Edwards v. K & B, INC.

641 So. 2d 1040, 1994 WL 460689
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 17, 1994
Docket26002-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 641 So. 2d 1040 (Edwards v. K & B, INC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edwards v. K & B, INC., 641 So. 2d 1040, 1994 WL 460689 (La. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

641 So.2d 1040 (1994)

Mardra EDWARDS, Plaintiff-Appellee
v.
K & B, INC. d/b/a K & B Drug Store and the Kemper Insurance Company, Defendants-Appellants.

No. 26002-CA.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

August 17, 1994.

*1042 Bodenheimer, Jones, Klotz & Simmons by David A. Szwak, Shreveport, for K & B, Inc. and American Motorists Ins. Co., defendants-appellants.

Mills, Timmons & Flowers by David C. Turansky, Shreveport, for plaintiff-appellee.

Before MARVIN, VICTORY and BROWN, JJ.

MARVIN, Chief Judge.

K & B, Inc., a retail drug and variety merchant, appeals a $7,700 judgment for personal injury damages in favor of Mardra Edwards, challenging the trial court's findings that a jewelry box fell from a display shelf onto Ms. Edwards' foot in a Shreveport K & B drugstore, and that K & B was either strictly liable or negligent for failing to properly fasten the shelf to its backing.

K & B disputes the occurrence of the accident, asserting the absence of a corroborating witness. K & B says that even if the accident happened as the trial court found, the court improperly equated proof of an accident with proof of liability, ignoring the other elements of proof required of a plaintiff in a falling merchandise case. K & B argues that strict liability does not apply here and contends it rebutted any prima facie showing of negligence by evidence of its safety inspection procedures. K & B also contends the trial court should have assessed some fault to Ms. Edwards.

Complaining also of the award, K & B contends Ms. Edwards' foot pain and swelling was caused by gout, a metabolic disease, and not by any trauma to her foot. K & B also questions the trial court's allowance of expert testimony by a chiropractor about a foot injury. Answering the appeal, Ms. Edwards seeks to increase the $6,000 general damage award.

In all respects, we affirm.

FACTS

Ms. Edwards shopped for Christmas gifts in the K & B store on Youree Drive in Shreveport on the evening of December 13, 1990. Her grown daughter, Lillian Edwards, accompanied her. Lillian looked at magazines while Ms. Edwards shopped. Both observed that store personnel were restocking the shelves with merchandise.

The shelves in the store are metal. Each shelf measures about three feet in length and is fastened to the vertical shelf backing by three metal teeth on the back of each side of the shelf. The teeth are inserted into slots appropriately spaced in the vertical support holding the shelves.

Ms. Edwards entered the gift aisle, which contained a display of jewelry boxes. Seeing a jewelry box that she desired to examine more closely, she reached over some stock boxes on the aisle floor for the jewelry box, which was on the top shelf of the display, about five feet high, roughly at eye level for Ms. Edwards. She testified that when she touched the jewelry box, the right side of the shelf "fell down from the back," dropping a few inches lower than the left side, and caused the entire jewelry box display to slide to the right side of the shelf. Some of the jewelry boxes fell to the floor. The left side of the shelf remained affixed to the vertical support.

Ms. Edwards testified that the pointed corner of a large wooden jewelry box fell on her right foot, between her big toe and her second toe. She was wearing sandals at the time.

Seeing no one in the aisle, Ms. Edwards sought the store manager on duty, Betsy Hale, who was elsewhere in the store. Ms. Edwards reported that her foot had been injured by a jewelry box that fell from a "loose" shelf. Ms. Hale accompanied Ms. Edwards back to the jewelry box display area. Their respective accounts of what happened after the two reached the jewelry box *1043 display differed, presenting a credibility call for the trier of fact.

According to Ms. Edwards, the jewelry boxes that had fallen from the shelf were still on the floor. Ms. Hale picked up one or two of them, then looked at the shelf and stated it was "loose" and it "must never have been fastened." Ms. Edwards said Ms. Hale told her she would "check into it" to see who had been stocking the shelves in that area.

Ms. Hale, on the other hand, testified that there were no jewelry boxes on the floor, and the shelf and its contents were intact, with no sign of having been disturbed. According to Ms. Hale's testimony, "Everything looked normal." Ms. Edwards could not identify for Ms. Hale which jewelry box had fallen on her foot. Ms. Hale found no dents, chips or scratches in any of the displayed jewelry boxes. She denied having told Ms. Edwards that the shelf had not been properly fastened.

Ms. Hale, however, did prepare an accident report, relating Ms. Edwards' statement to her that a jewelry box had fallen on her right foot. Describing Ms. Edwards' injury, Ms. Hale wrote, "Top of foot sore and big toe red."

Acknowledging she did not see the accident, Lillian Edwards said she heard a loud noise while browsing at the magazine rack. She did not immediately investigate the noise, assuming something had fallen while the store employees were restocking shelves. Casually approaching the gift aisle a little later, Lillian went to where her mother and Ms. Hale were talking. Lillian said she noticed that the shelf was "tilted" and that jewelry boxes were on the floor, a contradiction of Ms. Hale's testimony that the shelf and its contents appeared "normal." Lillian also observed that her mother's foot was swollen and red.

Although no store employees saw the accident, one employee, Virginia Lux, who was stocking shelves a few aisles away from the gift aisle, testified similarly to Lillian that she heard a noise that "sounded like something fell to the floor." A few minutes later, she saw a "woman" customer standing in the gift aisle "looking at some shelves." Ms. Lux was not sure whether the noise she heard came from the direction of the gift aisle and could not say whether Ms. Edwards was the customer she saw standing in the gift aisle.

On December 14, 1990, the day after her visit to K & B, Ms. Edwards sought treatment for her foot, described as being bruised, swollen and painful, from Dr. Elizabeth Savells, a chiropractor who had treated Ms. Edwards before. After eight visits to Dr. Savells over a six-week period, Ms. Edwards was referred by Dr. Savells to a podiatrist. She saw Drs. Piano and Castellano at the Southside Foot Clinic from March 1991 until July 1992. In September 1992 she saw an orthopedic surgeon, Dr. Lewis Jones, who gave her an injection of steroids to reduce the swelling in her foot. Ms. Edwards was still having problems with her foot at the time of trial in June 1993.

In reasons for judgment, the trial court stated:

This case involve[s] a claim by Plaintiff that a shelf fell or shifted and a jewelry box fell on her at the K & B [store] ... The Defendant questioned whether the accident happened, but the evidence consisting of the testimony of both Plaintiff and her daughter together with evidence of injury and lack of eye witnesses on the part of Defendant convinced the Court that this accident did occur.
... [T]he Court finds ... K & B ... and [its] liability insurer liable to Plaintiff. Certainly under a theory of strict liability the apparently defective shelf posed an unreasonable risk of danger to Plaintiff, and if not unreasonably dangerous, some negligence in fastening the shelf or placement of the jewelry box occurred.

LIABILITY ISSUES

Occurrence of Accident

In finding that the accident occurred as Ms.

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Bluebook (online)
641 So. 2d 1040, 1994 WL 460689, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edwards-v-k-b-inc-lactapp-1994.