Wesley v. Food Bank of Northeast

834 So. 2d 19, 2003 La. App. LEXIS 3, 2003 WL 42279
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 7, 2003
DocketNo. 36,588-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 834 So. 2d 19 (Wesley v. Food Bank of Northeast) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wesley v. Food Bank of Northeast, 834 So. 2d 19, 2003 La. App. LEXIS 3, 2003 WL 42279 (La. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinions

JjDfeEW, J.

Plaintiff, Josephine Wesley, appeals from the grant of summary judgment in favor of defendants, Food Bank of Northeast Louisiana, Inc. .(Food Bank) and its liability insurer, CGU Insurance Company (CGU). For the following reasons, we reverse and remand.

FACTS

This is an action to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by Ms. Wesley after she fell off a loading ramp at the Food Bank. Because the case was decided on summary judgment, the facts available for review come primarily from the depositions of the plaintiff and witnesses.

Ms. Wesley was an occasional volunteer at the Food Bank, having worked there one day per week for a period of about two months. Her tasks primarily consisted of placing cans or packages of food in boxes for distribution. Much of the food in the Food Bank’s large warehouse is stored in cases stacked on wooden pallets. These pallets occasionally had to be moved from one part of the warehouse to another by forklift or pallet jack, but moving the pallets was apparently supposed to be done by full-time Food Bank employees trained in the use of the equipment and not by the volunteers. Ms. Wesley said that she had never used a pallet jack prior to the day of her accident.

On the afternoon of July 10, 2000, Ms. Wesley and her sister, Jennatt Jackson, were at the Food Bank. They both stated in their respective depositions that they had been doing volunteer work that day. At approximately 3:00 that afternoon, Ms. Jackson was-in the process of retrieving a load of “spoiled” food to take to her farm for use as animal feed. [?The spoiled food had been placed in a box and was ready to be transported, by forklift, out of the warehouse loading dock, down a ramp and placed into the bed of Ms. Jackson’s pickup truck waiting outside. The forklift driver was Chyvis Turner, a full-time Food Bank employee. Ms. Wesley said that before she and her sister could take the food, the Food Bank had to weigh it. The Food Bank scale was near the doorway of the loading area of the warehouse. Ms. Wesley stated that the doorway was partially blocked by a barrel sitting on a manual pallet jack. She added that her sister had earlier used the pallet jack to move the [21]*21barrel “with that broken glass and stuff in it” from the doorway of the loading bay near the scale and-that Mr. Turner was having difficulty maneuvering the forklift around the pallet jack.

Ms. Jackson, who claimed wide experience with manual pallet jacks, testified in her deposition:

The manual pallet jack, I had it with the barrel on it. She never touched it the whole time that I saw her. I brought it •out and put — I parked it on one side of the scales way away from where Chyvis had to go with the forklift. Way out of the way.

According to Ms. Wesley, she pushed the pallet jack to clear a path for Mr. Turner’s forklift, and then once he passed, she pulled it toward her to return the pallet jack to its original spot. The pallet jack apparently continued rolling past the intended stopping point, as Ms. Wesley testified, “The hydraulic jack pushed me off the ramp. I didn’t just fall. It shoved me.” Ms. Wesley gave this detailed account of the incident in her deposition:

I was standing right in the door and the hydraulic jack was sitting' there, but it was sitting like Chyvis was trying to get it around.' He was trying to get — he was on the forklifter (sic) and |she was trying to get around the hydraulic jack to weigh the big old box and he kept-on struggling, and I asked him, I said, ‘Chyvis, do you want me to move it a little bit?’. And he kept looking down and turning and I said ‘well, I’ll just kind of move it a little bit.’ So I pushed it out of the way a little bit and he come around and put the box on the scale. So as he weighed the food he took it off and he went down the ramp to put it on the truck, and I was still standing there and I said, well, let me move it back in the position it was in so when he come back up he could, you know, get back up with the forklifter (sic) and come around and weigh the barrel because it was a barrel sitting waiting to be weighed, too, and I went to shove it back a little bit and it took off, and when it did I didn’t have no, you know — I had it like this (indicating) but it, — you know, I couldn’t hold on to nothing or nothing. It just throwed (sic) me over the ramp on this right arm here.

Ms. Wesley received several injuries as a result of her fall, including a broken right arm and suffered pain in her right knee, back and pelvis. At the September 2001 deposition she said that her pain still continued, particularly in her lower back, right shoulder and arm, and pelvis. Pain limited her ability to move her right arm.

Mr. Turner testified in his deposition that he first became aware of the accident when he heard a loud rumbling noise while he was loading a pallet of spoiled food into the bed of Ms. Jackson’s pickup truck. He said that he turned around and saw the pallet “rolling down the dock by itself’ and also saw Ms. Wesley’s legs as she fell over the loading ramp. Ms. Wesley’s sister, Ms. Jackson, recalled the incident somewhat differently; at her deposition, she said that when Ms. Wesley fell, Mr. Turner had not yet driven the forklift down the ramp. However, Ms. Wesley testified that her sister and Mr. Turner were both at her sister’s truck, loading a box, when she fell off the ramp.

|4Ms. Wesley filed suit against the Food Bank and its insurer alleging in part that the defendants created an unreasonable yet foreseeable risk of harm to her, that they failed to exercise reasonable care, that they allowed her to move the pallet jack without prior experience, and exposed her to risks beyond the scope of her background or work experience. After depositions were taken, the defendants filed a motion for summary judgment. Ms. Wes[22]*22ley opposed the motion for summary judgment and in her opposition she included the depositions, the defendants’ responses to interrogatories and a set of photographs of the loading dock and the pallet jack. The motion was submitted to the trial court on briefs, and the court granted summary judgment in favor of the defendants, dismissing Ms. Wesley’s lawsuit. The trial court cited Holmes v. Cromwell & Spencer Lumber Co., 51 La. Ann. 352, 25 So. 265 (1899), and Lynch v. Cities Service Refining Corp., 52 So.2d 456 (La.App. 1st Cir.1951), for the proposition that Ms. Wesley was required to show that the defendants had behaved with gross negligence by willfulness and wantonness. The trial court found that Ms. Wesley had not met this burden and that she had been injured as the result of her own negligence.

DISCUSSION

Summary judgment shall be rendered if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, admissions on file, and any affidavits, show that there is no genuine issue of material fact and that the mover is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. La. C.C.P. art. 966. The mover has the burden of establishing the absence of a genuine issue of material fact. If the mover [¿will not bear the burden of proof at trial on -the matter, then he is required to point out to the court the absence of factual support for one or more elements essential to the adverse party’s claim or action. La. C.C.P. art. 966(C)(2).

The party opposing summary judgment cannot rest- on the mere allegations of his pleadings, but must produce factual support sufficient to establish that he will be able to satisfy his evidentiary burden of proof at trial.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
834 So. 2d 19, 2003 La. App. LEXIS 3, 2003 WL 42279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wesley-v-food-bank-of-northeast-lactapp-2003.