Delima v. Wal-Mart Stores Arkansas, LLC

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Arkansas
DecidedDecember 21, 2018
Docket5:17-cv-05244
StatusUnknown

This text of Delima v. Wal-Mart Stores Arkansas, LLC (Delima v. Wal-Mart Stores Arkansas, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Delima v. Wal-Mart Stores Arkansas, LLC, (W.D. Ark. 2018).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT WESTERN DISTRICT OF ARKANSAS FAYETTEVILLE DIVISION KRYSTAL MEGAN DELIMA PLAINTIFF CASE NO. 5:17-cv-5244-TLB WAL-MART STORES ARKANSAS, LLC DEFENDANT

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER Currently before the Court are: e Defendant Wal-Mart Stores Arkansas, LLC’s (“Walmart”) Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. 44), Brief in Support (Doc. 45), and Statement of Facts (Doc. 46); Plaintiff Krystal Megan Delima’s Response in Opposition (Doc. 49), Brief in Support (Doc. 50), Statement of Facts (Doc. 54), and Statement of Disputed Facts (Doc. 55); and Walmart’s Reply (Doc. 56); e Ms. Delima’s Motion to Strike Uncertified Rough Draft Transcript of Her Deposition (Doc. 51) and Brief in Support (Doc. 60); and Walmart’s Response in Opposition (Doc. 64) and Brief in Support (Doc. 65); e Ms. Delima’s Motion to Strike Christopher Milam Affidavit (Doc. 53) and Brief in Support (Doc. 57); and Walmart’s Response in Opposition (Doc. 62) and Brief in Support (Doc. 63); e Ms. Delima’s Motion for Leave to File a Sur-Reply to Walmart’s Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. 68) and Brief in Support (Doc. 69); and Walmart’s Response in Opposition (Doc. 73) and Brief in Support (Doc. 74); and

e Ms. Delima’s Motion to Suppress All Parts of Her Own Deposition (Doc. 70) and Brief in Support (Doc. 71); and Walmart’s Response in Opposition (Doc. 75) and Brief in Support (Doc. 76). For the reasons explained below, these motions are all DENIED. |. BACKGROUND The arrival of the holiday season brings with it the lure of special bargains at big box retailers like Walmart. Ms. Delima attended one such sale at Walmart in Siloam

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Springs, Arkansas on November 27, 2014. She was particularly interested in purchasing two items: an iPad tablet and a Samsung Galaxy tablet. The sales on the iPad tablet began at 6:00 PM. Ms. Delima and her daughter arrived at the store and lined up in the designated lines that Walmart staff had created. She was able to purchase an iPad tablet without incident. By around 6:20 PM, Ms. Delima began to move towards the area where the Samsung Galaxy tablets were located. Because the sale on those tablets did not start until 8:00 PM, she was one of the first people to line up for that sale. As the sale drew closer, the crowd behind her grew extensively. Walmart associates and off-duty policemen helped direct customers and stood in front of the merchandise until shortly before the sale began. Approximately ten minutes before the sale began, Christopher Milam, the manager of this particular Walmart, announced to the crowd that the sale would begin soon and requested that the crowd be calm and courteous. At 8:00 PM, he announced that the sale was open. According to Ms. Delima, the opening of the sale for the Samsung Galaxy tablets caused panic. The announcement opened a flood gate that sent the crowd rushing towards the merchandise, since Walmart was selling the tablets on a “first come, first- served” basis. Ms. Delima contends that she was pushed by the crowd into the Samsung Galaxy rack, where she remained stuck until everyone was done getting the tablets. Fortunately, one of the tablets managed to hit her stomach and she was ultimately able to purchase the tablet; unfortunately, she contends that she suffered injuries to her back and pinky finger caused by the rushing crowd.

Ms. Delima then brought the present lawsuit against Walmart, contending that it was negligent in how it managed the sale of the Samsung Galaxy tablets that evening. According to Ms. Delima, her injuries stem directly from Walmart’s failure to conduct the sale in a safe manner. Following the close of discovery, Walmart moved for summary judgment. In response, Ms. Delima filed four separate motions seeking to strike various materials, including her own deposition transcript, that were included with Walmart’s motion. The Court now turns to the pending motions. Il. DISCUSSION A. Ms. Delima’s Motion to Strike Uncertified Rough Draft Transcript Ms. Delima moves to strike the uncertified rough draft transcript of her deposition that was attached as an exhibit to Walmart’s Motion for Summary Judgment. She argues that it must be stricken because, as a draft transcript, it contains erroneous words, misspellings, inconsistencies, etc. Ms. Delima’s Motion to Strike (Doc. 51) will be denied. As an initial matter, because of scheduling conflicts—many of which were due to her own actions—only an uncertified rough draft transcript of the deposition was available at the time the dispositive motions in this case were due.' In addition, Ms. Delima was allowed to—and did in fact—submit an errata sheet to correct these typographical errors, and Walmart committed to—and

1 The discovery deadline in this case was October 19, 2018. Walmart began requesting dates to take Ms. Delima’s deposition as long ago as August 6, 2018. In response, Ms. Delima objected to an in-person deposition and proposed instead to be deposed by written questions. When that matter could not be resolved at the settlement conference on October 4, 2018, Walmart had to resort to a subpoena, which prompted Ms. Delima to file a Motion to Quash (Doc. 34). It took two subsequent orders of this Court (Docs. 35, 38) before she relented and attended her deposition.

did—submit an amended document containing the certified copy of the transcript and the errata sheet (Doc. 72). As such, the Court has considered those documents, and not this unofficial transcript, when ruling on Walmart’s motion for summary judgment. There is no compelling reason, therefore, why the unofficial transcript should be stricken. Ms. Delima’s Motion to Strike Uncertified Rough Draft Transcript (Doc. 51) is DENIED. B. Ms. Delima’s Motion to Strike Christopher Milam Affidavit Ms. Delima next seeks to strike Christopher Milam’s affidavit (Doc. 53). The motion contends that the affidavit must be stricken because Mr. Milam lacks personal knowledge, fails to set out facts that would be admissible in evidence, and is not competent to testify about these matters. This motion, too, will be denied. Christopher Milam was the manager of the Walmart store where the alleged incident took place. The affidavit explains that he is familiar with the facts of the case and the allegations made by Ms. Delima, that he personally addressed customers on the night of the incident, and he was the one who commenced the sale. Ms. Delima’s argument that Mr. Milam is without personal knowledge of the incident is rebutted by her own statements about his involvement that night. Her argument that Mr. Milam’s affidavit was not as complete as she would have liked it to be—because it does not state the “incident location where the Samsung Galaxy Tablet was located inside the store” (Doc. 53, pp. 1-2)—misinterprets the requirements of the federal rules. If the rules allowed a party to strike an opposing party's affidavit each time that party disagreed with it or thought it was incomplete, nary a single affidavit would likely ever pass muster. As such, Walmart is correct that Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56(c)(4) contains no such completeness or sufficiency requirement. Rather, it requires

only that the affiant make the affidavit on personal knowledge with facts that would be admissible in evidence. The facts provided in Mr. Milam’s affidavit meet these requirements. The fact that Ms. Delima disagrees with his affidavit is not a reason to strike it. Finally, Ms. Delima contends that Mr. Milam is not competent to testify about the matters in his affidavit because he did not “swear under penalty of perjury that all his statement[s were] true and correct.” (Doc. 53, p. 2). Beyond the fact that Ms. Delima appears to have quoted the requirements for an unsworn declaration, see 28 U.S.C.

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Bluebook (online)
Delima v. Wal-Mart Stores Arkansas, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/delima-v-wal-mart-stores-arkansas-llc-arwd-2018.