Ridgeway v. Acme Markets, Inc.

CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedSeptember 5, 2018
Docket18, 2018
StatusPublished

This text of Ridgeway v. Acme Markets, Inc. (Ridgeway v. Acme Markets, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ridgeway v. Acme Markets, Inc., (Del. 2018).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

ANDREA RIDGEWAY, § § No. 18, 2018 Plaintiff Below, § Appellant, § Court Below—Superior Court § of the State of Delaware v. § § C.A. No. N16C-01-183 ACME MARKETS, INC., § FOX RUN SHOPPING CENTER, § LLC, and CIPOLLONI BROTHERS, § LLC, § § Defendants Below, § Appellees. §

Submitted: August 22, 2018 Decided: September 5, 2018

Before VALIHURA, VAUGHN, and SEITZ, Justices.

ORDER

This 5th day of September, 2018, having considered the briefs and the record

below, it appears to the Court that:

(1) Three days after a winter storm, Andrea Ridgeway slipped and fell on

ice in a parking lot outside the entrance to an Acme Market grocery store. Fox Run

Super Markets, LLC managed the property, and contracted with Cipolloni Brothers,

LLC to remove ice and snow from the parking lot. Ridgeway sued Acme, Fox Run,

and Cipolloni for negligence. After discovery, the defendants moved for summary

judgment, arguing that Ridgeway failed to produce expert testimony to establish the standard of care and its breach in a negligence action for ice and snow removal in a

commercial parking lot. According to the defendants, whether the contractor

deviated from industry standards was not within the common knowledge of jurors

to assess, and thus expert testimony was required to establish the standard of care

and whether it was breached. The Superior Court agreed, and granted the

defendants’ motions for summary judgment.

(2) On appeal, Ridgeway argues that an expert witness was not required to

establish the standard of care and whether it was breached in a slip and fall case in a

commercial parking lot. She claims it is within a juror’s common knowledge to

assess the standard of care for ice and snow removal, and whether the defendants

breached the duty owed to Ridgeway.

(3) To resolve this appeal we do not decide whether expert testimony is

necessary to establish the standard of care and its breach in a commercial parking lot

slip and fall case. Instead, we find that, after the defendants presented evidence at

the summary judgment stage of the steps the contractor took to treat the parking lot

over multiple days, Ridgeway then had to raise a disputed issue of material fact

regarding the defendants’ negligence. She failed to do so. Thus, we affirm the

Superior Court’s grant of summary judgment to the defendants.

(4) According to the allegations of the complaint and the record created

during discovery, Acme Markets leased commercial space in the Fox Run shopping

2 center in Bear, Delaware. Fox Run Shopping Center, LLC (hereinafter “Fox Run”)

managed the parking lot. Fox Run contracted with Cipolloni Brothers to handle ice

and snow removal. On February 3, 2014, a winter storm dropped an inch of snow

and icy rain onto the parking lot. Cipolloni Brothers plowed, salted, and shoveled

multiple times in the three days following the storm.1 On February 6, 2014, Andrea

Ridgeway parked near handicap-accessible parking spots in the Acme lot. She saw

ice between the handicap spots and the entrance and a mound of snow across from

the handicap spots.2 Shortly after stepping out of her car, Ridgeway fell within one

of the handicap spots, and sustained a concussion and damage to her cervical spine

and neck, which required the insertion of an artificial disk and physical therapy.

Ridgeway was unable to describe how much ice she fell on or how much of the

parking lot was covered in salt.3

(5) Ridgeway filed a complaint against Acme Markets, Fox Run, and

Cipollini Brothers alleging negligence in removing the snow and ice from the

parking lot. Ridgeway claimed that all three parties were negligent by failing to

prevent the harm or warning of the hazardous condition. After the close of

1 App. to Opening Br. at A149 (Cipolloni Invoice) (“[T]he following services were performed: Plowing of entire parking lot; Salt distribution applied throughout entire parking lot and driveway areas (5 times); Shoveling of entire walkway areas (2 times); and Calcium distribution applied to all sidewalk areas (2 times).”)). Some of this work was done on February 6, the day of the plaintiff’s accident. App. to Opening Br. at A145-A146 (Brande Cipolloni Dep.). 2 App. to Opening Br. at A208-A209 (Andrea Ridgeway Dep.); Id. at A349-A352 (Security Camera Photographs). 3 App. to Opening Br. at A212-A213 (Ridgeway Dep.). 3 discovery, Ridgeway had not retained an expert to provide testimony or an affidavit

on the standard of care or whether it had been breached. The defendants moved for

summary judgment. In her responses to the motions for summary judgment,

Ridgeway failed to offer any evidence of negligent acts by the defendants, or how

any negligence caused her harm, relying instead on the simple fact that she slipped

and fell on ice in the parking lot and did not see salt within an undefined area.4 The

Superior Court granted the defendants’ motions, finding expert testimony was

required because the standard of care for ice and snow removal from a commercial

parking lot was not a subject within the common knowledge of a juror.5 Because

Ridgeway “adduced no evidence of any negligence” by the defendants, “her failure

to retain an expert as to the appropriate standard of care” was fatal to her claim.6

(6) This Court reviews the grant of a motion for summary judgment de

novo to determine whether the undisputed facts entitled the movant to judgment as

a matter of law, viewing the facts in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.7

A party seeking summary judgment bears the initial burden of showing that no

genuine issue of material fact exists.8 If the movant makes such a showing, the

4 App. to Opening Br. at A330-A333, A358-A363, A392-A397 (Plaintiff’s Responses to Defendant Motions for Summary Judgment). 5 Mem. Op., at 5. 6 Id. at 11. 7 United Vanguard Fund, Inc. v. TakeCare, Inc., 693 A.2d 1076, 1079 (Del. 1997). 8 Moore v. Sizemore, 405 A.2d 679, 680–81 (Del. 1979).

4 burden then shifts to the nonmoving party to submit sufficient evidence to show that

a genuine factual issue, material to the outcome of the case, precludes summary

judgment.9

(7) Ridgeway argues that the Superior Court erred in granting the

defendants’ motion for summary judgment because she was not required to produce

expert testimony to establish the standard of care for ice and snow removal from a

commercial parking lot. She claims that jurors do not need expert testimony to make

a “common sense determination” about the danger created by a melting pile of snow

in a supermarket parking lot.

(8) Defendants respond that Ridgeway is confusing the juror’s common

sense ability to appreciate the dangers of ice and snow in a parking lot with the

industry standard of care for making a parking lot safe after a winter storm. They

state in their briefs, “[t]he issue is not whether a jury can determine whether snow

and ice is dangerous, but whether the actions taken by the Landlord in hiring a snow

and ice remediation company that salted the parking lot five times over the course

of three days deviated from an industry standard such that it did not exercise due

care to keep the property in a reasonably safe condition.”10 According to the

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