Food Lion, Inc. v. Max-Yeboah

CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedApril 23, 2004
Docket031140
StatusPublished

This text of Food Lion, Inc. v. Max-Yeboah (Food Lion, Inc. v. Max-Yeboah) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Food Lion, Inc. v. Max-Yeboah, (Va. 2004).

Opinion

Present: All the Justices

SOUTHERN FLOORS AND ACOUSTICS, INC.

v. Record No. 031097 OPINION BY JUSTICE DONALD W. LEMONS April 23, 2004 ANTHONY MAX-YEBOAH

FOOD LION, INC.

v. Record No. 031140

ANTHONY MAX-YEBOAH, ET AL.

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF CHARLOTTESVILLE Edward L. Hogshire, Judge

In this appeal, we consider whether a customer who is

injured by tripping over a stack of floor tiles in a grocery

store where the floor is being re-tiled is contributorily

negligent as a matter of law and, if not, whether both the

independent contractor installing the new floor and the store

owner can be held liable to the customer for his injuries.

I. Facts and Proceedings Below

Anthony Max-Yeboah ("Max-Yeboah") tripped over a stack of

tiles in an aisle of a Food Lion, Inc. ("Food Lion") grocery

store in Charlottesville, Virginia and broke his ankle. On

the evening of Max-Yeboah's accident, employees of Southern

Floors and Acoustics, Inc. ("Southern Floors"), a

subcontractor, were installing new floor tiles in the aisle

where Max-Yeboah was injured. The Southern Floors employees

had spread glue on part of the floor of the aisle an hour before Max-Yeboah entered it and were waiting for the glue to

become "tacky" so that new tiles could be installed. One end

of the aisle was completely blocked by caution tape.

Conflicting testimony was offered concerning whether, and to

what degree, the other end of the aisle was blocked by a fan

used to dry the glue, and caution tape.

Between 15 and 20 Southern Floors employees were working

in the aisle on a number of tasks associated with the tiling

process at the time of the accident. Although Max-Yeboah

testified at trial that he was not aware that work was being

performed on the floors when he entered the aisle, he was

aware that work associated with the remodeling of the store

was occurring throughout the store.

Max-Yeboah entered the aisle where the tile work was

occurring to get some frozen food. He testified at trial that

he did not see the stack of tiles he eventually tripped over,

although he had walked past them on his way into the aisle,

because he was looking at a freezer case for frozen food.

While Max-Yeboah was standing in front of the freezer case, a

Southern Floors employee told Max-Yeboah to "go back" because

he was standing in the glue which was not yet dry. Max-Yeboah

alleges that the man yelled at him and pointed which led Max-

Yeboah to believe that something was falling toward him. At

trial, the employee recalled addressing Max-Yeboah but did not

2 recall yelling. In response to the instruction from the

Southern Floors employee, Max-Yeboah turned quickly to exit

the aisle, tripped over a foot-high stack of tiles placed next

to the freezer unit, and broke his ankle.

Max-Yeboah filed suit against both Southern Floors and

Food Lion. At trial, the jury was given conflicting

instructions. One instruction provided that "[a] person who

hires an independent contractor is not liable for his

actions." The jury was also instructed that, "where the owner

of the premises had control and oversight at the site where

work was being done by the contractor, he is responsible for

the negligent actions of an independent contractor."

The trial court overruled Food Lion's objection to the

latter instruction. The jury returned a verdict for Max-

Yeboah, finding Food Lion and Southern Floors jointly and

severally liable and awarding Max-Yeboah damages in the amount

of $30,000. Food Lion and Southern Floors appeal the

judgments adverse to them.

II. Analysis

A. Contributory Negligence

Southern Floors and Food Lion maintain on appeal that the

trial court should have held that Max-Yeboah was

contributorily negligent as a matter of law because the tiles

that he tripped over were an open and obvious condition, which

3 he noticed or should have noticed when he initially entered

the aisle. They maintain that Max-Yeboah tripped over the

tiles because he failed to be reasonably aware of his

surroundings. Max-Yeboah contends that he was distracted by

the yelling and pointing by the Southern Floors employee and

that these special circumstances excused his failure to see

the tiles.

When a plaintiff is injured by an open and obvious

defect, it is his burden "to show conditions outside of

himself which prevented him seeing the defect or which would

excuse his failure to observe it . . . . When they do not

exist the law charges the party with failure to do what was

required of him." City of South Norfolk v. Dail, 187 Va. 495,

505, 47 S.E.2d 405, 409 (1948); see also Hill v. City of

Richmond, 189 Va. 576, 584, 53 S.E.2d 810, 813 (1949).

However, "more is needed than a simple allegation of a

distraction to create a jury issue. It [is] necessary for

[the] plaintiff to establish that his excuse for inattention

was reasonable, i.e., that the distraction was unexpected and

substantial." West v. City of Portsmouth, 217 Va. 734, 737,

232 S.E.2d 763, 765 (1977).

While the one-foot high stack of tiles Max-Yeboah tripped

over was clearly an open and obvious hazard, Max-Yeboah

offered evidence of an extrinsic condition, in the form of the

4 Southern Floors employee's yelling and pointing to excuse his

inattention. If believed, the condition was unexpected,

placed him in fear of bodily harm, and constituted a

substantial distraction. Determining the credibility and the

weight of the evidence is the province of the finder of fact,

in this case, the jury. Therefore, the question of Max-

Yeboah's contributory negligence was properly submitted to the

jury. The trial court did not err in refusing to hold that

Max-Yeboah was contributorily negligent as a matter of law.

B. Liability of Food Lion

Food Lion maintains that, even if Max-Yeboah is not

contributorily negligent, Food Lion cannot be held liable

because its employees were not involved in the work, it had no

duty to supervise an independent contractor, and it had no

actual or constructive notice of the defect. Further, Food

Lion argues that the trial court erred in giving conflicting

and irreconcilable instructions to the jury on this issue. We

agree.

Southern Floors was clearly an independent contractor.

As we have previously stated, "An independent contractor is one

who undertakes to produce a given result without being in any

way controlled as to the method by which he attains that

result." Craig v. Doyle, 179 Va. 526, 531, 19 S.E.2d 675, 677

(1942).

5 If under the contract the party for whom the work is being done may prescribe not only what the result shall be, but also direct the means and methods by which the other shall do the work, the former is an employer, and the latter an employee.

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