Sandow-Pajewski v. Busch Entertainment Corp.

55 F. Supp. 2d 422, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16029, 1999 WL 498562
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedJuly 13, 1999
Docket4:98CV00114
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 55 F. Supp. 2d 422 (Sandow-Pajewski v. Busch Entertainment Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sandow-Pajewski v. Busch Entertainment Corp., 55 F. Supp. 2d 422, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16029, 1999 WL 498562 (E.D. Va. 1999).

Opinion

ORDER GRANTING SUMMARY JUDGMENT

BRADBERRY, United States Magistrate Judge.

Plaintiffs instituted this cause of action in federal court against defendants on August 26,1998. Plaintiffs Michelle Sandow-Pajewski and Christine Pajewski allege that they were injured by a wheelchair patron while they were visiting Busch Gardens in Williamsburg, Virginia. Dr. Thomas N. Pajewski alleges that he is entitled to recover his expenses for curing his daughter, Christine Pajewski’s, injuries. Following appropriate discovery, this matter is now before the Court on Busch Entertainment Corporation’s (hereinafter “Busch”) motion for summary judgment.

I. STATEMENT OF THE CASE

On August 26, 1996, Michelle Sandow-Pajewski (hereinafter “Sandow-Pajewski”) and Christine Pajewski (hereinafter “C. Pajewski”), accompanied by others, went to Busch Gardens for the day. (Comply 15.) In the early afternoon, San-dow-Pajewski and C. Pajewski allege they were injured while exiting the Wild Moose Lodge at Busch Gardens. (Sandow-Pa-jewski Dep. at 17.) The Wild Moose Lodge is designed to look like a log cabin, and it is a facility that is used “for lost children of guests and for parents to rest, diaper, nurse, etc., with their young children.” (Pauls Aff. at 1.) When Sandow-Pajewski and C. Pajewski were exiting the lodge, there was a woman in a motorized wheelchair coming up a ramp which led up to the door of the lodge. (Sandow-Pajew-ski Dep. at .17-18.) The woman operating the wheelchair was “a heavy ... woman,” and she was accompanied by a young man who was between ten and fourteen years old. (Sandow-Pajewski Dep. at 18, 40.) As Sandow-Pajewski and her daughter were exiting the lodge, the wheelchair patron appeared to be stuck on the ramp. The wheelchair was making “a revving sound,” and the young man was encouraging the woman to go forward with her wheelchair. Sandow-Pajewski testified that “before I could react or do anything, the wheelchair, which was stuck on the right-hand side of a ramp, bolted free and hit me.” (Sandow-Pajewski Dep, at 18.) The wheelchair knocked Sandow-Pajewski to the floor of the porch, and before she could react or stand up, the wheelchair patron ran over Sandow-Pajewski a second time. (Sandow-Pajewski Aff. at 3; Dep. at 18.) Sandow-Pajewski claims that she suffered severe injuries because of the accident, and she was removed from the area in a wheelchair. (Sandow-Pajewski Aff. at 4.) In the course of the accident, C. Pajewski suffered an abrasion to her right arm, and after a band-aid was placed on her arm at the first-aid station, C. Pajew-ski’s parents were able to treat her injury at home. (Dr. Pajewski’s Answers to Busch’s First Interrogs ¶ 11.)

The identity of the wheelchair patron has never been determined. All that any *424 one knows about her is what Sandow-Pajewski remembers. Sandow-Pajewski described the wheelchair patron as a “heavy ... woman” who probably weighed “over 200 pounds.” (Sandow-Pajewski Dep. at 40, 104.) She had no idea of the woman’s age. (Sandow-Pajewski Dep. at 40.)

At the time of the accident, plaintiffs claim that the wheelchair patron was operating a motorized wheelchair that she had rented while at Busch Gardens. (Compl.1ffl 10-11, 18.) In support of this claim, Sandow-Pajewski stated that it was a scooter-like wheelchair which had a Busch Garden’s sticker on its lower side. (Sandow-Pajewski Dep. at 47.) She believes that the sticker was rectangular in shape and that it was blue and white. (Sandow-Pajewski Dep. at 88.) Sandow-Pajewski does not remember whether the wheelchair had a basket on it, what the color of the wheelchair was, or whether it bore any numbers. (Sandow-Pajewski Dep. at 47.) She has no personal knowledge as to whether the wheelchair belonged to the woman or whether the woman rented the chair at the park. (Sandow-Pajewski Dep. at 90.) Sandow-Pajewski also admitted that she had no knowledge of whether the wheelchair patron was instructed by anyone regarding the use of the chair. (Sandow-Pajewski Dep. at 77.)

In support of their brief in opposition to Busch’s motion for summary judgment, plaintiffs submitted affidavits from Wendy Sandow and Steve Gleason. Both Sandow and Gleason went to Busch Gardens with Sandow-Pajewski and C. Pajewski on August 26, 1996. These individuals were located outside of the Moose Lodge, and they did not see the accident occur, but they heard it, and they immediately ran over to Sandow-Pajewski after she was thrown to the ground. (Sandow Aff. at 2; Gleason Aff. at 2.) Sandow and Gleason have stated that they observed the ramp after the accident, and they concluded that it was “virtually impossible for any wheelchair to be safely maneuvered up and down that ramp because of its narrowness and configuration, and a motorized wheelchair could, in no way, properly and safely use that ramp.” (Sandow Aff. at 2; Gleason Aff, at 2.) Following the accident, San-dow-Pajewski was placed in a wheelchair, and both Sandow and Gleason reported that Busch Garden employees tried to take the wheelchair down the ramp, but they were unable to do so “because of its narrowness and configuration,” and as a result, Sandow-Pajewski’s wheelchair had to be picked up in order to get her to ground level. (Sandow Aff. at 2; Gleason Aff. at 2.) In an affidavit submitted to the Court, Sandow-Pajewski expressed her opinion that she did not believe that the ramp was designed for wheelchairs and that the ramp was unable to safely accommodate any type of wheelchair. (Sandow-Pajew-ski Aff. at 2.) Sandow-Pajewski also stated her conclusion that it was obvious that the wheelchair patron “was incompetent to operate the wheelchair properly.” (Sandow-Pajewski Aff. at 3.)

Plaintiffs allege that' Busch was negligent in that it failed to maintain “a safe and secure premises,” allowing “dangerous, defective, and hazardous conditions to exist” of which Busch knew or should have known. (CompU 17.) First, plaintiffs allege a negligent design claim, stating that Busch allowed a wheelchair patron to operate a wheelchair on a ramp that did not have “a safe or adequate design of ingress and egress to permit the safe passage of such wheelchairs in close proximity to patrons.” (Comply 18.) Second, plaintiffs allege that Busch failed to properly warn non-wheelchair patrons in the park about the “imminent presence of wheelchair-bound patrons.” (Comply 18.) Finally, plaintiffs allege a negligent entrustment claim against Busch, stating that it failed “to monitor and supervise the use of wheelchair equipment on its premises in such a manner as to allow the safe usage of such equipment without presenting risks of danger to other patrons.” (Comply 18.)

*425 The complaint contains additional claims against Jaad Moreno Trading- Company, also resulting in a motion for summary judgment.

II. FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

A. Motion for Summary Judgment Standard

As set forth in Rule 56 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure

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Bluebook (online)
55 F. Supp. 2d 422, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16029, 1999 WL 498562, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sandow-pajewski-v-busch-entertainment-corp-vaed-1999.