Woessner v. Home Depot USA Inc

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Washington
DecidedMay 5, 2023
Docket2:22-cv-00275
StatusUnknown

This text of Woessner v. Home Depot USA Inc (Woessner v. Home Depot USA Inc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woessner v. Home Depot USA Inc, (W.D. Wash. 2023).

Opinion

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4 5 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 6 WESTERN DISTRICT OF WASHINGTON AT SEATTLE 7 MARY WOESSNER, CASE NO. 2:22-cv-00275-JHC 8 Plaintiff, ORDER GRANTING IN PART AND 9 DENYING IN PART PLAINTIFF’S v. MOTION FOR PARTIAL SUMMARY 10 JUDGMENT HOME DEPOT USA, INC., 11 Defendant. 12 13 I 14 INTRODUCTION 15 This slip and fall negligence action arises out of injuries Plaintiff Mary Woessner 16 allegedly sustained at one of Defendant Home Depot USA, Inc.’s stores. Dkt. # 1-1. Before the 17 Court is Plaintiff’s motion for partial summary judgment. Dkt. # 15. The Court has considered 18 the parties’ submissions in connection with the motion, the balance of the case file, and the 19 applicable law. Being fully advised, for the reasons below, the Court GRANTS in part and 20 DENIES in part Plaintiff’s motion. 21

22 23 24 l II BACKGROUND 2 A. The Incident 3 On December 20, 2020, at around 9:30 a.m., Plaintiff was shopping with her daughter, 4 Lisa Woessner,! at a Home Depot store in Kent, Washington. Dkt. # 15-1 at 31, 34, 111-12. 5 Plaintiff testified at her deposition as follows: She walked through a set of sliding doors leading 6 to the store’s outdoor garden center. /d. at 40. Once in the garden center, Plaintiff turned left to 7 follow Lisa down an aisle. /d. at 43. As she walked toward Lisa, Plaintiff did not see any bird 8 droppings, dirt, or other debris on the ground in front of her; the aisle was clear. /d. at 43, 45. 9 She saw no birds or evidence of birds anywhere above her. /d. at 43. Lisa, who was ahead of 10 Plaintiff, indicated for Plaintiff to turn around and head back down the same aisle from which 11 she came. /d. at 43-44. Plaintiff turned around, walked a step or two, and then slipped and fell. 12 Id. at 39-40. She said she does not know what caused her to fall: “I don’t. . . know anything 13 other than I was on the ground all of a sudden.” /d. at 48. The photograph below, taken shortly 14 after her fall, shows Plaintiff on the ground: 15 * — 16 | Sa 17 | | N rs \ 18 é a “4 19 Be 20 □□□ » 7 . 21 ; “> ae we aa ‘y 22 \ - a al ae . 23 ' For clarity, because Plaintiff and her daughter share the same last name, this order refers to Lisa 24 Woessner by her first name. The Court means no disrespect. ORDER GRANTING IN PART AND DENYING IN PART PLAINTIFF’S MOTION FOR PARTIAL

1 Id. at 104. In a declaration, Lisa stated: “I did not realize what had caused [Plaintiff's] fall until I 2 saw bird droppings under her and covering her clothing and hands.” Dkt. # 15-2 at 2. Plaintiff 3 provided a photograph showing the bottoms of the shoes Plaintiff was wearing when she fell: 4 Ne hy ‘4 al es big □□□ rad 5 re A Rag f a" ae 6 — ws 7

8 Lo 9 Seis game Pee eK 10 ee < en hy a 11 ~« oS 12 Dkt. # 16 at 18. 13 At her deposition, Plaintiff stated that she did not remember seeing any warning signs 14 upon entering or inside the garden center. Dkt. # 15-1 at 40, 44. Debbie Klavuhn, the assistant 15 operations manager at the Home Depot in Kent, testified as a Rule 30(b)(b) witness on behalf of 16 Home Depot. Dkt. # 15-1 at 2, 121. She testified that Plaintiff fell next to a post that displayed, 17 at the time of the fall, a permanent sign warning of slippery floors. /d. at 148; see also Dkt. # 18 18 at 1 (Klavuhn declaration stating that at the time of Plaintiff's fall, a permanent warning sign was 19 placed next to where she fell). 20 Home Depot conducts a store safety inspection each morning, which includes ensuring 21 that the aisles are clear of any slip hazards. Dkt. # 15-1 at 153-56. Klavuhn explained that 22 Home Depot trains its employees to “isolate and correct” slip hazards whenever they encounter 23 them. /d. at 143-45. On the date of Plaintiff's fall, Klavuhn said that she “walk[ed] the store” 24 ORDER GRANTING IN PART AND DENYING IN PART PLAINTIFF’S MOTION FOR PARTIAL

1 the morning before the incident, and that she noticed no bird droppings on the ground in the 2 garden center. Id. at 148–49. Klavuhn cleaned due to bird droppings two or three times during 3 her eight years of employment at Home Depot; she stated that other employees, who opened the

4 store for the day, cleaned due to droppings more frequently. Id. at 121–22, 142. Klavuhn stated, 5 when cleaning, she would first put out warning cones around the bird droppings. Id. at 141–42. 6 She would wash and scrub the area, put out “wet slip” signs, and then remove the warnings once 7 the area dried. Id. at 141–42. 8 When Plaintiff fell in December 2020, the presence of bird droppings in the garden center 9 had been an ongoing problem for the Home Depot in Kent. See id. at 141 (Klavuhn said that, to 10 her knowledge, the first work order relating to bird droppings was submitted in 2018); Dkt. # 19- 11 1 at 2 (Home Depot work orders dating to 2018 requesting removal of bird droppings in the 12 garden center). To solve this problem, the Home Depot in Kent implemented several strategies

13 to deter the presence of birds in its garden center. See Dkt. # 17 at 2. In 2020, Home Depot 14 submitted work orders to outside vendors, including Superior Facility Service Group, to: (1) 15 remove bird carcasses; (2) power wash bird droppings; and (3) install scent dispensers and 16 “Avian Block pouches” to deter birds from perching, among other bird mitigation strategies. Id. 17 Plaintiff has retained Levi Dixon, a human factors engineer with over a decade of 18 experience in “safety and risk management,” as an expert witness to evaluate Plaintiff’s fall and 19 Home Depot’s conduct before this incident. Dkt. # 15-4 at 1, 9–18. Mr. Dixon drafted a report 20 based on surveillance video, photographs, discovery responses, and deposition testimony. Id. at 21 9–10. Mr. Dixon opined that: 22 1. The accumulation of bird droppings on the walkway created a hazardous condition for anyone walking in the general area. 23 2. Prior to [Plaintiff’s] incident, Home Depot was aware that bird droppings were routinely contaminating the walkway in the general area of this incident, 24 thereby creating a hazardous condition for anyone walking in the general area. 1 3. Despite appreciating that the walkway was routinely becoming contaminated with bird droppings, Home Depot failed to implement safety measures to 2 effectively mitigate/minimize the hazard, much less even warn customers of the hazard. 3 Id. at 11. 4 B. Medical Treatment and Expenses 5 Plaintiff has also retained David E. Spanier, MD, a board-certified physician, as an expert 6 witness to assess Plaintiff’s medical treatment and associated expenses. Dkt. # 15-3 at 1–2, 4. 7 Dr. Spanier drafted a report based on an interview and examination of Plaintiff and his review of 8 her medical records, including billing records. Id. at 12. Dr. Spanier opined that Plaintiff’s 9 “right proximal femur fracture, left intra-articular distal radius fracture, and left non-displaced 10 scaphoid fracture are all causally related to the subject collision on a more probable than not 11 basis.” Id. at 18. Dr. Spanier identified the following medical treatments for Plaintiff’s injuries 12 related to her fall: 13 Transportation by Tri-Med Ambulance. 14 Evaluation and treatment at Valley Medical Center, including all imaging. Transportation by Falck. 15 Evaluation and treatment at Overlake Medical Center[,] including all imaging and surgery. 16 Evaluation and treatment by Jeremy Chan, MD. Evaluation and treatment by Thomas Stoll, MD. 17 Evaluation and treatment at Kaiser Permanente as they pertain to [Plaintiff’s] subject fall related injuries. 18 Id. at 19. In Dr. Spanier’s opinion, “all of the evaluation and treatment that [Plaintiff] received 19 for her subject fall related injuries [were] reasonable, medically necessary, and causally related 20 to the subject fall on a more probable than not basis.” Id. Dr.

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Woessner v. Home Depot USA Inc, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woessner-v-home-depot-usa-inc-wawd-2023.