Robinson v. Panera, LLC

CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedOctober 16, 2019
DocketCivil Action No. 2017-2071
StatusPublished

This text of Robinson v. Panera, LLC (Robinson v. Panera, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robinson v. Panera, LLC, (D.D.C. 2019).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

) EMILLE GRACE MERCER ROBINSON, ) ) Plaintiff, ) v. ) Civil Action No. 1:17-cv-2071 (TSC) ) PANERA, LLC, ) ) Defendant. ) )

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Plaintiff Emille Grace Mercer Robinson brings this action against Defendant Panera, LLC,

alleging that Panera’s negligence caused her to fall in one of Panera’s restaurants.

Defendant moves, pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56, for summary judgment. (ECF

No. 18.) It has also filed a motion in limine to exclude Plaintiff’s proposed expert testimony. (ECF No.

19.) Plaintiff moves to file a surreply to Defendant’s summary judgment motion (ECF No. 27) and to

file a surreply to Defendant’s motion in limine (ECF No. 26).

For the reasons set forth below, the court will DENY Plaintiff’s motions to file a surreply,

GRANT Defendant’s motion in limine, and GRANT Defendant’s motion for summary judgment.

I. BACKGROUND 1

On February 11, 2016, there was snow on the ground “[i]n some places” in Washington, D.C.

because it had snowed earlier in the week. (ECF No. 22-4 (“Robinson Dep.”) at 9:8–16.) At some point

that day, Plaintiff entered the Panera located at 1750 H Street, NW, Washington, D.C. (Robinson Dep.

1 Where possible, the following facts are taken from the parties’ Local Rule 7(h)(1) Statement. (ECF Nos. 18-1, 22.) The other facts are taken either from the deposition transcripts or the expert report. Where Plaintiff has elected not to respond to Defendant’s proffered fact, the court deems the fact to be true, if supported by record evidence. 1 at 7:23–8:13.) Although there were mats on the floor near the entryway due to the icy weather, Plaintiff

does not recall noticing anything about the condition of the floor mats. (Id. at 10:11–24; ECF No. 18-1

(“Def.’s 7(h)(1) Statement”) at ¶ 4; ECF No. 22 (“Pl.’s 7(h)(1) Statement”) at ¶ 4; ECF No. 22-2

(“Mansaray Dep.”) at 23:13–17.) But she thinks that “if the mat had been buckled . . . or something like

that,” she would have noticed. (Robinson Dep. at 19:21–20:12.) Plaintiff then ordered “a latte and

some type of pastry.” (Id. at 11:2–3.)

Once Plaintiff received her order, she began to leave Panera with the latte in one hand and the

pastry in the other. (Id. at 17:9–15.) As she approached the exit, and while looking straight ahead,

Plaintiff felt the edge of her right boot catch either under the end of the mat or at the front edge of the

mat. (Id. at 17:16–22, 18:12–22, 19:13–20; Def.’s 7(h)(1) Statement at ¶ 4; Pl.’s 7(h)(1) Statement at

¶ 4.) She fell and tore her left rotator cuff. (Robinson Dep. at 17:22–25, 28:21–29:1.) After she fell,

Plaintiff did not notice anything about the mat’s condition (e.g,, it was neither frayed nor flipped over).

(Id. at 19:21–21:4; Def.’s 7(h)(1) Statement at ¶ 5; Pl.’s 7(h)(1) Statement at ¶ 5.) She does not know

why her boot caught the edge of the mat, but assumes it was because the mat was not tacked down to the

floor. (Robinson Dep. at 20:13–21:18; Def.’s 7(h)(1) Statement at ¶ 6; Pl.’s 7(h)(1) Statement at ¶ 6.)

Defendant directs the court to several facts in the record relating to Plaintiff’s fall. First, Plaintiff

did not notice anything unusual about the mat either before or after her fall. (Robinson Dep. at 20:13–

16; Def.’s 7(h)(1) Statement at ¶ 5; Pl.’s 7(h)(1) Statement at ¶ 5.) Second, as she exited the store,

Plaintiff never looked down but continued to look straight ahead. (Robinson Dep. at 19:13–20; Def.’s

7(h)(1) Statement at ¶ 3.) Third, Plaintiff does not “believe that there was any part of the mat that

wasn’t flat to the ground.” (Robinson Dep. at 19:21–25; Def.’s 7(h)(1) Statement at ¶ 5; Pl.’s 7(h)(1)

Statement at ¶ 5.) Fourth, Panera’s manager examined the mat after Plaintiff’s fall and observed that it

laid “perfectly” on the floor. (ECF No. 18-3 (“Javed Dep.”) at 40:14–41:6; Def.’s 7(h)(1) Statement at

2 ¶ 10; Pl.’s 7(h)(1) Statement at ¶ 10.) Fifth, Panera’s assistant manager examined the mat after

Plaintiff’s fall and observed that it did not “move or budge or anything” and that the edges of the mat

“were flat on the floor.” (Mansaray Dep. at 41:15–42:2; Def.’s 7(h)(1) Statement at ¶ 11; Pl.’s 7(h)(1)

Statement at ¶ 11.) Sixth, Plaintiff is not aware of any complaints reported to Panera about the mat’s

condition before her fall. (Robinson Dep. at 21:22–25; Def.’s 7(h)(1) Statement at ¶ 8.)

Plaintiff retained an expert witness, Russell Kendzior, the Founder and Chairman of the Board of

the National Floor Safety Institute (“NFSI”), and the President of Traction Experts, Inc. (ECF 22-9

(“Expert’s Experience”) at 1.) Kendzior is a certified NFSI Walkway Auditor, and a member of the

American Society for Testing and Materials (“ASTM”), (id. at 2), an organization that maintains design

and construction guidelines and minimum maintenance criteria concerning standard practices for

managing safe walking surfaces, including the use of floor mats, (ECF 22-10 (“Standards”)).

Kendzior reviewed (1) the depositions of Plaintiff, the manager, and the assistant manager; (2)

answers to interrogatories; (3) the responses to Plaintiff’s request for production and documents; (4) the

D.C. Fire and EMS Report; (5) the Service Agreement and Amended Service Agreements between

Panera and Aramark (the company that delivers new mats to Panera every Thursday); 2 (6) the Panera

Employee Safety & Security Manual; and (7) Panera’s surveillance video and photographs of the

restaurant’s entrance. (ECF No. 21-7 (“Kendzior Dep.”) at 8:11–9:3.) Kendzior never spoke to

Plaintiff, (id. at 21:11–12), never visited the Panera on H Street, (id. at 26:8–10), never saw or tested the

mat at issue, (id. at 70:8–14), and never examined an exemplar of the mat at issue, (id. at 43:11–14). He

also testified that he worked based on “limited information, photographs . . . and videos that [did not]

actually show the exact point of impact.” (Id. at 51:6–9.)

2 (Mansaray Dep. at 13:20–15:14.) 3 Kendzior concluded that Plaintiff fell for one of two reasons: either the floor mat was “buckled

or rippled or otherwise elevated above that of the floor level,” or the mat’s edge was at “the junction

point where the walkway transitioned from a ramp to a level walking surface,” which “creat[ed] a

change in elevation between the two surfaces.” (ECF 22-6 (“Kendzior Report”) at 2.)

When asked for the basis of his first reason, Kendzior replied:

Well, those—those are all possibilities. I—Ms. Robinson said with certainty that she caught the toe of her boot on the edge of the mat. I don’t know. I wasn’t there and I can’t see that in the surveillance video. There was [sic] no eyewitnesses that can testify to that. So assuming, and taking her testimony at face value that what she said happened happened, well, what other possibilities could there have been, if any? If any. So it’s the process of elimination.

(Kendzior Dep. at 45:15–46:4.) With respect to his conclusion that the mat might have been rippled or

buckled, he acknowledged that Plaintiff testified that she did not see any kind of buckling or rippling,

and he did not provide “[a]ny other factual basis” for that portion of his opinion. (Id. at 46:12–48:18.)

And with respect to his conclusion that the mat might have been “otherwise elevated above that of the

floor level,” he explained by comparing the “nose” 3 on carpeted stairs to the mat-covered junction point

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