Vicki Matherne v. Jerry West

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 28, 2016
DocketE2015-02061-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Vicki Matherne v. Jerry West (Vicki Matherne v. Jerry West) 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
Vicki Matherne v. Jerry West, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE September 14, 2016 Session

VICKI MATHERNE, ET AL. v. JERRY WEST, ET AL.

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Sevier County No. 2012-1383-III Rex Henry Ogle, Judge

No. E2015-02061-COA-R3-CV-FILED-OCTOBER 28, 2016

This appeal concerns premises liability in a slip and fall case. Vicki Matherne and Rodney Matherne (―Plaintiffs‖) sued Jerry West and Carolyn West (―the Wests‖), owners of a vacation cabin rented by the Mathernes, and American Patriot Getaways (―APG‖), which managed the cabin, (collectively, ―Defendants‖) after Mrs. Matherne injured herself falling off an elevated parking level at the cabin. Defendants filed a motion for summary judgment. The Circuit Court for Sevier County (―the Trial Court‖) granted Defendants‘ motion, finding that any hazardous condition was open and obvious and that Mrs. Matherne was at least 50% at fault. Plaintiffs appeal to this Court. We hold that there are genuine disputed issues of material fact regarding what Defendants could or should have done to prevent the risk of a fall from the elevated parking level and whether Mrs. Matherne was at least 50% at fault. Therefore, the Trial Court erred in granting Defendants‘ motion for summary judgment. We reverse the judgment of the Trial Court and remand this case for further proceedings.

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

D. MICHAEL SWINEY, C.J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which JOHN W. MCCLARTY and THOMAS R. FRIERSON, II, JJ., joined.

Timothy J. Gudmundson, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the appellants, Vicki Matherne and Rodney Matherne, individually and on behalf of Samuel Troxclair.

Kenneth W. Ward, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the appellees, Jerry West, Carolyn West, and American Patriot Getaways, LLC. OPINION

Background

In December 2011, Plaintiffs and their family took a vacation to Sevier County, Tennessee. Plaintiffs, Louisiana residents, rented a cabin called ―Bear House Rock‖ owned by the Wests and managed by APG. Plaintiffs‘ vehicles parked at the cabin were a rented Yukon and Mr. Matherne‘s pickup truck. The cabin had two levels of parking—a lower level and an upper level, which was elevated and on a hill. A black railing surrounded a portion of the upper parking level but not the full length of both sides as shown in exhibit 8 to Mrs. Matherne‘s deposition submitted by Defendants in their statement of undisputed material facts.

The day after arriving, Mrs. Matherne went out with her family for the evening. The Yukon was parked on the upper parking level. Mrs. Matherne took her granddaughter to the Yukon and leaned into the Yukon to buckle her granddaughter in the car. As Mrs. Matherne exited the vehicle by backing out and down, she fell off the upper parking level to the lower parking level and allegedly injured her right arm.

In December 2012, Plaintiffs sued Defendants for damages related to Mrs. Matherne‘s fall. Defendants filed a motion for summary judgment. Defendants

-2- submitted Mrs. Matherne‘s deposition as an exhibit to their statement of undisputed material facts, which we quote from in part:

Q. But what I would like for you to do in your own words is tell me what you believe that either Jerry West, Carolyn West, who are the two owners of the cabin, or American Patriot Getaways, LLC, either did or didn‘t do that caused you to fall. A. Like if I would have owned it, what I would have done to make -- to assure people wouldn‘t fall? Is that what you‘re asking me? Q. Well, no. I just want to know what you believe that the defendants did that either caused you to fall or didn‘t -- A. Well, proper lighting, for one. Q. Okay. Tell me what proper lighting would have been. A. Proper lighting would have been maybe lighting that‘s somewhere pointed directly onto that area or perhaps some striping paint that is visible at night. Q. Okay. A. Maybe some reflectors on the black part itself because, once that motion detector light goes off, the sky is it. Q. Sure. Now, let‘s take these one at a time. A. Okay. Q. If there had been lighting shining directly on the area where you fell, how would that have prevented you from falling based on what you‘ve described as how you fell? A. I would have known not to reach for the rail even though I saw it out the periphery of my vision. Q. Okay. How would you have known not to reach for the railing? A. Because if it was my railing, I would have had it go all the way to the end and I would have had reflectors, meaning -- Q. Okay. Let‘s back up, because we‘re getting into a lot of -- you told me three things. You talked about proper lighting. A. Correct. Q. You‘re talking about a striping paint and you talked about reflectors. A. Right. Q. So what I want to talk to you about is the lighting, that if there had been lights shining directly on the area where you fell, how would that have caused or prevented you from falling given the way that you described how you fell? A. It wouldn‘t have.

*** -3- Q. Okay. Well, then, let‘s go back to my question. I want you to tell me what my clients did or didn‘t do that caused you to fall. A. Okay. Not extending the safety -- I don‘t know what you want to call it, fence. Q. The black wrought iron fence? A. Right. Q. Okay. A. All the way to the end. Q. Now, based upon what you‘ve told me already, that before you fell you knew that the black wrought iron fence did not extend all the way to the road -- A. Correct. Q. And before you fell, you knew that there was a drop-off of differing heights depending upon how close you were to the road. A. Correct.

***

Q. Now, my question was, if you were able to put your left foot down entirely on the concrete, why were you unable to put your right foot down entirely on the concrete? A. I‘m not saying I was or wasn‘t. I attempted to do that. Q. Okay. And my question, was there room for you to put your right foot down entirely on the concrete when you removed it from the step board? A. Yes.

Q. And why is it only possible that you would not have fallen if you had both feet flat on the concrete? A. There could be multireasons why. Q. List them all, please. A. I mean, if I came down faster on that, I might have lost my footing on that foot and went to fall and there was nothing to stop me from falling off the edge. Q. All right. And you knew that there was nothing to stop you from falling off the edge when you came out of the house with your granddaughter? A. In that section that the Yukon was pulled up -- and remember, the back door was open here. Q. And you knew -- A. Maybe I misjudged a little, but –

-4- Q. Ma‘am, my question is, when you and your granddaughter left the house, you knew that the black fence did not extend the entire way? A. Correct. Q. And when you and your granddaughter left the house and walked up through there, you knew that there was a risk of falling off of the ledge; correct? A. There is a risk I could fall off this chair. So, yes, correct. Q. So you had already warned the boys about that risk by prohibiting them from playing up there? A. I didn‘t warn them of a risk. I told them they were not allowed up there.

A hearing was conducted on Defendants‘ motion for summary judgment. In September 2015, the Trial Court entered a detailed order granting summary judgment to Defendants which reads as follows, in part:

Further, pursuant to Rule 56.04 of the Tennessee Rules of Civil Procedure, this Court finds the following undisputed material facts: 1. On December 28, 2011, Vicki Matherne and her family traveled from their home in Louisiana to Sevier County, Tennessee. 2. Mrs. Matherne came to Tennessee with her husband Rodney, her son Sam and two of his friends, her daughter Stephanie and Stephanie‘s fiancé Stephen, and Mrs. Matherne‘s daughter Sophia and granddaughter Shea. 3.

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Vicki Matherne v. Jerry West, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vicki-matherne-v-jerry-west-tennctapp-2016.