Crawford v. Shop Rite Supermarket Inc.

40 Pa. D. & C.4th 85, 1998 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 21
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County
DecidedOctober 27, 1998
Docketno. 0428
StatusPublished

This text of 40 Pa. D. & C.4th 85 (Crawford v. Shop Rite Supermarket Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crawford v. Shop Rite Supermarket Inc., 40 Pa. D. & C.4th 85, 1998 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 21 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1998).

Opinion

ACKERMAN, J.,

This is an appeal by the plaintiffs from this court’s order of October 2, 1998, granting defendant Shop Rite Supermarket Inc.’s motion for summary judgment and dismissing plaintiffs’ action with prejudice.

The essential facts underlying this case are not in dispute.

The state of the record at the entry of summary judgment was clear to the effect that the defendant, Shop Rite Supermarket Inc., was not the owner nor in control of the premises where the plaintiff, Keith Crawford, had allegedly been injured.

The basic issue involved in this case and underlying the granting of summary judgment was whether this court erred in denying plaintiffs’ prior petition for leave [87]*87to amend their complaint “correcting the name of defendant from ‘Shop Rite Supermarket Inc.’ to ‘Trio Food Centers Inc. d/b/a Shop Rite Supermarket t/a Shop-Rite.’ ”

The petition to amend was filed on May 4, 1998, admittedly five months and seven days after the two-year statute of limitations had expired on the alleged incident of November 28, 1995.

At the time of the filing of the plaintiffs’ complaint on August 8, 1996, the supermarket located at 301 West Chelten Avenue, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, (where plaintiff allegedly fell) was operated, possessed and maintained by Trio Food Centers Inc. Trio Food Centers Inc. is a Pennsylvania corporation and is a member of a cooperative known as Wakefern Food Corporation. (See affidavit of Rafael Lissack, president of Trio Food Centers Inc., which is attached as exhibit “A” to defendant’s response for leave to amend complaint.) As a member of the cooperative known as Wake-fern Food Corporation, Trio Food Centers Inc. trades under the name “ShopRite.” Other individually owned corporations who are members of the cooperative also trade under the name “ShopRite.”

Trio Food Centers Inc. is a Pennsylvania corporation, which is located and registered to do business in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, and was so licensed and registered on the date of the alleged accident, November 28, 1995. At all times since February 1980, Trio Food Centers Inc. was a tenant at 301 West Chelten Avenue, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and operated, controlled and maintained the supermarket located at that address. See exhibit “A” attached to defendant’s re[88]*88sponse for leave to amend complaint and exhibit “1” which is attached to exhibit “A.”

Shop Rite Supermarket Inc., the defendant herein, is a New Jersey corporation. Shop Rite Supermarket Inc. also operates a number of retail supermarkets in a number of states, including New Jersey and Pennsylvania. Shop Rite Supermarket Inc. is also a member of Wakefem Food Corporation and, as such, operates its retail supermarkets as “ShopRite” supermarkets. Shop Rite Supermarket Inc. did not operate the supermarket located at 301 West Chelten Avenue, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on November 28, 1995, or at anytime either before or after November 28,1995. Shop Rite Supermarket Inc. is a separate and distinct corporation from Trio Food Centers Inc. The corporate headquarters and principal place of business of Shop Rite Supermarket Inc. is Edison, New Jersey. As admitted by plaintiffs in their motion for leave to amend, the corporate address of Trio Food Centers Inc. is 5 East Wynnewood Road, Wynnewood, Pennsylvania.

Thus, two distinct entities existed when the complaint was filed and plaintiffs brought suit against the wrong party and sought after the statute of limitations had run to substitute the correct party.

In the instant matter, following the alleged incident, plaintiffs’ counsel began settlement negotiations with Risk Services Inc. Risk Services Inc. is the self-insured administrator for members of the cooperative known as Wakefern Food Corporation. As such, Risk Services Inc. represents members of the cooperative who trade as “ShopRite.” Plaintiffs claim that written correspondence from Risk Services Inc. indicates that the adjusters [89]*89were representing ShopRite supermarkets. However, an examination of the correspondence attached by plaintiffs to their motion for leave to amend reveals that the insured is referred to simply by its trade name, “ShopRite.” Plaintiffs have not produced any documents that show that Risk Services represented that the defendant operated the involved store, nor have plaintiffs claimed that their counsel asked any adjuster from Risk Services Inc., who the entity was that operated the supermarket located at 301 West Chelten Avenue, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

On August 8,1996, plaintiffs filed a civil action complaint in Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas. Within the complaint, plaintiffs claim that the supermarket located at 301 West Chelten Avenue was owned, possessed and controlled by Shop Rite Supermarket Inc. Within two weeks of filing the complaint, plaintiffs served the complaint at 301 West Chelten Avenue and at CT Corporation at 1635 Market Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. As admitted by plaintiffs within their motion for leave to amend, Shop Rite Supermarket Inc. has an address for service, care of CT Corporation.

On or about September 11,1996,more than 14months before the expiration of the statute of limitations, defendant filed an answer with new matter to plaintiffs’ complaint.1 In response to allegations contained within the complaint, Shop Rite Supermarket Inc. denied having ever conducted business at 301 West Chelten Avenue, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and denied having ever owned, possessed or controlled the property located [90]*90at 301 West Chelten Avenue, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.2 Plaintiffs filed an answer to the defendant’s new matter on October 7,1996. At no time after defendant’s answer to the complaint was filed, did plaintiffs’ counsel ask defense counsel who owned and/or operated the supermarket located at 301 West Chelten Avenue, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on the date of the alleged incident. Similarly, at no time before April 22, 1998, almost five months after the expiration of the statute of limitations did plaintiffs’ counsel request that the parties sign a stipulation adding the entity that possessed and operated the supermarket located at 301 West Chelten Avenue, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, as a defendant.

Although plaintiffs served defense counsel with a request for production of documents on or about December 1996, the discovery request did not seek production of documents relating to the ownership or operation of the supermarket located at 301 West Chelten Avenue in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Moreover, even though defense counsel never provided a formal response to the request for production of documents, all discoverable documents responsive to the request for production of documents were provided to plaintiffs’ counsel as they were received by defendant’s counsel.

Plaintiffs’ counsel also neglected to inform the court that plaintiffs responded to the defendant’s request for production in the same manner that the defendant responded to plaintiffs’ request for documents. Plaintiffs’ counsel wrote on December 4, 1996, in the same letter [91]*91in which the plaintiffs enclosed their request for production of documents, “Please be advised that in lieu of a formal response to defendant’s request for production of documents, we enclose all discoverable documents in our file.”

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Bluebook (online)
40 Pa. D. & C.4th 85, 1998 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crawford-v-shop-rite-supermarket-inc-pactcomplphilad-1998.