Mannina v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.

757 So. 2d 98, 2000 WL 232609
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 29, 2000
Docket99-CA-1102
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 757 So. 2d 98 (Mannina v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mannina v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 757 So. 2d 98, 2000 WL 232609 (La. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

757 So.2d 98 (2000)

Danyele MANNINA
v.
WAL-MART STORES, INC. and National Union Fire Insurance Company of Pittsburgh, PA.

No. 99-CA-1102.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.

February 29, 2000.
Writ Denied June 2, 2000.

*99 Thomas M. Discon, John G. Discon, Gregory T. Discon, Mandeville, Louisiana, Counsel for Plaintiff-appellee/Cross-appellant Danyele L. Mannina.

Frederick R. Campbell, Geoffrey J. Orr, Campbell, McCranie, Sistrunk, Anzelmo & Hardy, Metairie, Louisiana, Counsel for Defendants-appellants.

Court composed of Judges EDWARD A. DUFRESNE, Jr., THOMAS F. DALEY and CLARENCE E. McMANUS.

*100 McMANUS, Judge.

The matter before us is an appeal from a judgment holding a store liable in a "falling merchandise" case. Because we agree that plaintiff carried her burden to show negligence, we affirm. Further, because we find no abuse of discretion in the award of general damages, we affirm this portion of the judgment, appealed by plaintiff, as well.

The incident occurred on October 24th, 1996, while plaintiff, Danyele Mannina, was shopping at defendant-appellant, Wal-Mart's, Harahan location. Mannina sustained injuries when several wood clocks fell from a display rack and struck the back of her head; these injuries required some months of treatment. Suit was timely filed against Wal-Mart, and on May 17th, 1999, a bench trial was held to decide liability and damages. At the conclusion of trial, the judge ruled in Mannina's favor; a written judgment was signed June 11th, 1999, awarding Mannina stipulated special damages and the sum of $8,500.00 in general damages. Wal-Mart's Petition for Appeal was filed July 9th, 1999, and Mannina's answer to the appeal was filed October 18th, 1999.

On appeal, Wal-Mart assigns one error, which is, that the trial court was manifestly erroneous in finding negligence on their part. Mannina assigns as error an inadequate award for general damages.

The following evidence regarding the facts of the accident and negligence on Wal-Mart's part was produced at trial.

Mannina testified that on the evening the accident occurred, she had been at the Wal-Mart, accompanied by her friend, Christine Gilson, shopping for needlepoint kits. The two had been in the crafts department walking down the aisle where the kits were on display when they had stopped to look at some hanging near the bottom of what they describe as a "gondola." On the gondola above the needlepoint kits had been several rows of wood clocks, dangling from "snap peg hooks" bracketed to the metal grid-type frame of the gondola. Mannina testified that as she had been kneeling in front of the needlepoint kits, with Gilson standing behind her, three clocks and the hook from which they had been hanging fell, two of them striking the back of her head: "I heard a noise, Christine heard a noise, she backed up and then noticed that there was (sic) three clocks falling with a peg. She reacted as fast as she could and grabbed the peg and the last clock, but the other two struck me." She testified that she had noticed the clocks as the two approached the gondola, and that there hadn't seemed to be anything "out of the ordinary" about them. She also testified that neither she nor Christine had had any reason to examine the clocks and that neither had touched them. She stated that she did not know what had caused the hook and clocks to fall.

Christine Gilson also testified that she had not touched the clocks, and stated that she had not consciously realized that the objects were clocks until they fell and she caught one. She testified that she had noticed a "rustling" sound, seen a flash, and looked up in time to catch one of the clocks still attached, "holding onto," the snap peg. Though she testified that she had no idea what had caused the clocks to fall, she did state that they had begun to fall as Mannina tried to pull a needlepoint kit from the bottom of the gondola. She, too, testified that she had not seen anything "odd" about the display or the clocks.

Both Mannina and Gilson testified, without equivocation, that there had been no one—not another customer nor any Wal-Mart employee—near them for as long as they had been on the aisle.

Terri Smith, a former Wal-Mart employee, and the one who had been the first to investigate the accident, testified as follows. Though she had ordinarily been the sales floor associate in the domestic section of the store, on the night in question and at the time of the accident, she had been watching the craft section for *101 another worker who had been at lunch for an hour. She stated that at the time of the accident, she had been about twenty to thirty feet from the gondola. She had not actually witnessed the clocks falling, but had been alerted by the noise they made as they fell. After she had turned towards the noise, she had seen Gilson standing, Mannina "stooping," and the clocks on the floor. She testified that she had inspected the clocks, the hook and the gondola, had not seen "anything wrong" with any of them, and had ultimately attached the hook back to the gondola and hung the clocks from it.

Smith also testified that she was familiar with both the metal gondola and the type of hook from which the clocks had been hanging. She described the hook as being identical to, though a little longer than, one admitted into evidence during her testimony. In addition, she described how the hook is attached to the frame of the gondola: "You have to put the top portion on first over the hook and then slide the bottom over, under ... You take it, you put the top portion on first cause (sic) it fits and then you slide the bottom portion underneath, it will fit between two metal pieces, it's like two metal bars." If we may elaborate, the "top portion" of the hook is the top of a small metal plate which is rounded to hug one of the metal rods forming the gondola and which, when rotated around the rod, allows the "bottom portion" of the plate, which is also slightly rounded, to slide underneath a lower rod of the frame. The hook is thus secured to the frame, and the rods from which merchandise is hung, attached to the metal plate, project outwards from the frame. Smith testified that "in her experience" she had never seen a peg hook "of [this] type" fall off of a display rack, and stated that in her opinion, it takes "the actions of someone" to remove such a hook from its place.

Smith was the only Wal-Mart employee to testify regarding Wal-Mart's procedures for aisle inspection and clean-up. She testified that Wal-Mart utilizes a "zone defense" clean-up strategy to maintain the aisles in a clean and safe state, which she described as follows. The defense is "To make sure nothing was on the floor or nothing could fall and hurt anyone, to make sure that the area was neat or orderly, everything pulled to the front." She testified, however, that this inspection was "basically" a visual one only and that it did not entail making sure that every display was "secure." She testified, since she had been watching the crafts department only during someone else's lunch hour, that she could not remember having done the visual inspection of this department during the hour or having specifically looked at the display where the clocks were hung. Smith did not know whether the Wal-Mart employee who was in charge of the craft department had done an inspection recently before the accident.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
757 So. 2d 98, 2000 WL 232609, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mannina-v-wal-mart-stores-inc-lactapp-2000.