Floyd Parson, Jr. v. Go Knightrider, LLC

CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedJuly 16, 2019
Docket2017-CA-01382-COA
StatusPublished

This text of Floyd Parson, Jr. v. Go Knightrider, LLC (Floyd Parson, Jr. v. Go Knightrider, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Floyd Parson, Jr. v. Go Knightrider, LLC, (Mich. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2017-CA-01382-COA

FLOYD PARSON JR. APPELLANT

v.

GO KNIGHTRIDER LLC APPELLEE

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 09/25/2017 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. ALBERT B. SMITH III COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: BOLIVAR COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT, SECOND JUDICIAL DISTRICT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: STEPHANIE NICOLE MORRIS ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE: ROBERT P. THOMPSON PAUL PACIFIC BLAKE NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - PERSONAL INJURY DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 07/16/2019 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

BEFORE CARLTON, P.J., LAWRENCE AND C. WILSON, JJ.

CARLTON, P.J., FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Floyd Parson Jr. filed a negligence action against Go Knightrider LLC (GK) in

Bolivar County Circuit Court, alleging he was injured when he slipped and fell on a slippery

substance at GK’s convenience store/gas station. GK moved for summary judgment,

asserting, among other grounds, that Parson lacked sufficient evidence to support his

negligence claim because even if a dangerous condition existed on its premises, Parson failed

to show GK had constructive notice of it. GK also moved to dismiss Parson’s lawsuit, with

prejudice, for discovery abuse. The circuit court granted GK’s summary judgment motion,

finding that Parson failed to offer sufficient evidence to overcome summary judgment that GK had constructive knowledge of the allegedly dangerous condition on its premises. In the

alternative, the circuit court granted GK’s motion to dismiss Parson’s lawsuit, with prejudice,

for discovery abuse.

¶2. Parson appeals, asserting that the circuit court erred in granting both motions. Finding

no error in the circuit court’s decision to grant summary judgment in GK’s favor, we affirm

the circuit court’s judgment on this basis. Our resolution of Parson’s appeal (affirming

summary judgment in GK’s favor) renders a discussion of Parson’s challenge to the circuit

court’s alternative decision to dismiss his lawsuit for discovery abuse unnecessary.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶3. The record reflects that on June 9, 2014, Parson purchased gas and several items at

GK, a convenience store and gas station in Cleveland, Mississippi. Parson slipped and fell

in a slippery substance as he left the store. On May 15, 2015, Parson filed a negligence

lawsuit against GK in the Second Judicial District of Bolivar County Circuit Court seeking

damages for injuries he allegedly incurred when he fell.1

¶4. In his complaint, Parson described a “liquid substance” on the GK premises, and

alleged that he slipped and fell in a “puddle of water, gas, oil[,] and/or greasy like substance”

that was located between the gas pumps and the front door of the store. In his sworn, written

discovery responses served September 24, 2015, Parson described this “puddle” as follows:

“[T]he size of the puddle was approximately 3 to 4 foot long and 2 feet wide. Mr. Parson

knows he was in some sort of motor oil due to the rainbow effect of the colors, and [it] was

1 Parson claims that as a result of his fall he suffered phantom leg pains and injured his back, necessitating two back surgeries.

2 very slick and thick.”

¶5. Parson was deposed on May 3, 2016, nearly two years after his fall. In his deposition,

Parson was asked about the “puddle” he described in his complaint. During this questioning,

Parson said that the description of the substance in his complaint as a “puddle” was

“incorrect.” He testified that “if I said that, I said that [in the complaint, but] . . . [i]t was not

a puddle.” When asked about the “liquid substance” he described in his complaint, he said,

“I wasn’t in anything wet . . . when I landed.” Parson testified that it was “the oil, gasoline,

whatever it was mixed in with the dirt and whatever. Evidently, it was there and had been

there for quite a while. It wasn’t something that had just been applied. It had been there for

a few days at least.” Parson further testified that after he fell the substance was “caked” on

his pants, and he testified that he was relying on “his personal opinion” that the substance

“wasn’t [anything] that just happened that day or that morning or the day before. It had been

there a while.” He admitted that other than his personal opinion, he had no other independent

knowledge about how long the substance had been there.

¶6. Parson also testified that the description of the substance’s location in his complaint

was “inaccurate.” He testified that the substance was located between two gas pumps, “on

the inner side of the front pump,” and “down the inside of [the] pump island,” rather than

between the front door and the gas pumps, or “in front near the door,” as described in his

complaint. Parson also testified that the area of the substance was about “10 to 12 inches

wide,” not two feet wide, as described in his sworn interrogatory responses.

¶7. Parson testified that when he fell, his prosthetic leg detached and his back struck the

3 raised curb near the gas pump. He said he was “sitting in [the substance]” and that a man

pulled up in his car, got Parson’s crutches from his truck, and helped him up. Parson testified

that he reattached his prosthetic leg, went into the gas station and said to the clerk, “You need

to get somebody to clean up out there before somebody really gets hurt.”

¶8. Plaintiff’s mother, Martha Walt, was deposed on May 3, 2016. She testified that she

stopped at the GK gas station for gas that morning and saw Parson “sitting on the ground . . .

and some man had come over and picked him up.” She testified that she parked her car, but

did not get out of her car. She said that after he was up, Parson came over to her car and

showed her his pants. She testified that Parson had “gook all over his . . . pants,” and then

she said, “I’m assuming that it was oil because it was at a service station. It was dark. . . .

It was on his bluejeans. I can’t exactly tell you what it looked like. . . . I didn’t get out of the

car and investigate it.”

¶9. Store employee, Candy Clifton, was deposed on May 4, 2016, and testified “that if gas

and oil [were] out there [on the lot], of course I’m going to clean it up,” but she said she had

not seen oil on the lot and “never had to clean up oil.” Clifton also testified that Parson came

to the store twice on the day that he fell—once at about 8:00 a.m., and again at about 10:45

a.m. She testified that when he came in to the store at 8:00 a.m. he smelled of beer, and

bought beer at that time. Parson bought beer again when he returned to the store later that

morning, then he walked out of the store. Clifton testified that she did not see Parson fall,

but just as she was finishing checking out the next customer, she looked up and saw Parson

sitting on the gas pump island “messing” with his leg, so she ran to the door, saying “did that

4 man just fall?” She testified that she stood at the door and asked Parson if he was ok.

Clifton testified that later that day she “went outside and looked to see if anything was on the

ground where [Parson] claimed he fell . . . [and saw] [n]othing.” She confirmed she saw no

“liquids, debris or anything else.”

¶10. Another store employee, Jo Ann Terry, was also deposed on May 4. She testified that

she went outside the store when Parson was still sitting on the gas pump island after his fall.

She said that she did not see any substances in the area where Parson fell—“just the

concrete.”

¶11.

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