Whiteru v. Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority ( 2022 )


Menu:
  •                             UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
    CAMEROON WHITERU, et al.,
    Plaintiffs,
    v.                                        Civil Action No. 15-844 (JEB)
    WASHINGTON METROPOLITAN AREA
    TRANSIT AUTHORITY,
    Defendant.
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    Plaintiffs Cameroon and Agnes Whiteru are the parents, and Cameroon is the personal
    representative, of the estate of Okiemute Whiteru, who died from injuries sustained at a Metro
    station here in Washington. Of particular significance is that Okiemute (first names are used for
    clarity and manifest no disrespect) took several days to die after falling off a parapet wall across
    from the train platform into an area not visible to the public while drunk late one night. It is
    Plaintiffs’ theory that Defendant Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority personnel
    should have discovered him during routine inspections in time to render aid. With trial set for
    this November, the Court addresses three of Plaintiffs’ Motions in Limine: to preclude a defense
    argument on contributory negligence, to preclude the same in regard to assumption of the risk,
    and for a jury instruction on failure to produce evidence.
    I.     Legal Standard
    “[M]otions in limine are a means for arguing why ‘evidence should or should not, for
    evidentiary reasons, be introduced at trial.’” Graves v. Dist. of Columbia., 
    850 F. Supp. 2d 6
    , 11
    (D.D.C. 2011) (emphasis omitted) (quoting Williams v. Johnson, 
    747 F. Supp. 2d 10
    , 18 (D.D.C.
    1
    2010)). They “are ‘designed to narrow the evidentiary issues for trial and to eliminate
    unnecessary trial interruptions.’” 
    Id. at 10
     (quoting Bradley v. Pittsburgh Bd. of Educ., 
    913 F.2d 1064
    , 1069 (3d Cir. 1990)). The court has “broad discretion in rendering evidentiary rulings, . . .
    which extends . . . to the threshold question of whether a motion in limine presents an evidentiary
    issue that is appropriate for ruling in advance of trial.” Barnes v. Dist. of Columbia, 
    924 F. Supp. 2d 74
    , 79 (D.D.C. 2013).
    II.    Analysis
    The Court analyzes the three Motions in turn.
    A.      Contributory Negligence
    Plaintiffs first ask that the Court prevent Defendant from arguing to the jury that they are
    barred from recovery because of Okiemute’s contributory negligence in being drunk and falling
    from the parapet. See ECF No. 45 (MIL on Contrib. Neg.) at 1. Their position is that, “in light
    of the special duties imposed upon common carriers, Mr. Whiteru’s negligence, if any, is
    irrelevant to the disposition of the case.” 
    Id.
     In reversing then-Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson’s
    ruling awarding summary judgment to WMATA on its contributory-negligence theory, our Court
    of Appeals did indeed agree with Plaintiffs that “there is a special relationship between a
    common carrier and passenger that gives rise to the common carrier’s duty to take reasonable
    steps to render aid to a passenger if it knows or has reason to know that they are injured,
    regardless of whether the passenger contributed to their own injury.” Whiteru v. WMATA, 
    25 F.4th 1053
    , 1057 (D.C. Cir. 2022). This precluded summary judgment since there were “genuine
    factual disputes regarding whether WMATA breached its duty to aid Mr. Whiteru after he
    negligently injured himself.” 
    Id.
    2
    Yet such a holding does not necessarily prohibit Defendant from asserting a contributory-
    negligence defense at trial. Instead, it simply means that if the jury finds that WMATA did have
    a duty to inspect all parts of the station and thus should have known that Okiemute lay injured,
    contributory negligence will not prevent recovery. On the other hand, if Plaintiff alternatively
    asserts some lesser, non-common-carrier duty, the jury could find that Okiemute was
    contributorily negligent and caused his own death. In the latter instance, a defense verdict would
    be warranted.
    The Court will thus deny this first Motion.
    B.       Assumption of the Risk
    In the next round, Plaintiffs ask the Court to preclude WMATA from relying on an
    assumption-of-the-risk defense. See ECF No. 46 (MIL on Ass. of Risk) at 1. “Assumption of
    risk, like contributory negligence, is an affirmative defense in negligence cases and may operate
    as a complete bar to liability.” Dennis v. Jones, 
    928 A.2d 672
    , 676 (D.C. 2007) (citation
    omitted). To rely on such a defense, the defendant must introduce evidence that “the plaintiff . . .
    subjectively kn[e]w of the existence of the risk and appreciate[d] its unreasonable character.”
    Sinai v. Polinger Co., 
    498 A.2d 520
    , 524 (D.C. 1985) (citing Restatement (Second) of Torts,
    § 496D (1965)); see also Scoggins v. Jude, 
    419 A.2d 999
    , 1004 (D.C. 1980) (citations omitted)
    (defense available “when a plaintiff voluntarily has incurred a known risk”).
    Although its position bears superficial appeal, WMATA misapprehends what Plaintiffs
    are actually claiming. It argues that by climbing on to the parapet, the decedent assumed the risk
    that he would fall and be injured. See ECF No. 53 (Def. Opp. on Ass. of Risk) at 6 (“Whiteru
    made the voluntary decision to sit on the parapet wall, and the danger of sitting on the wall was
    obvious.”); id. at 4 (“Only a jury can conclude if Whiteru knew or should of [sic] known of the
    3
    risk he encountered when he chose to sit on the parapet wall prior to his fall.”) (citation omitted).
    But this is not the issue. Plaintiffs are not seeking damages for injuries that Okiemute sustained
    in the fall itself; instead, they want relief for the injuries he incurred after the fall when he was
    left unattended and ultimately died. See, e.g., MIL on Ass. of Risk at 3; ECF No. 62 (Reply on
    Ass. of Risk) at 1 (“Plaintiffs make no claim for the injuries Mr. Whiteru suffered from his initial
    fall. It is the fall’s aftermath that matters.”).
    As a result, the proper question is not whether Okiemute assumed the risk that he would
    be injured when he mounted the wall; it is whether he assumed the risk that, if he fell, WMATA
    personnel would not inspect the full station and find him in time to render aid. Given that
    Defendant mischaracterizes Plaintiffs’ argument, it is not surprising that WMATA never
    maintains that Okiemute made that latter decision voluntarily. Nor could it, given that there is no
    evidence that the decedent had or should have had any idea of what Metro’s station-inspection
    policies and practices were. He thus could not have voluntarily incurred such risk. See Bradley
    v. NCAA, 
    249 F. Supp. 3d 149
    , 181 (D.D.C. 2017) (distinguishing other assumption-of-risk
    cases where plaintiff there was not suing about initial head injury sustained playing college
    sports, but rather university’s failure to take precautions to protect her from the “additional and
    compounded effects suffered” thereafter).
    Plaintiffs win this round.
    C.      Failure to Produce Evidence
    Their last Motion essentially seeks a missing-evidence instruction relating to surveillance
    video of the Judiciary Square station in the hours after the decedent’s fall, which would
    potentially show whether and to what extent the station manager conducted the required
    inspections. More specifically, Plaintiffs contend that “because defendant . . . failed to produce
    4
    relevant surveillance video evidence of the [station,] the jury may infer that such evidence would
    have been unfavorable to WMATA.” ECF No. 49 (MIL on Missing Video) at 1. They request
    that the Court so instruct the jury.
    “The missing evidence rule provides that when a party has relevant evidence within his
    control which he fails to produce, that failure gives rise to an inference that the evidence is
    unfavorable to him.” Huthnance v. Dist. of Columbia, 
    722 F.3d 371
    , 378 (D.C. Cir. 2013)
    (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). Courts must nevertheless be chary in giving the
    instruction because “there is the danger that the instruction permitting an adverse inference may
    add a fictitious weight to one side or another of the case.” Id. at 379 (internal quotation marks
    and citation omitted). The instruction “is appropriate if it is peculiarly within the power of one
    party to produce the evidence and the evidence would elucidate a disputed transaction.” United
    States v. West, 
    393 F.3d 1302
    , 1309 (D.C. Cir. 2005), abrogated on other grounds by Burgess v.
    United States, 
    553 U.S. 124
     (2008).
    There is little dispute regarding the second prong, meaning that video of the Judiciary
    Square station in the hours and possibly days after Okiemute’s fall would likely show the scope
    of inspections that the station manager took, which could be relevant to WMATA’s breach of a
    potential duty to render aid to members of the public at the station. The harder issue to resolve is
    the first prong and specifically whether or not the video was peculiarly within WMATA’s power
    to produce.
    Defendant first points out that, in its regular course of business, the station security
    videos are overwritten every 30 days. See ECF No. 52 (Def. Opp. on Missing Video) at 2. In
    addition, Plaintiffs never requested that WMATA preserve any video until almost one year after
    the incident. Id. at 3. The question therefore boils down to whether or not Defendant had a duty
    5
    in the 30 days following Okiemute’s fall to save the video. The law in such a scenario requires
    Plaintiffs to show, in addition to the evidence’s relevance, that “(1) the party having control over
    the evidence had an obligation to preserve it when it was destroyed or altered; [and] (2) the
    destruction or loss of the evidence was accompanied by a culpable state of mind.” Bolger v.
    Dist. of Columbia, 
    608 F. Supp. 2d 10
    , 30 (D.D.C. 2009) (internal quotation marks and citations
    omitted).
    As to the first question, such obligation “can arise when a party should have known that
    the evidence might be relevant to future litigation.” Martin v. Omni Hotels Mgmt. Corp., 
    206 F. Supp. 3d 115
    , 129–30 (D.D.C. 2016) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). WMATA
    explains that detectives from the Metro Transit Police Department, in connection with their post-
    incident investigation, did secure some video of the incident — namely, “44 minutes of footage
    of Whiteru’s movements in the Metro station, him stumbling down the escalator, lying on the
    ground, sitting on top of the parapet wall and then falling over.” Def. Opp. on Missing Video at
    2. Plaintiffs, not surprisingly, argue that this was insufficient and that video in the ensuing hours
    and days should also have been safeguarded.
    Although such a position is not unreasonable, the Court finds that the scales tip slightly
    to the defense here. In an investigation of a patron’s death, it makes sense that MTPD would
    focus on that person’s actions and what happened from his entry into the station until the
    particular unfortunate incident. And that is precisely what MTPD did here. Plaintiffs nowhere
    suggest that an autopsy or other information made clear to WMATA before the 30-day
    overwriting occurred that the decedent did not die for several days or that further station
    inspections would have revealed that in time to stave off death. It would concededly be more
    6
    thorough had MTPD preserved video extending through the discovery of his body, but the Court
    cannot conclude that it should have known of the relevance of that portion of the tapes.
    In Martin, for example, Judge Rudolph Contreras of this district rejected a request for a
    missing-evidence inference in a similar factual scenario. In a slip-and-fall case, the plaintiff
    argued that the defendant hotel should have preserved a greater portion of the video, which
    would have shown when the mat on which the plaintiff slipped had been placed in the lobby and
    by whom, all of which was relevant to the hotel’s notice of the purportedly dangerous condition.
    Martin, 206 F. Supp. 3d at 130. Judge Contreras held that the plaintiff “has supplied no evidence
    showing that Omni knew or should have known that the far earlier footage might be relevant to
    future litigation.” Id. While the Court cannot go that far here, it still believes that WMATA
    should not necessarily have known that the other video would be relevant. Given this
    conclusion, the Court need not address the second question about culpable state of mind, though
    it does note that Judge Contreras in Martin found none. Id. at 131 (no culpable state of mind
    because no “bad faith or negligent destruction of evidence”).
    Finally, the Court is cognizant of the admonitions from the D.C. Circuit that the missing-
    evidence rule “is more a product of common sense than of the common law” and that, “[a]t
    bottom, the question is whether an adverse inference is natural and reasonable.” Huthnance, 722
    F.3d at 379 (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). “If not, then it does not matter that
    the doctrine’s prerequisites are otherwise satisfied.” Id. (citation omitted).
    Following these precepts, the Court believes that a missing-evidence instruction is
    unwarranted, thus requiring a denial of the Motion.
    7
    III.   Conclusion
    For the reasons stated above, the Court will grant Plaintiffs’ Motion in Limine regarding
    assumption of the risk and deny it as to their Motions in Limine on contributory negligence and
    missing evidence. A separate Order so stating will issue this day.
    /s/ James E. Boasberg
    JAMES E. BOASBERG
    United States District Judge
    Date: May 23, 2022
    8