Hagopian v. Publix Supermarkets, Inc.
This text of 788 So. 2d 1088 (Hagopian v. Publix Supermarkets, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
George HAGOPIAN and Cheryl Hagopian, Appellants,
v.
PUBLIX SUPERMARKETS, INC., Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.
Roy D. Wasson, Miami, and Law Offices of Rosen, Switkes & Jove, Miami Beach, for appellant.
*1089 Shelley H. Leinicke of Wicker, Smith, Tutan, O'Hara, McCoy, Graham & Ford, P.A., Fort Lauderdale, for appellee.
WARNER, C.J.
In this appeal from a verdict and judgment in favor of appellee, Publix Supermarkets, Inc., appellant challenges the trial court's direction of a verdict on her spoliation of evidence claim in favor of Publix. That claim was based upon Publix's disposal of a Sprite bottle which either fell or exploded off a shelf, injuring appellant's foot. Because we conclude that appellant presented sufficient evidence on the elements of the cause of action, we reverse.
Appellant, Cheryl Hagopian, was shopping with her father in a Publix store on a Saturday morning in April of 1991. While she was pushing a cart down the middle of the soda isle in her flip-flop sandals, she heard a sudden boom, and "this bottle exploded off the shelf and my foot was in pain." She heard, but did not see, the explosion. She testified that half of the glass bottle and its cap were still inside the six pack of soda on the shelf, but the bottom part had blown out and came to rest by her foot. A store employee testified that there did not appear to be any liquid or part of the bottle left on the store shelf. The store employees also disputed whether the top of the bottle remained in the six pack on the shelf after the incident. The store manager filled out an incident report, but refused to give appellant a copy when she requested it.
The store manager collected the broken bottle pieces and other bottles from the six pack, put them in a bag, and placed the bag in the store's computer room. However, appellant never asked him to save the broken glass.
In July 1991, appellant's attorney wrote to Publix notifying it of appellant's claim. At that time, the attorney did not request that the store save the bottle parts. It appears that some time during the ensuing several months that particular Publix store closed, and the bottles in the bag were discarded.
Appellants, Cheryl and her husband George Hagopian, filed suit against Publix and Coca Cola in 1994 alleging a cause of action for premises liability and strict liability against Publix and products liability against Coca Cola, the producer of Sprite. In April of 1995, Coca Cola requested from Publix the actual bottle involved in the 1991 incident. Publix responded that it had not preserved the bottle in question. Appellants did not request the bottle from either Publix or Coca Cola until a supplemental request for production in February of 1997. After Publix could not produce the bottle, appellants amended their complaint to allege a cause of action against Publix and Coca Cola for spoliation of evidence.
Publix and Coca Cola cross-claimed against each other, and one of Coca Cola's affirmative defenses was that Publix was guilty of spoliation of the bottle. Ultimately, both parties voluntarily dismissed their cross-claims without prejudice. Appellants also dismissed their claim against Coca Cola with prejudice because the parties settled. Publix and appellant subsequently stipulated that any collateral source setoffs from the settlement would be determined after trial, if necessary.
In 1998, appellants moved for sanctions and partial summary judgment based on destruction of the evidence, namely the disposal of the bottle. The court considered whether sanctions were available where Publix inadvertently destroyed the bottles before initiation of the suit and without an order compelling production, and if so, what sanctions were warranted.
The court concluded that there was a duty to preserve evidence, relying on federal *1090 law and St. Mary's Hospital, Inc. v. Brinson, 685 So.2d 33 (Fla. 4th DCA 1996), in which we held that a plaintiff was able to bring a cause of action for spoliation of evidence where a medical device used during a surgical procedure which resulted in the death of an infant was disassembled prior to suit being filed. The trial court in this case found that the manager's preparation of an incident report on the date of the accident, together with Publix's refusal to give a copy to appellant based upon work product grounds, evidenced Publix's anticipation of litigation and therefore the necessity of preserving the instrumentality of injury, the bottle. Because the destruction of the evidence was not intentional and appellants could proceed without the evidence, the court did not impose the ultimate sanction of summary judgment. Instead, it found that the appropriate sanction was to draw a rebuttable adverse inference that the evidence would have been unfavorable to Publix.
At trial, appellant presented an exploding bottle expert, Dr. Harrenstine, who testified that normally he would reconstruct a product to determine the break pattern. This would allow him to assess whether the product was defective or damaged. Although he testified that the bottle would not have exploded in the absence of someone's negligence, he was significantly impaired in determining whether manufacturing defects were present by not having the bottle pieces or the remaining bottles. If he had the pieces, he would be better able to determine fault for the bottle explosion. Thus, he could not say that there was any evidence that Coca Cola was negligent in bottling or handling the bottle. Moreover, he could not determine if Publix could have mishandled the bottle, causing damage that led to its explosion.
On cross-examination, he admitted that he did not ask for the bottle immediately. When he was first brought into the suit, the claim against Publix did not involve discerning a defect in the product. Instead, "it was a case of a person shopping in Publix and getting hit by an exploding bottle. And I was of the opinion that this shouldn't happen." He was describing a strict liability claim. However, he also noted that if the lawyers had asked him about suing Coca Cola, he would have needed the bottle to prove a defect.
At the close of appellants' evidence, the trial court directed a verdict against appellant on the spoliation claim. The court found that Dr. Harrenstine testified that he did not need the bottle to express his opinions, that he was retained six years after the incident, that even if he had all of the pieces he would be "playing the odds" at reconstruction, and that he may not have requested the bottles in any event. It concluded that appellants could go forward against Coca Cola, Owens Corning (the alleged bottle manufacturer), and Publix without the bottle. Because the court believed that appellants had not been significantly impaired in their ability to prove their claim or a causal relationship between their inability to prove their claim and the evidence destruction, a directed verdict was entered on the spoliation claim.
The jury ultimately returned a verdict finding that Publix did not place a defective product on the shelf which was the legal cause of appellant's injuries and that Publix was not negligent. After denial of a motion for new trial, appellants appealed the final judgment, contending that the court erred in granting the directed verdict on the spoliation claim.
The standard for granting directed verdicts indulges all inferences in favor of the non-moving party.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
788 So. 2d 1088, 2001 Fla. App. LEXIS 8332, 2001 WL 686915, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hagopian-v-publix-supermarkets-inc-fladistctapp-2001.