Sarah Griswold, V. Fred Meyer Stores, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedAugust 16, 2021
Docket81444-3
StatusUnpublished

This text of Sarah Griswold, V. Fred Meyer Stores, Inc. (Sarah Griswold, V. Fred Meyer Stores, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sarah Griswold, V. Fred Meyer Stores, Inc., (Wash. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

SARAH GRISWOLD, individually, No. 81444-3-I

Respondent, DIVISION ONE v.

FRED MEYER STORES, INC., an UNPUBLISHED OPINION Ohio corporation registered to do business in Washington,

Appellant.

CHUN, J. — A dolly fell on Sarah Griswold’s foot at a Fred Meyer store.

Because of her resulting injury, Griswold sued Fred Meyer for negligence. At her

deposition, Griswold testified that an employee placed a dolly on an overloaded

shopping cart, moved the cart, and the dolly fell on her foot. Griswold moved for

summary judgment on liability, submitting video surveillance footage of the

incident. The trial court granted the motion. The matter proceeded to trial on

damages. A jury rendered a $2.73 million verdict in Griswold’s favor.

Fred Meyer appeals and submits an abridged and annotated version of

the video surveillance footage that was not before the trial court. For the first

time on appeal, it claims the video surveillance footage contradicts Griswold’s

testimony about the events leading to her injury, so the trial court improperly

entered summary judgment in her favor. It also raises various other arguments

supporting reversal of summary judgment.

Citations and pin cites are based on the Westlaw online version of the cited material. No. 81444-3-I/2

Since Fred Meyer failed to raise its argument related to the video

surveillance footage below, we disregard it. And we affirm the trial court’s grant

of summary judgment.

I. BACKGROUND

Griswold went to a Fred Meyer store. While browsing the cosmetics aisle,

she stood next to a shopping cart that workers were using to restock the shelves.

A Fred Meyer employee (Coral)1 approached the cart, placed something on it,

pulled it away, and then a wooden dolly fell on Griswold’s foot. Coral picked up

an item that had fallen, placed it back in the cart, and carried the dolly away.

Griswold waited a while in the aisle for Coral to help her; when she did not,

Griswold went to a cashier, who called a manager about the accident. The

manager filled out an accident report and gave Griswold an ice pack.

Because of the severity of the injury to her foot, Griswold sued Fred Meyer

for negligence. In a deposition, she testified that out of the corner of her eye, she

saw Coral approach the cart, place the dolly in the cart on top of a stack of

boxes, go to the other side of the cart, and pull the cart away. She testified that

once Coral pulled the cart away, the dolly fell on her foot. She testified that she

did not know how the dolly was oriented on the cart, and said that it could have

even been under the boxes. She testified that she never touched the cart or

dolly. And at her deposition, Griswold appeared to concede that her recollection

of the event was hazy:

1 Fred Meyer refers to the worker involved in the incident as Coral because of the color of her vest in the video. It claims not to know her name.

2 No. 81444-3-I/3

Q: Okay. Let me ask it this way. What was it on before it fell? A: Another cart. Q: Was it— A: I feel like it might have been a shopping cart, but I’m not 100 percent positive.

And: Q: Okay. And when you got to the aisle, the cart that had the dolly on it was already there? A: It didn’t have the dolly on it when I got there. She picked it up and put it on there. Q: Okay. Did you see her do that? A: Yeah, I watched her—I could see out of the corner out of my eye she was picking up stuff, and that was the last thing she put on top. Q: Okay. Where did the dolly—where did she pick it up from? A: I don’t know. I didn’t see it before that. It could have been leaning against the cart or the shelf or behind the cart. I wasn’t— Q: Did she bring the dolly into the aisle with her? A: That’s possible as well.

Griswold moved for summary judgment. She submitted video surveillance

footage of the incident and included stills from the video in her summary

judgment motion. In response, Fred Meyer claimed that there were questions of

fact as to whether Griswold was contributorily negligent. Fred Meyer did not

assert that the video contradicts Griswold’s testimony. Griswold said for the first

time in her reply in support of summary judgment that the doctrine of res ipsa

loquitur applied to her negligence claim. The trial court granted Griswold’s

summary judgment motion and dismissed Fred Meyer’s affirmative defense of

contributory negligence.

3 No. 81444-3-I/4

After a trial for damages, the jury returned a $2,732,171 verdict in

Griswold’s favor. Fred Meyer moved for a new trial and in the alternative for

remittitur, which motions the trial court denied.

Fred Meyer now appeals. It says for the first time that the video

surveillance footage of the incident contradicts Griswold’s deposition testimony

about the incident, so we should reverse the trial court’s grant of summary

judgment on liability.

II. ANALYSIS

Fred Meyer says that because the video surveillance footage contradicts

Griswold’s deposition testimony, we should reverse the trial court’s grant of

summary judgment on liability and enter judgment as a matter of law in its favor.

And it says that, even without considering the video, the trial court erred in

concluding as a matter of law that Fred Meyer was negligent, and that it

presented a genuine issue of material fact that Griswold was contributorily

negligent. We disagree on both points.

We review de novo a summary judgment. Blue Spirits Distilling, LLC v.

Washington State Liquor & Cannabis Bd., 15 Wn. App. 2d 779, 785, 478 P.3d

153 (2020). Summary judgment is appropriate if there is no genuine issue as to

any material fact and the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of

law. Id.; CR 56(c). In ruling on a summary judgment motion, a trial court must

view the evidence and reasonable inferences from it in the light most favorable to

the nonmoving party. Id. “The nonmoving party may not rely on speculation or

4 No. 81444-3-I/5

argumentative assertions that unresolved factual issues remain.” Little v.

Countrywood Homes, Inc., 132 Wn. App. 777, 780, 133 P.3d 944 (2006).

A. Physical Facts Doctrine

Fred Meyer says that under the physical facts doctrine, we should

disregard Griswold’s deposition testimony about the placement of the dolly

because the video surveillance footage contradicts it and shows that Coral did

not place the dolly on the cart. It raises this issue for the first time on appeal.

Fred Meyer submits abridged and annotated clips of the video in support of its

claim that the video contradicts Griswold’s testimony. Griswold says Fred Meyer

waived any claim about the video contradicting her testimony and that it

improperly submitted the video clips. Under RAP 9.12, RAP 2.5(a), and

RAP 1.2(a), we decline to address this argument, which Fred Meyer has waived.

Under Washington law, “when uncontroverted physical evidence speaks

with a force sufficient to overcome contrary testimony, reasonable minds cannot

differ, and the physical facts must be followed.” State v. Hansen, 30 Wn. App.

702, 707, 638 P.2d 108 (1981).

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