Heimer v. Roundy's Illinois, LLC

2025 IL App (3d) 240667-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 9, 2025
Docket3-24-0667
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2025 IL App (3d) 240667-U (Heimer v. Roundy's Illinois, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heimer v. Roundy's Illinois, LLC, 2025 IL App (3d) 240667-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and is not precedent except in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1).

2025 IL App (3d) 240667-U

Order filed December 9, 2025 ____________________________________________________________________________

IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

THIRD DISTRICT

DOROTA HEIMER, ) Appeal from the Circuit Court ) of the 18th Judicial Circuit, Plaintiff-Appellant, ) Du Page County, Illinois, ) v. ) Appeal No. 3-24-0667 ) Circuit No. 22-LA-522 ROUNDY’S ILLINOIS, LLC, d/b/a Mariano’s, ) ) Honorable Defendant-Appellee. ) Timothy J. McJoynt, ) Judge, Presiding. ____________________________________________________________________________

PRESIDING JUSTICE BRENNAN delivered the judgment of the court. Justices Davenport and Bertani concurred in the judgment. ____________________________________________________________________________

ORDER

¶1 Held: The trial court did not err in granting in part and denying in part defendant’s motion to strike portions of plaintiff’s response to defendant’s motion for summary judgment. The trial court did not err in granting summary judgment in defendant’s favor. Affirmed.

¶2 Plaintiff, Dorota Heimer, filed a complaint seeking financial compensation after her

shopping cart allegedly became stuck in a pothole in defendant’s, Roundy’s Illinois, LLC, d/b/a

Mariano’s, parking lot, causing her to fall and become injured. Plaintiff appeals the trial court’s

partial grant of defendant’s motion to strike portions of plaintiff’s response to defendant’s motion for summary judgment, as well as the court’s grant of summary judgment in defendant’s favor.

For the reasons set forth below, we affirm.

¶3 I. BACKGROUND

¶4 On June 14, 2022, plaintiff, representing herself, filed a document entitled “Motion for

financial compensation for the health impairment suffered[,]” (complaint) wherein she requested

damages in connection with injuries she sustained during a fall in the parking lot of defendant’s

store. Specifically, plaintiff alleged that on June 21, 2020 (Father’s Day), she purchased groceries

from the Elmhurst Mariano’s and attempted to transport them through the parking lot to her vehicle

with a metal shopping cart. Before she reached her vehicle, however, the wheels of the shopping

cart fell into a crack in the parking lot, causing it to stop suddenly. Plaintiff alleged that, as a result,

she fell and hit her “leg-knee and tibia” against the shopping cart. She described “the bad surface

of the parking lot, and the gaps, grooves of cracking in the pavement [that] were wide enough for

the wheels of the cart to easily fall into it” but explained that the cracks were difficult to spot and

avoid.

¶5 Plaintiff continued that she returned to the store “a few days” later to photograph the area

of the parking lot where she fell. At that time, she used a ruler to measure the gap in the surface of

the parking lot. Plaintiff claimed that, as a result of her injuries, weather changes caused “pain in

[her] knee and tibia of [her] ankle leg” and that therapies, ointments, and medication had been

ineffective. Plaintiff sought $95,000 in damages “for the damage suffered not only for health, but

also for stress and losses” as well as for compensation “for further treatments.”

¶6 Several exhibits were attached to the complaint. The first exhibit was plaintiff’s Mariano’s

receipt from the day of the alleged incident. The second exhibit was a June 26, 2020, after-visit

summary from Elmhurst Clinic noting that plaintiff was seen for “[i]njury.” The third exhibit was

2 a pharmacy receipt and medication list evidencing plaintiff’s “Amoxicillin-Pot Clavulanate”

prescription. The fourth exhibit was a Mariano’s receipt dated June 27, 2021. The fifth exhibit was

a letter dated September 10, 2020, from plaintiff to the “Managers of Mariano’s Store” explaining

that the parking lot “has pretty destroyed surface, especially in the front of the store.” She stated

that it was “stressful, inconvenient and irritating” to have to “go around” the cracks and holes. The

sixth exhibit was a letter dated June 27, 2021, from plaintiff to “Store Management of Mariano’s”

alerting the recipient that the damage to the surface of the parking lot remained. Plaintiff noted

that there was “still deep damage to the pavement, holes, cracks of various sizes, which are a big

nuisance and an obstacle for customers to move with shopping carts from Mariano’s store to the

car.” She stated that she was a regular customer and was “forced to endure these nuisances and

obstacles.” After expressing frustration that she did not receive a response to her first letter,

plaintiff disclosed in the letter her June 21, 2020, fall, which she described as painful and resulting

and “bruising of [her] leg, tibia of the left leg and hitting [her]self in the abdomen.” She requested

compensation “for the pain and health damage suffered: contusion of the leg, left tibia, abdomen,

leg and abdominal pain longer time, permanent disfiguring white spots on the left leg,

immobilization of body functions, physical fitness for a period of time.” Exhibit seven was a

medication list dated May 24, 2022, evidencing a prescription for ibuprofen to be taken “as needed

for [p]ain.” Exhibit eight was a medical referral to “physiatry-internal” and a May 24, 2022, after

visit summary from Dr. Nathaniel Pae, which indicated that plaintiff’s “[p]ain of left lower

extremity and [h]istory of injury” were addressed on that date.

¶7 In response, defendant denied the allegations and asserted five affirmative defenses,

including contributory or comparative negligence, plaintiff’s actions being the sole proximate

3 cause of her injuries, others’ actions being the proximate cause of plaintiff’s injuries, failure to

mitigate, and assumption of risk.

¶8 On November 15, 2022, plaintiff filed several documents, including her answers to the

written interrogatories propounded by defendant. She also filed several undated black and white

photographs depicting a parking lot, as well as June 26, 2020, May 24, 2022, September 8, 2022,

and September 22, 2022, progress notes following doctor’s visits. She included an October 25,

2022, spinal MRI report, November 8, 2022, knee x-ray report, and November 8, 2022, after-visit

summary from physical therapy. Finally, plaintiff included several medical bills. Plaintiff

subsequently filed separate exhibits containing additional medical bills, a December 16, 2022,

spinal x-ray report, and photographs of the Elmhurst Mariano’s parking lot dated December 31,

2022. On March 27, 2023, plaintiff filed an exhibit containing the results of a polygraph she

voluntarily took without prompting from defendant or the court.

¶9 On January 24, 2024, defendant filed a motion for summary judgment, arguing that the

defect in the parking lot was de minimis and, therefore, plaintiff could not prove any facts to

support the allegation that defendant breached a duty of care owed to plaintiff or that plaintiff’s

injury was foreseeable. Defendant attached photographs of the pothole that were taken by plaintiff.

One photograph depicted a ruler set inside the pothole along with a wheel of a shopping cart, and

the ruler showed that the depth of the pothole was less than one inch. Another photograph depicted

the ruler lying flat on the ground beside the pothole and showed that it exceeded one foot wide.

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2025 IL App (3d) 240667-U, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heimer-v-roundys-illinois-llc-illappct-2025.