Lewis v. B & R CORPORATION

56 S.W.3d 432, 2001 Ky. App. LEXIS 702, 2001 WL 1020983
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedSeptember 7, 2001
Docket2000-CA-001297-MR
StatusPublished
Cited by241 cases

This text of 56 S.W.3d 432 (Lewis v. B & R CORPORATION) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lewis v. B & R CORPORATION, 56 S.W.3d 432, 2001 Ky. App. LEXIS 702, 2001 WL 1020983 (Ky. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION

HUDDLESTON, Judge.

Theresa Gail Lewis, Administratrix of the estate of Brenda Carol Helton, and Don Helton (hereinafter collectively referred to as “Lewis”) appeal from a summary judgment granted to B & R Corporation, d/b/a Save-A-Lot, 1 on their complaint for wrongful death involving the death of Brenda Carol Helton in a one-car vehicular accident. We affirm.

On the afternoon of June 4, 1998, Brenda Helton went alone to a Save-A-Lot grocery store in Harlan, Kentucky. She parked her 1988 Ford Mustang on the front row, perpendicular to the front entrance of the store in a parking area designated for handicapped patrons. To the rear of her vehicle was the rest of a 20-foot parking area and a 38-foot grass embankment with an 18% grade that was parallel to Industrial Park Drive. After completing her shopping, Brenda Helton got into her vehicle and started the engine. Shortly thereafter, she placed the trans *434 mission in reverse and the vehicle suddenly accelerated at a high rate of speed. The car crossed the parking area, the grass embankment, Industrial Park Road, another level 35-foot grass embankment, and a short five-foot drop-off into the Cumberland River, where it landed on its roof, upside-down in the river. Brenda Helton was rescued by several witnesses and a city police officer. She was taken to the local hospital in a coma, but died the next day after being transferred to a regional hospital in Knoxville, Tennessee, without having regained consciousness.

Kentucky State Police Officers Kenneth Crider and Michael Cornett were called to the scene and conducted an investigation. Officer Crider took photographs of the scene and prepared an accident report after speaking with several witnesses and Helton’s family. Officer Cornett, who had training in accident reconstruction, prepared a diagram of the area with corresponding distance measurements indicating the path of the vehicle. Officer Crider learned that Brenda Helton was suffering from Huntington’s disease or chorea, a muscular, neurological condition, and that complaints had been filed with the Department of Human Resources about her driving ability. One witness stated that the car’s wheels were spinning just before it started moving in reverse at a high rate of speed.

On June 2,1999, Theresa Lewis, Brenda Helton’s daughter and administratrix of her estate, and Don Helton, Brenda Hel-ton’s husband, filed a wrongful death complaint against B & R Corporation, d/b/a Save-A-Lot, and Ford Motor Company. In the complaint, the appellants alleged B & R breached several duties it owed Brenda Helton related to her status as a handicapped person. They further alleged that as a proximate result of B & R’s failure to comply with its duties, Brenda Helton had been fatally injured. 2 The complaint listed the following duties owed by B & R to its handicapped patrons:

(a) To comply with all provisions of the Kentucky Revised Statutes regarding handicap[ped] persons and persons with physical disabilities.
(b) To reasonably protect patrons from unreasonable risks of harm while engaged in reasonably foreseeable activities.
(c) To provide its handicap[ped] business patrons with reasonably safe premises for the use of the patrons.
(d) To discover dangerous conditions that create an unreasonable risk of harm to handicap[ped] patrons and to correct or otherwise eliminate risk of harm to them.
(e) To maintain the premises in such a condition so that a patron will not be exposed to an unreasonable risks [sic] of harm.
(f) To provide safe guards [sic] and preventive measures to protect handicapped] patrons with physical disabilities from an unreasonable risk of harm.
(g) To make timely inspections of the premises used by its handicapped] patrons and discover and eliminate and/or warn of any conditions that create an unreasonable risk of harm to them.
(h) To use whatever means the defendant has available to it to eliminate unreasonable risk of harm.
(i) To lay out, construct, design, and otherwise present the premises to its handicap[ped] patrons so that they will not be exposed to an unreasonable risk of harm.
*435 (j) To otherwise use ordinary care to protect and provide a safe environment and premise [sic] for its handicap[ped] patrons with a physical disability.

On June 22, 1999, B & R served its first set of interrogatories and request for production of documents on the appellants. 3 In its interrogatories, B & R asked Lewis to state in detail each and every statute, regulation or case which she contended imposed each of the duties alleged in the complaint and state “every fact upon which you intend to rely to prove the alleged violation of each separate duty.” It also asked Lewis to state whether she intended to call an expert witness to testify, to state the subject matter of any expert’s testimony, and to provide a summary of the grounds for the expert’s opinions. In December 1999, the appellees took the depositions of Theresa Lewis, Officer Crider, and Rhonda Bowers, a witness to the incident. Also in December, Lewis served B & R with answers to its first set of interrogatories and request for admissions. In March 2000, the appellees took the deposition of Don Helton.

On February 16, 2000, B & R filed a motion for summary judgment arguing that Lewis had failed to identify any duty B & R breached which could have caused or contributed to the accident. On the same day, Ford filed a motion for a trial date and order assigning discovery deadlines. On March 17, 2000, the circuit court held a hearing on the motions during which appellants’ attorney stated that B & R had breached various provisions of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) regulations and that he would produce an engineering expert to support the allegations in the complaint. After the hearing, the circuit court set a March 2001 trial date with a pretrial conference in September 2000, and required Lewis to identify all of her expert witnesses by August 1, 2000. The court stated that a cut-off date for discovery would be considered at the pretrial conference.

On April 7, 2000, Lewis filed a response to B & R’s motion for summary judgment. She asserted that B & R’s breach of federal and state law on handicapped parking had created an unreasonably dangerous condition. She said that the handicapped parking spaces were too close to a steep drop-off and that the design of the parking spaces did not provide reasonable access for handicapped patrons. Attached to the response was an affidavit by Don Helton stating that the handicapped parking spaces were located on a steep grade, that they were not located to provide the shortest route of travel to the building’s entrance, and that there was insufficient room to maneuver a vehicle safely. On April 19, 2000, B &

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
56 S.W.3d 432, 2001 Ky. App. LEXIS 702, 2001 WL 1020983, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-b-r-corporation-kyctapp-2001.