Coop v. Lawrence Operations LLC

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Arkansas
DecidedAugust 30, 2021
Docket3:19-cv-00254
StatusUnknown

This text of Coop v. Lawrence Operations LLC (Coop v. Lawrence Operations LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coop v. Lawrence Operations LLC, (E.D. Ark. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF ARKANSAS NORTHERN DIVISION

LINDA COOP PLAINTIFF

v. Case No.: 3:19-cv-254-LPR

LAWRENCE OPERATIONS, LLC DEFENDANT

ORDER

This is a trip and fall case. Ms. Coop fell in the parking lot of Walnut Ridge Nursing and Rehabilitation Center in November of 2016. She and her husband were going there to visit her brother. The parking lot was made of concrete slabs. It had numerous cracks and patches. Ms. Coop fell where a portion of a concrete slab had settled, resulting in a small drop-off from the adjacent concrete slab. A picture is worth a thousand words. The location of the fall is memorialized in Exhibits 1, 2, and 3 to Ms. Coop’s deposition.1 Ms. Coop brought the instant negligence action against Defendant Lawrence Operations, LLC because she believed that (1) it was the entity that owned and operated Walnut Ridge at the time of her fall, and (2) its negligence was the cause of her fall.2 Primarily, Ms. Coop alleged that Lawrence Operations, LLC failed to maintain the parking lot in a reasonable and safe condition and failed to warn visitors of the danger and potential harm posed by the condition of the parking lot.3 Pending before the Court are two motions. The first is Ms. Coop’s Motion for Leave to File an Amended Complaint (“Motion to Amend”).4 The proposed amendment only has one

1 Exs. 1, 2, 3 to Ex. A to Statement of Facts (Doc. 16-1) at 18–20. 2 Pl.’s Compl. (Doc. 2) ¶¶ 2, 9. 3 Id. ¶ 9. 4 Pl.’s Mot. to Amend (Doc. 12). purpose: to add Lawrence-Progressive Eldercare Services, Inc. as a second defendant in this case.5 The impetus for the addition appears to have been Defendant Lawrence Operations, LLC’s recent disclosure that it transferred ownership and operation of the nursing home to Lawrence- Progressive Eldercare Services, Inc. in September of 2015.6 The proposed amendment does not drop Lawrence Operations, LLC as a Defendant because Plaintiff feels that she cannot trust

Lawrence Operations, LLC’s representations as to which entity was the true owner and operator of Walnut Ridge on the day Ms. Coop fell.7 The second motion is Lawrence Operations, LLC’s Motion for Summary Judgment.8 In addition to arguing that it did not own or operate Walnut Ridge on the day Ms. Coop fell, Lawrence Operations, LLC argues that the condition of the parking lot where Ms. Coop fell—specifically, the settled slab and resulting small drop-off—was open and obvious.9 According to Lawrence Operations, LLC, this precludes a finding that it acted negligently toward Ms. Coop. Summary Judgment Facts

On November 26, 2016, Ms. Coop and her husband went to Walnut Ridge, a nursing home operated by Lawrence-Progressive Eldercare Services, Inc.10 The Coops intended to visit Ms. Coop’s brother, who had been a resident of Walnut Ridge for seven or eight years, to deliver Christmas decorations.11 Ms. Coop had previously visited her brother at Walnut Ridge many times.12

5 Compare Pl.’s Compl. (Doc. 2), with Ex. E to Pl.’s Mot. to Amend (Doc. 12-5). 6 Pl.’s Mot. to Amend (Doc. 12) ¶ 6. 7 August 20, 2021 Hr’g Tr. at 18; see also supra note 5. 8 Def.’s Mot. for Summ. J. (Doc. 14). 9 Id. ¶¶ 6, 7. 10 Statement of Facts (Doc. 16) ¶ 1, 21. 11 Ex. A (Coop Depo.) to Statement of Facts (Doc. 16-1) at 5:16–23, 7:9–14. 12 Id. at 5:24–6:2. The Coops parked in a Walnut Ridge parking lot that sits between a main road and an entrance to the facility.13 The main road is south of the parking lot.14 The facility entrance is north of the parking lot.15 The parking lot has two rows, one close to the facility on the north side and the other close to the main road on the south side.16 The parking lot surface is made of concrete slabs.17 Some of the slabs have settled, resulting in a fair number of cracks, crevices, and height

differentials between or within the slabs.18 Mr. Coop drove that day.19 The Coops arrived just after lunchtime.20 The weather was clear.21 After Mr. Coop parked in a spot on the south side of the parking lot (near the main road), he and Ms. Coop got out of the car.22 Mr. Coop then walked across the parking lot towards the facility entrance while Ms. Coop gathered some things out of the car.23 Mr. Coop eventually stopped near the front door at the facility entrance and waited on Ms. Coop to finish at the car so he could remotely lock the car.24 Ms. Coop, while looking at Mr. Coop, started walking towards the entrance.25 Ms. Coop took the straightest line to reach the entrance.26 While walking, Ms. Coop fell in the parking lot.27

13 Statement of Facts (Doc. 16) ¶ 2. 14 Id. ¶ 2. 15 Id. 16 Id. ¶ 3. 17 Ex. 1 to Ex. A (Coop Depo.) to Statement of Facts (Doc. 16-1) at 18. 18 Id.; see also Exs. 1–3, 5–8, to Ex. A to Statement of Facts (Doc. 16-1) at 18–20, 22–25. 19 Ex. A (Coop Depo.) to Statement of Facts (Doc. 16-1) at 7:1. 20 Id. at 13:12–13. 21 Id. at 13:25–14:1. 22 Statement of Facts (Doc. 16) ¶ 7; Id. at 7:1, 12:20–25. 23 Ex. A (Coop Depo.) to Statement of Facts (Doc. 16-1) at 8:22–9:4. 24 Id. at 10:8–10, 12:20–25. 25 Id. at 12:24–25. 26 Id. at 25:4–11. 27 Id. at 13:1–3. Ms. Coop testified that “it felt like I stepped in a hole” and that “it felt like . . . someone grabbed my ankles and just twisted them and threw me down . . . .”28 The location of the fall can be readily seen in Exhibits 1, 2, and 3 to Ms. Coop’s deposition.29 It is marked by an “x” in Exhibits 1 and 3.30 It is obvious that Ms. Coop did not step in a hole. Instead, Ms. Coop fell in an area where a large concrete slab had settled.31 The settling resulted in a small height differential between two

slabs. Photographic evidence indicates that some parts of the parking lot were not in prime condition.32 The concrete slab on which Ms. Coop fell shows significant settling over a distance of the parking lot greater than one parking spot.33 Ms. Coop testified that the parking lot had multiple areas where concrete slabs had settled.34 Ms. Coop testified that, before the day in question, she knew the parking lot had multiple patches addressing surface issues.35 Ms. Coop said that “if you’re looking at [the parking lot],” the condition of the parking lot “would be apparent.”36 As to the slab where Ms. Coop fell, she testified that “if you look at it from one direction, it’s apparent. If you’re not looking for it, which of course I wasn’t, and you’re just walking, it probably wouldn’t be apparent unless you’re just watching for something like that.”37

28 Id. 29 Exs. 1, 2, 3 to Ex. A to Statement of Facts (Doc. 16-1) at 18–20. 30 Ex. A (Coop Depo.) to Statement of Facts (Doc. 16-1) at 20:13–16 (acknowledging that an “x” on the photographs comprising Exhibit 1 to her deposition denotes the place where she fell; Exs. 1, 3 to Ex. A to Statement of Facts (Doc. 16-1) at 18, 20. 31 Ex. 1 to Ex. A to Statement of Facts (Doc. 16-1) at 18. 32 Exs. 1–3, 5–8 to Ex. A to Statement of Facts (Doc. 16-1) at 18–20, 22–25. 33 Ex. 1 to Ex. A (Coop Depo.) to Statement of Facts (Doc. 16-1) at 18. 34 Ex. A (Coop Depo.) to Statement of Facts (Doc. 16-1) 21:7–12. 35 Id. at 21:4–23. 36 Id. at 21:24–22:5. 37 Id. In addition, Ms. Coop testified that nothing prevented her from walking around the concrete slab where she fell (or the other settled slabs) in order to access the facility entrance.38 Procedural History Relevant to the Motion to Amend Confusion over who owned and operated Walnut Ridge at the time Ms. Coop fell takes center stage in Ms. Coop’s Motion to Amend. Spoiler alert. It turns out that Lawrence-Progressive

Eldercare Services, Inc. (not Defendant Lawrence Operations, LLC) owned and operated Walnut Ridge on the day in question. That’s why Ms. Coop now seeks to add Lawrence-Progressive Eldercare Services, Inc. as a Defendant. The Court’s analysis of the propriety of Ms. Coop’s Motion to Amend turns in large part on the parties’ actions during the course of litigation.

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Coop v. Lawrence Operations LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coop-v-lawrence-operations-llc-ared-2021.