Dobson v. State

23 S.W.3d 324, 1999 Tenn. App. LEXIS 869, 1999 WL 1567001
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 29, 1999
DocketW1999-02014-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 23 S.W.3d 324 (Dobson v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dobson v. State, 23 S.W.3d 324, 1999 Tenn. App. LEXIS 869, 1999 WL 1567001 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

W. FRANK CRAWFORD, Presiding Judge, W.S.

This is a premises liability case arising from a fall by plaintiff on the University of Tennessee at Martin (referred to herein as UTM) campus. Plaintiffs, Dianne Dobson, and her husband Mike Dobson, appeal from the judgement of the Claims Commission denying the relief sought against defendant, State of Tennessee (referred to herein as State) and dismissing their claim.

On September 30, 1996, Ms. Dobson and her husband filed a complaint against the State with the Claims Commission. The complaint alleges that as a result of her fall on the UTM campus Ms. Dobson sustained serious and permanently disabling injuries and that the fall was proximately caused by the dangerous condition of the premise, which is State controlled real property. Specifically, the complaint alleges that Ms. Dobson was walking in a safe manner across the lawn of the Health Center on her way to enter the building and suddenly and without warning, tripped and fell on a metal landscape border that had been installed abutting the sidewalk entering the budding.

At trial before the Claims Commission Ms. Dobson testified that on May 2, 1996 she was injured when she fell outside the south entrance of the Student Health Center building on the UTM campus. At the time of her fall she was on the campus to deliver a golf shirt to Dr. Shore, one of three doctors that her employer, Health South Cain Creek, was sponsoring in a golf tournament scheduled for that afternoon. According to the record Health South Cain Creek, a physical rehabilitation facility, sponsored doctors in this golf tournament by paying their fees and giving them golf shirts to wear as part of a public relations effort for the facility. Ms. Dobson testified that she learned that she was to deliver the shirts that same morning, when she received a telephone call at work from Necie Barroni, the head of the facility, who requested that Ms. Dobson personally deliver the shirts to Drs. Lyerly, Jones, and Shore. Ms. Dobson testified that Ms. Bar-roni was attending a retreat in Union City at the time that she telephoned her and requested that she make the three hand deliveries.

Ms. Dobson testified that after receiving the telephone request, she went to another building in the facility where Ms. Barroni’s office was located and retrieved the three shirts. She then got into her van and left Cain Creek at approximately 9:15 a. m. to make the hand deliveries, starting at Dr. Lyerly’s office. The record contains contradictions in the testimony of Ms. Dob-son’s deposition testimony and her trial testimony as to where she proceeded from that point. In her deposition Ms. Dobson testified that she then proceeded to Dr. Jones’s office, located at the Specialty Clinic, to deliver Dr. Jones’s shirt personally and spoke with both Dr. Jones and his receptionist, and then proceeded to deliver Dr. Shore’s shirt. However at trial Ms. Dobson testified that she left Dr. Jones’s shirt with Dr. Lyerly and then proceeded to the Martin Medical Center, where she *327 believed Dr. Shore to be working. At trial Ms. Dobson explained the discrepancy in the two statements stating that she was confused at her deposition.

Ms Dobson testified that at the Martin Medical Center, she was informed by the receptionist that Dr. Shore was working at the UTM Health Center on that morning. Ms. Dobson stated that she asked front desk workers at the Martin Medical Center for directions to the Health Center and was told that the building was a white house. 1 Ms. Dobson then proceeded to the UTM campus to deliver Dr. Shore’s shirt.

Ms. Dobson testified that she had never been to the area of the UTM campus where the Health Center is located. As she was driving on the campus trying to locate the Health Center she spotted Dr. Shore going up stairs to a building and realized that this is where she needed to go. Ms. Dobson then parked her van in a yellow zone on the street adjacent to the Health Center. Ms. Dobson testified that she did not see the front door to the Health Center, nor was she aware that she had parked in a yellow zone. She then proceeded across the lawn toward the south entrance of the Health Center, where she recently saw Dr. Shore enter. Ms. Dobson was wearing sunglasses at the time, but testified that, if anything, they helped her visibility, as it was a sunny day. As she stepped from the grass to the sidewalk leading to the south entrance she tripped and fell on her right knee, left elbow, and face. Ms. Dobson testified that a young woman, who apparently had been walking down the street, immediately approached her and asked if she was hurt. Ms. Dobson responded affirmatively, and the young woman went to the south entrance of the Health Center to get help.

The record reveals that Dr. Shore and LPNs Barbara Moore and Nancy Hastings were working at the Health Center at the time of Ms. Dobson’s fall. Barbara Moore testified that she and Nancy Hastings both initially responded to the young woman’s call for help. According to Ms. Moore, Ms. Hastings then went to retrieve Dr. Shore and she remained with Ms. Dobson. The record reveals that an ambulance was summoned and Ms. Dobson was taken to Volunteer General Hospital in Martin, then to the Med in Memphis on the following day, and then to Germantown Methodist Hospital. The record further reveals that Ms. Dobson’s right leg had been broken in eight places and her left arm had been broken in fourteen places.

The State put on proof that the metal sidewalk border was installed approximately one year prior to Ms. Dobson’s fall as a safety precaution to prevent a slip and fall hazard to employees using the south entrance at the rear of the Student Health Center. The record reveals that the hazard had been caused by mud pooling on the sidewalk in front of the entrance in rainy weather. The mud pooling was caused by the east area of the property being lower than the west area, which resulted in a water flow that washed mud across the sidewalk. The border was installed adjacent to the sidewalk, but not extending over or on to the sidewalk, to serve as a barrier between the sidewalk and the mud that washed downhill. The border was two inches high and five feet long. Wanda Hall, a University of Tennessee safety officer, testified that there is a designated parking area outside the clinic for visitors to the clinic. The record reveals that this parking area is identified by a sign reading “Student Health Parking Only” and has parking capacity for eight cars, but that only three cars were parked there on the day of the accident. Visitors are allowed to park in any lot on the campus, even those that are marked restricted, and publications regarding visitor parking are available at the campus traffic office.

*328 The cause was heard by a commissioner sitting by designation. At the conclusion of proof the commissioner ruled from the bench that the condition of the university premises on which Ms. Dobson fell was not dangerous, and there was no need to compare relative negligence because over one-half of the negligence was attributed to Ms. Dobson and not to the State.

With regard to his decision that the State did not create a dangerous condition the commissioner stated:

[d]angerous conditions don’t exist in the abstract; they exist relative to circumstances. And I think here particularly in relation to use.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 S.W.3d 324, 1999 Tenn. App. LEXIS 869, 1999 WL 1567001, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dobson-v-state-tennctapp-1999.