Eddings v. Target Corporation

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Florida
DecidedFebruary 5, 2024
Docket8:22-cv-02060
StatusUnknown

This text of Eddings v. Target Corporation (Eddings v. Target Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eddings v. Target Corporation, (M.D. Fla. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT MIDDLE DISTRICT OF FLORIDA TAMPA DIVISION

MICHAEL EDDINGS,

Plaintiff,

v. Case No: 8:22-cv-02060-KKM-AEP

TARGET CORPORATION,

Defendant. ___________________________________ ORDER Michael Eddings slipped and fell on a plastic bag while pushing his cart toward the register at Target. Eddings sued Target Corporation for negligence. Target now moves for summary judgment based on the lack of actual or constructive notice of the bag. Because there is a genuine dispute of material fact on both issues, Target’s motion for summary judgment is denied. I. BACKGROUND1 Although the Parties do not agree on much, three core facts are undisputed. Statement of Facts (Doc. 30). On the evening of March 22, 2021, Eddings went to Target.

1 To the extent that facts are capable of multiple inferences, the Court draws “all reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.” , 946 F.3d 1256, 1262 (11th Cir. 2020). ¶ 1. Just before 7:45 PM, as he was approaching the register with his cart, Eddings

claims he slipped and fell on a plastic bag. ¶¶ 1, 3. Eddings did not see the bag before he fell. ¶ 2. Surveillance video from a security camera captured the incident and roughly twenty-

nine minutes before it. Surveillance Video (Doc. 32).2 The surveillance video shows two rows of cash registers where Target employees are checking out customers. The lane with Eddings’s register is the second-from-the-left in the row farthest away from the security

camera (located roughly in the top-middle of the frame). The surveillance video’s view of Eddings’s lane is somewhat obstructed because of the angle of the security camera and the position of the register to its immediate left.

The footage begins just before 7:16 PM and shows a cashier working at the register in Eddings’s lane. Surveillance Video at 7:15:58. Another employee is initially working at the register to the immediate left of Eddings’s, but he exits the frame shortly before 7:18

PM. at 7:15:58–17:48. At several times during the footage, other employees who were not manning a register walk nearby or into Eddings’s lane while performing their duties. at 7:16:30–46, 7:28:35–58, 7:34:27–35, 7:37:52–56, 7:39:20–27.

2 All citations to the surveillance video reference the time stamp located at the top-left of the frame.

2 At 7:21 PM, a customer in Eddings’s lane appears to grab one or more unopened

bags from their position on a rack at the end of the lane after being handed an item by the cashier. at 7:21:00–11. The customer then walks back toward the back of the lane, at one point appearing to reach for something across the conveyor belt that ferries products

up to the register. at 7:21:12–49. Just after 7:22 PM, the cashier hands the customer something else, although exactly what is unclear. at 7:22:01–03. Carrying the item, the customer walks toward her cart and the back of the lane again. at 7:22:03–38.

Eventually, the customer exits the frame altogether toward the back of the lane, where she remains until returning from the same direction about a minute later. at 7:22:38–23:35. The customer is then joined by a man wearing a green shirt and the two continue to load

their cart. at 7:23:35–58. At 7:25 PM, the customer appears to grab several more unopened bags from the rack in front of the cashier. at 7:25:25–30. She hands the bags to the man in green, who

grabs several more bags and then places them all on top of the cart, which at this point has moved up the lane and is filled with the customers’ purchases. at 7:25:30–40. The customer grabs several bags from the top of the cart and proceeds to bag various items.

at 7:25:47–26:31. The customer again walks back toward the back of the lane before returning to her cart with more items and continuing to bag. at 7:26:32–27:27. At 7:29

3 PM, the customer reaches back toward the rack again, but it is unclear if she grabs any

additional bags. at 7:29:24–31. At this point, the customer’s cart is full to the point of overflowing. , at 7:30:00. The cashier grabs another handful of bags from the rack and hands them to the

customer over the register. at 7:30:08–13. The customer then pushes her cart to the very front of the lane, freeing up the register for the next cart in line (this appears to be the customer’s second cart) and further obstructing the view of the lane from the surveillance

camera. at 70:30:24–31:00. Several minutes pass as the customer loads the second cart. During this time, the customer again walks toward the back of the lane, appearing to reach for another item across the conveyor belt. at 7:35:00–38. After returning to the front of

the lane, the customer reaches toward the rack, grabs more bags, bags items, and tosses several loose bags on the overloaded first cart. at 7:35:39–36:21. While this is happening, a third customer also grabs bags from the rack and begins loading yet a third

cart. at 7:35:57–36:15. Around this time, the group of customers (which now numbers four adults and a child) have three carts in or nearby the lane. The first cart is past the front end of the lane obstructing an intersection, the second cart is at the front end of the lane

just past the register, and the third cart is midway through the lane in front of the register and the cashier. , at 7:36:25. The customers finally leave the frame with their third cart shortly after 7:40 PM. at 7:40:15–28.

4 After the first group leaves, customers continue to check out in the lane for several

minutes without issue. Eddings and his cart enter the lane at the very top edge of the frame around 7:43 PM. at 7:43:06–17. Just before 7:45 PM, the group of customers in front of Eddings finish paying and begin to leave. at 7:44:48. As that group moves away from

the register, Eddings begins to push his cart toward the front of the lane. at 7:44:49. A few seconds later, Eddings slips and falls. at 7:44:49–54. At no point during the footage leading up to the fall can a plastic bag be seen in roughly the area where Eddings fell. At

some point after the fall, a Target store lead took several photos of the bag Eddings claims to have fallen on. Photos (Doc. 29-3). The photos depict an unopened plastic grocery bag bearing the red Target logo toward the back-left portion of Eddings’s lane. The bag is

somewhat crumpled, but otherwise does not appear to be stained, scuffed, or wet. The section of the lane depicted in the photos is not fully visible in the surveillance video because it is obstructed by the lane immediately to the left and the angle of the security

camera. , Surveillance Video at 7:44:54. At his deposition, Eddings testified that he had been in line for about ten minutes before falling and that he had not seen anyone drop anything on the floor during that time.

Eddings Dep. (Doc. 29-2) at 51:9–16. Indeed, he did not see the bag at all until after he fell and a manager “pointed it out” still on his foot. at 51:17–25. Eddings did not know who dropped the bag but assumed that, because it was “flat and unused,” someone had

5 dropped it while placing bags on the rack. at 59:2–23. Eddings estimated that the bag

had been there for between ten and fifteen minutes because that was roughly how long that he and his family were “congregated” at the far edge waiting for space in the lane to free up. at 59:24–60:25. Eddings never got a close look at the bag but described it as a “flat

and white” “Target bag” with a visible Target logo. at 56:12–24. Eddings confirmed that the photos appeared to depict the bag in the same condition as when he had slipped on it. at 72:2–23. When asked whether he had seen anything to suggest that someone

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