Davis v. Home Depot USA, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedNovember 3, 2022
Docket1:21-cv-00348
StatusUnknown

This text of Davis v. Home Depot USA, Inc. (Davis v. Home Depot USA, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis v. Home Depot USA, Inc., (D. Md. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF MARYLAND

GLORIA DAVIS,

v. Civil Action No. CCB-21-348

HOME DEPOT U.S.A., INC.

MEMORANDUM

The defendant Home Depot U.S.A., Inc., moves for summary judgment in this single-count negligence case filed by the plaintiff, Gloria Davis. (ECF 34, Def.’s Mot. for Summ. J.). The motion is fully briefed, and no oral argument is necessary. See Local Rule 105.6. For the following reasons, the court will Deny the motion. BACKGROUND Home Depot is a multinational home improvement retailer known for helping “Doers Get More Done.”1 This case involves an incident that occurred when one such “Doer,” Gloria Davis, visited the store to collect a set of pre-ordered cabinets, but left with a concussion after a box of moldings fell and struck her head. Ms. Davis sued Home Depot for negligence. With discovery now complete, Home Depot moves for summary judgment. An account of the incident follows. On December 7, 2018, Gloria Davis and her husband, Ronald Davis, traveled to a Home Depot in Glen Burnie, Maryland, to pick up a set of kitchen cabinets they had pre-ordered. (ECF 41-2 at 43:12-14, 44:13-16, Gloria Davis Dep.). The Davis’s parked their pickup truck in a designated loading zone before entering the store. (Id. at 46:11-21). Once inside, the Davis’s asked

1 The Home is Where Our Story Begins, Home Depot, https://corporate.homedepot.com/page/home-where-our-story-begins. a customer service agent for help loading the pre-ordered cabinets into their vehicle. (Id. at 47:6- 14). Two Home Depot employees, Jonathan Boyd and Michael Seager, were dispatched to help load the Davis’s cabinets into a trailer hitched to the back of the Davis’s pickup truck. (ECF 41-4

at 11:12-16, 12:13-16, Jonathan Boyd Dep.). Both Mr. Boyd and Mr. Seager were employed at Home Depot as “Pro-Loaders,” (id. at 8:19-20), a position dedicated to helping customers who need assistance loading a “truck, flatbed, trailer or shop van” and staffed by employees with “the skills, equipment and knowhow to take loading concerns off [customers’] hands.”2 The Home Depot employees delivered the Davis’s order to the loading zone in boxes stacked on three large pallets. (ECF 41-2 at 47:11-12). A thick layer of plastic shrink wrap secured the boxes on each pallet. (Id.). Before loading the order into the Davis’s trailer, the employees deposited the pallets, one at a time, at the trailer’s base, where Mr. Davis had positioned a ramp leading into the trailer to facilitate the loading process. (See generally ECF 34 Ex. C, CCTV Exterior Right).

Loading the first pallet went off without a hitch. Using a utility cart, a Home Depot employee delivered the first pallet to the base of the ramp leading to the Davis’s trailer. (Id. at 10:30-10:45). At this point, Mr. Boyd began cutting away the shrink wrap securing the boxes on the pallet, but he left a portion wrapped around the upper level of the load to hold the boxes in place. (Id. at 11:00-11:40). With the shrink wrap partially undone, Mr. Boyd and Mr. Davis started removing boxes from the load while the remaining shrink wrap continued to secure it. First, Mr. Davis removed a long, rectangular box bound vertically to the order. (Id. at 12:18-12:30). Next, Mr. Boyd set aside another large rectangular box from the side of the stack. (Id. at 12:38-12:50).

2 Pro Loaders, Home Depot, https://www.homedepot.com/c/proloaders. With these boxes safely unpacked, Mr. Davis circled the pallet’s perimeter, positioning himself on the parking lot side of the pallet across from Mr. Boyd who remained on the store side. (Id. at 13:00-13:20). The truck occupied the side of the pallet to Mr. Davis’s right, and he had just traversed the side to his left, giving Mr. Davis and Mr. Boyd assurance that no bystanders were

close enough to be struck by a falling box. (Id.). Still, Mr. Boyd checked the truck-side of the pallet and appeared to be communicating with Mr. Davis as they prepared to sever the shrink wrap. (Id. at 13:15-13:25). Mr. Boyd also placed a reinforcing hand on the upper portion of the stack to hold it steady as Mr. Davis prepared to finish removing the shrink wrap. (Id. at 13:20-13:28). Only at this point did Mr. Davis carefully undo the final piece of shrink wrap holding the load together. (Id. at 13:30-13:45). Once he did, the pair methodically carried the boxes into the trailer without incident. (Id. at 15:30-20:03). Things did not go as well with the second pallet. As with the first pallet, the Home Depot employees delivered the second pallet to the base of the ramp leading to the Davis’s trailer. (Id. at 20:28-20:54). Again, the shrink wrap was already partially opened, with only a final upper portion

remaining connected and holding the stack of boxes in place. (Id.). This time, however, Mr. Boyd and Mr. Davis did not secure the pallet’s perimeter before severing the shrink wrap. (Id. at 20:50- 21:08). Instead, with Mr. Davis behind him, Mr. Boyd casually split the final strand of shrink wrap without conducting a safety check of any of the pallet’s sides or using a hand to hold the uppermost boxes in place. (Id.). As he did this, Ms. Davis was just a few feet to his right verifying SKU’s on her order from the store-side of the stack and directly in the zone of danger surrounding the pallet. (Id.). As soon as Mr. Boyd broke the shrink wrap seal, a long rectangular box filled with moldings, which had been tied vertically at the top of the parking lot side of the stack, fell to the store side, descending across the length of the pallet and landing on Ms. Davis’s head. (Id. at 20:59-21:08).3 When the box connected with Ms. Davis’s head, she cried out in pain and immediately retreated to the side of her truck where her husband tended to her as the Home Depot employees

continued loading the trailer. (Id. at 21:18-25:21; ECF 41-2 at 49:15). Once the cabinets were fully loaded, Mr. Davis brought his wife to a WiseCare Urgent Care Center, where they were redirected to the emergency room at University of Maryland Baltimore Washington Medical Center because the WiseCare clinic did not treat head injuries. (ECF 41-2 at 52:10-18, 79:12-15). At Baltimore Washington, Ms. Davis received a CT scan and was diagnosed with a concussion and a traumatic brain injury. (Id. at 81:1-5). Ms. Davis sued Home Depot in February 2021, alleging a single count of negligence and seeking compensation for her pain and suffering, medical expenses, and lost time at work. (ECF 1, Compl.). She amended her complaint one month later. (ECF 6, Am. Compl.). The parties conducted discovery, including interrogatories, depositions, and file production that included

Home Depot CCTV camera footage of the incident. With discovery complete, Home Depot now moves for summary judgment. (ECF 34). For the following reasons, the court will Deny the motion. LEGAL STANDARD Home Depot moves for summary judgment under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56. Summary judgment is proper only “if the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any

3 Ms. Davis testified in her deposition that she was checking the SKU’s on her order at the instruction of Home Depot employees. (ECF 41-2 at 47:18-48:11). Home Depot disputes this. (ECF 34-2 at 3 n.1, Def.’s Mem. in Supp. of Mot. for Summ. J.). The parties agree, however, that Home Depot did not specifically instruct her to verify the SKU’s while the boxes were still on the pallet. (ECF 41-2 at 62:9-21). material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). “A dispute is genuine if ‘a reasonable jury could return a verdict for the nonmoving party.’” Libertarian Party of Va. v.

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Davis v. Home Depot USA, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-home-depot-usa-inc-mdd-2022.