Stephen v. Home Depot USA, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedDecember 10, 2020
Docket1:18-cv-00130
StatusUnknown

This text of Stephen v. Home Depot USA, Inc. (Stephen v. Home Depot USA, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stephen v. Home Depot USA, Inc., (N.D. Ill. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION

ELCY STEPHEN, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) No. 18 C 130 v. ) ) Judge Sara L. Ellis HOME DEPOT U.S.A., INC., GRAND ) FLOWER GROWERS, INC., and GRAND ) SERVICE, LLC, ) ) Defendants. )

OPINION AND ORDER After tripping on a garden hose and falling at one of Home Depot U.S.A., Inc.’s (“Home Depot”) stores in Orland Park, Illinois, Plaintiff Elcy Stephen filed this action against Defendants Home Depot, Grand Flower Growers, Inc. (“Grand Flower”), and Grand Service, LLC (“Grand Service”). Stephen alleges that Defendants negligently maintained the garden department at the store, creating a dangerous and unsafe condition that caused her severe injury. Defendants filed a motion for summary judgment. Because issues of fact exist as to whether the hose on which Stephen tripped constituted an open and obvious condition and, alternatively, whether the distraction exception to that rule applies, the Court cannot conclude as a matter of law that Defendants did not owe Stephen a duty of care and so denies Defendants’ motion for summary judgment. BACKGROUND I. Resolution of Parties’ Joint Motion for Ruling on Undisputed Facts [65] This Court’s summary judgment procedures differ from Local Rule 56.1, in that this Court requires the parties to submit a joint statement of undisputed facts. Judge Sara L. Ellis, Case Procedures, Summary Judgment Practice, https://www.ilnd.uscourts.gov/judge- info.aspx?VyU/OurKKJRDT+FUM5tZmA==; see Sweatt v. Union Pac. R.R. Co., 796 F.3d 701, 711–12 (7th Cir. 2015) (affirming this Court’s summary judgment procedures). If parties cannot agree whether their proposed statements of fact are in dispute, the Court requires the parties to

file a joint motion prior to filing for summary judgment so that the Court can determine whether the proposed statement of fact may be included in the joint statement as undisputed facts. Judge Ellis, Summary Judgment Practice. The party opposing summary judgment may submit additional facts it contends demonstrate a genuine issue of material fact in its response, providing citations to supporting material. Id. Here, the parties prepared a joint statement of undisputed facts but could not agree on the inclusion of four of Defendants’ proposed facts in the joint statement. The parties filed the required motion, and the Court now sets forth its ruling on these facts: Proposed Fact 18: Stephen saw hoses lying around the garden department in 2014 or 2015. Stephen testified that she had seen hoses on the ground of the garden department at the

Orland Park store on previous visits. She nonetheless objects to this fact as irrelevant because her injuries occurred in 2016. As noted in the Court’s summary judgment procedures, to the extent admissible evidence supports a proposed fact, a party cannot refuse to stipulate to that fact on the basis that it deems the fact “not material” or “irrelevant.” Id. Therefore, the Court finds this fact undisputed. Proposed Fact 33: The hose was open and obvious. Although Keane testified that, in her opinion, the hose was open and obvious, this proposed fact draws the ultimate legal conclusion Defendants ask the Court to reach in ruling on their summary judgment motion. Therefore, the Court excludes this proposed fact as a legal conclusion, but it does take into consideration Keane’s factual testimony as to the condition of the garden center on the day of Stephen’s fall as set forth in ¶¶ 31, 32, 34, and 36 of the Joint Statement of Undisputed Facts. Proposed Fact 35: Nothing was blocking anyone’s view of the hose.

Defendants cite to Annette Keane’s deposition testimony to support this proposed fact. Stephen objects based on her testimony that she was turning a corner when she fell and Keane’s inability to testify as to what Stephen saw. To address Stephen’s objection, the Court modifies this proposed fact to read: Keane testified that she did not observe anything that would block anyone’s view of the hose. Framed in this manner, the fact is undisputed. Proposed Fact 38: Although Home Depot has a sprinkler system, it can be used only at night because if it were used during the day customers would be “soaking wet.” Stephen objects to this statement as irrelevant because the Home Depot store in question had overhead reels with hoses on them. As discussed, however, irrelevance is not a basis for failing to stipulate to a fact. Nonetheless, the Court revises this proposed fact to clarify that Kevin Hesse testified that Home Depot chose not to use the sprinkler system during the day, not that such use was impossible. The Court thus considers the following statement of fact as undisputed: Although Home Depot has a sprinkler system, Home Depot’s policy is to use it only at night because if it were used during the day customers would be “soaking wet.” II. Facts1 Grand Flower grows flowers that Home Depot sells on a consignment basis in its stores,

including its Orland Park store. Grand Flower hires employees from Grand Service to maintain

1 The Court derives the facts in this section from the Joint Statement of Material Undisputed Facts, as modified by the Court, and the additional facts Stephen submitted in her response. The Court includes in this background section only those facts that are appropriately presented, supported, and relevant to resolution of the pending motion for summary judgment. The Court takes all facts in the light most favorable to Stephen, the non-movant. and water plants it provides to Home Depot. Watering occurs throughout the day to prevent plants from drying up, with employees watering the plants during store hours and a sprinkler system operating overnight. Home Depot instructed employees to set up caution signs as necessary while watering and to reel in hoses when not in use.

On May 19, 2016, around midday, Stephen visited the Orland Park Home Depot to purchase plants. After spending approximately ten minutes in the garden center, Stephen tripped on a garden hose stretched across one of the aisles. Stephen testified that her right foot got tangled in the hose, causing her to fall on the concrete floor. Stephen injured her right shoulder, right knee, and right ankle, and she has incurred medical bills totaling over $100,000. Immediately before falling, Stephen had rounded a corner while looking up at some flowers. She did not have anything in her hands and was not pushing a shopping cart. Stephen had not observed hoses in the area, anyone watering flowers, or any warning signs or barricades, although she did notice water on the ground. She saw the hose only after her foot got tangled in it. Stephen had previously visited the Orland Park store to buy plants, and she recalled noticing

hoses on the ground in the store’s garden center during at least one of her prior visits. Stephen also generally knew that Home Depot employees watered plants in the garden center. Keane, a Home Depot Garden Associate, assisted Stephen after she fell. Although Stephen cannot recall the amount of light in the area where she fell, she testified to “beautiful” weather that day. Doc. 71 ¶ 12. Keane testified that it was a bright day and that, despite parts of the outside garden center being shaded, she did not have any vision issues while walking around the garden center that day. Keane further testified that hoses customarily cross aisles and that she did not have any problems seeing the hose on which Stephen tripped as she walked over to help Stephen after the fall. Indeed, Keane testified that someone walking from the back of the store to the front or vice versa would not have had difficulty seeing the hose because nothing obstructed the view of the hose and the lighting was bright.

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Stephen v. Home Depot USA, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stephen-v-home-depot-usa-inc-ilnd-2020.