Cerquera v. Supervalue, Inc.

715 F. Supp. 2d 682, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 52761, 2010 WL 2163938
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedMay 25, 2010
Docket1:09-mj-00829
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 715 F. Supp. 2d 682 (Cerquera v. Supervalue, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cerquera v. Supervalue, Inc., 715 F. Supp. 2d 682, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 52761, 2010 WL 2163938 (E.D. Va. 2010).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

CLAUDE M. HILTON, District Judge.

This matter comes before the Court on Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment.

On May 8, 2009, Plaintiff filed a Complaint in the Circuit Court for the County of Fairfax. The Complaint asserts, among other things, that on or about Novembér 14, 2005, by reason of Defendants’ negligence, Plaintiff was caused to be injured when she slipped and fell in one of the aisles of a Shoppers Food & Pharmacy (“SFW”) store located on Little River Turnpike in Fairfax County, Virginia. On July 16, 2009, Defendants filed an Answer to the Complaint in the Circuit Court for the County of Fairfax and on July 25, 2009, Defendants timely removed the lawsuit to this Court.

Plaintiff entered into the SFW store for purposes of shopping. She was accompanied by her husband, Joel Soto-Rodriguez. She and her husband were at the store to buy sugar, and look at other things. Upon entering the store, they went immediately to the sugar aisle. She and her husband walked side by side up the sugar aisle until Plaintiff stopped at the place on the aisle where the sugar was located. At that point, she and her husband separated. Plaintiff does not recall whether she entered the aisle from the front of the store or the back, and does not know how long she was in the aisle prior to her fall.

Plaintiff stopped at the sugar area, picked up a bag and turned around to show her husband. As she was turning around she fell. As she was falling, she let go of the bag of sugar she was holding and it landed somewhere, but she does not know where. She is unsure of what caused her fall. There was sugar or flour on the floor and a piece of stick “like a sugar or a candy stick.” Plaintiff does not know if she stepped on the stick.

Prior to her fall, Plaintiff never saw anything on the floor. She also did not feel anything under her feet as she was walking in the aisle. Plaintiff does not remember whether she saw anything on the floor after she fell. At times, Plaintiff has claimed that she actually saw a white substance on the floor after her fall, and at other times she has testified that she was only told that there was a white substance. Of the three potential items on the floor either seen by Plaintiff or told to her by some other person, Plaintiff does not know which, if any, caused her to fall.

In addition, Plaintiff does not know, and is unable to give an estimate, how much *684 area the substance, which looked like flour or sugar, covered on the floor. Plaintiff also never felt the substance which was allegedly on the floor. Plaintiff does not know how the lollipop stick, or flour and/or sugar got on the floor. In terms of the location of her fall, Plaintiff believes it was in an area near the end of the sugar aisle closest to the back of the store, but she is not sure if she was completely out of the aisle when she fell.

After her fall, Oscar Zuniga, an employee of Defendants, assisted her to her feet along with the help of her husband. Mr. Zuniga then called a manager and got a chair in which Plaintiff could sit. Thereafter, Mr. Zuniga found a lollipop stick in the aisle where she had fallen and showed it to her and her husband.

Plaintiffs husband did not see his wife fall. He estimated that he and his wife were in the store seven to ten minutes from the time they walked in until the accident happened. According to Mr. Soto-Rodriguez, he and his wife entered the sugar aisle together. They entered from the end of the aisle that is closest to the front of the store and proceeded to walk towards the back. Near the back, Plaintiff stopped and obtained a bag of sugar. At that point, Mr. Soto-Rodriguez continued walking until he saw Mr. Zuniga looking at him. Mr. Zuniga yelled something to the effect of “Your wife,” and Mr. Soto-Rodriguez turned around and saw his wife on the floor. He estimated he was ten feet from her at that time.

Mr. Soto-Rodriguez recalled that there were other customers in the aisle when his wife fell, but the first employee to get to his wife was Mr. Zuniga. Thereafter, either Mr. Zuniga or a manager got a chair for his wife or had someone else get a chair, and the chair was placed outside the sugar aisle in the middle of the back aisle of the store. The chair was brought to the scene, and a female employee came to the area and gave the Plaintiff a pill. Mr. Soto-Rodriguez also began filling out a report. According to Mr. Soto-Rodriguez, while he was completing the report, Mr. Zuniga came from the aisle where the accident had occurred and brought him a lollipop stick. Mr. Soto-Rodriguez indicates that Mr. Zuniga gave him the stick and said, “Save this because you might need it.”

Plaintiff never told her husband that she slipped on the lollipop stick, and Mr. Soto-Rodriguez never saw the lollipop stick on the floor when he had walked through the aisle. When Mr. Soto-Rodriguez walked through the aisle where the accident happened, he felt something like sugar grain under his feet, but it was not a lot, and it was not visible. Mr. Soto-Rodriguez does not have any idea how the lollipop stick that was shown to him by Mr. Zuniga got on to the floor prior to his wife’s fall. Neither Plaintiff, nor her husband, had any conversation with any of the employees they encountered on the date of the accident which suggested how the lollipop stick or sugar and/or flour got on to the floor of the store prior to Plaintiffs fall, or how long either had been there prior to her fall.

At the time of the accident, Mamón Hakawati was an employee of Defendants and was working as the customer service manager. Mr. Hakawati first learned of the fall when Mr. Zuniga brought it to his attention. Mr. Hakawati offered assistance to the Plaintiff and brought her a chair. He made sure the Plaintiff was okay and then took a statement from her husband. Mr. Hakawati recalled that he had been in the area of the fall fifteen to twenty minutes before it happened. He did not see anything on the floor at that time.

At the time of the accident, Mr. Zuniga was an employee of SFW and worked in *685 the diary department of the store in question. According to Mr. Zuniga, he was assisting a customer with a question when he saw Plaintiff and her husband walking toward him. While talking to the customer he was helping, he saw Plaintiff fall. According to Mr. Zuniga, the fall occurred on the back aisle of the store near the dairy department. At the time, he was standing in that back aisle near the Plaintiff and her husband, and her husband was walking toward him from the direction of aisle 1. Prior to the fall, Mr. Zuniga had been checking a juice cooler to see what needed to be restocked. The juice cooler was located near the end of aisles 6, 7, and 8. Mr. Zuniga was walking from that area when the customer stopped to ask the question, which he had just begun answering when he saw the Plaintiff fall.

After seeing the fall, Mr. Zuniga ran to the Plaintiff and asked if she was okay. The customer he had been speaking to also came and wanted to move Plaintiff, but Mr. Zuniga instructed him not to do so. Mr. Zuniga then walked quickly to the front of the store and obtained a chair from the cafeteria. As he was returning to the scene, he told an employee at the front to page a manager. By the time he got back to Plaintiff, the manager, Mr. Hakawati, was present, as was another employee.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
715 F. Supp. 2d 682, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 52761, 2010 WL 2163938, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cerquera-v-supervalue-inc-vaed-2010.