Hazel v. Delaware Supermarkets, Inc.

953 A.2d 705, 2008 Del. LEXIS 321, 2008 WL 2721259
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedJuly 14, 2008
Docket210, 2007
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 953 A.2d 705 (Hazel v. Delaware Supermarkets, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hazel v. Delaware Supermarkets, Inc., 953 A.2d 705, 2008 Del. LEXIS 321, 2008 WL 2721259 (Del. 2008).

Opinions

JACOBS, Justice,

for the Majority.

Janice Hazel (“Hazel”), the plaintiff below, appeals from an order of the Superior Court granting summary judgment to the defendants below, Delaware Supermarket, [707]*707Inc. (“DSI”), Edy’s Grand Ice Cream (“Edy’s”), and Dreyer’s Grand Ice Cream Holdings, Inc. (“Dreyer’s”), and dismissing her action for personal injuries resulting from her fall in a supermarket operated by DSI. On appeal, Hazel claims that the Superior Court erred in granting summary judgment to the defendants, because (i) Hazel made the required prima facie showing of negligence, and (ii) the defendants have not demonstrated that there are no genuine issues of material fact and that as a matter of law the undisputed material facts preclude a finding of negligence. We agree and, therefore, reverse and remand.

FACTS

On July 2, 2008, Hazel slipped and fell in the frozen food aisle of the Stanton Sho-pRite supermarket that was operated by DSI. Hazel, who was wearing “flip-flops,” was pushing a shopping cart in the frozen food aisle. According to her testimony, she fell near a square wooden pallet that (Hazel was “99.9 percent sure”) contained ice cream. Hazel described the pallet as follows:

“What I mean [by] a pallet, [is that] it seemed like it was off the ground a little bit. I’m going to guess it was made of wood or something, but there was a stack of something there. I remember it having some sort of plastic over it and ... it seemed like there was some sort of [frost] on the plastic. [ ... ] It was full, and I’m pretty sure it was ice cream. If it wasn’t ice cream, it was something cold that made the plastic seem like it had a frosty thing on it. [ ... ] I actually ... saw some frost on it. It seemed like it may have been sitting there for a while.”

Hazel did not notice any water on the floor either before or after her fall, but indicated that she felt her legs “slide,” and that after the fall she touched her calf with her hand, and her hand was wet. Hazel did not know where the water came from. As a result of the fall, Hazel’s rear end hit the floor, her legs went under the shopping cart, and her knee hit the metal part underneath the cart.

At the time of Hazel’s injury, Michael Klingensmith (“Klingensmith”), an employee of Edy’s, was stocking ice cream in Edy’s freezers, which were located in that aisle 12 or 15 freezer doors away from where Hazel fell. Klingensmith testified that he would bring the ice cream from the freezers located at the back of the store to the sales floor in a shopping cart. He would then transfer the ice cream from the cart into the aisle freezers. Klingensmith agreed that occasionally a “product would get condensation on it and drip on the floor between the time [he] g[o]t it from the freezer and flnish[ed] packing it out on the sales floor.” In such cases, Klingen-smith would “clean it up with paper towels and get a wet floor sign, if [the frozen product] is sitting there for a while.”

After witnessing Hazel’s fall, Klingen-smith made the following notation: “7-2-03. Saw lady fall in the aisle. Said she hurt her back. Saw a little bit of water.” In his deposition, Klingensmith explained that, three or four minutes after Hazel fell, he and the frozen food manager inspected the area. The inspection revealed an amount of water on the floor about the size of a quarter. Klingensmith could not remember where he saw the water or whether the floor was cleaned after the incident.

Another person who witnessed Hazel’s fall was Jeanne O’Connor (“O’Connor”), who was working for Mellita, a coffee company. O’Connor’s job was to fill Mellita coffee machines located in ShopRite [708]*708stores, and to take inventory.1 At the time of the incident, O’Connor was on a ladder filling a Mellita coffee machine located in the frozen food aisle, close to where Hazel fell. O’Connor’s written report stated: “The lady was in front of the ice cream case when she just sort of went down. It didn’t look to me like she tripped over anything. I went over there but I didn’t see any water or objects on the floor. She was wearing very thin flip-flops which I knew are easy to trip over. I was ... high up a ladder when I observed her and she was complaining about her ... back. It didn’t look to me like a slip, it was just going straight down as if her knee gave way.” O’Connor further testified that she went over to Hazel and offered to help her, but Hazel refused and stood up without assistance, stating: “Oh, just what I need, another problem with my knee.” A Sho-pRite cashier then told Hazel that she could report the incident at the courtesy counter.

Hazel testified that as she left the frozen food aisle to go to the courtesy counter, she saw a ShopRite employee heading with a roll of paper towels towards the area where she fell. At the courtesy counter, Hazel reported the incident to William Yanchulis (‘Yanchulis”), the assistant store manager, who then noted the following: “Front office called me for a customer who fell. I asked the customer what happened, she said she fell on something. She stated that she did not have insurance and needed a contact person. She said something pulled in her back and she had back surgery about one year ago. Her ... knee was bruised on the left and ... right skin bruised. She had flip-flops on. Inspection of floor showed nothing. Floor was cleaned and no wet spots.”2 Although Yanchulis’ written report stated that the floor was “cleaned,” in his deposition Yan-chulis testified that he meant that the floor was “clean” and that nobody had “cleaned” the floor after the fall.

Hazel went home and put ice on her knee. Because the pain became “intense,” Hazel’s son took her to the hospital. The hospital doctor gave Hazel a prescription for pain medication and advised her to consult her family doctor. Hazel told her family doctor about her back pain and her recent back surgery. She then saw an orthopedic doctor who fitted her with a brace and recommended physical therapy. Hazel attended physical therapy sessions infrequently because she was uninsured.

Hazel filed suit in the Superior Court against DSI alleging negligence and seeking recovery for the injuries she sustained as a result of her fall. DSI filed a third-party complaint against Edy’s and Dreyer’s, seeking indemnification or contribution. All three defendants subsequently moved for summary judgment. The Superior Court “reluctantly” granted the motions, holding that “there is no evidence from which to argue negligence” because “there is nothing ... in the record which said what caused it” and “[wjhether it was a substance that [Hazel] brought in or the supermarket left there or some patron dropped ... a minute or hour or day before, we simply do not know.”

This appeal followed.

ANALYSIS

We review a Superior Court decision granting summary judgment de [709]*709novo.3 In an action for personal injuries resulting from a defendant’s breach of its “duty to keep the [] store premises in a reasonably safe condition for the use of the [] customers,”4

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Hazel v. Delaware Supermarkets, Inc.
953 A.2d 705 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 2008)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
953 A.2d 705, 2008 Del. LEXIS 321, 2008 WL 2721259, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hazel-v-delaware-supermarkets-inc-del-2008.