Sales v. Peabody

335 P.3d 40, 157 Idaho 195, 2014 Ida. LEXIS 260
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 19, 2014
DocketNo. 41446
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 335 P.3d 40 (Sales v. Peabody) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sales v. Peabody, 335 P.3d 40, 157 Idaho 195, 2014 Ida. LEXIS 260 (Idaho 2014).

Opinions

J. JONES, Justice.

Tracy Sales brought suit against spa owner Stacie Peabody, claiming that she contracted a toe infection as a result of a pedicure performed at the spa. The district court granted summary judgment against Sales after concluding that she had failed to present sufficient evidence of causation. The district court also denied Sales’ motion for reconsideration based on the ground that she had not adequately alleged the theory of negligence she relied on in support of that motion. Sales timely appealed to this Court.

I.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

At the time this litigation began, Stacie Peabody was the owner and operator of Fingerprints Day Spa in Boise, Idaho (the “Spa”). The Spa had two pedicure stations, each of which was equipped with a foot basin that was filled with warm water during the performance of a pedicure. Peabody owned these stations and the accompanying foot basins. Tracy Sales was a client of Linda Cook, a licensed nail technician, who leased space in the Spa from Peabody. Cook was not employed by Peabody or the Spa. Cook never signed a written contract detailing the terms of their agreement and was required to use her own supplies and nail implements when providing services. Cook shared the two foot basins with other lessees and with Peabody, who also performed pedicures. Cook testified it was her understanding that Peabody was responsible for cleaning and maintaining the foot basins, but that she cleaned the basin she used. Peabody testified that she was responsible for cleaning and sanitation when she used the pedicure stations for her personal clients.

During a visit to the Spa on April 19, 2010, Sales received what she described as a puncture wound in her right big toe. Sales testified that “after [the pedicure] there was a little bit of redness. But never any blood.” She stated that during the pedicure she “did not experience pain. There was one point where there was — well, yes, I did at one brief point. Very quick.” According to Sales, the pain did not continue throughout the pedicure. Rather, “it was just real brief.” Sales did not remember whether she felt pain in [198]*198her toe that evening, but “[t]he next day it was sensitive, and red, and puffing up.” Within a short period of time, Sales said, the pain, redness, and swollenness dissipated. And then “[sjometime during the summer” her pain returned “in a totally different aspect.” Sales further testified that five months after the pedicure, her toe was in pain, and that by October, it was “extremely painful and had been swollen about three times the size of [her] normal toe.” Sales first sought medical treatment for her toe on October 11, 2010.

Sales went to podiatrist Jeffrey L. Chandler on December 27, 2010. Dr. Chandler initially thought that Sales may have an ingrown toe nail stemming from the pedicure and decided to perform an excision of the toe. On January 17, 2011, Sales returned with inflammation and Dr. Chandler decided to open the joint, clean it out, and perform a culture, which “appeared to be clean.” He began suspecting a “psoriatic arthritic joint.” When Sales returned on February 28, Dr. Chandler “decided to look for mycobacteria.” He performed a biopsy on March 14 and the results “indicated there was no fungus or yeast isolated.” In his medical report prepared for this litigation he said, “as this continued to be on going and no other lesions or psoriatic joint processes in any other place in her body except where the toe had been worked on by this salon in April of 2010, we determined that it was a mycobacterial infection that was a result from the incident Tracy Sales had at the Salon.”

On April 10, 2012, Sales filed suit against both Stacie Peabody d/b/a/ Fingerprints Day Spa and Linda Cook. She alleged two causes of action: negligence against both Peabody and Cook and respondeat superior — that Cook’s negligence was attributable to Peabody. Sales alleged that during the pedicure, her

right big toe was punctured or otherwise injured by an instrument or instruments being used to perform the pedicure---Later, the cuticle and skin around the toe nail became red and swollen. Infection set in and Plaintiffs condition worsened, resulting in significant injury to Plaintiff, and Plaintiff required numerous treatments and procedures, including surgery.

Peabody moved for summary judgment on the respondeat superior claim in April of 2013. In response, Sales filed the affidavit of Dr. Chandler (“First Affidavit”) in which he stated that Sales got a mycobacterial infection as a result of the pedicure performed by Cook. On May 30, 2013, the district court granted summary judgment to Peabody on the respondeat superior claim. That order is not challenged on appeal.

The following month, Peabody filed a second motion for summary judgment, this time on the negligence claim. Peabody argued that Sales could not establish either duty or causation. In response, Sales asserted that she contracted the mycobacterial infection as a result of Peabody’s negligence in failing to properly clean, maintain, sanitize, and disinfect her facility, including the pedicure stations and foot basins. The district court granted Peabody’s motion, holding that Sales had failed to put forth any evidence that Peabody’s alleged breach of duty caused the injury (“Summary Judgment Order”). The court said, “Dr. Chandler does not state that a dirty foot basin caused — or even contributed to — Plaintiffs injury.” As an alternate basis for granting summary judgment, the district court ruled that, even if there was evidence of causation, the puncture wound caused by Cook was a superseding cause.

Sales filed a motion to reconsider, along with a second affidavit of Dr. Chandler (“Second Affidavit”). In his Second Affidavit, Dr. Chandler stated his opinion that Sales had suffered the toe infection as a result of “the presence of mycobacteria in the foot basin in which Tracy Sales received the pedicure at the Salon.” He asserted that Sales’ “toe would have been infected with the mycobacterial (sic) at that time regardless of whether a prick, a poke or a movement of the cuticle occurred.”

The district court denied the motion to reconsider, noting that Dr. Chandler’s Second Affidavit contained “some evidence” that Peabody’s alleged failure to clean the foot basin caused Sales’ injury but that this had not been alleged as a ground of negligence in [199]*199the complaint. (“Reconsideration Order”). Sales filed a timely appeal.

II.

ISSUES ON APPEAL

1. Whether the district court erred in denying Sales’ motion to reconsider.
2. Whether other grounds support the judgment against Sales.

III.

ANALYSIS

A. Standard of review.

The appropriate standard of review is well-settled: '

“Appellate review of a district court’s ruling on a motion for summary judgment is the same as that required of the district judge when ruling on the motion.” Steele v. Spokesman-Review, 138 Idaho 249, 251, 61 P.3d 606, 608 (2002). Under I.R.C.P.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
335 P.3d 40, 157 Idaho 195, 2014 Ida. LEXIS 260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sales-v-peabody-idaho-2014.