and started to walk down the stairs. At some point, her left foot was planted on a lower stair, and when she began to move her right foot forward it caught on a “raised strip” or lip on one of the steps, causing her to fall a significant distance down the stairs and land on her right knee.

An off-duty policeman promptly called for EMTs, and he and Mr. Brown went to help Mrs. Brown. The policeman was concerned that she was going into shock, and he sent Mr. Brown to meet the EMTs at the entrance. The EMTs put Mrs. Brown on a stretcher. As they were carrying her out of the theater, a Tinseltown employee gave Mr. Brown two free passes, which caused one of the EMTs to say, “Really?” Mrs. Brown

testified that she learned that her right tibial plateau was shattered, and she had fractures in her tibia and fibula. Mr. Brown testified that he returned to the theater with his daughter about a week later to watch a Spiderman movie. While there, he asked an employee if he could enter the auditorium where his wife fell and take some photos. The employee asked if she was the lady who fell the day before, which Mr. Brown took to suggest that more than one person had fallen recently in the theater. Mr. Brown took several photographs of the stairs, and

they were admitted and discussed in detail at the depositions. Mrs. Brown identified a “white strip” (depicted in Exhibit B3 to her deposition, and marked with a number 1) as the piece that caught her right foot and caused the fall. She described the strip as wooden or made of particle board, and said it was not flush with the carpet that covered the rest of the step. She said that the steps below where she tripped had

a different construction or configuration; the one that caused her to trip was raised and did not have rubber stripping to make it flush. She did not know how much it was raised, and no one took any measurements as far as she knew. Mr. Brown testified that he did not take any measurements of the lip or otherwise when he took the photographs. He said that he took the photos to show Mrs. Brown’s

physician, who said that he had never seen such significant damage from a fall. Mrs. Brown said that she fell the depth of at least two or three steps before her knee struck the floor, and Mr. Brown wanted the photos to demonstrate that distance to the physician. Mrs. Brown testified, “The cause of the tripping was that the board is raised and just not flush.” Mrs. Brown said that the Boardwalk theater she ordinarily attended had some

rubber stripping on the stairs, and they were much wider and safer. She was asked whether the stripping situation at Tinseltown appeared to be associated with the recent remodeling. She said she did not know, but “it appeared to be remodeled by middle schoolers.” Mrs. Brown said that her husband told her that when he took the photos, he could see “light coming through” where the strip was raised. She pointed out that the photo marked Exhibit B6 appeared to show rubber stripping on the stairs below where she fell, but there was no such stripping on the step where she tripped.

Mrs. Brown retained Dennis R. Howard, Certified Safety Professional, to offer an opinion about the stairs on which she fell. Mr. Howard has been the president of Safety Management, Inc., based in North Carolina, since 1979. He has extensive experience in safety consultations, developing safety programs, and safety-related training. He holds a B.S. in industrial management from Florida State University, and he has extensive speaking

and teaching experience related to safety issues, including the prevention of slips, trips, and falls. Mr. Howard has not been deposed in this case, but he did tender an expert report. He stated in his report that he did not visit the scene of the accident or take any measurements. He did review the depositions of Mr. and Mrs. Brown, the photos attached

to the depositions, and the petition for damages. In his description of the facts, he stated, “No specific measurement was taken to determine the stair nosing above the adjacent carpeted walking surface.” He added, “I would like the opportunity to visit the site if possible.” Mr. Howard’s “initial opinions” in the report included the observation that the

theater’s darkened path required using the greatest possible safety precautions and certainly compliance with the recommended ASTM Standard Practice for Safe Walking Surfaces. He opined that the failure to maintain a flushed surface or one that provided the utility of a beveled surface ran afoul of some safety code provisions that caused the stairs “to be unreasonably dangerous and were causative for Mrs. Brown’s injuries.” He cited ASTM sections 5.2 and 5.3, which allow changes in levels up to one-quarter inch to be vertical and without edge treatment, but changes in levels between one-quarter inch and one-half

inch must be beveled with a slope no greater than 1:2. He also cited Life Safety Code, Chapter 7, Means of Exit. Section 7.1.6.2 was said to require abrupt changes in elevation of walking surfaces to not exceed one-quarter inch, with beveling of edges between one- quarter inch and one-half inch. He also cited Section 7.2.2.3.3.2, which he said provides that stair treads and landings shall be free of projections or lips that could trip a stair user.

Cinemark retained architect Lauren F. Marchive, III, who holds bachelor’s and master’s degrees in architecture from Louisiana Tech University. Mr. Marchive testified in an affidavit that in November 2019 he inspected the premises where the incident took place in July 2017 (more than two years earlier) and reviewed Mrs. Brown’s deposition and attached photos. His written report stated that he inspected, photographed, and took

measurements of the area.

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Brown v. Cinemark U S A Inc, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-cinemark-u-s-a-inc-lawd-2020.