Nicholas Sapp v. CSX Transportation Inc.

478 F. App'x 961
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedApril 19, 2012
Docket10-6391
StatusUnpublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 478 F. App'x 961 (Nicholas Sapp v. CSX Transportation Inc.) 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
Nicholas Sapp v. CSX Transportation Inc., 478 F. App'x 961 (6th Cir. 2012).

Opinion

DAN AARON POLSTER, District Judge.

Plaintiff-Appellant Nicholas Sapp, a foreman for Defendant-Appellee CSX Transportation, Inc. (“CSX”), was injured following repair of a CSX railroad switch. He subsequently filed an action against CSX under the Federal Employers Liability Act, 45 U.S.C. §§ 51 et seq. (“FELA”), asserting claims of negligence per se and negligence. Sapp claimed that he was injured due to CSX’s failure to remove vegetation adjacent to its railroad track in violation of 49 C.F.R. § 213.37(c), and in violation of its duty to provide a reasonably safe workplace. Following discovery, the district court denied in part Sapp’s motion to strike the declarations of two railroad experts and granted summary judgment in favor of CSX. It is from these rulings that Sapp timely appealed.

I.

On July 25, 2006, Roadmaster Willard Price assigned Sapp and his crew 1 to perform maintenance on the switch from CSX’s mainline to the Ozburn-Hessey Storage Company’s out-of-service industry track, otherwise known as the old Hoskins track. 2 Sapp parked his truck in the Oz-burn-Hessey parking lot adjacent to the old Hoskins track. There, Sapp and his crew loaded their “track jacks” and other tools onto a backhoe to be transported to the work site.

During maintenance, the backhoe backed up over a spike, causing a flat tire. As a result, upon completion of the assignment, Sapp and his crew, carrying the jacks and other tools, returned to the Oz-burn-Hessey parking lot via the old Hos-kins track. They walked down the middle of the track because the vegetation outside the track was so thick. When they neared the parking lot, Sapp, who was carrying a 55-pound jack, looked up at the 18-wheel-ers in the parking lot as he was stepping over the rail. There was no vegetation along the track at this particular point. Sapp, nonetheless, tripped over the rail and lurched forward, catching himself from falling completely. That motion was significant enough to cause injury to Sapp’s back, requiring surgical repair.

Shortly after the accident, Sapp completed an incident report in which he checked a box indicating that he had a safe place to work. A week after the accident, *963 CSX Manager of Field Investigations Lee Miller and Sapp conducted a recorded interview at the site of the injury. At that time, Sapp explained that he was looking up, not down, when he tripped. He admitted that the ground conditions outside the track at that time were pretty good when he tripped over the rail. When asked whether there was anything he could have done to prevent the injury, Sapp responded, “Uh, it’s just a freak accident, or just an accident, I mean, maybe pick my feet up, a little bit better, when I stepped over. the rail ... And this never would have happened, but it’s just one of those things, you know.” (R.34-1 at 41.) When asked if there was something CSX could have done to prevent the injury from happening, he responded, “Probably not, I mean, probably find a lighter jack maybe, or something.” (Id.) Yet, he admitted that it was not unusual to carry jacks that distance.

In Plaintiffs Response to Defendant’s Statement of Undisputed Facts, Sapp admitted, among other things, that the rail on which he tripped was no higher than any other rail on which he worked in the past, and he could have avoided walking between the rails of the old Hoskins track by either driving his work truck to the area where the tools were found, or walking to the nearby road crossing.

In a deposition of Sapp conducted over four years later, Sapp was asked to describe what happened when he was trying to step over the rail the day he was injured. He responded,

I had to walk down the middle of the track. It was growed up all the way around it with thistles and briars and limbs. So I walked down the middle of the track and I just — I don’t know, stepped over it. I looked up because I was stepping over to make sure which one of the 18-wheelers I needed to go through and the trailers, and just tripped up a little.

(R. 84-1 at 5.)

Sapp filed a complaint alleging that CSX caused his injury by breaching both its statutory and common-law duty to remove vegetation adjacent to the old Hoskins track. Specifically, Sapp contended that CSX had a statutory duty, under track safety standard 49 C.F.R. § 213.87, to control the vegetation immediately adjacent to the track — and that its failure to do so constituted a breach of that duty, or negligence per se. Sapp also contended that CSX had a common-law duty to maintain a reasonably safe workplace, and that its failure to control the vegetation adjacent to the old Hoskins track constituted a breach of that duty since it forced him to walk down the middle of the track — which, he contends, inherently poses a trip hazard. If he hadn’t been forced to walk down the track, the injury would not have occurred. Thus, the failure to maintain the vegetation caused his injury.

Following discovery, CSX filed a motion for summary judgment, 3 while Sapp filed a motion for partial summary judgment and a motion to strike the declarations of CSX witnesses Mark Gennette, Roy Dean, and Edward English. In the motion for summary judgment, CSX contended that the federal vegetation regulation did not apply to out-of-service industry track such as the old Hoskins track; CSX did not owe Sapp a general duty to maintain vegetation alongside out-of-service industry track; and the vegetation did not cause Sapp to trip. In the motion for partial summary judgment, Sapp contended that his injury was caused by CSX’s failure to remove *964 vegetation adjacent to its track, in violation of 49 C.F.R. § 218.37(c) and CSX’s duty to maintain a reasonably safe workplace. Sapp also asked the court to strike as untimely the declaration of Mark Gen-nette regarding ownership of the old Hos-kins track. Sapp asked the court to strike the declarations of Roy Dean and Edward English as they improperly relied upon Gennette’s declarations, contained improper interpretations of Federal Railway Administration (“FRA”) regulations, constituted advocacy reports, and did not qualify as expert opinions.

The district court granted Sapp’s motion to strike the declaration of Mark Gennette, and it granted Sapp’s motion to strike only those portions of the Dean and English declarations that relied on Gennette’s declarations. The district court also granted summary judgment in favor of CSX. Sapp challenges these rulings on appeal.

II.

The district court’s ruling on a motion to strike is reviewed on appeal for an abuse of discretion. Seay v. Tenn. Valley Auth. 339 F.3d 454, 480 (6th Cir.2003).

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478 F. App'x 961, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nicholas-sapp-v-csx-transportation-inc-ca6-2012.