Darryl Clark v. Darden Restaurants Inc

613 F. App'x 101
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMay 27, 2015
Docket14-2810
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 613 F. App'x 101 (Darryl Clark v. Darden Restaurants Inc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Darryl Clark v. Darden Restaurants Inc, 613 F. App'x 101 (3d Cir. 2015).

Opinion

OPINION *

AMBRO, Circuit Judge.

“Sea food differently” Red Lobster advertises in its play on words. Appellee Darryl Clark forever will. He was dining with a friend at the Lawrenceville, New Jersey Red Lobster when, during the course of their meal, a server dropped a plate on their table — causing the plate to shatter. Pieces of the plate punctured Clark’s eyes. The physician who later operated on his eyes opined that a “glass foreign body” had damaged his corneas. Clark sued Red Lobster for negligence. 1

The evidence against the restaurant was damning. The server who dropped the plate admitted that it “felt a little slippery” and “a little greasy,” and that he didn’t handle it properly. With the evidence largely on his side, Clark moved for summary judgment (on liability only), invoking the familiar tort doctrine of res ipsa loqui-tur (“the thing speaks for itself’) reserved for cases where a factfinder can infer negligence from the incident itself.

Not unexpectedly, the District Court granted Clark’s motion. In doing so, it rejected outright Red Lobster’s suggestion, unsupported by evidence, that the dropped plate was “only an accident.” The Court thought it “significantly more probable than not” that the server’s mishap was a result of not exercising the appropriate level of care. See Clark v. Darden Restaurants, Inc., No. 11-1056, 2013 WL 104052, at *4 (D.N.J. Jan. 8, 2013). Thus, in light of the “unrebutted, competent evidence that the accident resulted solely from [the server’s] conduct,” id., it concluded that Red Lobster breached the duty it owed to Clark and was liable for the injuries he sustained on its premises. Id. The Court also suggested that Clark “demonstrated that there is an absence of genuine dispute to the claim that the broken plate caused [Clark’s] eye injuries.” Id. at *5.

. The extent of damages was the sole issue left for trial. The jury returned a $337,017 verdict in favor of Clark. Red Lobster appeals both the District Court’s grant of summary judgment and a number of perceived mishaps at trial. 2 It takes issue with: (1) the Court’s application of *103 res ipsa loquitur; (2) its jury charge on the issue of damages; and (3) its (purported) decision to allow Clark to introduce evidence of his outstanding student loan debt as a measure of recoverable damages. Addressing each argument in turn, we find none persuasive.

Under the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur, a jury may infer that the defendant is liable for negligence where (1) the incident at issue ordinarily shows negligence, (2) the cause of the plaintiffs injury was within the defendant’s exclusive control, and (3) there is no indication that the plaintiff was at fault for- his injuries. See Bornstein v. Metro. Bottling Co., 26 N.J. 263, 139 A.2d 404, 408 (1958). Red Lobster concedes that the latter two elements are satisfied, but contends that Clark offered “no evidence” that the incident in question' — -a dropped plate on a customer’s table — “bespeak[s] negligence.” Red Lobster Br. 10-11. In its view, an incident connotes negligence only where the plaintiff offers evidence that the injuries incurred couldn’t have occurred unthout negligence. See id. at 10 (arguing that Clark needed to, but didn’t, “put forth evidence that a plate cannot slip from a server’s hand without negligence”). And because Clark didn’t offer any evidence to that effect, the District Court erred in invoking the doctrine.

Red Lobster’s argument might have some force were its initial premise correct — that an incident “ordinarily bespeaks [ ] negligence” only where it couldn’t have occurred absent negligence. But the premise fails. An incident ordinarily appears negligent where the probabilities fall in favor of negligence such that an inference of it is appropriate. See Myrlak v. Port Auth. of N.Y. & N.J., 157 N.J. 84, 723 A.2d 45, 51 (1999) (“res ipsa is available if it is more probable than not that the defendant has been negligent”) (citation omitted). Here the probabilities clearly do, as no reasonable, similarly situated server should have handled the plate as the server did here. See Clark, 2013 WL 104052, at *4 (highlighting the server’s testimony that “the plate felt ‘a little slippery’ and ‘a little greasy’ that the server “had only dropped objects less than ten times in his five years of experience”; and that “he had never dropped a plate .on a table or ever seen another server drop something on a patron’s table”).

-Failing that, Red Lobster offers a second reason to reverse: that the District Court misapprehended the effect of holding that the three-pronged res ipsa loqui-tur test had been satisfied. See Red Lobster Br. 11 (arguing that the District Court incorrectly held that the application of the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur established Red Lobster’s “negligence as a matter of law”). According to Red Lobster, the doctrine merely “permits an inference of negligence to be made by a jury that can satisfy a plaintiffs burden of proof and enable [him or her] to survive a motion to dismiss at the close of [his or her] case.” Id. It does not require the more aggressive measure of taking the issue of negligence away from the jury.

Although Red Lobster’s statement of the law is correct, it paints but a partial picture. It neglects to mention that, to survive a motion for summary judgment, a defendant must produce evidence to rebut an inference of negligence — which Red Lobster did not do here. Red Lobster’s only rejoinder to the evidence Clark presented was that the server could have accidentally rather than negligently dropped the plate. But it is axiomatic that the “mere denial of negligence, in the face of a plaintiffs prima face case,” Mangual v. Berezinsky, 428 N.J.Super. 299, 53 A.3d 664, 672 (2012), cannot defeat a summary judgment motion — especially where, as *104 here, Clark “put forth ample uncontrovert-ed evidence demonstrating that [he] sustained injuries because of [the server’s] breach of the duty of care,” Clark, 2013 WL 104052, at *5. 3

We next address the arguments Red Lobster raises regarding the Court’s instruction to the jury on the issue of damages and that Clark was allowed to introduce evidence regarding his unpaid student loans. As to the former, Red Lobster argues that the Court’s “jury charge regarding damages had the capacity to unfairly influence the jury.” Red Lobster Br. 14. Specifically, it says that the following passage of the charge was “highly prejudicial” because this “removed the issue of proximate cause as to damages from the per view [sic ] of the jury,”

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613 F. App'x 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/darryl-clark-v-darden-restaurants-inc-ca3-2015.