Lesley Houghtaling v. Healthcare Realty Inc

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 15, 2018
Docket337162
StatusUnpublished

This text of Lesley Houghtaling v. Healthcare Realty Inc (Lesley Houghtaling v. Healthcare Realty Inc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lesley Houghtaling v. Healthcare Realty Inc, (Mich. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

LESLEY HOUGHTALING, UNPUBLISHED May 15, 2018 Plaintiff-Appellee,

v No. 337162 Macomb Circuit Court HEALTHCARE REALTY, INC., LC No. 2015-002999-NO

Defendant, and

ST. JOHN MACOMB-OAKLAND HOSPITAL, doing business as ST. JOHN HEALTH SYSTEM DETROIT-MACOMB CAMPUS,

Defendant-Appellant.

Before: BORRELLO, P.J., and SAWYER and JANSEN, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

In this premises liability action, defendant-appellant, St. John Macomb-Oakland Hospital, doing business as St. John Health System Detroit-Macomb Campus (St. John Hospital), 1 appeals by leave granted the trial court’s order denying defendant’s motion for summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(10). For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we reverse the trial court’s order and remand this matter for entry of an order granting summary disposition in defendant’s favor.

I. BACKGROUND

This case arises out of a slip and fall in a parking lot. Plaintiff, Lesley Houghtaling, testified during her deposition that on December 29, 2014, she arrived at the St. John Hospital

1 In the trial court, all of plaintiff’s claims against defendant Healthcare Realty, Inc., were dismissed without prejudice by stipulation. Because defendant Healthcare Realty has been dismissed and is not a party to the instant appeal, our use of the word “defendant” throughout this opinion refers only to St. John Macomb-Oakland Hospital.

-1- and Medical Building parking lot for her 7:00 a.m. physical therapy appointment at Mendelson Kornblum Orthopedic & Spine Specialists (Mendelson Kornblum). Plaintiff alleged in her first amended complaint that this premises was owned by defendant and that Mendelson Kornblum rented space from defendant. Plaintiff testified during her deposition that she left her house at approximately 6:40 a.m. and arrived at the St. John Hospital parking lot by approximately 6:54 a.m. Regarding the weather conditions that morning as she went to her appointment, plaintiff testified that it “was a normal day,” the temperature was “in the 40s,” and there had not been any snow yet that winter. The sun had not started to come up yet when she left her home that morning, and it was still dark outside. Plaintiff did not see any accumulations of snow or ice at any point before she arrived in defendant’s parking lot, none of the pavement before she arrived at the parking lot was wet, and she did not have to use her windshield wipers as she drove that morning. Plaintiff testified that the weather had been the same on the previous day, and she did not know what the low temperature was during the night before her appointment.

According to plaintiff’s deposition testimony, she parked close to the medical building when she arrived. No other cars were parked in the immediate vicinity, and there was only one other car in the entire parking lot. The other car did not have its headlights on, and there were no parking lot lights on when she arrived. Plaintiff testified that the parking lot was black and made of asphalt.

Plaintiff testified that as she was getting out of her car, she slipped. She opened her car door, put her left foot out of the car, and began to put her weight on it. Then she started to turn to shut the door and slipped. As plaintiff described it, “My one foot, I had one foot out, I went to go turn and shut the vehicle and I slipped out from under my foot.” Plaintiff further explained, “I was literally opening up the door and then I went to shut it and I went flying in the air that way.” Plaintiff tried to grab the car door to brace her fall, but her foot continued to slip out from underneath her. She fell down and her head was the first part of her body to strike the ground. Then her lower back hit the ground. Her left elbow also struck the ground, and the fall “affected [her] knee,” although her left knee cap never directly struck the ground. Plaintiff remained on the ground for “[p]robably a minute or so, couple.” She did not lose consciousness, she was not bleeding, and she never had a lump on her head at the time of the fall or afterward.

Plaintiff testified that once she got up from the fall, she saw that she had slipped on ice. According to plaintiff’s deposition testimony, it “was a divot with ice” and there was no wetness or puddling in the area. Plaintiff testified that the ice patch was a circle that was approximately two or three feet in diameter and that none of the ice was covered by her car. According to plaintiff, the ice looked black, just like the surface of the parking lot. She was only able to see it when she was getting up. Plaintiff testified that she did not see any ice other than in the spot where she fell, and she took some photographs of the ice with the camera on her smart phone before going into Mendelson Kornblum. Plaintiff did not know if the hospital or anyone responsible for the parking lot actually knew that there was any ice in the parking lot that morning. Once inside Mendelson Kornblum, plaintiff completed an incident report, describing the incident. Plaintiff also took additional photographs the next day when it was light outside, but there was water on the parking lot surface by this time because the ice had melted.

After plaintiff reported her fall, two Mendelson Kornblum employees, Jennifer Trevorrow and Amy Hauxwell, went out to look at the spot where plaintiff fell and saw the ice.

-2- Trevorrow testified during her deposition that she did not know when the ice patch at issue formed or where the moisture that caused the ice patch came from. Hauxwell also testified during her deposition that she did not know how long the wetness or ice patch was on the ground before plaintiff’s fall, that she did not know how the moisture first came to be on the ground allowing the ice to form, and that she did not know where the moisture originated from.

Another Mendelson Kornblum employee, Deedria Johnson, testified that she had arrived for work at approximately 6:45 a.m. on the day of plaintiff’s fall. She typically arrived early for work and sat in her car for a while before walking in to start her shift at 7:30 a.m., which is what she did on this particular day as well. Johnson testified that it was dark outside at that time, “[l]ike nighttime dark.” There was no snow or sleet that morning. According to Johnson, the sun was not up yet, and there was a light pole near where she parked in the parking lot. However, she did not recall whether it was on or off that morning. However, another Mendelson Kornblum employee, Victoria Cassar, testified that she believed this light was working that morning because she would have noticed if it had not been working. Johnson testified that the lighting at that time typically stayed “dim” until approximately 7:20 a.m. Johnson also explained that there was a separate entrance to the building reserved for physical therapy patients and that Johnson always used the other entrance along with other employees. There was also a raised “curb-type” divider separating the two parking lots. That morning, Johnson was parked in her usual parking spot near the divider. Johnson explained that the other parking lot was “a whole separate parking lot” and that she would never walk that path. With respect to the temperature that morning, Johnson testified that it “couldn’t have been too bad out” because the heat in her car did not work and she would not have been sitting in her car if it had been very cold outside. She also testified that there were not any accumulations of snow anyplace in sight.

Johnson testified that approximately 10 minutes after she parked in the parking lot, she saw plaintiff drive into the parking lot and park. It was still dark outside. Johnson was facing the back of plaintiff’s car, and plaintiff’s car was approximately 50 to 60 feet in front of Johnson’s car.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Lesley Houghtaling v. Healthcare Realty Inc, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lesley-houghtaling-v-healthcare-realty-inc-michctapp-2018.