Pete Walker v. Cellular South Inc. d/b/a C Spire

CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedJune 23, 2020
DocketNO. 2019-CA-00276-COA
StatusPublished

This text of Pete Walker v. Cellular South Inc. d/b/a C Spire (Pete Walker v. Cellular South Inc. d/b/a C Spire) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pete Walker v. Cellular South Inc. d/b/a C Spire, (Mich. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2019-CA-00276-COA

PETE WALKER APPELLANT

v.

CELLULAR SOUTH INC. D/B/A C SPIRE APPELLEE

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 11/27/2018 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. ALBERT B. SMITH III COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: BOLIVAR COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT, SECOND JUDICIAL DISTRICT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: EDWARD D. LAMAR FRANK J. DANTONE JR. ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE: SHELDON G. ALSTON ROBERT LANE BOBO NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - PERSONAL INJURY DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 06/23/2020 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

BEFORE CARLTON, P.J., GREENLEE AND McCARTY, JJ.

CARLTON, P.J., FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Pete Walker brought a premises liability action against Cellular South Inc. in the

Bolivar County Circuit Court seeking damages for injuries he allegedly suffered when he fell

as he was attempting to sit in a tall (bar-height) chair at the C Spire store. After discovery,

Cellular South moved to exclude the opinions of Walker’s safety expert as irrelevant and

improper under Rule 702 of the Mississippi Rules of Evidence and moved for summary

judgment, claiming that Walker failed to raise any disputed issues of material, genuine fact

in support of his premises liability claim. Walker moved for sanctions against Cellular

South, alleging spoliation of evidence because Cellular South did not retain the store surveillance videotape from the day of Walker’s fall. The circuit court granted Cellular

South’s motion to exclude Walker’s liability expert and granted summary judgment in

Cellular South’s favor. In the same order, the circuit court denied Walker’s motion for

sanctions. Walker appeals. For the reasons addressed below, we affirm.

STATEMENT OF FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶2. The record reflects that on June 4, 2014, Walker, who was seventy-one at the time,

went to Cellular South’s C Spire store in Cleveland, Mississippi, to have his cell phone’s

voicemail fixed. According to Walker’s complaint and his deposition testimony, when it was

his turn at the counter to meet with a Cellular South representative, he tried to sit on a tall

(bar-height) chair when it suddenly slipped from underneath him, causing him to fall to the

floor. Walker alleges that he was injured as a result of the fall.

¶3. Cellular South employee Steadman Hunter completed an incident report later that day

and reviewed the store surveillance videotape as part of providing a description of the

accident for the report. In describing the fall, Hunter indicated in the report that “[w]hile in

the chair, [Walker] had the chair tilted forward the entire time leading up to the fall at

5:18 p.m. The fall happened quickly and he made a loud sound as he fell slightly to the

floor.” Hunter reported that at 5:20 p.m. Walker got back up on his feet with the help of a

customer and a Cellular South representative, Zach Stallings. Stallings then took Walker’s

phone-bill payment and fixed his voicemail issues. According to the incident report, Walker

was asked several times if he needed medical assistance, and he declined; so Stallings called

2 Walker’s daughter, Lara, and she came and got her father. When she got there, she said that

Walker was “known for having sudden seizures and blacking out.” The incident report

reflects that Lara then “collected business cards from the representatives that witnessed the

accident. She said this [was] only to get a list of names of witnesses to see how severe the

accident was that took place today.” The record reflects that after three weeks, the video

cameras at the C Spire store record over themselves.

¶4. Approximately two months after the incident, a medical bill for Walker, dated July

23, 2014, was delivered to the Cleveland, Mississippi C Spire store. In a letter dated January

22, 2015, Walker’s counsel notified Cellular South that Walker had retained the Dantone

P.A. law firm with respect to the June 4, 2014 incident and in that letter counsel requested

“a copy of any incident reports, written or taped statements regarding the incident,

photographs and the surveillance videotape of the incident.” The record also includes

correspondence dated March 13, 2015, from the claims specialist for Cellular South’s insurer

informing Walker’s counsel that there was “no video surveillance nor taped statements to

provide.”

¶5. On July 19, 2016, Walker filed his complaint, claiming as follows:

[Cellular South] breached its duty when it allowed customers and invitees to sit in chairs with legs that did not properly grip the floors when customers and invitees attempted to sit in them. [Cellular South] breached its duty when it failed to remedy said dangerous condition by failing to make the premises safe by removing the chairs with poor grips, installing flooring with more slip resistance and/or failing to warn [Walker] of the known hazardous condition then and there existing on the premises, which was known or should have been known to [Cellular South].

3 ¶6. Walker served discovery, and in Cellular South’s supplemental response to Walker’s

request for any video of the incident, Cellular South informed Walker that the cameras at the

C Spire store “record over themselves after three weeks. Cellular South did not know of a

claim, and therefore did not retain the videos.”

¶7. In December 2017, Walker filed his expert designation, identifying Russell J.

Kendzior as his expert witness and attaching Kendzior’s expert report. Kendzior opined that

Walker fell because of insufficient traction between the chair legs and the store’s Vinyl

Composite Tile (VCT) floor. He further opined that Cellular South “failed to provide a safe

walking or seating surface which was in direct violation of [The American Society of Testing

and Materials (ASTM)] F-1637-13 and [ASTM] D-2047-04.” To avoid repetition, we will

discuss additional details relating to these opinions below.

¶8. One month later, Cellular South filed its expert designation, identifying Dan Roig of

Packer Engineering Group as its expert and attached Roig’s report to its expert designation.

¶9. In June 2018, after conducting written discovery and taking fact- and expert-witness

depositions, Cellular South filed a motion to exclude Kendzior, Walker’s expert witness.

Cellular South asserted that Kendzior’s opinions should be excluded as irrelevant under

Mississippi Rule of Evidence 702 because Kendzior was inappropriately attempting to use

walking standards as the basis for his opinions, which did not apply to a stool or chair

slipping on a floor. Walker opposed Cellular South’s motion to exclude Kendzior’s opinions,

arguing that Kendzior was qualified to offer the opinions given in his report and that these

4 opinions would be helpful to the jury in determining whether a dangerous condition existed

within the store.

¶10. In September 2018, Walker filed a motion for sanctions, asserting that Cellular South

had engaged in spoliation of evidence because the surveillance videotape from the C Spire

store on the day of Walker’s fall had not been retained. Walker argued that this conduct

warranted an instruction to the jury “that whatever the videotape would have revealed would

have been adverse to [Cellular South’s] contention that it was not negligent.” In response,

Cellular South asserted that sanctions were not warranted because it did not intentionally

destroy or lose the video surveillance through means of gross negligence. Cellular South

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Pete Walker v. Cellular South Inc. d/b/a C Spire, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pete-walker-v-cellular-south-inc-dba-c-spire-missctapp-2020.