Ockey v. Club Jam

2014 UT App 126, 328 P.3d 880, 762 Utah Adv. Rep. 22, 2014 WL 2533172, 2014 Utah App. LEXIS 131
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedJune 5, 2014
DocketNo. 20130024-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 2014 UT App 126 (Ockey v. Club Jam) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ockey v. Club Jam, 2014 UT App 126, 328 P.3d 880, 762 Utah Adv. Rep. 22, 2014 WL 2533172, 2014 Utah App. LEXIS 131 (Utah Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Memorandum Decision

ROTH, Judge:

1 Teresa Ockey sued Club Jam and Jam in the Marmalade, LLC (the Club) for personal injuries she sustained after a ladder she was using inside the Club collapsed unexpectedly. The district court granted the Club's motion for summary judgment, and Ockey appealed. Ockey asserts that the ladder the Club produced for her expert to inspect was not the ladder she used the day of her injury. And she argues that "a reasonable inference from the fact that Club Jam produced the wrong ladder ... requires the trial court to reject" the Club owner's deposition testimony, which was integral to the court's decision. We vacate the court's summary judgment and remand for further proceedings.

{2 In September 2010, Ockey was invited to display some of her artwork on a column inside the Club.2 When Ockey arrived, Todd Crofts, the Club manager, set up a ladder near the column for Ockey to use. After climbing the ladder twice without incident, Ockey "felt [the ladder] become unstable" and the "back right [leg] seemed to come up, ... went forward[,] and then twisted." Ockey fell and sustained injuries, including a broken ankle that required surgery. After the fall, she experienced residual pain in her ankle, back, and neck. Within days of the accident, Ockey's friends, Tara Payne and Jason Stone, went to the Club to finish hanging her art. According to Payne, Crofts told her that the "ladder has been nothing but trouble." And Margo Smith, another friend who was with Ockey the day of her injury, claimed that Crofts told her that the ladder was "Jinxed." Ockey filed a negligence action against the Club, alleging premises liability and res ipsa loquitur.

3 During discovery, Ockey described the ladder in a deposition as a folding ladder, "six feet tall, ... aluminum," that had "some yellow on it," looked old, and had clearly "been used a lot." Before climbing the ladder, Ockey claimed, she repositioned it "maybe a foot to 18 inches" away from the column, allowing her to face the column directly and hang her art over the top of the ladder. Crofts's deposition testimony described the ladder differently. He testified that the ladder was "a yellow aluminum and fiberglass ladder" that was "eight feet tall," not six feet tall as Ockey had claimed. Crofts also offered a different account of Ockey's accident, claiming that she positioned the ladder alongside the column so she would have to turn sideways to hang the pictures. Brian Morris, the Club's owner, testified in a deposition that he believed the ladder was nine feet tall. He also stated that the Club used the ladder daily before and after the injury and that there had been only one other injury involving the ladder-Morris -cut his hand on a ceiling fan while using the ladder some time before Ockey's injury. Four days after Morris's deposition, Ockey visited the Club with an expert to inspect the ladder following a request under rule 34 of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure. The ladder produced for inspection was eight feet tall and matched Crofts's description. Ockey insisted that the eight-foot ladder was not the one she used the day of her injury, and her expert confirmed that the ladder produced by the Club could not have been positioned in the way Ockey had described.

14 The Club moved for summary judgment, arguing that any dangers posed by the ladder "were open and obvious" and that the [882]*882Club "had no reason to anticipate the accident" because the owners were "not aware of any other incidents in which the ladder itself caused harm to anyone." In response, Ockey argued that the ladder she fell from was not the same ladder she and her expert inspected at the Club, casting doubt on Morris's testimony that no one aside from himself and Ockey had been injured while using the ladder. Ockey also contended that if the Club had "destroyed or concealled] the ladder," she would be "entitled to sanctions that include a default judgment and attorney fees."

T5 Ockey submitted with her response an affidavit from her expert, F. David Pierce, which stated that it was "impossible for the Ladder [he] inspected to have been the one Ms. Ockey was using when she fell" because "the Ladder was too wide for her to reach the column to hammer nails into it while standing on the steps." Ockey also pointed to testimony from her two friends who used the ladder within days of her injury to finish hanging her art. They both testified that the ladder was six-feet tall, not eight- or nine-feet tall as the Club owner and manager claimed. Finally, Ockey highlighted other testimony that she argued showed the ladder was involved in other injuries, including Payne's assertion that Crofts told her that the "ladder has been nothing but trouble" and Smith's statement that after the accident, Crofts had described the ladder as "jinxed." Crofts claimed that he was referring to Morris's ceiling-fan injury, not any other incidents. Ockey's response did not identify any specific injuries involving the ladder other than Morris's and her own.

T6 The district court granted the Club's motion for summary judgment. The court appeared to rely heavily on Morris's description of the frequent use of the ladder and the Club's sparse history of personal injuries: "[IIntegral to this Court's decision [is] that the ladder in question had been used without incident countless times prior to and after Ms. Ockey's accident and that it had no obvious defects." As a result, the court stated, whether the ladder produced for inspection was the same ladder Ockey used the day of her injury "is not important and does not create a genuine issue of material fact. Even if the original ladder contained a hidden defect, there is simply no evidence that Club Jam knew or should have known of the defect, as evidenced by the frequent use of the ladder." The court also awarded the Club costs in the amount of $3,826.40.

17 Ockey appeals She argues that the district court should not have granted the Club's motion for summary judgment. We review a district court's decision to grant summary judgment for correctness. Overstock.com, Inc. v. SmartBargains, Inc., 2008 UT 55, ¶ 12, 192 P.3d 858. "Summary judgment is appropriate when the 'pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law'" Id. (quoting Utah R. Civ. P. 56(c)). The parties' factual disputes at summary judgment all hinged on whether the ladder the Club produced at inspection was the same ladder Ockey used the day of her injury. The central question presented to us on appeal, then, is whether the identity of the ladder is material to Ockey's negligence claim. We conclude that it is.3

18 For Ockey's negligence claim to survive summary judgment, she needed to establish that there was a dispute of material fact about whether the Club breached a duty it owed to Ockey and whether that breach caused her injuries See Torrie v. Weber County, 2013 UT 48, ¶ 9, 309 P.3d 216 (noting that a plaintiff cannot prevail on a negligence claim without establishing that the defendant breached a duty owed to the plaintiff); Overstock, 2008 UT 55, ¶ 12, 192 P.3d 858. Ockey claims that a hidden defect in the ladder caused her fall. She therefore needed to show that the Club failed to warn her even though (1) it could have discovered the defect through the exercise of reasonable care, (2) [883]

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Bluebook (online)
2014 UT App 126, 328 P.3d 880, 762 Utah Adv. Rep. 22, 2014 WL 2533172, 2014 Utah App. LEXIS 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ockey-v-club-jam-utahctapp-2014.