Cador v. YES Organic Market

CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 1, 2022
Docket0898/20
StatusPublished

This text of Cador v. YES Organic Market (Cador v. YES Organic Market) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cador v. YES Organic Market, (Md. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Jacqueline Cador v. YES Organic Market Hyattsville Inc., No. 0898, September Term 2020, Opinion by Moylan, J.

HEADNOTES:

THE ROLE OF INFERENCE; THE RISK OF NON-PERSUASION – THE CASE

AT HAND – WHAT IS A “DISPUTE”? – STANDARD OF REVIEW – TWO

OSTENSIBLE BEACONS OF ALARM – THE FATE OF CONTRIBUTORY

NEGLIGENCE SEALED THE FATE OF ASSUMPTION OF RISK –

CONTRIBUTORY NEGLIGENCE – THE UNAMBIGUOUS “CAUTION: WET

FLOOR” SIGN – THE SITE OF THE ACTUAL FALL – A YELLOW MOP BUCKET

– A TWO-STAGE INFERENTIAL ROCKET – A. STAGE ONE: THE VISIBILITY

OF THE YELLOW MOP BUCKET – 1. THE ALLURE OF EYE-CATCHING

MERCHANDISE – 2. THE INFERENCE THAT WHAT COULD HAVE BEEN

SEEN MUST HAVE BEEN SEEN IS NOT COMPELLING – B. STAGE TWO:

WHAT STORIES DID THE MOP BUCKET HAVE TO TELL? – 1. THE ABSENCE

OF REINFORCING WARNINGS – 2. THE TWILIGHT ZONE – 3. CONFLICTING

INFERENTIAL MESSAGES – THAT VERSION OF THE EVIDENCE MOST

FAVORABLE TO THE PLAINTIFF Circuit Court for Prince George’s County Case No. CAL19-05154

REPORTED

IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS

OF MARYLAND

No. 0898

September Term, 2020

JACQUELINE CADOR

V.

YES ORGANIC MARKET HYATTSVILLE INC.

Graeff, Shaw, Moylan, Charles E., Jr. (Senior Judge, Specially Assigned),

JJ.

Opinion by Moylan, J.

Pursuant to Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal Filed: February 1, 2022 Materials Act (§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State Government Article) this document is authentic.

2022-02-01 12:05-05:00

Suzanne C. Johnson, Clerk The subject is contributory negligence. The specific focus is on the difference,

qualitative rather than quantitative, between the evidentiary predicate that requires a

judicial ruling of contributory negligence, as a matter of law, and the evidentiary predicate

that permits a jury finding of contributory negligence, as a matter of fact. This difference

is not simply one between more or less of the same thing. Quantity is not the issue. Nor is

the difference one between an adequate case of contributory negligence and a stronger,

perhaps much stronger, case. The difference is rather between a case of contributory

negligence built on disputed evidence and one built on undisputed evidence. Quantity is

not the differentiating factor. Even a mountain of evidence may be disputed; a molehill of

evidence may be undisputed. The difference is that the resolution of the dispute, large or

small, requires factfinding. Undisputed evidence, by contrast, requires no factfinding.

The Role Of Inference; The Risk Of Non-Persuasion

A judge, as legal referee, does not engage in factfinding. In cases of undisputed

evidence, the judge need not do so, for there are no disputes to be resolved. For some

rulings as a matter of law, moreover, even apparent disputes may sometimes be finessed,

as the judge accepts as fact that version of the evidence most favorable to the non-moving

party. Such a version of the evidence is something not in dispute. The evidence, as it

indisputably exists or is presumed to exist, either is or is not contributory negligence, as a

matter of law. The judge, therefore, may make a legal decision as to it by way of Summary

Judgment or a judgment in the course of the trial or a judgment N.O.V. without engaging in factfinding. Appellate review, moreover, is not deferential. Where things are determined

as a matter of law, the appellate court will make its own legal determination, de novo.

In the case of disputed evidence, on the other hand, factfinders play a very different

role. Factfinders exist for the very purpose of resolving disputes. Unlike the judge-as-legal-

referee, the factfinders have wider discretionary options. Appellate review, moreover, will

be very deferential to almost anything that the factfinders decide, just as it will be

deferential to the trial judge’s legal decision to let issues go to the factfinders. The

factfinders may be persuaded to find in one direction or in the other by the parties to the

case. That burden of persuasion, to whomever it belongs, incurs the risk of non-persuasion.

Figuring prominently in the exercise of persuasion, along with such factors as the

credibility of witnesses and the logical cogency of the competing propositions, is the

phenomenon of drawing inferences. The factfinder may be persuaded that from the

existence of Fact A, one may infer the existence of Fact B, the ultimate fact itself. It is here,

however, that the risk of non-persuasion looms large. Inferences may be drawn, but they

may also be declined. Inferences may be contradicted by counter-inferences. This

inferential swirl and counter-swirl is a world wherein the judge-as-legal-referee does not

operate. The judge’s rulings are existential; the jury’s findings, on the other hand, may be

inferential. For the judge, it is not a case of “may be;” it is a case of “is” or “is not.” The

jury is not so limited.

In the case before us, the sole question is, “Was the existence of contributory

negligence, yea or nay, a question of law for the judge or a question of fact for the jury?”

2 The question might also be phrased, “Was there a genuine dispute as to a material fact?”

Was it a case for the judge? Or was it a case for the jury?

The Case At Hand

At approximately 9:00 P.M. on September 21, 2016, the plaintiff-appellant, Mrs.

Jacqueline Cador (the plaintiff), along with her husband and her daughter, went shopping

in a grocery store owned and operated by the defendant-appellee, Yes Organic Market

Hyattsville Inc. (the Market). The Market was still open, but it was approaching closing

time. While shopping, the plaintiff slipped and fell on a portion of the floor that had recently

been mopped by an employee of the Market. The plaintiff required partial knee

replacement surgery.

In the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County, the plaintiff sued the Market for

negligence. The Market filed a motion for Summary Judgment based on the affirmative

defenses of both 1) contributory negligence and 2) the assumption of risk. On October 6,

2020, the trial judge granted the motion for Summary Judgment in favor of the Market on

both grounds. The plaintiff has filed the present appeal.

The motion for Summary Judgment was filed pursuant to Maryland Rule of

Procedure 2-501(f), which provides in pertinent part:

The court shall enter judgment in favor of or against the moving party if the motion and response show that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and that the party in whose favor judgment is entered is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. (Emphasis supplied.)

What Is A “Dispute”?

3 A brief word is in order about the “genuine dispute” as to a “material fact” that will

defeat Summary Judgment. The notion of a “dispute” is not limited to a testimonial dispute

about the very physical existence of a predicate fact in order to launch a possible inference.

It may also be a “dispute” about the inferential process itself. Even from an undisputed

predicate fact, shall a permissible inference be drawn or shall it be declined? Which of

several possibly contradictory inferences shall be drawn? There are obviously critically

important “disputes” about which inferences to draw or to decline. Such “disputes”, as Rule

2-501(f) clearly states, are not matters to be resolved by Summary Judgment.

Standard Of Review

In Matthews v. Cassidy Turley Maryland, Inc., 435 Md.

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