Estate of Donald L. Grove, and Karen L. Grove, Individually and as administrator of the Estate of Donald L. Grove v. Clinic Building Company, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 22, 2023
Docket22-0716
StatusPublished

This text of Estate of Donald L. Grove, and Karen L. Grove, Individually and as administrator of the Estate of Donald L. Grove v. Clinic Building Company, Inc. (Estate of Donald L. Grove, and Karen L. Grove, Individually and as administrator of the Estate of Donald L. Grove v. Clinic Building Company, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Estate of Donald L. Grove, and Karen L. Grove, Individually and as administrator of the Estate of Donald L. Grove v. Clinic Building Company, Inc., (iowactapp 2023).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 22-0716 Filed February 22, 2023

ESTATE OF DONALD L. GROVE, and KAREN L. GROVE, Individually and as administrator of the ESTATE OF DONALD L. GROVE, Plaintiffs-Appellants,

vs.

CLINIC BUILDING COMPANY, INC., Defendant-Appellee. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Story County, John R. Flynn, Judge.

Plaintiffs appeal the district court’s grant of summary judgment against

them. AFFIRMED.

Thomas A. Palmer of Lawyer, Dougherty & Palmer, PLC, West Des Moines,

for appellants.

J. Scott Bardole of Andersen & Associates, West Des Moines, for appellee.

Heard by Vaitheswaran, P.J., and Greer and Chicchelly, JJ. 2

GREER, Judge.

Donald and Karen Grove sued Clinic Building Company, Inc. (CBC), the

owner of the parking lot where Donald Grove fell and fractured his right hip in

October 2019. After filing but before trial, Donald passed away and his estate was

substituted in his place. CBC moved for summary judgment, which the district

court granted. The estate and Karen now argue several pieces of evidence were

wrongly deemed inadmissible. Because we agree with the district court that the

admissible evidence did not generate a question of material fact, we affirm.

I. Background Facts and Prior Proceedings.

On March 24, 2021, Donald filed a petition alleging that in October, 2019,

he was on his way to a clinic for cancer treatment. He parked in a handicap-

accessible space in a nearby parking lot owned by CBC. The petition stated that

when exiting the vehicle, “he stepped into an unmarked storm drain, fell over a

curb, and fractured his right hip.” He was taken to the emergency room, where he

received weeks of care. The petition described CBC’s alleged negligence in failing

to design, construct, and maintain the handicap parking area. It also alleged CBC

failed to warn of the area’s “dangerous nature” and breached “its duty to use

reasonable measures to protect the safety of [Donald] and other users of its

handicapped parking area.” The petition also contained Karen’s claims for

deprivation of Donald’s companionship, aid, services, affection, and society. In

June, Donald passed away; Karen was named administrator of his estate. She

modified the petition to substitute Donald’s estate in his place.1

1We refer to these parties collectively as “the estate” throughout the rest of the opinion. 3

Donald was the only known witness to his fall,2 but the estate offered various

statements it attributed to Donald as evidence. First, there were notes in Donald’s

medical records, which had various comments that Donald fell when he tripped on

a curb. One of those statements, made to Dr. Curtis Waite shortly after the fall,

repeated Donald’s explanation of the fall—“he ‘tripped over his own feet,’ stumbled

over a curb, and landed on his right hip and right wrist. . . . States this was purely

a mechanical fall. States he was just clumsy.”3 CBC considered this statement

an admission against interest. But other statements in the medical records on the

day of the fall were offered by the estate to show CBC’s negligence, including that

“[Donald w]as coming in for radiation, fell stepping up to the curb,” “[Donald] was

on his way today to have radiation his third out of 5 treatments when he tripped on

the curb and fell and fractured his right hip,” and “[Donald] tripped coming to the

hospital today to get radiation treatment.” Then about a week later, a note in the

medical record stated Donald “was on his way to his radiation therapy appointment

when he tripped on a curb, fell, and suffered a right hip fracture.” On top of the

medical records, the estate also offered a recording of a statement Donald made

to an insurance adjuster from CBC’s insurer in March 2021; he told the insurance

adjuster:

I went to get up on the, the sidewalk, and the next thing I know I’m, I’m on the ground. ....

2 CBC’s safety and environmental coordinator, Seth McCoy, investigated the incident. The clinic’s video surveillance does not capture the location of Donald’s fall, and McCoy was unable to find a witness; the estate also did not produce any eyewitness to the district court. 3 This was the only statement in the records that was placed in quotation marks. 4

. . . I just got out of the car by the round intake and went to step up. I didn’t realize the sidewalk had a step up on it, and I ended up on the ground. The other places I had parked were level. .... I think the sidewalk being too high there [caused me to fall].

The estate also certified an expert—Dr. Arvid Osterberg, a professor of

architecture at Iowa State University—who compiled a report on the incident based

on his observations of the parking lot and the recorded statement from Donald.

Dr. Osterberg provided an affidavit containing two excerpts from his report. The

first excerpt said:

It is evident from Mr. Grove’s recorded statements that he did not anticipate the high step up that he encountered. He may have caught the toe of his shoe on the edge of the curb as he stepped up the unexpectedly high step. He may also have caught the toe of his shoe in one of the two-inch-wide square holes in the drain cover. It is also possible that he lost his footing as he stepped up due to the sloped surface near the drain cover. Regardless of exactly what happened, the location was unsafe and did not comply with [Americans with Disabilities Act] Requirements.

The second excerpt provided:

The unsafe conditions caused Mr. Grove to misstep, fall and suffer serious injuries. Had the parking lot been properly designed, constructed, and maintained, and/or had proper warning of the hazardous locations been present, it is more likely than not that Mr. Grove would have not fallen and suffered serious injuries.

CBC moved for summary judgment, claiming the estate failed to provide

any admissible evidence supporting its claim it was the negligence of CBC that

caused Donald’s fall. It argued that the notes in Donald’s medical records and

statements to the insurance adjuster were inadmissible hearsay;4 and while it

4See Iowa R. Evid. 5.802 (“Hearsay is not admissible unless any of the following provide otherwise: the Constitution of the State of Iowa; a statute; these rules of evidence; or an Iowa Supreme Court rule.”). 5

agreed the statement to Dr. Waite was admissible as an admission by a party

opponent,5 the statement supported its assessment that the injury was caused by

Donald’s clumsiness rather than CBC’s negligence. It also argued that

Dr. Osterberg’s opinion about the cause of Donald’s fall was inadmissible because

it was based on inadmissible evidence and the estate did not establish the

recorded statement was the type of evidence typically relied upon by experts in his

field. So, there was no admissible evidence that could establish that CBC’s alleged

negligence was the cause of Donald’s fall. The estate argued the medical record

notes were admissible as statements made for a medical diagnosis or treatment,

or under the residual hearsay exception. Further, it believed the recorded

conversation with the insurance adjuster would also be admissible under the

residual hearsay exception or under Iowa Rule of Evidence 5.7036 because the

recording was used by Dr. Osterberg in forming his expert opinion.

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