Mark Joseph Smith v. Heritage Hill Golf Club

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 14, 2021
Docket2019 CA 001442
StatusUnknown

This text of Mark Joseph Smith v. Heritage Hill Golf Club (Mark Joseph Smith v. Heritage Hill Golf Club) 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
Mark Joseph Smith v. Heritage Hill Golf Club, (Ky. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

RENDERED: OCTOBER 15, 2021; 10:00 A.M. TO BE PUBLISHED

Commonwealth of Kentucky Court of Appeals

NO. 2019-CA-1442-MR

MARK JOSEPH SMITH APPELLANT

APPEAL FROM BULLITT CIRCUIT COURT v. HONORABLE RODNEY BURRESS, JUDGE ACTION NO. 11-CI-00721

HERITAGE HILL GOLF CLUB APPELLEE

OPINION AFFIRMING

** ** ** ** **

BEFORE: COMBS, DIXON, AND TAYLOR, JUDGES.

TAYLOR, JUDGE: Mark Joseph Smith (Smith), pro se,1 brings this appeal from a

July 16, 2019, Order of the Bullitt Circuit Court granting Heritage Hill Golf Club’s

1 Mark Joseph Smith (Smith) is a licensed practicing attorney in Kentucky. (Heritage Hill) renewed motion for summary judgment and dismissing Smith’s

negligence complaint.2 For the reasons stated, we affirm.

BACKGROUND

This appeal arises from a golf cart accident on May 29, 2010, at

Heritage Hill in Shepherdsville, Kentucky.3 Smith was playing golf with five other

players (a sixsome) including Robert Buehner. The group was operating four

separate electric golf carts provided by Heritage Hill.4 Smith had been a member

of Heritage Hill for approximately two years and testified that he regularly played

the golf course as many as five times a week during the golf season.

On the day of the accident, the parties played the first hole without

incident. The second hole, a par three, has an elevated tee box, and the hole sloped

downward to the green. There was heavy foliage, including bushes and trees on

both sides of the fairway. Along the paved cart path to the green, there were

various rock formations adjacent to the path. The cart path weaved from the right

2 Smith’s motion to alter, amend, or vacate pursuant to Kentucky Rules of Civil Procedure 59.05 was denied by Order entered August 21, 2019. A timely Notice of Appeal was filed on September 20, 2019. 3 The parties have referred to the golf club and course as Heritage Hills Golf Club throughout this litigation although its actual name is Heritage Hill Golf Club. We have elected to reference appellee in this Opinion as Heritage Hill Golf Club (Heritage Hill), its legal name, and will correct the record accordingly. 4 Apparently, golf carts were required for all players playing the golf course. Two of the golf carts were occupied by two players each, and two of the carts were occupied by one player each.

-2- side of the tee box down the hill adjacent to the rock formations up to the green

area, with at least one s-curve in the pathway.

After the six golfers teed off from the second hole, they proceeded

down the cart path toward the green. Buehner was alone in the front cart. Smith

and another passenger were following Buehner down the path. After Buehner

rounded an s-curve adjacent to a rock formation, he inexplicably lost control of the

cart. The cart pivoted or flipped over on its left front wheel and subsequently

landed on top of Buehner on the cart path. As Smith rounded the same curve, he

immediately observed Buehner’s cart and Buehner lying on the path before him.

To avoid a collision and running over Buehner, Smith swerved his cart to the left

of Buehner’s cart and Buehner. This evasive action by Smith caused his cart to

leave the cart path and also immediately overturn on top of Smith. The passenger

in Smith’s cart leaped out as the cart was overturning to avoid injury. As a result

of the accident, Smith suffered injuries, including a broken arm at the shoulder

socket. Smith was transported to a hospital by ambulance for treatment of his

injuries.5

On May 31, 2011, Smith initiated this negligence action in Bullitt

Circuit Court, naming as defendants Heritage Hill, Buehner, and Esurance

5 Robert Buehner also suffered injuries as a result of his golf cart overturning, but he did not file an action seeking damages against Heritage Hill.

-3- Insurance Services, Inc. (Esurance). Esurance was Smith’s automobile insurance

carrier and presumably he was seeking basic reparation benefits and uninsured or

underinsured policy benefits from the carrier. The claims against Esurance were

resolved during the litigation and are not relevant to this appeal. The claims

against Buehner remain pending in the Bullitt Circuit Court. Although Smith

asserted claims that the golf cart Buehner was driving was negligently designed,

the golf cart manufacturer was not named a party to this litigation. As concerns

Heritage Hill, Smith asserted that the golf cart was not the proper type of cart for

use on Heritage Hill’s golf course and that the golf course was negligently

designed by Heritage Hill, especially as concerns the layout of the second hole.

Subsequent to the filing of the complaint, the parties began

exchanging discovery requests in accordance with Kentucky Rules of Civil

Procedure (CR) 26.02. On December 30, 2013, Heritage Hill filed its first motion

for summary judgment, arguing in part that Smith had failed to timely provide his

expert witnesses’ report and supporting documents to establish Smith’s negligence

claims against Heritage Hill. This motion was denied by order entered February

19, 2014, as Smith had provided a report from his expert, Stephen Eisenberg, in

January 2014, prior to the hearing on the motion.

The case was mediated in May of 2014, which resulted in the

settlement with Esurance. However, the record of this case reflects no activity

-4- after the mediation until the court issued a CR 77.02 notice in October of 2015.

Thereafter, the parties apparently spent much of 2016 attempting to depose

Stephen Eisenberg, resulting in a motion to compel being filed by Heritage Hill in

September of 2016. The parties ultimately agreed to depose Eisenberg in Florida

on February 17, 2017. However, at the deposition, Eisenberg failed to produce

various documents that he relied upon in giving his expert opinion. When Smith

failed to subsequently produce the documents as promised after the deposition,

Heritage Hill filed another motion to compel on August 15, 2017. By order

entered August 21, 2017, the motion was granted, but Smith failed to timely

comply. Pursuant to CR 37.02, Heritage Hill then filed a motion to dismiss on

October 17, 2017. After hearing arguments of counsel in February of 2018, the

court entered an order on May 9, 2018, denying the motion to dismiss but striking

Eisenberg as an expert witness per CR 37.02(2).

Approximately six months later, in November of 2018, Heritage Hill

renewed its motion for summary judgment, as Smith had failed to identify another

expert witness to establish the negligence claims asserted against the golf club. In

response, in January of 2019, Smith identified a new expert, Charles Heath. The

renewed motion for summary judgment was then denied by order entered February

5, 2019.

-5- In Smith’s expert witness disclosure identifying Heath, his opinion

report and supporting documentation were attached therewith. In response,

Heritage Hill filed another motion, on February 27, 2019, to reconsider its renewed

motion for summary judgment along with a motion to strike Heath as an expert

witness. The primary basis for these motions was that Heath’s report and opinion

were premised primarily upon Eisenberg’s opinion report and discovery

deposition, which had previously been stricken by the court. Heath had also not

inspected the golf course or the alleged defective golf cart. Heritage Hill argued

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