Gonyea v. Stop & Shop Companies, Inc.

1995 Mass. App. Div. 60
CourtMassachusetts District Court, Appellate Division
DecidedMay 1, 1995
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1995 Mass. App. Div. 60 (Gonyea v. Stop & Shop Companies, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts District Court, Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gonyea v. Stop & Shop Companies, Inc., 1995 Mass. App. Div. 60 (Mass. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

DEFENDANTS’APPEAL (94WAD 009)

Teahan, J.

We review this tort action arising out of a fall in a supermarket upon claims of a report by the defendant.

The plaintiffs, Lynn Gonyea and her husband, were shopping at a Stop & Shop in Springfield on September, 24, 1989 in mid-afternoon when she fell in an aisle. The floor was wet and neither she nor her husband observed any warning signs. The store manager upon notification of the incident went to the location and subsequently completed a form entitled “Report of Accident or Injury,” the admission into evidence of which after the denial of a motion in limine is largely the focus of the defendants’ appeal. That pre-printed report form contained handwritten responses to questions by the manager that included (“describe any defects”) the entry “floor was wet, it had been mopped.” That entry followed a question, “did you inspect location immediately after accident” to which he entered “yes.” The report viewed in its entirety contained information obtained by the manager-witness from the plaintiff, (such as names of all employee witnesses, description of the accident [’’Mrs. Gonyea slipped on a wet floor. She strained her back.”]), as well as multiple questions completed by the manager about his observations of the floor and its surface condition, lighting and whether any foreign objects were observed (“no”). It concluded with “injured person’s story of how accident occurred,” (“she was walking slowly through produce department when she slipped and fell”). At trial, the report was admitted over renewed objections and the defendant properly claimed a report. The judge in written findings observed:

the report contains the store manager’s observations of the site of the fall. It contains no opinions as to the cause of the fall nor suggestions for remedial measures. It is merely his present sense impression and was admitted as a recording of the event (Report, Tab N, Findings & Order, paragraph 6.)

At trial the manager testified that he learned of the incident from the plaintiff who approached him in the front of the store, that he walked part of the way to the produce department, but that he did not go into the aisle where she fell. He was further questioned by the plaintiff about the contents of the “Report of Accident or Injury” and stated that he had seen the warning signs in the area and he, therefore, assumed the floor was wet but that he did not see the specific area (Report, page 6). The plaintiff [61]*61and her husband both testified that the floor was wet where the fall occurred.

The plaintiff suffered a sciatic nerve contusion resulting in a 5% permanent partial impairment, full time inability, to work from September 28, 1989 to December 2, 1989, and partial employment to January 16, 1990. She had a forty-six year life expectancy. The permanent partial disability disqualified her from some recreational pursuits due to pain.

The detailed written findings of the Court included, inter alia, finding credible the manager’s testimony that he observed the mop and bucket in the aisle in which plaintiff fell “still at the site” coupled with finding credible the testimony of an employee that as he mopped and posted signs, he moved the bucket to the next site. The findings included as follows:

Therefore the Court infers that the area was recently mopped or was still in the process of being mopped when (the plaintiff) slipped and fell.

In no findings did the Court mention the manager’s observations as narrated in the “Report of Accident or Injury.” It is clear from the findings that the thought process of the factfinder included inferential reasoning, as the basis for the finding of fact that the plaintiff fell on a recently mopped floor. In the “Findings of Fact” of the Court many of the “findings” are, in fact, recitations of what someone testified to rather than findings. That includes the reference to the written report completed by the manager. A fair reading of the Court’s “Findings and Order” includes the conclusion that the issue of the floor being wet as it bears on the finding of negligence was arrived at independently of the written report which, if relied upon, would have permitted a factual finding on the floor’s condition directly rather than by inference.

The Court entered a finding for the plaintiff on Count III in the amount of $63,000 and for her husband on Count IV for $6,300.

At the completion of trial the defendant filed five requests for rulings of law. Requests 1, 2, 4 and 5 were “denied, inapplicable to facts found”; Request 3 was allowed. The plaintiff filed twenty-two requests for rulings of law. All were allowed.

The defendant, in support of its appeal, has briefed multiple areas including:

a) admission of the accident report and its use in cross-examination of the store manager (claim of report filed);
b) admission of testimony from the plaintiff Lynn Gonyea relating to the manager allegedly telling her that another customer had fallen in the same area that morning (no claim of report filed under Rule 64 (a));
c) insufficiency of evidence on negligence to support a finding (Defendant’s request for ruling #1);
d) Court’s alleged prejudicial error in not finding comparative negligence (Defendant’s Request for Ruling #2) (Report, Defendant’s Claim of Report at F);
e) Court’s alleged prejudicial error in awarding excessive damages (Report, Defendant’s Claim of Report at G);
$ allegations of bias and prejudice by Court (Report, Defendant’s Claim of Report on Denial of Motion for New Trial, at J);
g) failure to grant new trial (Report, Defendant’s Claim of Report on Denial of Motion for New Trial at J).

In its claim of report, denial of defendant’s request for rulings 4 and 5 was not pursued and those issues are not subject to review. Neither has the defendant pursued by brief its claim of report as to the allowance of the plaintiffs’ requests for rulings of law 1 to 21, or the contents of paragraphs E, F, H, I and K of defendant's claim of report, (Report, page 7). They are deemed waived. Dist./Mun. Cts. R Civ. E, Rule 64(f).

[62]*62We consider the defendant’s arguments a, c, d, e, f and g as above set forth. Argument b) is not considered as it was preserved neither by a claim of report under Rule 64(a) nor in Defendant’s Claim of Report (Report, page 7).

I. ADMISSION OF THE “REPORT OF ACCIDENT OR INJURY’

The motion in limine denied by the Court sought to exclude the accident report which was asserted to consist of “after the fact ideas of how to prevent future accidents.” (Report, Tab F). It is the clear public policy proscription of the Commonwealth that not only evidence of subsequent repairs, but also results of a defendant’s accident investigations into causes, require exclusion from evidence. Reasoning that investigation is required to determine cause, that exclusion is an extension of evolving law in the Commonwealth. Martel v. Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority, 403 Mass. 1, 4-5 (1988). The area of exclusion of subsequent remedial measures has usually arisen through a plaintiff’s effort to elicit an opinion about the cause of an accident which is based upon investigation or evidence of physical or design modification.

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Bluebook (online)
1995 Mass. App. Div. 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gonyea-v-stop-shop-companies-inc-massdistctapp-1995.