Walworth v. Khoury

2021 Ohio 3458
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 30, 2021
Docket109898
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2021 Ohio 3458 (Walworth v. Khoury) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walworth v. Khoury, 2021 Ohio 3458 (Ohio Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

[Cite as Walworth v. Khoury, 2021-Ohio-3458.]

COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO

EIGHTH APPELLATE DISTRICT COUNTY OF CUYAHOGA

JOHN WALWORTH, :

Plaintiff-Appellant, : No. 109898 v. :

JUDY KHOURY, :

Defendant-Appellee. :

JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION

JUDGMENT: AFFIRMED RELEASED AND JOURNALIZED: September 30, 2021

Civil Appeal from the Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas Case No. CV-19-923596

Appearances:

Chamberlain Law Firm, L.P.A., and Henry W. Chamberlain, for appellant.

White, Getgey & Meyer Co., L.P.A., and C. Joseph McCullough, for appellee.

LISA B. FORBES, J.:

John Walworth (“Walworth”) appeals from the trial court’s journal

entry granting summary judgment in favor of Judy Khoury (“Khoury”) in this

personal injury case. After reviewing the facts of the case and pertinent law, we

affirm the lower court’s judgment. I. Facts and Procedural History

On February 27, 2018, Walworth was carrying a box into Khoury’s

basement when he tripped over a pair of shoes that Khoury left at the top of the

basement steps (“the Incident”). Walworth fell down the stairs and suffered

multiple injuries requiring three corrective surgeries. Walworth and Khoury were

engaged at the time of the incident and got married in May 2019. On October 21,

2019, Walworth filed a complaint against Khoury alleging negligence. On August 18,

2020, the court granted Khoury’s summary judgment motion, making the following

findings:

By [Walworth’s] own admission, but for his vision obscured by the box he was carrying, he would have seen the shoes. The shoes were not latent or concealed, but were out in the open and easy to see. Therefore, the shoes were open and obvious and [Khoury] had no duty to warn or protect plaintiff from the condition of shoes placed at the top of the basement steps. Additionally, [Walworth] carrying a box does not create an attendant circumstance, nor were there any circumstances outside of [Walworth’s] control that limited his ability to see the shoes.

It is from this order that Walworth appeals.

II. Civ.R. 56(C) Evidence

A. Walworth’s Deposition Testimony

To support her summary judgment motion, Khoury attached

Walworth’s deposition testimony and one photograph taken by Walworth of a

recreation of the approximate location of Khoury’s shoes at the time of the Incident.

Walworth testified that he and Khoury met in 2000 or 2001, started dating in 2015,

and got married in May 2019. At the time of the deposition (March 2020), Walworth and Khoury lived together at Khoury’s house at 3299 W. 157th Street. This is where

the Incident took place.

On February 27, 2018, Walworth went to Khoury’s house after he

finished working. Khoury asked Walworth to take four one-gallon containers of

vinegar in a sealed box from the back of her car to her basement. Walworth testified

that, “I did that. In the process of carrying that box, I stepped, my left foot stepped

on her shoes. My right foot caught a tread on the stairs and that’s when I went

down.”

Walworth testified that he had been to Khoury’s house more than a

hundred times in the three years they dated leading up to the Incident. He entered

the house through this same back door “every single time.” Asked how many times

he had been in Khoury’s basement prior to the incident, Walworth answered,

“Dozens, if not up to a hundred. * * * Because that’s where I would put my shoes.”

According to Walworth, taking one’s shoes off inside Khoury’s home was “one of the

house rules.”

The following colloquy took place during Walworth’s deposition:

Q: * * * you have the box in your hands, you go to walk down the steps —

A: Uh-huh.

Q: — and your left foot steps on one of those shoes, is that your understanding?

A: At least one of them.

Q: You don’t know where you stepped on that shoe — A: No.

Q: — specifically?

A: No.

Q: Somehow your left foot hit that shoe —

A: I know. I felt it.

Q: — one of the shoes?

A: I stepped on it, yes.

***

Q: When your left foot stepped on one or both of those shoes, that caused you to lose your balance?

A: It did.

Q: And I think you said your right foot then went where?

A: I caught my right foot, and I’m pointing to the top tread or first tread, my right foot caught on the edge of the tread.

Q: All right. I assume both of your hands were on the box?

A: That’s correct.

Q: You weren’t using a handrail on this particular day?

Q: Do you remember how you were carrying the box, can you describe that?

A: Just both arms in what I would describe as a cradle fashion.

Q: Were your arms around the box or under the box?

A: Underneath.

Q: Both were under? A: Underneath?

Q: Why did your left foot step on the shoes?

A: I don’t, I don’t know.

Q: Did you not see them?

A: I did not see the shoes.

Q: Did you look?

A: I was carrying a box. Shoes had never been there before. I presumed, if anything, that there was nothing in my path.

Q: Okay. So you just didn’t expect there to be shoes there on that particular day?

Q: And because you did not have an expectation that there would be shoes there, you didn’t look down there, right?

A: I did not look down there.

Q: Was there anything preventing you from looking down?

A: Carrying the box.

Q: Anything else?

Q: Had you looked there, would you have been able to see the shoes?

A: I don’t know if — I was carrying the box. If I had turned my head to the left, yes, I would have seen it.

Q: And had you seen them you would have avoided stepping on them, right?

A: Yes.

Q: What color are they?

A: They are black and gray. Q: In the pictures that we’ve now marked as Exhibits B through F, they’re fairly noticeable in these pictures, do you agree?

A: They are noticeable in the photographs.

Q: Is there anything different about February 27, 2018 that would have made them less noticeable?

A: Well, I was carrying a box.

Q: Right.

A: And I did not know they were there so I didn’t look for shoes.

Q: You had a general assumption they just wouldn’t be there, right?

B. Walworth’s Affidavit and Photographs

The gist to Walworth’s opposition to summary judgment appears to

be that Khoury “told the truth and admitted liability in this case.” Specifically,

Walworth argued that “the attendant circumstances surrounding [his] fall prohibit

summary judgment and indeed [Khoury’s] negligence should be an issue for a jury

to consider. In fact, [Khoury] admits she was negligent in leaving her shoes at that

location and that she failed to warn or protect [Walworth] from that hazard.”

To support his position, Walworth attached his affidavit to his brief

in opposition of summary judgment. Pertinent parts of this affidavit state as follows:

6. The box Affiant carried, as described in my deposition, contained four (4) one gallon bottles of vinegar.

7. In order to take the box from the car to the basement, Affiant went up the outside steps of the back deck, turned right onto the landing. The storm door opens outward. The rear door to the residence opens inward, which would partially block my view of the shoes on the landing. The location of the shoes in the attached photographs is my best estimate as to where they had to be located on the landing at the time of my fall.

8.

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2021 Ohio 3458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walworth-v-khoury-ohioctapp-2021.