Dollar General Corporation; Dolgencorp, LLC, D/B/A Dollar General; Caddo Trading Co., Inc.; Rodney Fagan and Judy Fagan v. Karen Renee Elder

2019 Ark. App. 526
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 13, 2019
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2019 Ark. App. 526 (Dollar General Corporation; Dolgencorp, LLC, D/B/A Dollar General; Caddo Trading Co., Inc.; Rodney Fagan and Judy Fagan v. Karen Renee Elder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals 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.; Rodney Fagan and Judy Fagan v. Karen Renee Elder, 2019 Ark. App. 526 (Ark. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Cite as 2019 Ark. App. 526, vacated 2020 Ark. 208 Digitally signed by Elizabeth Perry ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS Date: 2022.08.08 10:18:24 DIVISION I -05'00' No. CV-18-313 Adobe Acrobat version: 2022.001.20169 DOLLAR GENERAL Opinion Delivered: November 13, 2019 CORPORATION; DOLGENCORP, LLC, D/B/A DOLLAR GENERAL; APPEAL FROM THE CADDO TRADING CO., INC.; MONTGOMERY COUNTY RODNEY FAGAN; AND JUDY CIRCUIT COURT FAGAN [NO. 49CV-13-30] APPELLANTS HONORABLE JERRY RYAN, JUDGE V.

KAREN RENEE ELDER AFFIRMED APPELLEE

RITA W. GRUBER, Chief Judge

This appeal stems from a $700,000 jury verdict in a slip-and-fall case. In June 2010,

Karen Elder slipped and fell on the sidewalk in front of Dollar General in Mount Ida,

Arkansas. She later sued Dollar General and the owners of the property it leased for

negligence. After a highly contentious jury trial, a Montgomery County Circuit Court jury

returned a verdict in Elder’s favor. Dollar General and the owners of the property it leased

appealed, and after due consideration, we affirm.

I. Background

Appellee Karen Elder went to Dollar General to buy milk. It was raining that day,

and while running into the store, Elder slipped and fell on the sidewalk. When Elder got

up, she walked into Dollar General and notified employee Pamela Bryant about her fall, and

an incident report was taken. Before her fall, Elder had an active lifestyle, and she worked as a registered nurse at

a local school. However, she also had some preexisting neck and back pain, and she had

visited a chiropractor, Dr. Eric Carson, on occasion since 2004.

In the years that followed her fall, Elder’s lifestyle dramatically changed. She no

longer was able to maintain the active lifestyle she previously had—including her work as a

registered nurse. Elder also sought the care of a chiropractor, a general practitioner, a

radiologist, an orthopedic surgeon, a neurologist, and a neurosurgeon. Ultimately, she

would undergo shoulder, neck, and back surgeries. She contends that all this medical care

was necessitated by her fall.

In June 2013, Elder sued Dollar General Corporation for negligence. Later, Elder

filed an amended and substituted complaint against Dollar General Corporation;

Dolgencorp, LLC, d/b/a Dollar General; Miners Village C-Stop, LLC; Caddo Trading Co.,

Inc.; Rodney Fagan; and Judy Fagan. For practical purposes, Dollar General Corporation

and Dolgencorp, LLC (collectively referred to as Dollar General), are corporate entities that

own the Dollar General store where the fall occurred. Caddo Trading Co., Inc.; Rodney

Fagan; and Judy Fagan (collectively referred to as the Landlords) represent the owners of the

land the Dollar General occupied. 1 Each of these defendants employed the same counsel

and mounted a united defense.

In her amended complaint, Elder alleged she was a business invitee on the premises

and sued for negligence asserting that her fall was the proximate cause of severe injuries to

1 Miners Village C-Stop, LLC, is no longer a party to this action because Elder dismissed her claims against it without prejudice in a pretrial order. See Driggers v. Locke, 323 Ark. 63, 913 S.W.2d 269 (1996).

2 her head, neck, and back that required three surgeries and would require treatment for the

rest of her life. Elder sought damages, lost wages, and future medical expenses relating to

her injuries. Dollar General and the Landlords answered, denying liability.

Before trial, Dollar General and the Landlords filed a motion in limine seeking to

exclude certain evidence. Specifically, they sought to prevent Elder from providing

testimony regarding the medical necessity of her treatments. They also sought to prevent

Dr. Carson from offering an opinion on whether her slip and fall caused her need for

treatment—including surgeries—from medical doctors. They sought to exclude Dr.

Carson’s testimony because of what they perceived as a change in course by Elder. Eighteen

days before the trial was scheduled to begin, Elder supplemented her discovery responses

and notified Dollar General and the Landlords that Dr. Carson would provide his opinion

as to the cause of Elder’s neck, back, and shoulder injuries as a result of the fall; the

reasonableness and necessity of her medical bills; and the permanency of her injuries. This

contradicted Dr. Carson’s deposition testimony wherein he stated that he did not have an

opinion regarding the injuries to Elder’s shoulders or nerves as well as his testimony that

with the exception of the surgeries Elder underwent for the discectomy and fusion, he had

no opinion as to the reasonableness or necessity of any of the other surgeries Elder has had.

The circuit court denied the motion in limine.

A jury trial was held over the course of four days in July 2017. The primary issues

were whether the slip and fall was the fault of Dollar General and the Landlords and whether

that slip and fall caused the need for all of Elder’s subsequent medical treatment.

3 To establish that her fall was Dollar General’s and the Landlords’ fault, Elder

presented testimony from Pamela Bryant and Derek Jennings. Bryant, now a former

employee of Dollar General, testified that she had seen “about four other people” fall where

Elder fell and that she had reported those falls to several Dollar General district managers

and to landlord Rodney Fagan. Bryant attested that Fagan told her it would be taken care

of. She further explained that there was usually a mat outside Dollar General’s entrance.

Jennings testified as a safety expert who performed slip-resistance testing on the concrete

where Elder fell. Jennings stated that, in his expert opinion, the area where Elder fell was

unreasonably dangerous. Both Jennings and Bryant described the concrete outside Dollar

General as having a section of smooth, finished concrete that was more slippery than the

surrounding concrete.

Elder sought to establish causation through the testimony of Dr. Carson and herself.

Over the objections of Dollar General and the Landlords, Elder testified regarding the

medical necessity of her treatments that occurred after her fall. Elder also sought to provide

causation testimony through Dr. Carson. Specifically, she intended for Dr. Carson to testify

regarding the necessity of her medical treatments and that they were causally related to her

fall. Dr. Carson’s qualifications to provide this testimony were sharply disputed.

When Dr. Carson’s testimony began, Dollar General and the Landlords renewed

their objections. The circuit court allowed counsel for Dollar General and the Landlords to

voir dire Dr. Carson regarding his qualifications outside the presence of the jury. During

voir dire, Dr. Carson explained his educational and practical background in the areas of

chiropractic, neurology, and orthopedics. The circuit court ultimately ruled that Dr. Carson

4 was qualified to give expert testimony relating to whether Elder’s fall caused her need for

medical care, including shoulder, neck, and back surgeries. Thereafter, counsel for Dollar

General and the Landlords requested a continuance, but the circuit court denied the request,

and the trial resumed.

Dr. Carson then testified before the jury. He explained that he had been Elder’s

treating chiropractor since 2004.

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Related

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2019 Ark. App. 526, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dollar-general-corporation-dolgencorp-llc-dba-dollar-general-caddo-arkctapp-2019.