Colwell v. Bob & Shawn Ents., L.L.C.

2026 Ohio 976
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 23, 2026
DocketCA2024-11-131
StatusPublished

This text of 2026 Ohio 976 (Colwell v. Bob & Shawn Ents., L.L.C.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Colwell v. Bob & Shawn Ents., L.L.C., 2026 Ohio 976 (Ohio Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

[Cite as Colwell v. Bob & Shawn Ents., L.L.C., 2026-Ohio-976.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS

TWELFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT OF OHIO

BUTLER COUNTY

TIFFANY COLWELL, :

Appellant, : CASE NO. CA2024-11-131

: OPINION AND - vs - JUDGMENT ENTRY : 3/23/2026

BOB & SHAWN ENTERPRISES LLC, : et al., : Appellees.

CIVIL APPEAL FROM BUTLER COUNTY COURT OF COMMON PLEAS Case No. CV 2023-09-1935

O'Connor, Acciani & Levy, LPA, and Kory A. Veletean, for appellant.

Davidson Law Offices Co., LPA, and David T. Davidson, for appellees.

____________ OPINION

BYRNE, P.J.

{¶ 1} Tiffany Colwell appeals the decision of the Butler County Court of Common

Pleas, General Division, granting summary judgment to Bob & Shawn Enterprises, LLC,

dba Our Place Saloon, on Colwell's negligence claim. The common pleas court found that

Colwell's injury resulting from her being hit in the face by a flying umbrella was, as a Butler CA2024-11-131

matter of law, the result of an unforeseeable "act of God."1 For the reasons outlined below,

we reverse and remand this matter to the common pleas court for further proceedings.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

A. Robert King's Businesses

{¶ 2} Robert King owns three limited liability companies that each operate local

restaurant/bar establishments: (1) Neighbors Sports Grill, LLC operates "Neighbors

Sports Grill" in Trenton, Butler County, Ohio; (2) Doc's Place Pub 1, LLC operates "Doc's

Place Pub" in Lebanon, Warren County, Ohio; and (3) Bob & Shawn Enterprises, LLC

operates "Our Place Saloon" in Trenton, Butler County, Ohio. We will refer to Bob &

Shawn Enterprises, LLC and "Our Place Saloon" collectively as "the Saloon".

B. The Umbrella Incident

{¶ 3} Tiffany Colwell was a regular patron of the Saloon. On October 10, 2021,

Colwell went to the Saloon to watch a football game with friends. Once there, and while

seated at a table on the bar's outdoor patio, a sudden wind dislodged her table's open

umbrella from its pedestal base.2 The wind lifted the umbrella up from its pedestal base

and through a center hole in the table. Upon rising above the table, the umbrella was

blown sideways, striking Colwell in the face and breaking her nose. This incident was

recorded on video, and still images taken from that video were introduced into the record.

Colwell received medical treatment for her injury.

C. Colwell's Lawsuit

{¶ 4} In September 2023, Colwell filed suit against the Saloon raising a single

1. Pursuant to Loc.R. 6(A), we sua sponte remove this appeal from the accelerated calendar for purposes of issuing this opinion.

2. At oral argument, it was suggested that there was an evidentiary dispute as to whether a pedestal base was in use for the umbrellas at the Saloon. The record does not support the existence of such a suggested dispute.

-2- Butler CA2024-11-131

claim of negligence.3 The parties took the depositions of Colwell and King. We will

summarize relevant testimony from those depositions.

1. Robert King's Testimony Concerning the Umbrella

{¶ 5} King testified that he purchased the Saloon in 2013. He installed the outdoor

patio in 2021, just a "few months" prior to the umbrella incident. The patio contained three

metal tables. Each table had an umbrella installed in a center hole. The umbrellas were

secured by a base that prevented back-and-forth movement, but not up-and-down

movement. On the day of the incident, the bases did not have screws or any other

features to secure the umbrellas in place, and they were not designed with such a feature.

{¶ 6} King testified that, typically, the three umbrellas would be brought inside at

the end of the business day. There was no employee policy or procedures at the Saloon

for removing umbrellas from the patio under certain weather conditions. Yet King testified

that it was "common sense" to him that if it was windy out, he should take the umbrellas

down to secure them.

2. Evidence Concerning Weather Conditions

{¶ 7} The summary judgment record is limited as to the weather conditions on the

day of the umbrella incident. King testified he did not know the exact temperature on

October 10, 2021. He recalled that it was sunny and nice enough for people to be sitting

outside, drinking. King also noted that when he observed security video from earlier that

day, "it was fine" but that the wind picked up suddenly. He thought that perhaps a weather

front was moving through. He had no idea as to what speed the wind was gusting that

day.

3. Within her complaint, Colwell also named "Good Times Great People, LLC" as a defendant. Colwell subsequently dismissed Good Time Great People, LLC as a defendant with prejudice, so Good Times Great People, LLC is not a party to this appeal.

-3- Butler CA2024-11-131

{¶ 8} Colwell testified that it was windy on the day of the umbrella incident, and

that it was windy when she sat down at the patio table. Prior to the incident, she noticed

the umbrella moving back and forth "a little bit" but it was not going up and down until a

"strong wind"4 caused the umbrella to dislodge from the table and strike her.

3. Summary Judgment Decision

{¶ 9} Following discovery, the Saloon moved for summary judgment. The Saloon

argued that it was not subject to liability as a matter of law because the umbrella incident

was an unforeseeable "act of God." After briefing, the common pleas court issued a

written decision granting the Saloon's summary judgment motion. The trial court first

noted that there was no testimony in King's deposition indicating any prior incidents of

umbrellas dislodging from the patio tables, and that Colwell also stated she had never

observed any problems with the umbrellas becoming dislodged. The court also found that

no expert testimony had been submitted indicating that the circumstances or placement

of the umbrellas were negligent and what reasonable steps should have been taken to

prevent the accident. Finally, the court determined that there was "zero evidence" that the

wind was "usually [sic] fast or heavy" on the day in question, October 10, 2021.5

Therefore, the trial court concluded that the proximate cause of the incident was an

unforeseeable wind gust, i.e., an "act of God," barring Colwell's claim as a matter of law.

{¶ 10} Colwell appealed, raising one assignment of error for review.

4. "Strong wind" was not Colwell's statement, but instead the characterization of the deposing attorney. However, Colwell agreed with the characterization. Colwell had previously described the conditions as "windy."

5. The court's full statement was, "There is zero evidence that the winds on October 10, 2021 were usually fast or heavy, and zero evidence that any of the umbrella/table combinations had had prior similar issues." (Emphasis added.) This is an awkward sentence as phrased. The court probably meant "unusually," rather than "usually." Or, if it used the word "usually" intentionally, it may have been stating that no evidence had been submitted to show that very strong wind gusts were a "usual" occurrence at the Saloon, making an incident like the one that occurred more foreseeable to the Saloon.

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2026 Ohio 976, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colwell-v-bob-shawn-ents-llc-ohioctapp-2026.