Strode v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Florida
DecidedSeptember 9, 2021
Docket2:19-cv-00669
StatusUnknown

This text of Strode v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. (Strode v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Strode v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., (M.D. Fla. 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT MIDDLE DISTRICT OF FLORIDA FORT MYERS DIVISION

VALERIE STRODE,

Plaintiff,

v. Case No: 2:19-cv-669-JLB-NPM

WAL-MART STORES, INC. (n/k/a Walmart, Inc. and Wal-Mart Stores East, LP),

Defendant.

ORDER Plaintiff Valerie Strode slipped and fell inside a Walmart store and now sues Defendant Wal-Mart Stores East, LP (“Walmart”) for negligence under Florida law. (Doc. 1-1.) Walmart moves for summary judgment, arguing that Ms. Strode has failed to demonstrate that it had actual or constructive knowledge of the existence of a dangerous condition that purportedly caused her to fall in its store, as required by Florida Statute § 768.0755. (Doc. 28.) The Court agrees with Walmart and therefore GRANTS its motion for summary judgment. (Doc. 28.) FACTS Construed in a light most favorable to Ms. Strode, the non-moving party here, the facts are as follows. On August 24, 2015, Ms. Strode and her son, Stephen, visited their local Walmart for groceries and school supplies. (Doc. 28-2 at 99:21–100:3, 101:17–18, 105:3–5.) Although she could not recall for certain, Ms. Strode did not believe it had rained earlier that day. (Doc. 28-3 at 108:6–14.) As she and her son were walking in the Walmart store, Ms. Strode’s legs went out from underneath her. (Id. at 108:15–19.) After she got up, Ms. Strode noticed a small amount of “orange-ish” liquid that her flip-flop had smeared. (Id. at 112:15–113:4.) Ms. Strode and her son did not see anything on the floor before she slipped. (Id. at

109:9–12; Doc. 28-4 at 24:4–6.) Ms. Strode had been to this store more than 100 times and did not recall seeing anything on the floor in that area of the store during her prior visits. (Doc. 28-2 at 104:19–105:2, 105:9–14.) The liquid was free of any dirt or track marks except for what dirt Ms. Strode’s flip-flop transferred when she stepped in and smeared the liquid. (Id. at 113:5–8, 114:4–8.) Otherwise, Ms. Strode does not know what the liquid was,

where it came from, or how long it was on the floor before she slipped and fell. (Id. at 112:23–24, 113:15–19, 115:9–11.) Her son similarly could not recall what the liquid was, where it came from, if it was dirty, or how long it had been on the floor. (Doc. 28-4 at 26:1–23, 27:1–3.) Franklin Oliver, Walmart’s corporate representative, identified an employee named Sean Anderson who had spent a “significant amount of time” stocking the area of the fall that evening. (Doc. 28-6 at 38:1–12, 57:11–15.) The store’s video

footage (CCTV) shows Mr. Anderson leaving the area only “16 to 17 seconds” before Ms. Strode’s fall. (Id. at 61:12–17; Doc. 28-7 at 10:36:17.)1 Mr. Oliver testified that “part of [Mr. Anderson’s] job was to monitor the floor for any type of liquid that

1 The CCTV footage is contained in Exhibit F of Walmart’s motion for summary judgment. (Doc. 28-7.) Walmart provided the Court with a CD-ROM showing two angles of the store, spanning about an hour before and after the accident. But the footage is somewhat blurry, and a product stand blocks the exact area where Ms. Strode fell. could be there and cause a customer such as Miss Strode to fall.” (Doc. 28-6 at 57:11–16.) While this is specifically part of Walmart’s “inclement weather procedures,” its policy also requires all associates “to be constantly looking on the

floor for spills or liquid or anything like that,” even when its employees are doing other tasks (e.g., stocking.) (Id. at 37:11–15.) Walmart also employs maintenance associates who, unlike Mr. Anderson, are specifically tasked with walking through the store and identifying safety hazards. (Id. at 21:25–22:3, 22:14–15, 59:1–8.) Walmart, relying on CCTV footage, argues that an employee inspected the area about two minutes before Ms. Strode fell and another employee inspected the

floor one minute before the fall, and that neither saw any liquid on the floor. (Doc. 28 at 7, ¶ 19 (citing Doc. 28-7 at 10:34:26–10:35:40).) Although the footage shows two employees walking in that area, and one appears to be walking with his or her head down and facing the floor, the quality of the video is too poor to determine whether this was an “inspection.” Walmart even concedes that “the surveillance footage is not clear enough to establish the Walmart employees’ direct line of vision.” (Doc. 31 at 3.) In all events, Ms. Strode asserts that other evidence

supports an inference that no employee inspected the floor for at least fifteen minutes. (Doc. 30 at 5.)2

2 About fifteen minutes before the accident, the footage shows an employee placing a small box on the floor. (Doc. 28-7 at 10:19:57.) Mr. Oliver testified that it is unsafe to leave a box on the floor, and Walmart’s policy dictates that an employee should pick up the box as soon as he or she sees it. (Doc. 28-6 at 10:11– 22.) Despite several employees walking by, including Mr. Anderson, the box remains on the floor for over an hour. (Id. at 21:17–24; see also Doc. 28-7.) Mr. Oliver could not explain whether a maintenance associate also missed the box Sabrina Bouie, another Walmart employee, provided a statement after the accident. (Doc. 28-5 at 5; Doc. 28-6 at 7:6–8:3.) Ms. Bouie claimed she saw a trail of drops one aisle over from where Ms. Strode fell. (Doc. 28-5 at 5.) Ms. Bouie

stated that, as she was cleaning down that aisle, she turned the corner and saw Ms. Strode. (Id.) She observed what she believed was juice leaking from a cart. She noted that the “substance was clear with a yellowish tint to it. It was fresh, not dirty or tracked.” (Id.) This is the only evidence of the “orange-ish” liquid’s potential source. But CCTV footage shows, and Mr. Oliver testified, that she “wasn’t cleaning and just happened to come upon” Ms. Strode. (Doc. 28-6 at 54:6–

56:20.) Rather, Ms. Strode testified that no one was near her when she fell and that she sent her son to “get somebody.” (Doc. 28-3 at 109:14–18, 110:8–13.) Stephen thereafter located Ms. Bouie. (Doc. 28-4 at 28:12–22; Doc. 28-6 at 55:2–56:20.) Ms. Bouie can be seen following Stephen to Ms. Strode, and Ms. Bouie does not appear to be carrying any cleaning equipment. (Doc. 28-7 at 10:36:57–10:37:14.) CCTV footage does not show any cart leaking “yellowish” juice, as Ms. Bouie had

claimed. Moreover, nowhere else in the record is there evidence of the liquid’s source.3

during a safety sweep or if the associate had not yet inspected the area. (Doc. 28-6 at 22:4–20.) In short, it is reasonable to infer that the employees working in the area had not inspected the floor before Ms. Strode’s accident. 3 Granted, the display stand blocking the cameras’ views of the area may obscure this cart. But multiple Walmart employees can be seen cleaning the area following the fall and no one ever moves a cart into view. Mr. Anderson and assistant manager Dawn Hobson also “saw and/or examined the area . . . just after Similarly, Ms. Strode’s and Mr. Oliver’s accounts of what happened is not entirely accurate either. Mr. Oliver, relying on CCTV footage, testified that no one else walked through the area after Mr. Anderson left and before Ms. Strode’s fall.

(Doc. 28-6 at 36:22–37:7.) But the footage shows that, just as Mr. Anderson leaves the area, a man in a white shirt and black shorts pushing a cart directly over the area where Ms. Strode slips eleven seconds later. (Doc. 28-7 at 10:36:17.) No other employee is in that area when this man crosses the spot where Ms. Strode fell. And, as Ms. Strode testified, no employee returns to that area until after her fall. Again, the footage is not clear enough to say one way or the other if this man caused

a spill. But the evidence clearly shows someone walking through the area after Mr. Anderson left and while no other employee is present. This is the entirety of the record before the Court.

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