Fowler v. CEC ENTERTAINMENT

921 So. 2d 428, 2005 WL 927507
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedApril 22, 2005
Docket2040181
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 921 So. 2d 428 (Fowler v. CEC ENTERTAINMENT) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fowler v. CEC ENTERTAINMENT, 921 So. 2d 428, 2005 WL 927507 (Ala. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinions

On March 18, 2003, Bobbie Fowler sued CEC Entertainment d/b/a Chuck E. Cheese's ("CEC"), FSR Enterprises, and Ferris S. Richey Enterprises (FSR Enterprises and Ferris S. Richey Enterprises are hereinafter collectively referred to as "FSR" or "the FSR entities") seeking damages based on an injury sustained when she fell on stairs in front of the entranceway of a Chuck E. Cheese's restaurant ("the restaurant"). In her complaint, Fowler alleged that CEC and FSR were guilty of negligent and wanton conduct in causing her injuries. On December 19, 2003, CEC, as lessee of the building housing the restaurant, filed a cross-claim against FSR, as lessor, seeking indemnity in the event CEC was found liable. FSR answered the cross-claim.

On February 9, 2004, FSR filed a motion for a summary judgment seeking a judgment in its favor on the claims brought by both Fowler and CEC. Likewise, CEC filed a motion for a summary judgment on the claims brought by Fowler and on its *Page 430 cross-claims against FSR. Fowler filed a response to the summary-judgment motions. In support of their respective summary-judgment motions, CEC and FSR attached copies of the lease for the property housing the restaurant; the deposition testimony of Ferris S. Richey, Jr., one of the owners of the FSR entities; and excerpts from the deposition testimony of Fowler and Bryan Freeman, a general manager employed at the restaurant. Fowler supported her response to the summary-judgment motions with similar exhibits and also included the deposition testimony of Joann Green, the general manager at the restaurant at the time of the incident; also attached to Fowler's response were black and white copies of photographs of the entranceway into the restaurant and of the stairs on which Fowler fell. On July 23, 2004, the trial court entered a summary judgment in favor of CEC and FSR on Fowler's claims. Fowler appealed to the Supreme Court of Alabama, which transferred the appeal to this court, pursuant to § 12-2-7(6), Ala. Code 1975.

The record indicates that Fowler was 65 years old at the time of the incident. Fowler regularly wears bifocals. On February 17, 2002, Fowler, along with members of her immediate family, attended the birthday party of her three-year-old granddaughter at a Chuck E. Cheese's restaurant located in Roebuck; it was the second time Fowler had patronized the restaurant. In her deposition testimony, Fowler testified that she was unsure about the exact time of day that the party took place on February 17, 2002, but she guessed that the party was from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. Fowler walked up the two steps leading to the restaurant's front door without difficulty; the steps were painted yellow. According to Fowler, she did not notice a problem with the steps when she entered the restaurant.

After exiting the front door of the restaurant, Fowler stated that she began to walk down the two steps leading to the parking lot when her foot "snagged on something" and "threw [her] out on the pavement." Fowler further explained in her deposition that "when I stepped down, when my foot first hit [the stair], that's when my foot got caught in something and it threw me off and it bent my foot back in under me and when I landed on the pavement, I landed on my foot." Fowler testified that she landed on the pavement in front of the steps. While sitting on the pavement, Fowler observed a "dent out in the step." According to Fowler, the "dent" was painted yellow and "looked smooth" but it was not and the "dent" was in the middle of the step. Fowler testified that she was only carrying her purse when she fell, that she was wearing her glasses when she fell, and that she was looking down at the step before she fell. Fowler was wearing Keds brand tennis shoes when she fell. According to Fowler, she did not observe any loose gravel or other foreign objects on the step after she fell. Fowler did not speak with any restaurant employees after her fall.

Fowler injured both of her feet as a result of the fall. An MRI of Fowler's left foot indicated that the foot was broken. Fowler's right foot healed after six weeks; her left foot remained in a cast for several months. Fowler testified that, at her last doctor's appointment, the doctor said that her left foot had healed but that the foot could easily break again. Fowler testified that she continues to feel pain in her left foot and that her foot swells if she walks on it for extended periods of time. Fowler testified that she had never fallen and injured herself before the February 17, 2002, fall.

Joann Green, the general manager of the restaurant on February 17, 2002, testified *Page 431 that she did not see the fall but that she filled out an incident report after Fowler fell. Green testified that she inspected the area after Fowler fell and saw no loose concrete or gravel on the stairs. According to Green, the "crack"1 in the stair was not "broken up" in any way.

Green had worked at the Roebuck restaurant location for 13 years. According to Green, Fowler's fall was the first and only incident reported with regard to the outside of the restaurant; there had never been a problem with the step while she had been employed at the restaurant. Green testified that the crack in the step was present when she first started working at the restaurant's Roebuck location. Green testified that, in the years that she had worked at the restaurant, the crack in the step had become more visible. Green identified a crack running through the middle of the step in a picture of the entranceway to the restaurant that was produced by counsel for Fowler at Green's deposition. Green stated that she did not believe that the crack in the step was deep enough to "catch" someone's foot or toe. Green did not believe the crack was a tripping hazard.

Over the course of her employment at the restaurant, Green painted the steps in front of the restaurant twice. Green testified that she had used yellow paint and that she had painted the steps for cosmetic reasons. Green last painted the steps approximately one year before the February 17, 2002, incident. Green testified that it was her understanding that the landlord was generally responsible for the upkeep of the outside of the building. Green testified that she never reported a problem with the stairs to the landlord or to CEC upper management.

Bryan Freeman, a restaurant employee, replaced Green as general manager of the restaurant several months after the February 17, 2002, incident. At the time Fowler fell, Freeman was the assistant manager of the restaurant; he had held that position for five years. Freeman testified that there had never been a problem with the outside steps before Fowler fell. According to Freeman, one of the responsibilities of the manager on duty was to inspect the entranceway and to make sure the area was safe. Freeman testified that this primarily entailed sweeping up loose debris.

Ferris S. Richey, Jr., one of the owners of the FSR entities, testified that he had looked at the area where Fowler had fallen and could not identify what had caused Fowler to fall. According to Richey, the step was smooth. Richey could not identify anything on the step that would constitute a tripping hazard. Richey testified that no one had fallen on the steps before Fowler fell on February 17, 2002.

Richey testified that CEC was responsible for the construction of the steps leading to the entrance of the building. According to Richey, CEC designed and built the entranceway. Richey testified that neither CEC management nor CEC employees notified him that the steps needed repair.

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Fowler v. CEC ENTERTAINMENT
921 So. 2d 428 (Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama, 2005)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
921 So. 2d 428, 2005 WL 927507, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fowler-v-cec-entertainment-alacivapp-2005.