Ronnaesa Reider v. Christus Health Southwestern Louisiana, Etc.

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 5, 2017
DocketCA-0016-0959
StatusUnknown

This text of Ronnaesa Reider v. Christus Health Southwestern Louisiana, Etc. (Ronnaesa Reider v. Christus Health Southwestern Louisiana, Etc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ronnaesa Reider v. Christus Health Southwestern Louisiana, Etc., (La. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

16-959

RONNAESA REIDER

VERSUS

CHRISTUS HEALTH SOUTHWESTERN LOUISIANA, ET AL.

**********

APPEAL FROM THE FOURTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF CALCASIEU, NO. 2013-5129 HONORABLE ROBERT L. WYATT, DISTRICT JUDGE

MARC T. AMY JUDGE

Court composed of Marc T. Amy, Billy Howard Ezell, and Shannon J. Gremillion, Judges.

REVERSED AND REMANDED.

Jerald L. Album Suzanne M. Ganucheau Reich, Album & Plunkett, L.L.C. 3850 N. Causeway Boulevard, Suite 1000 Metairie, LA 70002 (504) 830-3999 COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLANT: Hospital Housekeeping Systems, LLC

Mark A. Delphin Arthur J. O’Keefe Delphin Law Offices 626 Broad Street Lake Charles, LA 70601 (337) 439-3939 COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLEE: Ronnaesa Reider Marne Jones Beirne, Maynard & Parsons, LLP 601 Poydras Street, Suite 2200 New Orleans, LA 70130-6097 (504) 586-1241 COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE: Christus Health Southwestern Louisiana AMY, Judge.

The plaintiff filed suit against the defendant hospital and the defendant

maintenance company due to injury allegedly sustained in a fall at the hospital.

She filed a motion for summary judgment against the maintenance company,

submitting a video of the incident as well as witness statements indicating that

liquid was on the floor. Following a hearing, the trial court entered summary

judgment in favor of the plaintiff. The resulting judgment indicated both that the

maintenance company was fully at fault in causing the plaintiff’s fall and that the

plaintiff was free of fault. The maintenance company appeals. For the following

reasons, we reverse and remand.

Factual and Procedural Background

The plaintiff, Ronnaesa Reider, filed this matter after falling in the hallway

of Christus Health Southwestern Louisiana d/b/a Christus St. Patrick Hospital. By

her petition, the plaintiff alleged that, on August 21, 2013, she and a friend, Brandi

Jones, were visiting the hospital and that they were “walking down a hallway

when, suddenly and without warning, she slipped and fell due to water and/or

liquid on the floor surface.” She alleged that the “fall caused her to sustain serious

and grievous personal injuries and other damages.” Specifically, the plaintiff

alleged injury to her knee. She initially named Christus St. Patrick Hospital as the

defendant, contending that the hospital was negligent and/or strictly liable for,

among other things, allowing liquid to remain on the floor surface. It also

advanced liability based upon a failure to warn. She sought both general and

special damages related to the alleged injury. By amended petition, the plaintiff added Hospital Housekeeping Systems,

Ltd. d/b/a Hospital Housekeeping Systems, LLC (HHS), as a defendant. 1 The

plaintiff again alleged negligence and/or strict liability against the defendants

asserting liability due to, among other things, the presence of a liquid on the floor,

failure to warn of the danger of slipping and/or falling, and failure to post visible

warning signs. By its answer to the petition, HHS denied the plaintiff’s allegations

and asserted that “the sole and proximate cause of the accident sued upon herein

were the acts, commissions, omissions and negligence of others for whom this

defendant is not answerable or responsible.”

Thereafter, the plaintiff filed a motion for summary judgment and asserted

that she was entitled to judgment indicating that HHS was “one hundred (100%) at

fault in causing the fall made the basis of the above claim for damages.” She

further sought a determination that she was “free of fault[.]” In support of her

motion, the plaintiff included an excerpt from her deposition, as well as one from

Brandi Jones, in which both women addressed her fall. Both women identified a

wet streak on the floor at the time of the incident.

The plaintiff also introduced surveillance footage from the hallway in the

minutes before, during, and after the plaintiff’s fall. In her memorandum in

support of the motion for summary judgment, the plaintiff included still images

captured from the video, and asserted that they captured HHS employee Jamon

Thomas using a scrubber machine on the floor “[m]oments before [her] fall[.]”

The plaintiff noted the machine’s movement in the hallway prior to the fall and

1 This matter appears before the court on a designated record with limited background information available for reference. See Uniform Rules—Courts of Appeal, Rule 2-1.17. See also La.Code Civ.P. art. 2128. However, HHS’s brief to this court indicates that it “provided cleaning services at the hospital pursuant to a contract entered into between Christus St. Patrick Hospital and HHS.”

2 suggested that “[i]nstead of cleaning and drying the floor as the machine makes its

“S” maneuver, it left a streak of transparent water and cleaning fluid on the floor.”

Again referencing photographic images from the video, the plaintiff asserted that

after Mr. Thomas left the scene, she and Ms. Jones entered the hallway, and that,

after she stepped “forward in the area where the machine made its “S” turn,” her

left foot slid and she fell “hard on her right knee.” Referencing her deposition

testimony, the plaintiff explained that she then identified a streak of liquid on the

floor and that her pant leg was wet. The plaintiff then noted that she thereafter

stopped hospital personnel, showing the person that there was water on the floor

and that the video images reveal Mr. Thomas returning to the area with the

scrubber machine. The plaintiff also introduced the affidavit of Mr. Thomas,

noting that he explained therein that he returned to the hallway and that, upon

cleaning the area, he identified a narrow streak of liquid on the floor, appearing to

him that the wiper of the machine failed to remove the subject liquid.

In opposition, HHS suggested that its own evidence demonstrated genuine

issues of material fact regarding whether a foreign substance was on the floor,

whether it had actual or constructive knowledge of that condition, or whether it

created such a condition. In particular, HHS noted that in her deposition, the

plaintiff explained that the streak of water ran the length of the hall. This

description, HHS asserted, differed from her affidavit and from Ms. Jones’s

deposition, wherein she only identified drops in a line, but explained that the streak

was only three to five feet long.

Turning to the video footage, HHS suggested that the video identified “a

clean, clear hallway” and that it did not appear different before or after Mr.

Thomas is shown passing with the scrubber machine. It further asserted that an

3 unidentified male shown on the video prior to the plaintiff’s arrival is shown to

“place[] his left foot in the exact spot in which Ms. Reider claims to have slipped

on water, which occurs exactly 0:05 seconds before Ms. Reider slips.” It suggests

that the fall therefore could have “been caused by the shoe of the unidentified male

that steps on the exact spot 0:05 seconds prior” to the fall.

Additionally, HHS argued that the videotape rendered Mr. Thomas’s

affidavit unreliable, insofar as he had explained therein that he discovered liquid

upon his return to the scene, but the video revealed that he did not stop and inspect

the area. Rather, HHS asserted that Mr. Thomas re-entered the hallway with the

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