Hassaine v. Club Demonstration Services, Inc.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 22, 2022
DocketD079396
StatusPublished

This text of Hassaine v. Club Demonstration Services, Inc. (Hassaine v. Club Demonstration Services, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hassaine v. Club Demonstration Services, Inc., (Cal. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed 4/22/22

CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION*

COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

STATE OF CALIFORNIA

LILYAN HASSAINE, D079396

Plaintiff and Appellant,

v. (Super. Ct. No. 37-2019-00016440- CU-PO-CTL) CLUB DEMONSTRATION SERVICES, INC.,

Defendant and Respondent.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Diego County, Richard E.L. Strauss, Judge. Reversed. Law Offices of Nicholas A. Boylan and Nicholas A. Boylan for Plaintiff and Appellant. England Ponticello & St. Clair, Barry W. Ponticello and Sarah M. Reddiconto for Defendant and Respondent.

* Pursuant to California Rules of Court, rule 8.1110, this opinion is certified for publication with the exception of parts C and D of the Discussion. While shopping at the Carmel Mountain Ranch location of Costco Wholesale Warehouse Corporation (Costco) in San Diego, plaintiff Lilyan Hassaine slipped and fell on a slippery substance that she believed was liquid soap. Claiming serious injuries from the fall, she sued Costco and Club Demonstration Services (CDS), an independent contractor that operated food sample tables within the store. The trial court granted a motion for summary judgment filed by CDS, concluding that the company owed Hassaine no duty of care. In the court’s view, it was dispositive that CDS’s contract with Costco limited its maintenance obligations to a 12-foot perimeter around each sample table, and that Hassaine’s fall occurred outside that boundary. The trial court erred in concluding that CDS’s contract with Costco delineated the scope of its duty of care to business invitees under general principles of tort law. Businesses have a common law duty of ordinary care to their customers that extends to every area of the store in which they are likely to shop. (See Danisan v. Cardinal Grocery Store (1957) 155 Cal.App.2d 833 (Danisan).) While the CDS-Costco agreement may allocate responsibility and liability as a matter of contract between those parties, it does not limit the scope of CDS’s common law duty to customers. Although CDS protests that this outcome would impose an unreasonable duty covering the entire Costco warehouse, its argument conflates the legal question of duty and the (generally) factual question of whether that duty was breached. Despite having a duty of ordinary care, CDS would have no liability so long as its conduct was reasonable under the circumstances, which include the distance between CDS personnel and the hazard.

2 In short, CDS owed Hassaine the usual duty of ordinary care codified in Civil Code section 1714. Breach and causation present triable factual issues here, precluding summary judgment on those grounds. We accordingly reverse. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND On the evening of October 19, 2018, Hassaine was shopping with her sister-in-law at Costco. While walking down an aisle, she slipped and fell. A

Costco surveillance video captured the incident.1 Hassaine entered the aisle where she would later fall, walking beside her sister-in-law, who pushed a shopping cart. No foreign substance appeared on the floor. The two women stayed in the aisle for about a minute and a half, pulling out various grocery items from the refrigerated display case as they conversed. After they moved on, a dark spot can be seen near where the cart had been located. Over the next several minutes various people proceeded to walk through the aisle and past the dark spot, including an aproned CDS employee and a Costco employee wearing a baseball cap. Less than seven minutes after leaving the aisle, Hassaine and her sister-in-law returned. The sister-

1 Hassaine objected and moved to strike the surveillance video for lack of foundation, defective chain of custody, spoliation, and failure to effect proper service. CDS responded that there was no prejudice to Hassaine where both sides had copies of the video, which was produced in discovery and had been used in multiple depositions. In granting CDS’s motion for summary judgment, the court overruled all evidentiary objections and denied Hassaine’s motion to strike. Hassaine does not challenge those rulings and instead suggests on appeal that the video demonstrates a triable issue of fact as to whether CDS’s conduct was reasonable under the circumstances. Accordingly, we have reviewed the video and summarize its contents in reciting the facts in the light most favorable to Hassaine as the nonmoving party. (See Mackey v. Board of Trustees of Cal. State Univ. (2019) 31 Cal.App.5th 640, 647, fn. 3.) 3 in-law pushed the shopping cart past the spill, as Hassaine walked behind her with items in her hands. As Hassaine stepped near the spill, she fell flat on her back. Her sister-in-law helped her up. Several Costco employees arrived to assist her and wipe the floor. Believing she slipped on liquid soap that leaked out of a Softsoap twin- pack carried in the shopping cart, Hassaine sued Costco and CDS (erroneously named as Advantage Solutions, Inc.) for negligence and premises liability, seeking compensatory damages for her injuries. CDS moved for summary judgment, arguing that it owed no duty to inspect or

maintain the location where Hassaine fell.2 To the extent a duty did exist, CDS maintained that Hassaine could not prove breach where only seven minutes elapsed between the spill and her fall. CDS also claimed Hassaine could not demonstrate that any alleged negligence caused her fall where she could not identify what substance caused her to slip or provide “evidence that this substance was in any way related to CDS.” In other words, CDS claimed that Hassaine could not establish the essential elements of duty, breach, or causation required to prove negligence and premises liability. Supporting its motion, CDS lodged a portion of the surveillance video, the “Agreement for Demonstration Services” between Costco and CDS, and excerpts of various depositions and discovery responses. Its lack-of-duty argument turned entirely on the Costco-CDS agreement, which named CDS as an “independent contractor” tasked with providing “demonstration and/or consumer sampling of food and non-food merchandise” within Costco warehouses. The contract defined the “ ‘Work Area’ ” that CDS had to safely maintain as “a Demo workstation and the adjacent 12 [foot] vicinity.”

2 Costco also moved for summary judgment, but only CDS’s motion is relevant to this appeal. 4 Witnesses testified that based on measurements, Hassaine fell somewhere between 16 and 17 feet from the nearest CDS sample table. Hassaine challenged CDS on both the law and the facts. Citing Danisan, supra, 155 Cal.App.2d 833, she argued that CDS owed its invitees a duty of reasonable care irrespective of anything in its private agreement with Costco. Factually, she suggested there remained triable issues of fact as to whether CDS and Costco employees in practice acted as mutual agents for ensuring floor safety; whether the spill had migrated to within a 12-foot perimeter by the time she fell; and whether Costco and CDS’s conduct was reasonable under the circumstances. Hassaine offered deposition testimony by several Costco and CDS employees who confirmed that CDS employees typically notified Costco of any visible spills and acknowledged that the video showed a CDS employee twice walk past the spill in the seven minutes before Hassaine fell. Following oral argument, the court entered a written order granting CDS’s motion for summary judgment, concluding Hassaine could not establish that CDS owed her any duty of care: “Here, Costco contracted with [CDS] to provide product demonstration services. (UMF ¶ 17.) The contract between [CDS] and Costco defines the ‘work area’ as the 12-foot radius of the ‘Demo workstation.’ (Id.) Thus, based upon the terms of the contract, [CDS] is reasonably responsible for the area within 12- feet of the workstation.

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