Tezozomoc Alcantar v. Dolgencorp, LLC

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedSeptember 6, 2024
DocketM2023-01143-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Tezozomoc Alcantar v. Dolgencorp, LLC (Tezozomoc Alcantar v. Dolgencorp, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tezozomoc Alcantar v. Dolgencorp, LLC, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

09/06/2024 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE February 7, 2024 Session

TEZOZOMOC ALCANTAR v. DOLGENCORP, LLC

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Davidson County No. 21C760 Lynne T. Ingram, Judge ___________________________________

No. M2023-01143-COA-R3-CV ___________________________________

A shopper slipped and fell on a slippery liquid that was on a convenience store floor, resulting in injuries. The shopper sued the property owner. The property owner sought summary judgment, arguing the shopper had not provided sufficient evidence to establish how long the liquid had been on the floor prior to the slip and fall. The trial court granted summary judgment. We reverse.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Reversed

JEFFREY USMAN, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which FRANK G. CLEMENT, JR., P.J., M.S., and KRISTI M. DAVIS, J., joined.

Michael W. Gaines and Tim L. Bowden, Goodlettsville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Tezozomoc Alcantar.

Alston A. Peek, Brentwood, Tennessee, for the appellee, Dolgencorp, LLC.

OPINION

I.

On March 30, 2020, Appellant Tezozomoc Alcantar visited one of Appellee Dolgencorp LLC’s (Dollar General) retail locations in Old Hickory, Tennessee. Mr. Alcantar intended to purchase potato chips for his young grandson. While walking through the store, Mr. Alcantar, who had been in the store for a few minutes, slipped on liquid that he had not noticed, fell to the ground, and sustained injuries.

Mr. Alcantar cried out in pain. A Dollar General employee immediately rushed “around the corner from the adjoining aisle” and checked on Mr. Alcantar, who informed the employee that he fell on “something slick.” The employee responded that the slick substance was “possibly milk” because there was “a big spill on the next aisle.” Mr. Alcantar promptly took two pictures of the spillage “[w]ithin a minute or two,” noting that they were taken essentially as soon as he got up and walked around the corner to the other aisle. Set forth below, the photograph of the aisle where he fell is labeled exhibit two and the photograph of the adjacent aisle is labeled exhibit three:1

Mr. Alcantar sued Dollar General in the Circuit Court of Davidson County. As bases for liability, Mr. Alcantar asserted premises liability in connection with a dangerous condition and “other acts of negligence and breaches of duty.” Mr. Alcantar alleged “as a proximate result of one or more acts of negligence for failure to warn or make safe a dangerous condition, failure to prudently clean up a wet substance, failure to inspect, negligent acts, failure to adequately train employees, and other breaches of duty owed by the Defendant” that he had been injured. Mr. Alcantar noted that his injuries include a “right knee injury and neck sprain” as well as “other injuries.” In his prayer for relief, Mr. Alcantar requested an award of $150,000. Dollar General denied liability.

Discovery commenced. Mr. Alcantar deposed Cathy Cain, who had been the manager of the Old Hickory Dollar General store on the date of Mr. Alcantar’s accident. Ms. Cain described Dollar General’s standard operating procedure for cleaning up spills and indicated that all new employees were trained to use this method. She indicated that employees were first to place caution signs indicating a wet floor; the signs were to remain up during the cleaning process. The signs were to be placed “right in the aisle where it’s happened” or “on both sides if it’s leaked through.” For the actual clean-up, she testified

1 Exhibit two includes markings made by the parties during depositions. -2- that employees were to use specific gray-colored “pigment towels.” These special gray towels were used because of their absorbent material and were to be laid on the floor. Ms. Cain indicated that the signage and towels needed for the clean-up were approximately 50 to 60 feet from where Mr. Alcantar fell.

Though she was the manager of this store, Ms. Cain was off from work and, thus, was not present when Mr. Alcantar fell. She did, however, discuss the matter with store employees of the Old Hickory Dollar General store. She testified regarding her conversation with the manager on duty in her absence, Christian Alvarado. Mr. Alvarado noted an earlier attempted theft and that another customer, not Mr. Alcantar, had indicated that there was milk on the floor. Mr. Alvarado told Ms. Cain that the milk “was running across the floor . . . and [Mr. Alcantar] slipped and fell . . . He said [the milk] wasn’t on the floor very long before that . . . .”

Dollar General deposed Mr. Alcantar. Mr. Alcantar admitted that he did not know how long the liquid was on the ground prior to his fall. In response to questioning, Mr. Alcantar also stated the following:

[Mr. Alcantar]. . . . I took a couple of pictures of [the employee] there, and the spill, which shows all of this water trail that he left all the way around the store.

...

[Q. Are you] claiming that whoever was cleaning up this mess intentionally shoved this liquid towards your way?

[Mr. Alcantar]. No sir. No sir. I don’t believe – from looking at the pictures and all, the big spill and him filling up his shoes full of water there, it just looked like he – you know, there wasn’t no one there supervising this individual, and he basically just shoved the water to me and caused my damages.

....

Q. . . . Now, I know you stated that it’s your belief that as somebody was potentially cleaning up the spill, it was – the liquid was pushed over into the aisle shown in Exhibit 2; is that correct?

[Mr. Alcantar]. Yes, sir. That’s what I believe happened. I believe he pushed it, pushed it out on me. . . . I believe he was trying to clean it up, but from Cathy’s testimony, she said they were supposed to have gray towels to soak up the liquid, and I don’t see no one using gray towels. I see a bucket -3- of water, and water that he was splish-splashing, basically creating a giant slip-and-slide in the middle of the store.

Q. And tell me in your own words what you think Dollar General did wrong in this situation to cause this incident.

[Mr. Alcantar]. In my own words, I believe that the manager came, left these individuals alone, and they wasn’t capable of handling this situation, and he just made the situation ten times worse. Just by [Ms. Cain’s] testimony, there’s no gray towels. If he would have just took the gray towels and started soaking up the water, then it probably would have never leaked underneath for me to fall.

Dollar General filed a motion for summary judgment. The company argued that Mr. Alcantar’s claim failed as matter of law because he provided no evidence of how long the spill existed prior to his fall. Dollar General argued that Mr. Alcantar could not establish actual or constructive notice, a required element of his premises liability claim, without a clear indication of how long the spill existed. In the absence of notice, Dollar General argued that it owed no duty to Mr. Alcantar.

Mr. Alcantar opposed Dollar General’s motion. In his response, Mr. Alcantar recounted the events as mentioned above and placed them into the context of Dollar General’s standard operating procedures. Mr. Alcantar explained,

[Dollar General] has developed and maintains in its store office, a large book of standard operating procedures (SOPs), which are meant to instruct [Dollar General] employees how to deal with various issues . . . One of those SOPs of [Dollar General] deals with the cleanup procedures whenever there is a spill in the store aisles . . .

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Bluebook (online)
Tezozomoc Alcantar v. Dolgencorp, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tezozomoc-alcantar-v-dolgencorp-llc-tennctapp-2024.