Isaiah Rider, a Minor, by and through his Natural Mother and Next Friend, Michelle Rider v. The Young Men's Christian Association of Greater Kansas City

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 13, 2015
DocketWD76680_and_WD76711
StatusPublished

This text of Isaiah Rider, a Minor, by and through his Natural Mother and Next Friend, Michelle Rider v. The Young Men's Christian Association of Greater Kansas City (Isaiah Rider, a Minor, by and through his Natural Mother and Next Friend, Michelle Rider v. The Young Men's Christian Association of Greater Kansas City) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Isaiah Rider, a Minor, by and through his Natural Mother and Next Friend, Michelle Rider v. The Young Men's Christian Association of Greater Kansas City, (Mo. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

IN THE MISSOURI COURT OF APPEALS WESTERN DISTRICT

ISAIAH RIDER, a Minor, by and through ) his Natural Mother and Next Friend, ) MICHELLE RIDER, ) ) Appellant-Respondent, ) WD76680 ) (Consolidated with WD76711) v. ) ) OPINION FILED: ) January 13, 2015 THE YOUNG MEN’S CHRISTIAN ) ASSOCIATION OF GREATER KANSAS ) CITY, ) ) Respondent-Appellant. )

Appeal from the Circuit Court of Jackson County, Missouri The Honorable Charles H. McKenzie, Judge

Before Division II: Joseph M. Ellis, Presiding Judge, and Victor C. Howard and Mark D. Pfeiffer, Judges

Isaiah Rider (“Rider”), by and through his next friend and mother, Michelle Rider

(“Mother”), appeals the judgment of the Circuit Court of Jackson County, Missouri (“trial

court”), following a jury trial, which awarded him damages against The Young Men’s Christian

Association of Greater Kansas City (“YMCA”) in the amount of $590,652.50. On appeal, Rider

claims that the trial court erred in submitting a failure to keep a careful lookout comparative fault

instruction because there was no evidence supporting it. YMCA filed a cross-appeal alleging four points of error and filed a motion to strike a portion of Rider’s appellate reply brief. We

grant Rider’s point on appeal, deny YMCA’s points on cross-appeal, deny YMCA’s motion to

strike,1 and hereby enter the judgment the trial court should have entered, which is to award

Rider the full amount of damages found by the jury, not reduced by any percentage of

comparative fault.

Factual and Procedural Background

Rider was six years old in December of 2003. He attended an after-school daycare that

was run by YMCA at a facility located in Kansas. On December 16, 2003, YMCA staff directed

the children in the after-school daycare to play outside on the playground. There was melting

snow and melting ice on the playground where the children were playing. After some time,

YMCA staff directed the children to come back into the building through a door that led from the

playground directly into the cafeteria, which had a smooth tile floor. There was no floor mat at

or near the door on which the children could dry their feet. YMCA staff then directed the

children to cross the cafeteria to a large communal sink where the children were told to wash

their hands. Again, no floor mat was placed near the sink to absorb any water that might splash

or drip from the sink or from the hands or shoes of the children standing at the sink. Rider was

the last child to wash his hands. After the children washed their hands, YMCA staff directed

them to cross the cafeteria tile floor again and line up. After Rider left the sink and was crossing

the cafeteria heading toward the other children, he slipped on the tile floor, fell, and broke his left

tibia. Although Rider had not seen any water on the floor, he believed that he had slipped in

1 In his reply brief, Rider responds to one of YMCA’s arguments regarding the “mitigation of damages” instruction. YMCA argues that the reply brief should be stricken because Rider is allegedly raising a new claim of error—that the “mitigation of damages” instruction should not have been given. We disagree. Rider has consistently maintained that there is no evidence in the record supporting the imposition of a comparative fault percentage against Rider, and as we explain in our ruling today, there is nothing about the “mitigation of damages” instruction that directs the jury to utilize the “mitigation of damages” instruction to impose a percentage of fault to Rider. Rider is not injecting new allegations of error in his reply brief. Instead, Rider is merely responding to the arguments raised by YMCA in its initial appellate briefing. YMCA’s motion to strike is denied.

2 some water, because his clothes were wet after his fall but not before. Mother testified that, upon

arriving at the scene, she was told by YMCA staff that her son had “fallen and slipped in water.”

Although one YMCA staffer, Jean Phillips (“Phillips”), initially reported to an

investigator that she did not see Rider fall, she testified at trial that she did see Rider fall and that

he did not slip in any water but merely tripped over his own feet. Phillips also wrote on an

accident report that there should have been a floor mat on the floor. Another YMCA staffer,

Tiffany Haymon (“Haymon”), also would later testify that she saw Rider fall but that she did not

see any water on the floor before or after his fall. None of the YMCA staff persons testified that

Rider had violated a command or safety rule, was guilty of horseplay, or had ambulated in such a

way that was unusual (for Rider) or lacking in care as to any plainly visible dangerous conditions

on the floor. Instead, all of the YMCA staff persons testified that they did not observe any

plainly visible dangerous conditions on the floor and, frankly, did not believe that any existed at

the time of Rider’s fall.

Because Rider had a condition called congenital pseudoarthrosis,2 the tibia fracture that

Rider suffered in his fall did not heal normally; he had to have several surgeries, had to have rods

placed in his bone, and had to spend many months with his leg in a cast and then a brace so that

he was not bearing weight on the leg. The combination of the pseudoarthrosis and the lengthy

absence of weight bearing caused the bones in his left leg, ankle, and foot to incur osteopenia,

which is a loss of bone tissue and bone density. The result was that Rider suffered several

subsequent fractures to the bones in his left leg. The muscles in his lower left leg also began to

atrophy. The problem compounded, and Rider required more surgeries over the next several

years. His left leg also became shorter than his right leg, and he had to have a procedure to stunt

2 Rider was born with the congenital pseudoarthrosis; however, before his fall in the YMCA’s care and supervision, he had not shown any signs of osteopenia, nor had he had any fractures.

3 the growth of his right leg so that it would not become too much longer than his left leg.

Ultimately, it became clear to Rider, his family, and his doctors that Rider’s left leg would not

heal, and the leg was amputated below the knee. At some point during his treatment, Rider and

Mother moved from Kansas to Missouri.

Rider, through Mother as his next friend, sued YMCA, a Missouri corporation, for

premises liability and negligence in the trial court—a Missouri state court. Shortly before trial,

YMCA argued via motion in limine that the trial court should use Kansas law and Kansas jury

instructions to set forth the standards for its liability, for any comparative fault on Rider’s part,

and for any damages available to Rider (Kansas does not allow a plaintiff to collect any damages

if he is found to be more at fault than the defendant, and it has a cap on non-economic damages).

The trial court ruled that since YMCA had established that there was a difference between

Missouri and Kansas law with respect to the elements of premises liability and because Rider’s

accident had occurred in Kansas, it would instruct the jury on premises liability under Kansas

standards. However, because YMCA had not shown any substantive difference between

Missouri and Kansas law with respect to the elements of negligence, the trial court ruled that it

would use the Missouri MAI instruction for negligence. Finally, because Rider and YMCA were

both Missouri residents, and the trial court found that Kansas did not have any interest in limiting

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Isaiah Rider, a Minor, by and through his Natural Mother and Next Friend, Michelle Rider v. The Young Men's Christian Association of Greater Kansas City, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/isaiah-rider-a-minor-by-and-through-his-natural-mother-and-next-friend-moctapp-2015.