2024 IL App (1st) 230582-U No. 1-23-0582 June 14, 2024 SIXTH DIVISION
NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and may not be cited as precedent by any party except in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1).
IN THE APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS FIRST DISTRICT
ROBERTA RUDA, ) Appeal from the Circuit Court ) of Cook County. Plaintiff-Appellant, ) ) v. ) No. 21 L 7777 ) JEWEL FOOD STORES, INC., a foreign ) The Honorable corporation d/b/a JEWEL-OSCO, ) Gerald V. Cleary, ) Judge, presiding. Defendant-Appellee. )
PRESIDING JUSTICE ODEN JOHNSON delivered the judgment of the court. Justices Hyman and C. A. Walker concurred.
ORDER
¶1 Held: Reversing the trial court’s grant of summary judgment for the store in this slip- and-fall case, we find there were genuine issues of material fact regarding: (1) whether the dangerous condition existed for a sufficient amount of time such that it should have been discovered by the exercise of ordinary care, where there is a 2-hour gap in the store’s sweep records due to a stipulation by the parties, and where the parties dispute on appeal whether the store’s video shows that store employees are, or are not, looking at the floor as they work, and (2) whether the dangerous condition was part of a pattern of conduct or a recurring incident, where the depositions of defendant’s employees establish that cherry pits on the floor was a recurring incident on the days when there was a cherry display in the store, such as on the day that plaintiff slipped on a cherry pit.
¶2 Plaintiff Roberta Ruda appeals the trial court’s grant of summary judgment for
defendant Jewel Food Stores, Inc. Plaintiff slipped and fell in a Jewel Osco Store on Waukegan No. 1-23-0582
Road in Deerfield and filed a complaint alleging one count of negligence against the store. For
the following reasons, we reverse the trial court’s grant of summary judgment for the store.
¶3 BACKGROUND
¶4 On August 2, 2021, plaintiff filed her complaint alleging that on May 29, 2021, she fell
while shopping in the store. There is no dispute that plaintiff fell on that date while a customer
in the store. The complaint alleged that plaintiff slipped on a cherry on the store’s floor; and a
store director later acknowledged that she did not bother to ask plaintiff how plaintiff fell since
the director saw a cherry pit on the bottom of plaintiff’s shoe. There is also no dispute that the
store had a display with cherries for sale on that date.
¶5 The complaint alleged that defendant breached its duty of care in the maintenance of
its premises to guard against foreseeable injuries to plaintiff and others. Although the
complaint was not divided into individual counts, it further alleged: a failure to properly inspect
the floor near the cherry display; a failure to remove pieces of fruit on the floor near the cherry
display; allowing a dangerous condition to exist; a failure to remedy the dangerous condition
by clearing the floor near the display; and a failure to warn, although it knew or should have
known of a dangerous condition.
¶6 Defendant filed an answer in which it alleged as an affirmative defense that plaintiff
was negligent in that she was inattentive, that she failed to observe and avoid open and obvious
conditions, and that she failed to keep a proper lookout.
¶7 As part of its response to plaintiff’s request to produce documents, defendant produced
an “Incident Detail Report,” authored by store director Tammy Stock, which stated that it was
completed the same day as plaintiff’s fall. Under “Incident Description,” the report stated:
“customer slipped on a cherry pit and fell on knee.” “Customer Footwear Description” was
2 No. 1-23-0582
given as “walking shoes.” “General description of substance allegedly slipped on” was given
as “cherry pit.” The report answered “yes” to the following two statements: “Store verify
existence of substance” and “Substance appear slipped on.” 1 The question “Who inspected
area after incident?” was answered: “store director.” The entry “Sweep Log Information” had
a “No” by it. The entry “Employee [who] last conducted sweep” was left blank. The report
noted that the fall did not occur on a “non-skid floor,” that caution cones were not out, and that
mats were not in place. The question “How did [the substance] get on floor/area” had the
following answer: “customer ate a cherry and dropped [sic] on the floor.” The store director
later explained at her deposition that she was not referring in this particular entry to plaintiff
but rather to a “customer” in general.
¶8 On February 16, 2022, defendant moved for summary judgment, with exhibits attached,
including portions of various deposition transcripts, as well as photos, the store incident report
and surveillance footage inside the store.
¶9 Jamie Ianson stated in her deposition 2 on September 27, 2022, that she was employed
by defendant in customer service, specifically as the front-end manager of the store, that she
was working at the store in question at the time that plaintiff fell, and that she had worked for
defendant since graduating from high school in 2004, or almost 20 years.
¶ 10 At Ianson’s deposition, plaintiff’s counsel observed that the store incident report for
this incident stated that a customer ate a cherry and dropped it on the floor. Counsel then
1 This is a direct quote from the report, and it appears to ask: did the substance, which the store verified in the prior question, appear to have been slipped on? The author of the report answered that question “yes.” 2 The depositions taken here were discovery depositions, rather than evidence depositions. See Ill. S. Ct. R. 212 (describing the purposes for which discovery depositions may be used as opposed to evidence depositions). See also Ill. S. Ct. R. 202 and 206. In general, the purpose of a discovery deposition is to explore the facts of the case, while, in contrast, the purpose of an evidentiary deposition is to preserve testimony for trial, In re Estate of Rennick, 181 Ill. 2d 395, 401 (1998). 3 No. 1-23-0582
asked, even though Ianson had not authored the report, if Ianson had a reasonable belief where
that information had come from, and Ianson replied yes. When asked, Ianson explained:
“Q. What is that reasonable belief?
A. That it happens all the time.
Q. Oh, so based on your experience?
A. Based on my experience, during—whenever there are cherries, customers eat them
and spit them on the floor.
Q. Really?
A. Yes. All the time.
Q. Interesting.
So that’s a common occurrence?
A. Yes.”
Thus, according to Ianson, customers eat cherries and spit them on the floor all the time.
¶ 11 Ianson stated that, at the time of plaintiff’s fall, the store had in place a “sweep
program,” to ensure the removal of debris from the floor. She stated that “every hour somebody
goes through and checks to make sure that there’s no debris on the floor.” She explained that
someone does not actually sweep the entire floor, but rather someone walks the aisles and picks
up what he or she spots.
¶ 12 Ianson stated that, although she did not witness plaintiff fall, she was notified of the
fall through a radio broadcast which she heard through a headset she was wearing, and she
walked over to the produce department where the fall had occurred. When Ianson arrived, her
store director, Tammy Stock, was already there. Ianson observed plaintiff on the floor in a fetal
position and a shopping cart that was 5 or 6 feet away, Stock asked Ianson to take photos, and 4 No. 1-23-0582
Ianson took photos on her cell phone. Five print copies of these photos were identified at
Ianson’s deposition and marked as a group exhibit. Ianson agreed that Photo A showed plaintiff
and the paramedics’s gurney, that Photo B showed a dark spot directly under plaintiff’s left
shoe, that Photo C also showed a spot right under plaintiff’s left shoe and another spot above
and in line with the toe of her left shoe, that Photo D showed plaintiff holding her phone and a
dark spot under her right foot, and that Photo E depicted the shopping cart, showing what was
in the cart. When asked to look at the photo of the cart and to recite what produce she observed,
Ianson stated: “Strawberries, corn, cherries, watermelon, cantaloupe, and honey dew.” Ianson
estimated that it took her 15 seconds to take all five photos.
¶ 13 At her deposition, plaintiff’s counsel asserted that he was showing Ianson two photos
that were taken when plaintiff was at the hospital and that showed residue on the bottom of
plaintiff’s shoe. Ianson stated that she observed the residue in the photos. However, Ianson
agreed that she had not observed that residue on the shoe when Ianson was at the scene, because
Ianson had not looked at the bottom of plaintiffs’ shoes.
¶ 14 Tammy Stock stated in her deposition on June 7, 2022, that she was the store director3
and the one who answered the interrogatories on behalf of defendant, and that she had worked
for defendant for 10 years. Stock stated that clerks “sweep” the floors every hour. She
explained that, by the word “sweep,” she did not mean “physically sweep,” but rather visually
survey the floors and clean when needed. Stock noted that, while “working tables,” the clerks
were also expected “to maintain the floors as well” and clean when needed. Mike Sarno was
Stock explained that the term “store director” was the same as what used to be called the “store 3
manager.” 5 No. 1-23-0582
the produce manager and, at the time of the fall, there would also have been three produce
clerks in the produce department.
¶ 15 Stock stated that she first became aware of plaintiff’s fall when Sarno, her produce
manager, called her on her radio. When Stock arrived in the produce section, she observed
plaintiff on the floor holding her leg. After asking plaintiff if she wanted medical assistance,
Stock called for paramedics right away. When asked about plaintiff’s condition, Stock stated
“[s]he was in pain.” Stock explained that she did not ask plaintiff how plaintiff fell because:
“There—there was a cherry pit on her shoe, so I didn’t have to ask her.’ Stock confirmed that
Stock observed the cherry pit on plaintiff’s shoe and asked Ianson to take a picture of the shoe.
Stock also noticed that plaintiff had cherries in her cart, but Stock did not observe plaintiff
drop a cherry and did not hear anyone say that they had observed plaintiff drop a cherry. Stock
stated that the display with cherries was approximately 25 feet away from where plaintiff fell.
Plaintiff’s counsel asked if, “in any of what you have either seen or read before your deposition,
is there any indication to you that [plaintiff] was eating those cherries and just—or dropping
them on the floor?” and Stock said “No.”
¶ 16 Stock stated that the marking or redness on the ground depicted in Photo B indicated
the location of the cherry pit. Stock agreed that the presence of cherries in plaintiff’s cart did
not mean that plaintiff was eating the cherries, and any belief that plaintiff dropped cherries
would be speculation. Plaintiff’s counsel stated that he had been provided with “the sweep
log” from that date and he showed it to Stock. Stock agreed that the log showed that L.R.4
clocked in his “sweep” of the produce section at 13:05:16 (or 1:05:16 p.m.). Stock explained
4 Because L.R. is a challenged employee, the parties stipulated that L.R. would not be called as a witness. See supra ¶ 30. To protect his privacy, we use his initials. 6 No. 1-23-0582
that a clerk would clock in the task after having first completed it. Less than 20 seconds later,
at 13:05:34, L.R. clocked in his “sweep” of the grocery department, which Stock explained
was “right next to produce,” approximately “2 feet” away. To clock in, LR. had to use the
“time clock up front” in the store. The next time L.R. clocked in was approximately an hour
later, at 14:05:25, and that was again in the produce section. If there was nothing on the floor,
Stock estimated that it would take L.R. five minutes to “sweep” both the produce and grocery
areas.
¶ 17 Stock acknowledged that she prepared the incident report after plaintiff left the store
and sent it to defendant’s risk management department. Stock also acknowledged the various
entries that she made on the form, which we already described above. Stock explained that,
where her report stated that a customer had dropped a cherry pit on the floor, Stock was not
referring to plaintiff. Stock clarified:
“The cherry pit was on the floor, and a customer had to have eaten it and put it on
the floor. [The report] doesn’t necessarily state it was that customer, but someone ate
it and put it on the floor.”
When asked whether there was a pit or a cherry on the floor, Stock answered that there was
definitely not a whole cherry on the floor, because a whole cherry “would’ve made a big mess.”
After plaintiff was removed from the store, Stock did not speak to L.R., Sarno or any of the
other employees working in the produce department that day, and she did not ask L.R. whether
he had swept the aisle where plaintiff fell. Stock agreed that, on the store video of the incident
that she watched, Sarno was within a few feet of where plaintiff fell, but his back was turned
to her.
7 No. 1-23-0582
¶ 18 On cross, Stock testified that she saw plaintiff weekly in the store and plaintiff was
“walking well,” but Stock had not spoken to her since the incident. Plaintiff’s daughter came
to the store the morning following the incident and said that her mother had surgery and that
she (the daughter) wanted to leave her contact information. After the incident, plaintiff said
that her knee hurt. On recross, Stock agreed that there is always some fruit that is not perfect
when it is packaged, and that a cherry could have been crushed in the bag. Stock agreed that,
after watching the video and discussions with Sarno and Ianson, Stock had not determined who
put the cherry pit on the floor. At the end of her deposition, Stock waived the right to review
the deposition transcript and sign it.
¶ 19 Mike Sarno stated at his deposition on June 7, 2022, that he had worked for
defendant for 32 years and had been the produce manager at this particular store for five years.
Other than a few part-time jobs in high school, Sarno stated that working for defendant “has
been what I’ve been doing my entire life.” Sarno stated that, at the time of plaintiff’s fall, he
was close by, but he had his back to her and he turned around when he heard her scream. When
asked what she had fallen on, he replied:
“I saw that she fell and I was, you know, trying to see how she was, and then I did—I
did after looking down, we did notice a cherry pit on the floor, just a cherry pit with
some flesh that was still on it, so it looked like it was recently a newer cherry pit. It
wasn’t something that had been sitting there for a while because it looked pretty fresh.”
¶ 20 After plaintiff fell, Sarno contacted his supervisor, Tammy Stock, on the intercom,
asking her to come over to the produce department because a customer had fallen. Plaintiff
“said something about her knee.” Sarno did not look at the bottom of plaintiff’s shoe. Sarno
assumed someone must have picked up the cherry pit, because he saw it after plaintiff fell and,
8 No. 1-23-0582
when plaintiff left with the paramedics, it was no longer there. Sarno then cleaned the area
where it had been.
¶ 21 Sarno stated that, every hour, the store has “a sweep walk,” and that if he or his clerks
notice a spill, they clean it up immediately. Looking at a photo of a red mark on the floor
underneath plaintiff’s shoe, Sarno said that it did not appear “to be a crush of a cherry like
someone stepped on it.” Sarno explained that, “if it was a whole cherry there would be juice
everywhere.” When asked what his belief was about the cherry, Sarno answered “someone ate
it probably.” Sarna said there was a “good possibility” that someone ate it and spit the pit on
the floor. The bags of cherries come pre-packaged, and Sarno has never seen a pit or a crushed
cherry inside the bag.
¶ 22 Sarno stated that, when he stacks the bags of cherries, the bags are not always sealed:
“Q. So when you stack the bags, are those bags sealed?
A. Not all the time.
Q. I’m sorry.
A. Sometimes we’ll spin them once or twice to like fold them over or whatever, but the
customers will open them to pick out what they want so they never really stay closed,
but, no, like they’re never all closed at one time when they are on display.”
Prior to these questions, Sarno stated that there was no way of aerating the cherries other than
by opening the zip lock at the top of the bag.
¶ 23 Sarno stated, after plaintiff fell, Stock called 911. From where plaintiff fell, it was about
40 to 50 feet from the cherry display Later, Sarno stated that it could be 50 to 60 feet, but that
was “just a guesstimation.” Looking at a photo of a substance on the bottom of plaintiff’s shoe,
9 No. 1-23-0582
Sarno stated: “It does not look like a cherry to me.” At the end of the deposition, Sarno waived
the right to review and sign his deposition.
¶ 24 Plaintiff stated at her deposition on April 5, 2022, that, prior to this incident, she had
shopped at this store once or twice a week for five years. On the day of the incident, she arrived
at the store at approximately 1:50 p.m. and took a shopping cart. She was in the store for 10 or
15 minutes before she fell, and in the produce department specifically for only a minute or two
before her fall. Prior to her fall, she recalled putting three melons into her cart, but did not
recall putting any other produce in it. Defense counsel specifically asked if she put a bag of
cherries into her cart, and she said no. Plaintiff had previously seen items on the floor of the
produce department at other times when she had shopped at that store but she did not notice
anything on the floor on this visit prior to her fall. However, plaintiff was looking straight
ahead, as she pushed her cart. While walking around, she did not eat any cherries or any other
produce.
¶ 25 Plaintiff recalled that the cherries were in bags on “a stationary display case,” which
was a square table with other fruit. The cherries were Bing cherries, and some bags on the
table were closed and some were open. Immediately before her fall, plaintiff was walking and
holding her shopping cart with both hands, when she felt something under her foot that felt
“squishy or slippery” and she fell to her knee and then fell backwards. Plaintiff felt something
under her root foot, and she fell on to her right knee, and she fell back onto her left side and
lay “head to toe” on the ground. Plaintiff stated that it was a cherry that caused her fall. When
she stepped on the cherry, the cherry display was immediately to her left side, approximately
a foot away. The first time that plaintiff observed the cherry pit was when the paramedics
10 No. 1-23-0582
arrived approximately 10 minutes later and they pointed it out to her, lying in the aisle. Plaintiff
did not know how long the cherry was on the floor or how it got there.
¶ 26 Plaintiff recalled that, after she fell, she was in excruciating pain and was screaming
for someone to call an ambulance. The first person who arrived to help her was a woman
employee, who arrived approximately five minutes later. The employee asked plaintiff if
plaintiff needed help getting up, and plaintiff asked her to call an ambulance. The employee
asked plaintiff what had happened, and plaintiff replied that she was in terrible pain and could
not move her leg, and that she had slipped and fallen on something. After the fall, plaintiff was
in the store for another 15 minutes. During that time, plaintiff used the cellphone in her purse
to call her sister. Looking at photos, plaintiff identified the cherry pit that she had seen.
¶ 27 Counsel asked if her shopping cart was depicted in one of the photos, and plaintiff said
she did not know. When asked if that is where her cart “would have likely been” after her fall,
plaintiff said no. When asked if the cart is in the photo was near where her shopping cart
“would have been,” plaintiff replied: “It could be.” Plaintiff does not recall whether someone
moved her cart and does not know if someone did. Eventually, plaintiff stated that the cart
depicted in photo 2E was “probably” her shopping cart. She agreed that the photo of the cart
showed a sanitation wipe in the basket, three containers of precut melons, a package of corn
on the cob, a package of whole strawberries and an open bag of cherries. Plaintiff stated that
she did not remove or drop any of the cherries out of the bag before her fall.
¶ 28 From her medical providers, plaintiff knows that the fall injured her right knee, that her
patella tendon was severed, that her kneecap was fractured and that they removed five pieces
of her kneecap. In addition, the wound opened, and there was possible contamination and
infection. Prior to her fall, she did not have any pain, problems or arthritis with her right knee.
11 No. 1-23-0582
Approximately thirty years ago, she was diagnosed with osteopenia. Plaintiff identified photos
taken in the emergency room that showed cherry flesh on the bottom of her shoe. After being
taken first by ambulance to the emergency room at Highland Park Hospital, she was taken next
by ambulance to Skokie Hospital, because it was an orthopedic hospital, and that is where she
had surgery. The surgeon later told her that. to reattach her tendon, he removed five pieces of
her kneecap, and that she had only two-thirds of her kneecap left. After the surgery, she was
in the hospital for several days, and at a skilled nursing facility for six weeks. For three months,
she was in a knee immobilizer, and for six months she used a walker. She also needed wound
care and home health care for a couple of months. Plaintiff was still in physical therapy two
days a week for her right knee at the time of the deposition. The therapy started after she was
out of the immobilizer. Since the surgery, she also received gel injections and steroid injections
in her right knee. Although her pain level is okay when she is sitting, the pain is “there all the
time.” She said: “Just about everything you do in your daily life is compromised now.”
Plaintiff also waived her signature for the deposition.
¶ 29 In addition to deposition transcripts, defendant’s motion included the five photos taken
by Ianson shortly after plaintiff’s fall, which were already described above (supra ¶ 11), and a
video clip from the store surveillance video camera. The video clip starts at 1 p.m. on Saturday
May 29, 2021, and shows plaintiff walking around the store, prior to the incident.
¶ 30 Plaintiff’s response to defendant’s motion for summary judgment included photos, a
stipulation and defendant’s sweep log. The relevant content of the sweep log was already
described above (supra ¶ 15). Although entitled “Stipulations,” the document is one short page
and states:
“It is hereby stipulated by and between the parties hereto that:
12 No. 1-23-0582
1. No Party will call [L.R.] at trial and/or arbitration as a witness;
2. No Party will present any evidence that on the date the Plaintiff fell, [L.R.] swept the
specific aisle in which the Plaintiff fell before she fell, regardless of whether [L.R.] is
named or unnamed in such evidence.”
The evidence in which L.R. is “named” is the sweep log.
¶ 31 On March 2, 2023, the trial court granted summary judgment for defendant in a five-
page written order. The court found that “plaintiff failed to present evidence to create a
question of fact that [defendant] caused the condition, that [defendant] had actual notice of the
condition or that [defendant] had constructive notice of the condition.” The order did not
address the foreseeability or failure to warn allegations raised by plaintiff in her complaint.
The court found that there was no evidence regarding how long this particular cherry or cherry
pit was on the ground prior to plaintiff’s fall. The trial court further found that an appellate
court case that plaintiff relied on was “overruled” by another appellate court case. 5
¶ 32 On March 30, 2023, plaintiff filed a notice of appeal, and this timely appeal followed.
¶ 33 ANALYSIS
¶ 34 I. Standard of Review
¶ 35 Plaintiff appeals the trial court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of defendant.
Summary judgment is appropriate when the record, viewed in the light most favorable to the
nonmovant, shows there is no genuine issue as to any material fact, thereby entitling the
moving party to judgment as a matter of law. Zurich American Insurance Co. v. Infrastructure
5 “A decision of our appellate court may only be reversed or overruled by [the supreme court].” Gillen v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co., 215 Ill. 2d 381, 392 n.2 (2005). An appellate court is “free to part company” with the decision of another panel, “but as a court of equal dignity it had no authority to ‘abrogate that decision.” Gillen, 215 Ill. 2d at 392 n.2. 13 No. 1-23-0582
Engineering, Inc., 2023 IL App (1st) 230147, ¶ 17; 735 ILCS 5/2-1005(c) (2022) (“there is no
genuine issue as to any material fact” and “the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter
of law”).
¶ 36 “Summary judgment is a drastic means of disposing” of a lawsuit (Bruns v. City of
Centralia, 2014 IL 116998, ¶ 12), and it should be utilized only when the movant’s right to
judgment is clear and free from doubt. Zurich, 2023 IL App (1st) 230147, ¶ 17. “A plaintiff
who opposes summary judgment need not prove his case, but must provide some factual basis
which could arguably result in a favorable judgment.” Brown, Udell and Pomerantz, Ltd v.
Ryan, 369 Ill. App. 3d 821, 824 (2006). By contrast, the opposing party must produce
competent, admissible evidence which, if proved, would warrant entry of judgment for it.
Brown, 369 Ill. App. 3d 821, 824 (2006).
¶ 37 A genuine issue of material fact exists where any material fact is disputed or, if the
material facts are undisputed, reasonable persons might draw different inferences from the
undisputed facts. Carrey v. Union Pacific Railroad Co., 2016 IL 118984, ¶ 25.
¶ 38 On appeal, a reviewing court will consider de novo the trial court’s decision to grant
summary judgment. Zurich, 2023 IL App (1st) 230147, ¶ 17. De novo review means that we
perform the same analysis that a trial court would, and that we owe no deference to the trial
court’s decision. People v. Avdic, 2023 IL App (1st) 210848, ¶ 25.
¶ 39 II. Constructive Knowledge
¶ 40 In the case at bar, plaintiff seeks recovery based on defendant’s alleged negligence. To
recover, plaintiff must plead and later prove: (1) a duty owed by defendant to plaintiff, (2) a
breach of that duty, and (3) an injury proximately resulting from that breach. Carney v. Union
14 No. 1-23-0582
Pacific Railroad Co., 2016 IL 118984, ¶ 26. On this appeal, only the second element, the
breach is disputed.
¶ 41 Liability may be imposed upon a business when a business invitee is injured after
slipping and falling on the business’s premises, if the invitee can establish that the business
had actual or constructive notice of the dangerous condition causing the fall. Zuppardi v. Wal-
Mart Stores, Inc., 770 F.3d 644, 651 (2014) (citing Culli v. Marathon Petroleum Co. 862 F.2d
119, 123 (7th Cir. 1988) (citing Illinois cases)). Plaintiff concedes in its brief to this court that
defendant did not have actual notice.
¶ 42 Under Illinois law, a plaintiff may establish constructive notice by showing evidence
either (1) that the dangerous condition existed for a sufficient amount of time such that it should
have been discovered by the exercise of ordinary care, or (2) that the dangerous condition was
part of a pattern of conduct or a recurring incident. Zuppardi, 770 F.3d at 651; Nicholson v. St.
Anne Lanes, Inc., 136 Ill. App. 3d 664, 668-69 (1985). See also Swartz v. Sears, Roebuck &
Co., 264 Ill. App. 3d 254, 274 (1993) (constructive notice came from “defendant’s awareness
of the potentially dangerous recurring situation”). Applying those prongs to the facts at bar
would require plaintiff to show either (1) that this particular pit was likely on the floor for a
sufficient amount of time such that this pit should have been discovered in the exercise of
ordinary care, or (2) that the recurring incidence of cherry debris on the floor, in the wake of a
cherry display, created a dangerous condition that the store failed to adequately address. 6
6 For example, in Perminas v. Montgomery Ward & Co., 60 Ill. 2d 469, 471-72 (1975), the court noted that a business is liable for the negligent acts of third parties if the business fails to take reasonable care to discover such acts are being done or to give adequate warning, and that a business is also liable if an invitee is injured as the result of a dangerous condition created by a particular method of displaying merchandise, if the creation of the dangerous condition was reasonably foreseeable. 15 No. 1-23-0582
¶ 43 Regarding the first prong, plaintiff argues that there is a two-hour gap, which we
discuss below. See Newson-Bogan v. Wendy’s Old Fashioned Harmburgers, 2011 IL App (1st)
092860, ¶ 19 (“when plaintiff testified that she observed no one inspecting the area for 20
minutes, that testimony is sufficient to create a triable issue of fact as to constructive notice”
about grease on the floor of a restaurant); Tafoya-Cruz v. Temperance Beer Company, 2020 IL
App (1st) 190606, ¶ 78 (summary judgment on the issue of constructive notice was not
appropriate where a plaintiff testified that no employee did a walk-through for 20 minutes).
¶ 44 Regarding the second prong, plaintiff argues that defendant had a duty “to protect its
customers from this constant problem of which it was also aware of customers throwing cherry
pits on the floor.” The depositions of defendant’s employees indicate that cherry pits on the
floor was a recurring incident on the days when there was a cherry display, such as on the day
of plaintiff’s fall. Ianson, an employee with almost 20 years of experience with defendant,
stated that cherries on the floor happen all the time. Stock, the store director assumed, as a
matter of course, that the cherry pit on the floor came from a customer who ate a cherry and
spit out the pit. Similarly, Sarno stated that cherry pits on the floor “usually” came from
“someone eating it and spitting it onto the floor.” 7 Despite the fact that long-term employees
were aware of the incidence of cherry debris, the incident report indicated that there were no
mats or non-skid floors, and Sarno stated that, when he stacked bags, some were open.
Although Sarno stated that the cherries arrive at the store in sealed ziplock bags, when asked
if they were sealed when “you” stack them, he replied “[n]ot all the time.” The store did have
“sweep” policies in place, which we discuss in more detail below.
¶ 45 III. The Record
7 Sarno also later stated “in my experience, someone ate the pit and spit it out on the floor.” 16 No. 1-23-0582
¶ 46 The record before us consists largely of deposition transcripts of defendant’s
employees. “A statement by an employee is admissible against the employer as a party
admission if it is made during the existence of the employment relationship and concerns
matters within the scope of the employment.” Holland v. Schwan’s Home Service, Inc., 2013
IL App (5th) 110560, ¶ 185 (“In addition, statements made by a party’s agent about a matter
within the scope of his or her agency and by virtue of the agent’s authority are party-opponent
admissions.”). Generally, an employee’s knowledge of a dangerous condition is considered
sufficient to impute notice to a defendant employer, since an employee has a responsibility to
correct or report the problem. Pavlik v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 323 Ill. App. 3d 1060, 1066
(2001).
¶ 47 Defendant argues, and we agree, that it is well established that any evidence which
would be inadmissible at trial cannot be considered by the court in support of, or in in
opposition to, a motion for summary judgment. CCP Ltd. Partnership v. First Source
Fianncial, Inc., 368 IL App. 3d 476, 484 (2006); Brown, 369 Ill. App. 3d 821, 824 (2006).
This is true even if the other party failed to object. “Given the purpose of summary judgment,
a party’s failure to object when the other party cites clearly inadmissible facts or opinions does
not mean that the trial court must accept those facts or opinions and set the case for trial if they
create issues of material fact.” Essig v. Advocate BroMenn Medical Center, 2015 IL App (4th)
140546, ¶ 89. Since we perform the same analysis as the trial court, the same is true on appeal.
As defendant quoted for us in its appellate brief, “[i]t would be a disservice to both the parties
and the judicial system as a whole if the court were to base its summary judgment ruling on
inadmissible evidence.” Essig, 2015 IL App (4th) 140546, ¶ 89.
17 No. 1-23-0582
¶ 48 In the case at bar, the parties have stipulated that certain evidence is inadmissible. The
parties stipulated that no one will call L.R. as a witness and that no party “will present any
evidence that on the date the Plaintiff fell, [L.R.] swept the specific aisle in which the Plaintiff
fell before she fell, regardless of whether [L.R.] is named or unnamed in such evidence.” Thus,
defendant stipulated that it will not “present any evidence” that L.R. swept that aisle
“regardless of whether L.R. is named *** in such evidence.” The evidence in which L.R. is
named is the sweep log, thus making that evidence inadmissible as evidence of sweeping
during the relevant time period and creating a two-hour gap.
¶ 49 Defendant, for its part, argues that there is not a two-hour gap, because others in the
area also had an obligation to clean up debris, if they noticed it. However, that does not change
the fact that there is a two-hour gap in the procedure instituted specifically by defendant to
address debris on the floor, which defendant’s employees indicated was foreseeable in the
wake of a cherry display. Defendant argues in response that such a statement means that its
safety procedure is being held against it. However, by making this observation, we are not
holding defendant’s procedure against it, but rather noting that defendant cannot use this
procedure as a shield or defense against plaintiff’s allegations of foreseeability, if it cannot
prove the procedure.
¶ 50 Plaintiff argues that the video surveillance footage captures several instances where
employees do not check the floor around them, as they walk through the store performing
specific tasks such as stocking shelves and talking to other customers and employees.
Although Sarno, for example, testified that he is “always looking at the floors,” plaintiff argues
that the video footage shows that he did not look at the floors, as he moved around the produce
area, stocking produce and talking to customers. In the few seconds before plaintiff’s fall, the
18 No. 1-23-0582
video shows Sarno turn into the aisle and reach for an item on a shelf, and then return to the
intersecting aisle, without appearing to look down.
¶ 51 In response, defendant argues that it is impossible to determine from the video where a
person’s eyes are focused and that it is “common knowledge” that a person can look ahead and
to the ground without bending their head. Whether this argument would or would not persuade
a jury is not up to us to say, but it still creates a material issue of fact and credibility. Carney,
2016 IL 118984, ¶ 25 (a genuine issue of material fact exists where reasonable people might
draw different inferences from undisputed facts).
¶ 52 In granting summary judgment to defendant, the trial court relied on Tafoya-Cruz, 2020
IL App (1st) 190606, in which the appellate court affirmed a trial court’s grant of summary
judgment to a defendant business in a slip and fall case. However, the Tafoya-Cruz case is
distinguishable legally and factually from our case.
¶ 53 First, Tafoya-Cruz is distinguishable legally because the recurring nature of the danger
was simply not an issue in that appeal. The appellate court noted that plaintiff failed to cite
relevant supporting cases, such as Perminas v. Montgomery Ward & Co., 16 Ill. App. 3d 445
(1973) (liability based on a recurring incident “is a valid principle of law”), rev’d on other
grounds by 60 Ill. 2d 469 (1975), 8 until its motion to reconsider. Tafoya-Cruz, 2020 IL App
(1st) 190606, ¶ 85. Thus, the reviewing court refused to consider that prong of the constructive
notice doctrine, finding it forfeited. Tafoya-Cruz, 2020 IL App (1st) 190606, ¶ 86.
¶ 54 By contrast, in the case at bar, plaintiff cited Perminas, both the appellate court case
and the subsequent supreme court case, in her initial response to defendant’s summary
8 The Tafoya-Cruz court cited the appellate court opinion in Perminas, without noting that there was a subsequent supreme court opinion that reversed on other grounds. Tafoya-Cruz, 2020 IL App (1st) 190606, ¶ 85 (citing only Perminas, 16 Ill. App. 3d). 19 No. 1-23-0582
judgment motion. Based on it and other cases, she argued that the trial court must consider
“whether a foreign object is known to the business to cause a dangerous condition” and “the
likelihood of the dangerous condition.” In her timely response to defendant’s motion, plaintiff
noted that, in Perminas, constructive notice was inferred where a store knew of a dangerous
condition “often” created by customers and yet failed to take reasonable steps to address the
danger. The trial court discussed plaintiff’s argument in its written order and stated that it
found Perminas distinguishable because the store in Perminas “had actual knowledge that the
objects were being misused as skateboards and left in the aisle.” This is a distinction without
substance because, in the case at bar, defendant similarly had actual knowledge that customers
were eating cherries and spitting pits on the floor, all the time. In any event, plaintiff’s timely
argument and the trial court’s discussion of it in its order establish that this issue was not
forfeited, as it was in Tafoya-Cruz, and, thus, Tafoya-Cruz is legally distinguishable from ours.
¶ 55 Factually, the differences are even more extreme. Tafoya-Cruz case is to ours, as night
is to day. The opening line of the Tafoya-Cruz opinion states: “After a day spent drinking
beer and fixing cars at his auto-repair shop, [the plaintiff] went to a craft brewery in Evanston,
Illinois, defendant Temperance Brewing Company, where he continued drinking.” Tafoya-
Cruz, 2020 IL App (1st) 190606, ¶ 1. Compare that opening sequence of events to the sequence
in our case, where plaintiff was in a grocery store, in the middle of the afternoon, holding her
shopping cart with both hands, with no suggestion of prior alcohol impairment. In addition,
although the manager at the brewery could not specifically recall when he had last checked the
bathroom, which was the scene of the fall, he testified that, usually, he personally checked it
every 30 minutes. Tafoya-Cruz, 2020 IL App (1st) 190606, ¶ 64. By contrast here, due to the
stipulation, there is no one who can testify as to when he did, or did not, personally check the
20 No. 1-23-0582
floor. Further, in Tafoya-Cruz, 2020 IL App (1st) 190606, ¶ 66, this court observed that there
was no testimony about what the alleged substance was and, particularly, no testimony about
the substance from plaintiff. By contrast, even defendant’s employees here talked about the
cherry pit. The store director stated that she did not have to ask plaintiff what caused the fall
because the director could see for herself the cherry pit. Stock stated: “there was a cherry pit
on her shoe, so I didn’t have to ask her.’ Because of the considerable factual and legal
differences from our case, Tafoya-Cruz is not dispositive, even if we found it persuasive.
¶ 56 Defendant and the trial court relied on Tafoya-Cruz, in part, for the proposition that a
retail establishment’s safety procedure should not be held against it, otherwise that could
encourage retailers not to have one. Tafoya-Cruz, 2020 IL App (1st) 190606, ¶ 75. However,
in this appeal, the foreseeability of the alleged danger was already well established by
employee depositions, and the question is more whether the store can rely on its procedure as
a defense or shield to allegations of foreseeability. 9
¶ 57 In sum, we cannot find, under de novo review, that defendant was entitled to summary
judgment as a matter of law, where only the element of breach was at issue; where the
depositions of defendant’s own employees establish that, to people like themselves who are in
the grocery business, the alleged hazard, namely, cherry debris on the floor, was readily
forseeable; where its produce manager stated that, when he stacked the cherry bags, they were
not always sealed; where the store’s incident report indicates other measures that were not
taken, such as non-skid floors or mats; where, due to a stipulation, there is a two-hour gap in
the sweep procedure established by defendant, thereby rendering the procedure a weak shield
9 Plaintiff argued in its brief to this court that defendant’s internal policies “become a relevant factor where other facts prove foreseeability by the defendant of the dangerous condition,” which was the recurrent incidence of cherry debris when there is a cherry display. 21 No. 1-23-0582
against allegations of foreseeability; 10 and where the parties on appeal spent portions of their
appellate briefs disagreeing about the inferences to be drawn from a video concerning whether
employees, other than the designated “sweeper,” looked at the floor as claimed. For the
foregoing reasons, we find there were genuine issues of material fact, and we reverse and
remand for further proceedings.
¶ 58 Reversed and remanded.
10 In addition, the incident report had a “no” next to the entry for the sweep log.