Neely v. Circle K Stores, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Florida
DecidedApril 11, 2024
Docket8:22-cv-02556
StatusUnknown

This text of Neely v. Circle K Stores, Inc. (Neely v. Circle K Stores, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Neely v. Circle K Stores, Inc., (M.D. Fla. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT MIDDLE DISTRICT OF FLORIDA TAMPA DIVISION

MICHAEL NEELY,

Plaintiff,

v. Case No: 8:22-cv-2556-NHA

CIRCLE K STORES, INC.,

Defendant. _______________________________________/

ORDER Plaintiff Michael Neely sues Defendant Circle K Stores, Inc. for a single count of negligence. Doc. 1-1. Mr. Neely alleges he slipped and fell in water leaked from a cooler while shopping in Circle K. Id. Mr. Neely alleges Circle K was negligent in allowing the condition to occur, in not remedying the condition thereafter, and in not physically marking or verbally warning Mr. Neely of the condition. Id. Circle K moves for summary judgment, alleging that the condition was openly and obviously dangerous, that Mr. Neely knew about the condition, that Circle K did mark and warn of the condition, and that Mr. Neely failed to exercise reasonable care in protecting himself from it. Doc. 24. Having reviewed the motion (Doc. 24), Mr. Neely’s response (Doc. 28), and the record before the Court, the Court finds that genuine issues of fact preclude summary judgment in Circle K’s favor. Circle K’s motion for summary judgment is denied.

I. Background A. Undisputed Facts The parties do not dispute the following facts: On January 15, 2020, Mr. Neely was shopping in Circle K, when he

slipped on standing water that had leaked from the store’s cooler, and fell. Docs. 24, pp. 1-2; 28, p. 1; Neely Depo. Doc. 24-1, p. 21: 24-25. Prior to the day of the fall, Circle K’s cooler often leaked into the aisle. Docs. 24, p. 2; 28, p. 4; Radeboldt Depo. Doc. 24-2, p. 10: 13-25. When it did, Circle K’s employees

regularly placed cones around the leak. Doc. 24, p. 4; Radeboldt Depo. Doc. 24- 2, pp. 10: 24-25; 11: 1-19. As a daily customer, Mr. Neely was aware that Circle K’s cooler had leaked into the aisle, potentially as often as multiple times per week, and that Circle K’s employees often placed cones in the aisle when it did.

Docs. 24, p. 2; 28, p. 1; Neely Depo. Doc. 24-1, p. 30: 3-13. On the day of Mr. Neely’s fall, Circle K was aware that the cooler was leaking into the aisle. Docs. 24, p. 4; 28, p. 3; Radeboldt Depo. Doc. 24-2, p. 21: 13-16. B. Facts in Dispute

The parties dispute whether Mr. Neely was aware of the standing water on the day of the accident. Doc. 24, p. 2; Neely Depo. Doc. 24-1, p. 26: 9-22. The parties further dispute whether Circle K’s employees physically marked and verbally warned Mr. Neely of the condition. Radeboldt Depo. Doc. 24-2, p. 31: 17-23; Screen Depo. Doc. 24-3, p. 9: 1-16; Neely Depo. Doc 24-1, p. 28: 15-24.

The parties also dispute whether Mr. Neely took proper care in navigating the condition. Docs. 24, p. 15; 28, p. 2. C. Facts in the Record i. Knowledge of the Condition

Before Mr. Neely’s fall, Circle K’s malfunctioning cooler had been leaking, fairly regularly, for months. Screen Depo. Doc. 24-3, p. 8: 5-14. Circle K’s employees filed work orders for the malfunctioning cooler in the months and days preceding the accident. Smith Depo. Doc. 24-4, p. 10: 6-9. Specifically,

Circle K’s former assistant manager, Ms. Radeboldt, claimed that the cooler had been broken “a good seven, eight times” in the months preceding Mr. Neely’s accident. Radeboldt Depo. Doc. 24-2, p. 24: 19-23. Ms. Smith, Circle K’s former assistant store manager, testified that she placed at least two work

orders in the six months prior to January 15. Smith Depo. Doc. 24-4, pp. 16: 23-25; 17: 1-2. Ms. Smith testified that “It looks like [maintenance] was just putting a band aid on it or you know. We needed a new cooler but they just kept doing whatever they had to, to keep it going.” Smith Depo. Doc. 24-4, p.

16: 2-7. In the four months preceding Mr. Neely’s accident, former assistant store manager Latasha Screen testified she “was putting signs [out] every morning” and making “sure that the water was off the floor because it had a leak. So, every morning I come in. . . I would come in and change it and get the water

out[.]” Screen Depo. Doc. 24-3, p. 8: 5-14. Ms. Screen would use mop-heads and thick napkins to remove water from the area and would replace the mop-heads and thick napkins “[h]ourly, every two hours something like that.” Id. at 8: 24- 25.

Mr. Neely was a daily customer of Circle K and acknowledges that he knew the cooler leaked, “[f]rom going in the store and seeing the cones, having other people talk about it. Might have been saying the cooler leaks. You know, be careful. Stuff like that.” Neely Depo. Doc. 24-1, p. 30: 6-10. Mr. Neely noticed

water was “coming from the same area” and acknowledged that he had observed warning devices, such as cones, on prior occasions. Id. at 30: 11-13; 31: 6-9. Mr. Neely said he would go around the cones if they were present. Id. at 30: 11-18.

On January 15, 2020, the day of Mr. Neely’s fall, the cooler was again leaking into the aisle. Docs. 24, p. 4; 28, p. 4; Radeboldt Depo. Doc. 24-2, p. 21: 13-16. Indeed, before Mr. Neely fell, the cooler was “leaking pretty bad.” Smith Depo. Doc. 24-4, p. 14: 11-19. And Ms. Screen “hadn’t got the water out” before

Mr. Neely walked down the aisle. Screen Depo. Doc. 24-3, p. 9: 1-16. But, on the day of the fall, Mr. Neely states he was looking at and talking to the store manager when he slipped and fell. Neely Depo. Doc. 24-1, p. 19: 3-9. The parties dispute whether, based on Mr. Neely’s prior familiarity with the condition of the cooler, the obviousness of the condition, and the alleged

markings and warnings discussed below, Mr. Neely knew the cooler had leaked into the aisle before he walked into the water, slipped, and fell. Docs. 24, p. 15; 28, p. 2; Neely Depo. Doc. 24-1, p. 28: 15-24. Mr. Neely asserts that, he didn’t know and that, even if he knew of the leaked water, he would not have known

it was dangerous. Doc. 28, p. 6. ii. Warnings The parties dispute whether Circle K’s employees marked and warned Mr. Neely of the leak just prior to his fall. Radeboldt Depo. Doc. 24-2, p. 31: 17-

23; Screen Depo. Doc. 24-3, p. 9: 1-16; Neely Depo. Doc. 24-1, p. 28: 15-24. Circle K asserts that, on January 15, 2020, its employees both warned Mr. Neely about the standing water and marked the aisle with cones to prevent customers from entering it. Radeboldt Depo. Doc. 24-2, p. 31: 17-23; Screen

Depo. Doc. 24-3, p. 9: 1-16. Specifically, Ms. Screen testified that she had been yelling out “Hey, don’t go that way” to customers and, when she told Mr. Neely, before he walked down the aisle, he looked directly at her but ignored her. Screen Depo. Doc 24-3, p. 9: 1-16. To the contrary, Mr. Neely testified that

employees did not warn him to avoid the aisle. Neely Depo. Doc. 24-1, p. 28: 15-17. Circle K also asserts that, on the day of the fall, its employees had placed warning cones in the aisle and that Mr. Neely purposely avoided them. Doc.

24, p. 4. Ms. Screen stated, “I was putting signs [out] every morning.” Screen Depo. Doc. 24-3, p. 8: 8-10. Ms. Radeboldt testified that “[w]e had two cones when you first walk in” as well as two other cones on both sides of the cooler. Radeboldt Depo. Doc. 24-2, p. 15: 12-18. Ms. Radeboldt further testified that

Mr. Neely “touche[d] the top of the cones” multiple times before falling. Id. at 15: 12-24. However, when Mr. Neely was asked in his deposition whether any warning cones or signs were present, Mr. Neely responded “Definitely was not this time. I’m 100 percent certain there wasn’t.” Neely Depo. Doc. 24-1, p. 28:

18-21. iii. Mr. Neely’s Actions The parties further dispute whether Mr. Neely took proper care in navigating the condition. Docs. 24, p. 15; 28, p. 4-5. Both Mr. Neely and Circle

K agree in their briefs that, shortly after entering the store, “Plaintiff turned to the right into the first aisle where the cooler was located.

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