DOLLAR GENERAL CORPORATION DOLGENCORP, LLC, D/B/A DOLLAR GENERAL CADDO TRADING CO., INC. AND RODNEY FAGAN AND JUDY FAGAN v. KAREN ELDER

2020 Ark. 208
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 28, 2020
DocketCV-18-313
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 2020 Ark. 208 (DOLLAR GENERAL CORPORATION DOLGENCORP, LLC, D/B/A DOLLAR GENERAL CADDO TRADING CO., INC. AND RODNEY FAGAN AND JUDY FAGAN v. KAREN ELDER) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DOLLAR GENERAL CORPORATION DOLGENCORP, LLC, D/B/A DOLLAR GENERAL CADDO TRADING CO., INC. AND RODNEY FAGAN AND JUDY FAGAN v. KAREN ELDER, 2020 Ark. 208 (Ark. 2020).

Opinion

Cite as 2020 Ark. 208 SUPREME COURT OF ARKANSAS No. CV-18-313

Opinion Delivered: May 28, 2020

DOLLAR GENERAL CORPORATION; DOLGENCORP, LLC, D/B/A DOLLAR APPEAL FROM THE MONTGOMERY GENERAL; CADDO TRADING CO., COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT INC.; AND RODNEY FAGAN AND JUDY [NO. CV-13-30] FAGAN APPELLANTS HONORABLE JERRY RYAN, JUDGE

V. AFFIRMED; COURT OF APPEALS’ KAREN ELDER OPINION VACATED. APPELLEE

COURTNEY RAE HUDSON, Associate Justice

Appellants Dollar General Corporation and Dolgencorp, LLC, d/b/a Dollar

General (collectively “Dollar General”), Caddo Trading Co., Inc., and Rodney Fagan and

Judy Fagan (collectively “the Landlords”), appeal the Montgomery County Circuit Court’s

August 8, 2017 judgment on jury verdict in favor of appellee Karen Elder (“Elder”).1 For

reversal, appellants argue (1) the circuit court erred by not granting their motion for a

directed verdict because Elder failed to prove that the sidewalk she slipped on was

unreasonably dangerous; (2) the circuit court erred by not granting their motion for a

1 Dollar General Corporation and Dolgencorp, LLC, are corporate entities that operate the Dollar General store where the events giving rise to this appeal occurred. Caddo Trading Co., Inc., and Rodney Fagan and Judy Fagan represent the owners of the property on which the Dollar General store is located. directed verdict because Elder did not prove that the Landlords failed to maintain the

sidewalk outside the store or failed to keep the premises in compliance with the Americans

with Disabilities Act (ADA); (3) the circuit court abused its discretion as a matter of law by

allowing a chiropractor to testify as an expert regarding the causal connection between

Elder’s fall and the treatment provided by other physicians; and (4) the circuit court abused

its discretion by allowing Elder to give causation testimony regarding her treatments that

were not rendered in temporal proximity to the occurrence of the accident. We affirm.

This case began at approximately 4:00 p.m. on June 10, 2010, when Elder, a

registered nurse, went to purchase milk at the Dollar General store in Mt. Ida, Arkansas. It

was raining that day, and the concrete outside was wet when Elder slipped and fell near the

store’s entrance. Fearing that others might slip in the same area, Elder reported her fall to

Pam Bryant, who was the assistant manager of the store. Bryant completed a report. At

that time, Elder had worked as a nurse with the Mt. Ida School District for approximately

nine years.

Elder sought medical treatment the day after her fall, and she subsequently received

treatment from a chiropractor, a neurologist, a neurosurgeon, and an orthopedic surgeon.

Elder eventually underwent neck, back, and shoulder surgery. According to Elder, she has

continuing pain in her neck and back. However, Elder did experience neck and back pain

prior to the accident, and she had seen her chiropractor, Eric Carson, D.C., for treatment

since 2004.

2 Elder filed a complaint against appellants on June 7, 2013, and an amended

complaint on August 15, 2014. In the amended complaint, Elder alleged that she was

injured when she slipped on the wet concrete at the entrance to the Dollar General store.

Elder further alleged that she was a business invitee and that appellants had a duty to use

reasonable care in maintaining their business premises; that appellants knew or should

have known that the rain was causing the concrete at the outside entrance to become

dangerously and unexpectedly slippery; and that if the appellants had used reasonable care

to either post appropriate signs warning of the slippery concrete and/or ensure that mats

were in place outside the entrance, her injury would not have occurred. Elder claimed that

she was permanently disabled because of the fall and that she had sustained and will

continue to sustain pain, medical expenses, permanent impairment, scars and

disfigurement, and loss of earnings. Appellants answered and denied liability.

Less than three weeks before the trial, Elder supplemented her discovery responses

to notify appellants that Carson planned to testify as to the cause of Elder’s injuries, the

reasonableness and necessity of her medical bills, and the permanency of her injuries.

Thereafter, appellants filed a motion in limine in which they sought to exclude any

causation testimony from either Elder or Carson. As to Carson, Dollar General and the

Landlords argued that he was not qualified to provide causation testimony and that his

proposed testimony conflicted with his prior deposition testimony. The circuit court

denied the motion.

3 The jury trial was held from July 24 to July 27, 2017. At issue was whether

appellants failed to maintain the premises in a reasonably safe condition and whether

Elder’s slip and fall caused the need for her medical treatment. Elder testified that she

approached the entry from the right side and that it was misting rain that day. According

to Elder, she was either jogging or slowly running to the entrance to escape the rain when

the next thing she knew, she was lying on the ground. Elder believed that she had been

briefly knocked unconscious. Elder recalled that the area where she fell was slick and that

no mat was present. To establish that the concrete was unreasonably dangerous, Elder

presented testimony from Bryant, the former assistant manager of Dollar General, who

said that the area was slick and that she had seen at least four other people slip there,

although not all of them fell all the way to the ground. Bryant testified that even she

herself had slipped there. Bryant also testified that she had personally alerted three Dollar

General district managers about the issue, along with Rodney Fagan, a landlord. Bryant

recounted that Fagan advised her that it would be “taken care of.” Elder recalled that

Bryant expressed concern that someone would be injured in that area. Elder also

presented expert testimony from Jennings. Jennings testified that he tested the concrete at

the entrance and determined it to be unsafe and probable that an accident would occur.

Both Bryant and Jennings testified that one part of the exterior concrete had a rough finish

and that another part had a smoother finish.

In order to prove that the fall caused her injuries, Elder offered her own testimony

and that of Carson. Elder testified over appellants’ objection that her medical expenses

4 were reasonable and medically necessary. When Elder called Carson, appellants renewed

their objection and argued that Carson was not a medical doctor and was not qualified to

give expert testimony that the treatment the medical doctors provided was causally related

to Elder’s fall. Outside the presence of the jury, the circuit court conducted extensive voir

dire to determine Carson’s qualifications. After voir dire and arguments from counsel, the

circuit court ruled that Carson could give expert testimony that Elder’s injuries and need

for medical care, including her surgeries, were caused by her fall. Thereafter, appellants

moved for a continuance, but the circuit court denied the motion. Carson then testified

before the jury that it was more probable than not that Elder’s symptoms, injuries, and

need for medical treatment were caused by her fall at Dollar General.

At the close of Elder’s case, appellants moved for a directed verdict and argued that

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