Hendrix v. Stobaugh

343 S.W.3d 597, 2009 Ark. App. 657, 2009 Ark. App. LEXIS 828
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 7, 2009
DocketCA 09-71
StatusPublished

This text of 343 S.W.3d 597 (Hendrix v. Stobaugh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hendrix v. Stobaugh, 343 S.W.3d 597, 2009 Ark. App. 657, 2009 Ark. App. LEXIS 828 (Ark. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

RITA W. GRUBER, Judge.

| ¶ James Hendrix appeals from an order of the Pope County Circuit Court granting appellee David Stobaugh’s motion for summary judgment and dismissing Mr. Hendrix’s complaint for personal injuries that he sustained at Stoby’s, Mr. Stobaugh’s restaurant in Russellville. Because Mr. Hendrix failed to present evidence that a genuine issue of material fact existed regarding Stoby’s alleged negligence, we affirm the circuit court’s order. 1

Mr. Hendrix alleged in his complaint that he and his wife went to Stoby’s to eat breakfast on February 18, 2006. Snow had fallen in the area the night before, but the walkways and parking lot of the restaurant were clear. Mr. Hendrix alleged that, upon entering the restaurant, he fell in standing water that had been allowed to accumulate and the |awater on the floor was of such a volume that it had soaked through a doormat. He claimed that Sto-by’s was negligent in “allowing significant amount of water to be left upon the floor, causing a dangerous and slick condition as a result of lack of due care.” He also alleged that Stoby’s “knew or should have known of the presence of the volume of water on the floor and failed to adequately maintain the premises.” Finally, Mr. Hendrix alleged that Stoby’s “failed to warn” Mr. Hendrix of the dangerous condition. He claimed that he sustained damages in excess of $75,000 for injuries to his prosthetic hip requiring surgical intervention, other medical expenses, pain and suffering, and loss of income.

Stoby’s filed a motion for summary judgment, contending that it took all reasonable precautions so that any water on the floor of the restaurant was not a result of Stoby’s negligence. In the alternative, Stoby’s contended that any water on the floor had not been present for such a length of time that Stoby’s should have known of its presence and removed it. Stoby’s attached relevant portions of the depositions of Mr. Hendrix and his wife, Tanya Hendrix; Heather Frensko, an employee working the day of the incident; Patty Stobaugh, Mr. Stobaugh’s wife; and Mr. Stobaugh.

Mr. Hendrix testified in his deposition that he did not know exactly when he got up or went to breakfast at Stoby’s that morning but that he had plans later in the morning to unload a truck in Dardanelle. He said that it had snowed the night before and, while the streets were still slushy, it was melting and he had no trouble getting around. He also said that the walk in front of Stoby’s had salt residue and was extremely well cleared and well cared for. |sHe explained that there was a door leading to an entryway and then a set of double doors between the entryway and the restaurant. He said that he fell on his first step inside the front door to the entryway. He thought he slipped on the wood threshold or the area between the threshold and a mat laid on the ground. He said that he knew it was wet because there was a six-inch wet patch on his shoulder and a small wet spot on his jeans. He said that the mat was wet, although he did not know how wet. It was not clear from his testimony whether his clothes got wet from the floor or the mat.

Mrs. Hendrix testified that the steps leading to the restaurant had been salted and were clear and well prepared. She said there was a rug, which is always there, immediately inside the front door. She did not remember whether it was wet when she came in, but she said she noticed it was wet when they left after eating breakfast. She also testified that she did not remember seeing any caution signs when she went in but that she was not looking for anything, although she did see a yellow “caution when wet sign” in the cash-register area when she left after eating breakfast. She said she did not see any signs in the entryway when she left. She did not notice whether her husband’s clothes were damp or wet after he fell.

Mrs. Stobaugh testified that she opened the restaurant that morning between 5:00 a.m. and 6:00 a.m. and put out the wet-floor signs: one in the entryway and one near the cash register in the restaurant. She also testified that she was not aware of any customers having slipped or fallen on the floors of the restaurant before.

Ms. Frensko testified that she came in at about 8:00 a.m. She said that she put out the |4rugs when she got there: one in the entryway and one inside the restaurant. She stated that, when she put the rug down, the entryway floor was “all dry.” She said she also put down the wet-floor signs: one in the entryway and one in the main restaurant area near the pie case.

Mr. Stobaugh testified that one of his primary responsibilities when he spends the night in Russellville the night before a snow day is to shovel and take care of the hazards involving snow. He said that he is “ten times more aware of the conditions of the floor and the safety of the floor when it’s just snowing versus when it’s raining, for instance, just because it is unusual and it is more hazardous.” He said Stoby’s typically had “much” water tracked into the entryway.

Mr. Hendrix attached relevant portions of the same depositions to his response to Stoby’s motion for summary judgment. He argued that there was evidence that Stoby’s knew that water would accumulate on the floor, that it took no action to monitor the water and mop it up, and that a disputed issue of material fact existed as to whether the warning signs were out prior to his injuries. He attached the part of Mrs. Stobaugh’s deposition in which she said that the employee who comes in before 6:00 a.m. is responsible for putting the mats down in the entryway. He also nob-ed that Mrs. Stobaugh testified that it was a busy day. Finally, he attached Mrs. Stobaugh’s testimony in which she said that she did not mop the mats or do anything to them, but that if the mats had gotten extremely wet she would have gotten the wet-dry vac out and dried them.

In the part of Ms. Frensko’s deposition attached to Mr. Hendrix’s response, Ms. | BFrensko testified that she put the wet-floor signs out when she arrived at 8:00, that she did not remember whether she cleaned the rug between 8:00 and the time she went to lunch, and that the wet-floor signs were still out when she came back from lunch.

Mr. Hendrix attached the part of his own deposition in which he testified that he knows there was a wet-floor sign in the cash-register area when he left, but that he did not remember a wet-floor sign in either the entryway or the cash-register area when he arrived. He said it could have been there but that he fell immediately upon his first step inside and he was hurting.

Finally, Mr. Hendrix attached Mr. Sto-baugh’s testimony in which Mr. Stobaugh said that he did not independently remember whether there were signs out that morning. He testified that he was concerned with clearing the snow outside and that he was never at the restaurant to take care of the floors. He said that it was rare for him to be at the store on a Saturday and that he was generally not in the stores at all, but in the office. He was there to shovel and take care of the hazards involving snow. He said Stoby’s typically had much water tracked into the entryway because you have people with wet feet. “And when you’re that busy, it’s just a fact of life.”

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Bluebook (online)
343 S.W.3d 597, 2009 Ark. App. 657, 2009 Ark. App. LEXIS 828, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hendrix-v-stobaugh-arkctapp-2009.