Lorie Applebaum v. Target Corporation

831 F.3d 740, 2016 FED App. 0182P, 101 Fed. R. Serv. 35, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 14049, 2016 WL 4088740
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 2, 2016
Docket15-2198
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 831 F.3d 740 (Lorie Applebaum v. Target Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lorie Applebaum v. Target Corporation, 831 F.3d 740, 2016 FED App. 0182P, 101 Fed. R. Serv. 35, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 14049, 2016 WL 4088740 (6th Cir. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION

SUTTON, Circuit Judge.

Cycling and gravity have an uneasy relationship, as anyone who rides eventually learns. There are many ways, too many ways, to fall. A slick surface, an effort to avoid a hazard, a suddenly appearing animal, and a suddenly decelerating rider all come to mind. This lawsuit brings to the fore two other possibilities: a defective bicycle or operator error.

While browsing in a Target store in 2009, Lorie Applebaum noticed a purple Schwinn mountain bike that reminded her of her childhood bicycle. A few days later she bought one just like it at a different Target store. Any nostalgia was fleeting. On the Fourth of July, she took the bike on an inaugural ride with a friend. Just minutes into the ride, Applebaum fell off the bike at the bottom of a hill and injured her shoulder. She sued Target, alleging it negligently sold her a brake-defective bike. Target claimed that there was nothing wrong with the bike. Over the course of a three-day trial, a jury sorted out the competing evidence, eventually rejecting Ap-plebaum’s claim that the bike caused her fall. Because she received a fair trial, because the evidence supports the verdict, and because no errors infected the verdict, we affirm.

I.

The ease largely turns on whether Ap-plebaum bought a new or a used (and unrepaired) bike. According to Applebaum, when she returned to the Target store where she first noticed the bike in February 2009, the model was sold out. An employee, she says, told her a Target store in Farmington Hills had one that had been returned because of a brake problem that would soon be repaired. A week later, Applebaum called the Farmington Hills store and spoke with Sean Bryan, who allegedly told her the bike was “perfect, all fixed.” R. 107 at 144. As Bryan recounts the conversation, Applebaum did not mention a repair and asked only if his store had any of the bikes in stock. She purchased the bike later that day.

The bike spent a Michigan spring in the garage before Applebaum took it out for its first ride. Less than one-tenth of a mile into the ride, Applebaum fell off the bike and injured her left shoulder. A passerby came to Applebaum’s assistance, showed her that the rear brakes had clamped down on the tire, and released the brakes so that the bike could be wheeled back to Applebaum’s car.

On July 7, Applebaum returned the bike to Target and told Bryan she had been in an accident caused by a brake problem. She alleges she left the bike with Bryan, but he claims she left the store with it. One way or another, no one has seen the bike since.

After Applebaum’s visit, Bryan reported the incident to Target’s claims examiner, Sedgwick Claims Management Services. Sedgwick employee Katherine Kracner investigated the complaint and found that Target had no record of a repair being made at the Farmington Hills store in February 2009.

In 2011, Applebaum filed a negligence lawsuit in state court against Target, Impact Resources Group (the company that built and repaired bicycles for Target), and *743 National Product Services (Impact’s parent company). Target removed the case to federal court based on the diversity of the parties. Impact and National Product Services declined to participate in the litigation, and the district court entered a default judgment against them for $50,000. The record does not reveal whether Ap-plebaum was able to collect against these two defendants, though they apparently have been restructured in the interim. After a trial in which eight witnesses testified, a jury found that Target was not negligent in selling Applebaum the bike. The district court denied her motion for a new trial.

II.

On appeal, Applebaum claims that the district court should have granted her motion for a new trial for three reasons: (1) the evidence did not support the verdict; (2) the court mistakenly excluded certain evidence as hearsay; and (3) the court mistakenly limited the scope of an adverse inference instruction relating to the spoliation of evidence by the defendant.

Weight of the Evidence. Applebaum contends that no reasonable jury could have reached this verdict, requiring a new trial. See Armisted v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins., 675 F.3d 989, 995 (6th Cir. 2012). We cannot agree.

On the one hand, we must acknowledge that plenty of evidence (most of it Appleb-aum’s testimony) supported her theory of the case. She testified that she bought a used bike'from Target, that Bryan told her it had been sent back to the store due to a malfunctioning brake, that it did not work when she first tried to slow down, and that it suddenly clamped down, sending her flying through the air “like the scene in ET” and injuring her shoulder, R. 107 at 151. Had the jury ruled for Applebaum, this evidence would have supported the verdict.

On the other hand, Target’s account of the purchase and accident suggests the bike was brand new. Bryan testified that Applebaum never mentioned a repair when she first called about the bike, that he had no reason to believe the bike had ever been repaired, and that he retrieved Ap-plebaum’s bike from the area where the ready-for-sale bikes were kept rather than the separate area for the repair bikes.

Applebaum herself testified, moreover, that, when she bought the bike, it had cardboard wheel inserts in place, along with a plastic bag that contained the product manuals. All of these items were entered into evidence at trial. A Target employee testified that a bike sold with these items is “brand new ... out of the box,” R. 110 at 42, and that Target did not keep extras.

Target’s expert witness also attributed Applebaum’s fall to operator error and claimed that the rear brakes clamped onto the tire as a result of the impact of the accident, not as the cause of it. All in all, a reasonable jury could credit this testimony and rule in favor of Target.

Applebaum challenges this conclusion on the ground that the absence of any repair records shows that Impact never repaired the bike’s defective brakes. But of course another explanation for this evidentiary void exists: The absence of any such evidence confirms the absence of any defective brakes in the first place.

The rest of Applebaum’s contrary evidence is just that: Applebaum’s contrary statements and testimony. They include her own account of what unnamed Target representatives told her. And they include the “Guest Incident Report[ ]” prepared by Bryan for Sedgwick, which noted that the bike’s brakes had been repaired by *744 Impact. R. 67-4 at 3. But Bryan testified that this report was based entirely on what Applebaum told him when she returned with the bike, and that he had no personal knowledge of the bike’s history. If the jury did not find Applebaum’s statements credible, as it was entitled to do on this record, it had no obligation to rule for her. Appleb-aum is entitled only to a fair jury, not one that believes whatever she says.

It is a "rare occurrence” for this court to find that a verdict was against the weight of the evidence. Armisted, 675 F.3d at 995. We will not make it any less rare today.

Hearsay.

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831 F.3d 740, 2016 FED App. 0182P, 101 Fed. R. Serv. 35, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 14049, 2016 WL 4088740, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lorie-applebaum-v-target-corporation-ca6-2016.