Bridget S. Salzman Versus Matherne's Supermarket at Riverlands, L.L.C. & State Farm Fire & Casualty Company ( 2023 )


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  • BRIDGET S. SALZMAN                                     NO. 22-CA-404
    VERSUS                                                 FIFTH CIRCUIT
    MATHERNE'S SUPERMARKET AT                              COURT OF APPEAL
    RIVERLANDS, L.L.C. & STATE FARM FIRE
    & CASUALTY COMPANY                                     STATE OF LOUISIANA
    ON APPEAL FROM THE FORTIETH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT
    PARISH OF ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST, STATE OF LOUISIANA
    NO. 73,819, DIVISION "C"
    HONORABLE J. STERLING SNOWDY, JUDGE PRESIDING
    June 22, 2023
    FREDERICKA HOMBERG WICKER
    JUDGE
    Panel composed of Judges Fredericka Homberg Wicker,
    Jude G. Gravois, and John J. Molaison, Jr.
    REVERSED AND REMANDED
    FHW
    JGG
    JJM
    COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT,
    BRIDGET S. SALZMAN
    William E. Mura, Jr.
    Delaney P. Shea
    Warren A. Forstall, Jr.
    COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE,
    MATHERNE'S SUPERMARKET AT RIVERLANDS, LLC AND STATE FARM
    FIRE AND CASUALTY COMPANY
    Leonard M. D'Angelo
    WICKER, J.
    This case involves a slip and fall in a grocery store that occurred during
    business hours and allegedly caused by a liquid substance puddled on the floor of
    the grocery store aisle. Plaintiff Bridget Salzman (“Ms. Salzman”) sued Defendants,
    Matherne’s Supermarket at Riverlands, LLC (“Matherne’s Supermarket) and State
    Farm Fire and Casualty Company (“State Farm”) (collectively “Defendants”) for
    injuries she allegedly sustained as a result of the slip and fall.          Matherne’s
    Supermarket and its insurer filed a motion for summary judgment alleging that
    pursuant to the Merchant Liability Statute, La. R.S. 9:2800.6, Ms. Salzman cannot
    meet her evidentiary burden at trial that Matherne’s Supermarket created or had
    actual or constructive notice of the alleged hazardous condition that she claims
    caused her injuries. Evidence properly attached to the summary judgment pleadings
    indicates that store management was aware that liquid meat byproduct habitually
    leaked onto the floor throughout the grocery store and that the grocery store had
    taken steps to respond to the condition. Properly attached evidence also indicates
    that with respect to the particular incident in this case, the store had no knowledge
    that the liquid was puddled on the floor at the time and place where Ms. Salzman
    slipped and fell. On the motion of Matherne’s Supermarket and its insurer, the trial
    court granted summary judgment and dismissed with prejudice Ms. Salzman’s
    personal injury suit, finding no genuine issue of material fact exists that a Matherne’s
    Supermarket employee either created the hazardous condition or that the grocery
    store had actual or constructive knowledge of the condition. Ms. Salzman seeks this
    Court’s appellate review.
    Applying La. R.S. 9:2800.6, on de novo review, for the following reasons, we
    find that the trial court incorrectly dismissed with prejudice Ms. Salzman’s suit, as
    a genuine issue of material fact exists as to whether Matherne’s Supermarket created
    the claimed dangerous condition on its premises. Accordingly, we reverse the trial
    22-CA-404                                  1
    court’s judgment granting summary judgment and remand the matter for further
    proceedings.
    FACTUAL BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    In May 2019, Ms. Salzman filed suit for damages against defendants, alleging
    that on September 18, 2018, she slipped and fell while shopping at Matherne’s
    Supermarket in Laplace, Louisiana.
    According to her deposition testimony, Ms. Salzman arrived at Matherne’s
    Supermarket at 6:45 p.m. It was still daylight, and the weather was dry and sunny,
    as it had not rained that day. Ms. Salzman had shopped at the store on previous
    occasions and was going to the store that day only to buy milk.
    Ms. Salzman testified that she entered the store on the left side, walked past
    the deli, and turned right at the last aisle near the refrigerated juice. She proceeded
    down the aisle to the back wall, where she retrieved a quart of milk. Ms. Salzman
    then returned down the same path, walking towards the checkout counter. As Ms.
    Salzman turned the corner from the juice aisle to the deli, she slipped and fell.
    After she fell, Ms. Salzman saw that she had slipped on, what she described
    as, “kind of thick,” “pink” “little puddles.” She took photographs of the substance
    with her cell phone. Ms. Salzman testified that she did not see the puddles before
    she fell; she did not see how the puddles came to be on the floor; or who left them
    there. She further stated that she did not see any customers or employees walking
    ahead of her. Ms. Salzman testified that she did not know what the pink substance
    was that caused her to slip and fall. However, she stated that when she spoke to the
    store’s manager the next day, he told her it was “chicken drippings.” Ms. Salzman
    agreed that the substance she slipped on would be consistent with chicken drippings.
    After Ms. Salzman slipped, Nadine Wells, the assistant manager on duty at
    the time of the accident, was alerted by a store employee that a customer had slipped
    and fallen. Ms. Wells testified in her deposition that she reported to the location of
    22-CA-404                                  2
    Ms. Salzman’s fall and observed a liquid substance on the floor, which she
    photographed with her cell phone. A store employee was then called to clean the
    substance from the floor. Ms. Wells testified that she reported the incident to her
    manager the next day.
    Ms. Wells testified that she was unaware of the presence of the liquid on the
    floor that Ms. Salzman slipped on before Ms. Salzman fell. No one reported it to
    her, and no one notified her or any other employee of it. Ms. Wells testified that she
    did not know how the liquid came to be on the floor, who placed it there, or how
    long it was on the floor before Ms. Salzman fell.
    Ms. Wells testified that the substance Ms. Salzman slipped on looked like
    “chicken juice.” She testified that she did nothing further to determine what the
    substance was or where it came from.
    Ms. Wells stated that before the incident in this case, she had seen poultry
    “juice drippings” on the grocery store’s floor on several occasions. In fact, she
    testified that it was not unusual to see “juice drippings” on the floor of the store. Ms.
    Wells indicated that in order to address the issue, the grocery store provided plastic
    bags near the meat case for customers to use. She stated that customer use of the
    plastic bags is voluntary and that there is no customer signage or instructions for the
    customer’s use of the bags while shopping in the store.
    Scott Schwaibold, Matherne’s Supermarket store manager, was not present at
    the store at the time the accident occurred, but recalled Ms. Wells informing him of
    the incident. He testified that he prepared the accident report after speaking with
    Ms. Wells and Ms. Salzman. Mr. Schwaibold wrote in the accident report that Ms.
    Salzman claimed she slipped on chicken juice; however, in his deposition testimony,
    Mr. Schwaibold testified that it was actually the assistant manager, Ms. Wells, who
    identified the substance as chicken juice. Mr. Schwaibold testified that he never
    determined how the liquid substance Ms. Salzman slipped on got on the floor or who
    22-CA-404                                  3
    spilled it, nor did he know how long it was there. Specifically, he testified that
    Matherne’s Supermarket did not know how long the substance had been on the floor
    before Ms. Salzman fell. When asked if he had been able to determine what the
    substance on the floor was, Mr. Schwaibold testified, “I would guess it’s some kind
    of meat byproduct, juice. . . .[I]t could be from any kind of liquid leaking off the
    package, from a package of chicken.” Mr. Schwaibold testified that the substance
    that Ms. Salzman slipped on “probably came from some kind of meat product in a
    customer’s basket.”
    Mr. Schwaibold testified that the animal and seafood products the store sells
    are all packaged, most of which are pre-packaged. He testified that the store does
    repackage some of the chicken it sells, but that repackaging is limited to wings and
    drumettes, which arrive to the store in large boxes. Those chicken parts are then
    repackaged in the grocery store’s butcher shop, using an automatic wrap machine
    that wraps the Styrofoam carton containing the soaker pad and the meat. Mr.
    Schwaibold was also asked if the store has a procedure for checking its packages
    after they are wrapped. Mr. Schwaibold testified that employees are required to
    “walk the case all the time.” He went on to state:
    When they [sic] working the case, they know to walk it. These guys do
    a really good job. ‘Cause kids come along and poke their fingers in
    there. So yeah, they always have to check. And sometimes the packages
    get a little wet and you got to go repackage them.
    …
    Q: …Who determines who does that and when it’s done?
    A: Usually do it as they [sic] walking the case, ‘cause they got a guy
    who works the case with a rack changing products, so he checks every
    product he puts out.
    Q: In front of the shelves?
    A: Yeah …
    Like Ms. Wells, Mr. Schwaibold testified that the store offers plastic bags for
    customers to use, at their option, if they want a secondary protective measure.
    Nevertheless, Mr. Schwaibold indicated “leaking from meat containers is not a rare
    occasion.” He stated: “I mean, I guess it depends on the crowd and everything, but
    22-CA-404                                4
    it happens a lot. I mean, it happens a lot. You see it every day, every other day,
    every couple of days. It happens more than you would think it does.” Mr.
    Schwaibold testified that to combat the issue, store employees carry rags with them
    to wipe the floor.
    On March 3, 2022, Defendants filed a motion for summary judgment,
    claiming that pursuant to La. R.S. 9:2800.6(B)(2), Ms. Salzman is unable to meet
    her burden of proof that Matherne’s Supermarket created or had actual or
    constructive notice of the foreign substance upon which Ms. Salzman fell. In
    support of its motion, Defendants claim there is no evidence that any employee
    “directly caused the pink foreign substance…to be on the floor where plaintiff fell.”
    Defendants argue Ms. Salzman did not witness any employee spill anything onto the
    floor and no witness has been produced to provide such testimony. Additionally,
    Ms. Salzman testified that she did not know how the liquid substance ended up on
    the floor. Defendants further argue that Ms. Salzman can not show the store had
    actual or constructive notice of the presence of liquid on the floor that day prior to
    her accident because Ms. Salzman did not see any store employee or customer
    walking ahead of her; the store managers testified that they were not aware of the
    liquid substance on the floor; they were given no notice of its presence; and the store
    does not know how the substance got on the floor or how long it was on the floor.
    Ms. Salzman filed her opposition to summary judgment on March 25, 2022,
    in which she alleged that there is sufficient evidence from which a trier of fact could
    conclude that Matherne’s Supermarket created the injury-causing condition. She
    averred that Matherne’s Supermarket was aware that their packaged meat products,
    and particularly their chicken products, would leak liquid meat byproduct; that the
    store managers testified that observable leaking occurred almost daily; that the
    grocery store was aware that the liquid meat byproduct was difficult to see on the
    grocery store floors; and that the liquid meat byproduct would leak from customers’
    22-CA-404                                  5
    baskets. Ms. Salzman argued that the evidence is sufficient for a reasonable trier of
    fact to conclude that Matherne’s Supermarket created the injury-causing condition
    because it was well-aware there was a problem with the packaging of its meat
    products and that Matherne’s Supermarket failed to adequately address or fix the
    problem.
    Defendants then filed a reply, and on April 11, 2022, a hearing on the
    summary judgment motion was held. On April 25, 2022, the trial court issued a
    judgment granting defendants’ motion for summary judgment and dismissing with
    prejudice Ms. Salzman’s cause of action. The trial court reasoned that Ms. Salzman
    failed to present facts that tend to prove that a Matherne’s Supermarket employee
    either created the hazardous condition or that the grocery store had actual or
    constructive knowledge of the condition.
    Ms. Salzman files this timely appeal, seeking review of the trial court’s April
    25, 2022 judgment granting defendant’s motion for summary judgment and
    dismissing her cause of action with prejudice.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    Appellate courts review the granting or denying of a motion for summary
    judgment de novo, using the same criteria that governs the trial court’s consideration
    of whether summary judgment is appropriate. Richardson v. La.-1 Gaming, 10-262
    (La. App. 5 Cir. 12/14/10), 
    55 So.3d 893
    , 895.
    “[A] motion for summary judgment shall be granted if the motion,
    memorandum, and supporting documents show that there is no genuine issue as to
    material fact and that the mover is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” La.
    C.C.P. art. 966(A)(3). Although the burden generally rests with the mover, if the
    mover will not bear the burden of proof at trial, the mover need only show there is
    an “absence of factual support for one or more elements essential to the adverse
    party’s claim.” La. C.C.P. art. 966(D)(1). The adverse party must then show there
    22-CA-404                                  6
    is “factual support sufficient to establish the existence of a genuine issue of material
    fact or that the mover is not entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” 
    Id.
    ISSUES PRESENTED ON APPEAL
    The seminal issue raised on appeal is whether a genuine issue of material fact
    exists as to whether Matherne’s Supermarket created or had actual or constructive
    notice of the alleged hazardous condition that Ms. Salzman claims caused her
    injuries.
    Ms. Salzman bases her claim upon the theory of recovery that the store
    “created” the hazardous condition causing her fall, by negligently addressing the
    frequent and repeated leaking of liquid meat byproduct throughout the store, of
    which the store had knowledge. Pursuant to La. R.S. 9:2800.6(B)(2), Ms. Salzman
    posits that because the store “created” the dangerous condition, she need not prove
    the store had actual or constructive knowledge of the specific puddle in which she
    slipped and fell. For purposes of defeating summary judgment, Ms. Salzman asserts
    that a material issue of fact exists as to whether the grocery store “created” the
    hazardous condition that caused her fall. As discussed in detail below, we agree.
    Furthermore, the facts of this case demonstrate that the answer to the principal
    question hinges in part on answering the subsidiary questions of what constitutes the
    creation of a hazardous condition and whether Matherne’s Supermarket’s alleged
    conduct suffices to show that it “created…the condition which caused the damage”
    under La. R.S. 9:2800.6(B)(2).
    DISCUSSION
    In her petition, Ms. Salzman claims that she slipped and fell on a foreign
    substance found on the floor of Matherne’s Supermarket and asserts that Matherne’s
    Supermarket is liable for failing to properly maintain its premises.          Her action
    against Defendants is governed by Louisiana’s Merchant Liability Statute, La. R.S.
    9:2800.6, which concerns negligence claims brought against merchants for accidents
    22-CA-404                                  7
    caused by a condition existing on or in the merchant’s premises. La. R.S. 9:2800.6
    provides in pertinent part:
    A. A merchant owes a duty to persons who use his premises to exercise
    reasonable care to keep his aisles, passageways, and floors in a
    reasonably safe condition. This duty includes a reasonable effort to
    keep the premises free of any hazardous conditions which reasonably
    might give rise to damage.
    B. In a negligence claim brought against a merchant by a person
    lawfully on the merchant's premises for damages as a result of an injury,
    death, or loss sustained because of a fall due to a condition existing in
    or on a merchant's premises, the claimant shall have the burden of
    proving, in addition to all other elements of his cause of action, all of
    the following:
    (1) The condition presented an unreasonable risk of harm to the
    claimant and that risk of harm was reasonably foreseeable.
    (2) The merchant either created or had actual or constructive
    notice of the condition which caused the damage, prior to the
    occurrence.
    (3) The merchant failed to exercise reasonable care. In
    determining reasonable care, the absence of a written or verbal uniform
    cleanup or safety procedure is insufficient, alone, to prove failure to
    exercise reasonable care.
    (emphasis added).
    A reading of subsection (B)(2) of the Merchant Liability Statute sets forth
    three potential theories of recovery: (1) the merchant created the condition that
    caused plaintiff’s harm; (2) although it did not create the condition that caused the
    plaintiff’s harm, the merchant had actual notice of the condition; or (3) although it
    did not create the condition that caused the plaintiff’s harm, the merchant had
    constructive notice of the condition. Davis v. Cheema, 14-1316 (La. App. 4 Cir.
    5/22/16), 
    171 So.3d 984
    , 989. Therefore, by the express language of the statute, if
    a claimant establishes that the merchant created the injury-causing condition, he
    need not prove the notice requirement. 
    Id. at 993
    ; See also Savoie v. Sw. La. Hosp.
    Ass’n, 03-982 (La. App. 3 Cir. 2/25/04), 
    866 So.2d 1078
    , 1081.
    The general facts relating to Ms. Salzman’s fall are not in dispute. The parties
    do not dispute that Ms. Salzman slipped and fell on pink puddles of “chicken juice”
    found on the floor of Matherne’s Supermarket. The parties do not dispute that the
    22-CA-404                                 8
    condition that caused Ms. Salzman to slip and fall was the leaking of liquid
    byproduct from the store’s packaged meat products onto the store’s floor. Ms.
    Salzman’s claim relies on the first theory of recovery under La. R.S. 9:2800.6(B)(2).
    Therefore, Ms. Salzman need not prove the notice requirement, as her theory of
    recovery relies on finding Matherne’s Supermarket created the condition.
    Consequently, the issue on summary judgment is whether the evidence is sufficient
    that a reasonable trier of fact could find that Matherne’s Supermarket created the
    condition that caused Ms. Salzman’s fall.
    In support of summary judgment, Defendants argue that there is no evidence
    to establish who or what caused the liquid to be present on the floor, as well as a lack
    of evidence of how long the substance was on the floor before Ms. Salzman fell.
    Defendants also argue there is no evidence that a Matherne’s Supermarket employee
    spilled or leaked poultry or meat juice in the aisle where Ms. Salzman fell.
    Therefore, Defendants claim that Ms. Salzman cannot meet her evidentiary burden
    of establishing that Matherne’s Supermarket either created or had actual or
    constructive notice of the condition prior to her fall.1
    Ms. Salzman argues, however, that a genuine issue of material fact remains as
    to whether Matherne’s Supermarket created the condition which caused Ms.
    Salzman’s injuries. Ms. Salzman contends that Matherne’s Supermarket knew that
    leaking meat juice from its prepackaged and repackaged products created an unsafe
    condition for its customers. The store was also aware that its packaging methods
    caused meat juice to leak regularly onto the floors of its store. To address the unsafe
    condition, Matherne’s Supermarket implemented some monitoring practices to
    address the condition. Yet, store employees testified that the leaking of meat juice
    onto the store’s floor persisted on an almost daily basis. Ms. Salzman contends that
    1
    Defendants contest only Ms. Salzman’s ability to carry her burden under La. R.S. 9:2800.6(B)(2).
    Defendants raise no objections to Ms. Salzman’s ability to carry her burden under subsections (B)(1) and
    (B)(3) of the statute.
    22-CA-404                                          9
    the evidence shows the store was aware that its packaged meat products and
    repackaging methods created the hazardous condition. Further, the fact that meat
    juice continued to leak onto the floors of the grocery store, Ms. Salzman contends,
    is evidence that Matherne’s was negligent and unsuccessful in adequately addressing
    and correcting a known unsafe condition. Ms. Salzman maintains that the failure to
    correct a known unsafe condition is sufficient to establish that Matherne’s
    Supermarket created the injury-causing condition, as required by La. R.S.
    9:2800.6(B)(2).
    On de novo review, the question is whether Ms. Salzman has presented
    sufficient evidence to establish a genuine issue of material fact exists as to whether
    Matherne’s Supermarket created the condition that caused Ms. Salzman’s alleged
    injuries. More specifically, the issue before us is whether the grocery store’s failure
    to correct a known problem with its packaged meat products and repackaging
    methods can qualify as “creation” of a hazardous condition under La. R.S.
    9:2800.6(B)(2).
    While four of the five Louisiana circuit courts of appeal and both the United
    States Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals and various Louisiana federal district courts,
    have been called upon, on summary judgment, to interpret the language of La. R.S.
    9:2800.6(B)(2), and specifically the use of the term “created,” this Court has not.
    The pivotal issue presented here—what constitutes creation of a hazardous
    condition—is a res nova issue for this Court.
    Our review of the jurisprudence demonstrates that there is a split among the
    circuit courts of appeal regarding the proper interpretation of La. R.S.
    9:2800.6(B)(2) and the use of the word “created.” The First and Second Circuit
    courts of appeal, in Ross v. Schwegmann Giant Super Markets, Inc., 98-1036 (La.
    App. 1 Cir. 5/14/99), 
    734 So.2d 910
    , 913, the case upon which Defendants rely, and
    most recently, in Matlock v. Brookshire Grocery Co., 53,069 (La. App. 2 Cir.
    22-CA-404                                 10
    11/20/19), 
    285 So.3d 76
    , have opined that where the hazard in question does not
    emerge through the direct action of the merchant’s employees, the merchant did not
    “create” the condition within the context of La. R.S. 9:2800.6(B)(2). In both cases,
    the courts of appeal found there was no evidence to suggested that the store
    employees were “directly responsible” for the spill in those cases.
    By contrast, the Fourth Circuit, in Davis, found that while the evidence was
    insufficient to establish an issue of fact as to constructive notice of the injury-causing
    condition, there was sufficient circumstantial evidence from which the trier of fact
    could reasonably infer that the merchant created the injury-causing condition.
    Moreover, the Third Circuit, in Savoie, determined that the plaintiffs were not
    required to prove actual or constructive notice of the alleged wax buildup, which
    allegedly caused the plaintiff to fall, where evidence that the hospital maintained its
    own floors and that the floors had a long-term buildup of wax tended to show the
    hospital created the unreasonably dangerous condition. See also Gray v. Wal-mart
    La., L.L.C., 
    484 F. App’x 963
    , 966 (5th Cir. 2012) (finding the evidence insufficient
    to raise a fact issue as to whether the defendants created the hazardous condition
    where no evidence was presented to show employees were responsible for the hole
    in the roof or that the store was responsible for maintaining its own roof). The
    holdings in these cases demonstrates the varied interpretations of subsection (B)(2)
    of the Merchant Liability Statute.
    Where the First and Second Circuit courts of appeal suggest that a merchant’s
    creation of a hazardous condition is only satisfied through evidence that the
    merchant or its employees took some direct action, the Third Circuit interprets
    subsection (B)(2) more broadly to find that evidence that the merchant is responsible
    for maintenance of the thing that caused the plaintiff’s injury is enough for a
    determination that the merchant created the hazardous condition.
    In each of the cited cases, the appellate court’s interpretation of “created,” as
    22-CA-404                                  11
    used in La. R.S. 9:2800.6(B)(2), is discussed in terms of the facts specific to the case
    before it. However, it is only in Deshotel v. Wal-Mart La., L.L.C., 
    850 F.3d 742
    ,
    747-48 (5th Cir. 2017), a case from the United States Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals,
    that a court endeavored to unify the varied interpretations of subsection (B)(2). In
    Deshotel, the United States Fifth Circuit examined Louisiana’s jurisprudence
    interpreting La. R.S. 9:2800.6(B)(2) to establish a definition for what constitutes the
    creation of a hazard by synthesizing the findings from Ross and its progeny.
    In Deshotel, a customer slipped and fell on water from a leaking roof, which
    the customer alleged was negligently maintained. 
    Id. at 744
    . The accident report
    indicated that the customer slipped on a clean floor, although there were small drops
    of water on it, and it indicated that the weather was rainy. Both parties agreed that
    the store had roof leaks, but they disagreed as to their scope and frequency. Wal-
    mart claimed that the extent of the leaks was confined to specific areas of the store
    and were attributed to the installation of new skylights. By contrast, the plaintiff
    alleged that the store was “plagued by a chronically leaky roof.” 
    Id. at 745
    . The
    store manager testified that at the time of the customer’s fall, leaks were springing
    up regularly and that new leaks were a known issue for the store. He testified that
    not only were there leaks throughout the building, but also store employees knew to
    look for new leaks that had not been identified or marked whenever it would rain.
    The record also contained photographs that purported to show that on the day of the
    customer’s accident, Wal-mart had placed buckets and caution signs in various parts
    of the store. Additionally, billing records showed the store paid for roof repairs near
    the date of plaintiff’s fall and that the store paid for a full roof repair after plaintiff’s
    fall.
    On summary judgment, the court was presented with two questions: first,
    whether the evidence was sufficient that a jury could find that the water the customer
    slipped on came from water that leaked from the roof; and second, whether Wal-
    22-CA-404                                    12
    mart’s alleged negligent maintenance of the roof created the condition that caused
    the customer’s injuries. 
    Id. at 745
    . Relevant to our discussion is the court’s
    consideration of the latter question.
    Synthesizing Louisiana’s jurisprudence as to what constitutes the creation of
    a hazardous condition under La. R.S. 9:2800.6(B)(2), the court stated:
    It is evident that for the defendant to have “created” the hazardous
    condition, it must be “directly responsible” for the plaintiff's injuries.
    Ross, 734 So.2d at 913. That direct responsibility can be shown in
    one of two ways—either via evidence that the defendant’s employees
    actually created the hazard (by, for example, spilling crab salad on the
    floor, as was alleged in Ross) or evidence that the defendant was
    responsible for maintaining the area where the hazardous
    condition was manifest, as in Savoie and Gray.
    
    Id. at 747-48
     (emphasis added).
    The Deshotel court rejected Wal-mart’s argument that the customer could not
    satisfy La. R.S. 9:2800.6(B)(2) because “the law requires that it must have had notice
    of the condition no matter what.” 
    Id. at 748
    . The court explained that the plain
    language of La. R.S. 9:2800.6(B)(2) makes clear that the plaintiff must demonstrate
    “either creation of the hazard or actual or constructive notice thereof.” 
    Id. at 748
    (emphasis in original); See also Davis, 171 So.3d at 989. There is no requirement
    that the plaintiff prove that the defendant had notice of the hazard if the defendant
    created it. Savoie, 866 So.2d at 1081.
    Wal-mart also alleged that because the specific hazard that caused the
    customer’s injury “emerged not through direct action by its employees but rather
    through a failure to remedy a dangerous condition,” it was not “directly responsible”
    as contemplated in Ross. Deshotel, 
    850 F.3d at 748
    . The U.S. Fifth Circuit rejected
    this argument, explaining:
    Wal-Mart seems to think that so long as its employees did not
    personally create the leaks—by, say, making holes in the roof to affix
    some object—Wal-Mart escapes liability under the statute. To hold
    otherwise, it urges, would be to convert the statute into “strict liability.”
    We do not read the statute so harshly. The ordinary meaning of
    “creation” admits of creation both through direct action—
    22-CA-404                                  13
    pounding holes into the roof with hammers—and failure to act—e.g.,
    a failure to fix a known leaky roof, leading to the creation of hazardous
    puddles on the floor. And the claim that we would be reading strict
    liability into the statute significantly overstates the hardship to Wal-
    Mart, for several reasons.
    First, of course, there is the procedural posture of this case, which
    Wal-Mart avoids. By reversing the summary judgment, we only permit
    a jury to find that Wal-Mart created the hazard; we make no such
    finding ourselves. Second, there are other provisions in the statute,
    which are not at issue on this appeal, that a plaintiff must satisfy before
    a defendant can be held liable—namely, that the condition created an
    unreasonable risk of harm and that the defendant failed to exercise
    reasonable care. See LA. REV. STAT. ANN. § 9:2800.6(B).
    Finally, Louisiana precedent is explicit that Wal-Mart’s notion is
    incorrect. See Savoie, 866 So.2d at 1081 (holding that because the
    defendant maintained the floors on which the hazard occurred, it
    created the hazard). Maintenance, under Louisiana courts’
    interpretation of Louisiana law, is enough for creation. And Wal-
    Mart has not provided reasons for us to disregard that legal reality.
    Id. (emphasis added).
    The Deshotel court recognized that even if the defendant is responsible for
    maintaining its own floors, the plaintiff must still point to evidence, absent of
    speculation, which suggests that the defendant created the hazardous condition. Id.
    (citing Gray, 484 F. App’x at 966); See also Harris v. Dollar Tree Stores, Inc., 
    2020 WL 6868848
     (finding summary judgment appropriate where plaintiff’s only
    evidence was defendant’s interrogatories that it was responsible for maintaining its
    floors). The court in Deshotel ultimately concluded that summary judgment was
    inappropriate because evidence was presented that Wal-mart was responsible for its
    own roof. Billing records showed the store paid for roof repairs near the date of
    plaintiff’s fall and that the store paid for a full roof repair after plaintiff’s fall.
    Therefore, the court concluded that Wal-mart’s maintenance of its own roof was
    evidence sufficient to show a genuine issue of material fact existed as to whether
    “Wal-mart created the hazardous condition through its failure of maintenance.” 
    Id.
    Additionally, in Jackson v. Family Dollar Stores of La., unpub., 
    2020 WL 3066629
     (W.D. La. 6/9/20), the plaintiff slipped and fell in a puddle of liquid that
    leaked from an air conditioning vent in the ceiling of the defendant’s store. Evidence
    22-CA-404                                  14
    showed that the store was aware that the ceiling leaked prior to the plaintiff’s
    accident; that the air conditioner caused a leak from the ceiling on and off for about
    three weeks prior to the accident; that the store had repairs made approximately three
    times before the accident; that the leak was “regular, but it was inconsistent;” and
    that when the store was aware that the ceiling was leaking, its employees would
    place cones and a water receptacle in the area. Id. at *1. The court determined that,
    like the defendant in Deshotel, the store was aware of and had undertaken steps to
    repair the hazardous condition, but failed to successfully make the repair. Id. Based
    on the evidence presented, the court found the evidence sufficient to raise an issue
    of fact as to whether the store created the condition that caused the plaintiff’s fall.
    By contrast, Defendants in this case rely on Ross to argue that there is no
    evidence that Matherne’s Supermarket created the complained-of condition. In
    Ross, the plaintiff sought damages against the supermarket after she slipped and fell
    on crab salad from a self-service station. Like Ms. Salzman, the plaintiff could not
    say how the crab salad came to be on the floor or for how long it was on the floor
    before she fell. Both the store’s supervisor and loss prevention officer gave no
    indication as to how the crab salad arrived on the floor or for how long. The
    supermarket moved for summary judgment on grounds that the plaintiff lacked proof
    to demonstrate that it either created or had actual or constructive notice of the crab
    salad on the floor. The First Circuit determined “that the wording of [La.] R.S.
    9:2800.6 B(2) which requires plaintiff prove that ‘the merchant ... created ... the
    condition which caused the damage’ means there must be proof that the merchant is
    directly responsible for the spill or other hazardous condition.”            Id. at 913
    (emphasis added). Considering the self-service nature of the sample station, the
    court determined that it was likely the spill was the result of a customer dropping the
    crab salad on the floor, and therefore, in the absence of evidence to suggest
    otherwise, the evidence failed to show that the defendant merchant created the
    22-CA-404                                  15
    hazardous condition.       Since Ross, some courts have interpreted “directly
    responsible” to refer only to the direct actions of the merchant or its employees. See
    e.g., Matlock, supra.
    Still, as the United States Fifth Circuit explained in Deshotel, “[t]he ordinary
    meaning of ‘creation’ admits of creation both through direct action—pounding holes
    into the roof with hammers—and failure to act—e.g., a failure to fix a known leaky
    roof, leading to the creation of hazardous puddles on the floor.” Deshotel, 
    850 F.3d at 748
    . Additionally, when a merchant “maintains its own floors, the [plaintiff is]
    not required to prove that it had notice or constructive notice of the possible [hazard].
    If there [is] a [hazard], [defendant] created it, thus, the notice requirement of La. R.S.
    9:2800.6 does not apply....” Savoie v. Sw. La. Hosp. Ass’n, 03-982 (La. App. 3 Cir.
    2/25/04), 
    866 So.2d 1078
    , 1081 (finding merchant “created” hazard where plaintiff
    slipped on wax-like substance on floor, and merchant was responsible for cleaning
    floor); See also Gray, 484 F. App’x at 966 (finding no issue of material fact as to
    whether Wal-mart created the roof leak because there was no evidence showing that
    Wal-Mart’s employees were responsible for the holes in the roof, nor any evidence
    showing that Wal-Mart was responsible for maintaining its own roof).
    In the instant case, Defendants urge that, like Ross, there is no evidence that
    Matherne’s Supermarket employees took any direct action that resulted in the
    specific instance of leaking of meat juice on the grocery store floor that caused Ms.
    Salzman’s accident. Defendants point to Ms. Salzman’s testimony that she did not
    see any employee walking ahead of her prior to her fall or witness an employee spill
    anything on the floor; the store managers were not aware that there was any liquid
    substance on the floor; and no one had informed the store of the substance’s presence
    on the floor prior to Ms. Salzman’s accident. Therefore, Defendants claim that Ms.
    Salzman is unable to prove that Matherne’s Supermarket either created or had actual
    or constructive notice of the specific instance of leaking meat juice that caused Ms.
    22-CA-404                                  16
    Salzman to slip and fall. We find Defendants’ argument in support of its contention
    is flawed.
    First, Ms. Salzman’s claim that Matherne’s Supermarket created the
    hazardous condition is based on a failure to act, not a direct action. Defendants focus
    on the spill itself that caused Ms. Salzman’s fall to argue that there is no evidence to
    show Matherne’s Supermarket or its employees were directly responsible for the
    puddles of meat juice on the floor in this case. Defendants maintain it is plausible
    that the meat juice Ms. Salzman slipped on was the result of the direct actions of a
    customer versus a store employee. Without evidence of how the meat juice ended
    up on the floor, they claim Ms. Salzman cannot prove it is “directly responsible,” as
    contemplated in Ross, and, therefore, created the puddles that caused Ms. Salzman’s
    fall. However, this argument incorrectly assumes that Ms. Salzman’s theory of
    recovery is based on an affirmative act of Matherne’s Supermarket or one of its
    employees.
    Review of the pleadings and Ms. Salzman’s opposition demonstrates that her
    theory of recovery pursuant to La. R.S. 9:2800.6(B)(2) is based not on some direct
    action of Matherne’s Supermarket, but rather on its failure to act. Ms. Salzman
    claims that it is the act of omission, specifically the failure to fix a known leaking
    issue with its prepackaged and repackaged products that led to the creation of
    hazardous puddles on the floor, which created the injury-causing condition in this
    case.
    In support of her assertion that Matherne’s Supermarket created the hazardous
    condition, Ms. Salzman points to evidence that the store was aware that its packaged
    meat products and repackaging methods regularly resulted in liquid byproduct
    leaking onto the store’s floor.      The store’s knowledge that leaking from its
    prepackaged and repackaged meat products routinely resulted in puddles on the
    floor, which posed a slipping hazard, required Matherne’s Supermarket to remedy
    22-CA-404                                 17
    the ongoing and unsafe condition. Ms. Salzman claims the fact that the store took
    measures to address the issue demonstrates the store’s concern regarding the unsafe
    condition its leaking packages posed and as such, its notice of the condition.
    In response, Defendants claim the aforementioned evidence goes to establish
    constructive notice—the third theory of recovery recognized under subsection
    (B)(2). Because constructive notice requires proof that the puddles of meat juice
    Ms. Salzman slipped and fell on were present for some period of time before she fell
    such that the store should have known about it, Defendants argue that the store’s
    notice that its prepackaged and repackaged products often leaked is insufficient to
    establish the store had constructive notice of the particular spill that caused Ms.
    Salzman’s fall. In that neither Ms. Salzman nor the manager and assistant manager
    could testify as to how, when, or by whom the puddles of meat juice came to be on
    the store floor, Defendants argue, Ms. Salzman cannot demonstrate that the store had
    constructive notice of the hazardous condition.
    Defendants’ argument in this regard is also flawed, not for their interpretation
    of the law on constructive notice, but rather because Defendants conflate Ms.
    Salzman’s basis for recovery with what Defendants believe the evidence presented
    on summary judgment stands to prove. Ms. Salzman has elected to pursue a theory
    of recovery based on Matherne’s Supermarket having created a hazardous condition.
    She has not asserted a claim based in, nor does the evidence she relies on go to
    establish, a theory of recovery rooted in constructive notice as contemplated under
    La. R.S. 9:2800.6(B)(2).      The evidence relating to what notice Matherne’s
    Supermarket had in this case refers to the store’s general knowledge that its packaged
    meat products leaked almost daily, resulting in a slipping hazard and, in particular,
    that its repackaging methods were faulty. In other words, the evidence of knowledge
    in this instance goes to notice of a known unsafe condition. This evidence goes to
    establishing that the merchant created the hazardous puddles on the floor through a
    22-CA-404                                18
    failure to act. See Deshotel, 
    850 F.3d at 748
     (finding a failure to fix a known leaky
    roof, leading to the creation of hazardous puddles on the floor was sufficient
    evidence to create a genuine issue of fact as to whether the merchant defendant
    created the injury-causing condition). This evidence is separate and distinct from
    knowledge, actual or constructive, of the specific instance of liquid meat juice that
    caused Ms. Salzman to slip and fall.2
    According to Ms. Salzman, evidence that the store was aware of its faulty
    packaging and negligent repackaging methods coupled with evidence that the
    leaking was chronic and continued on an almost daily basis, despite the store’s
    preventative implementations, is evidence that Matherne’s Supermarket failed to
    correct a known unsafe condition. This failure to act, she contends, constitutes
    creation of a dangerous condition—hazardous puddles on the floor. Therefore, Ms.
    Salzman’s theory of recovery, which she submits the evidence shows, is not that
    Matherne’s Supermarket had constructive notice of this particular instance of
    leaking meat juice that occurred in September 2018, but rather, that the failure to
    successfully correct a known unsafe condition created the injury-causing condition
    in this case.
    Unlike Deshotel, there is no dispute as to what caused Ms. Salzman’s fall.
    The parties agree, at least for purposes of summary judgment, that leaking from the
    store’s packaged meat products caused the puddles on the floor of the store.
    Ms. Salzman testified that she did not see the poultry juice before she fell.
    She did not know how the liquid came to be on the floor, who put it there, or how
    long the liquid was on the floor. Ms. Salzman testified that she did not see any
    employees or customers walking ahead of her in the aisle. Like Ms. Salzman, the
    2
    In Davis, the court drew a similar distinction in finding that the plaintiff in that case, while she could not
    establish that the gas station had constructive notice of the kitty litter the plaintiff slipped and fell on,
    produced sufficient evidence from which to infer that the gas station created the injury-causing condition.
    Further, the evidence that tended to prove that the gas station created the condition was circumstantial in
    nature and in that way the inference that can be drawn—that the grocery store created the injury-causing
    condition, is similar to this case.
    22-CA-404                                             19
    manager and assistant manager of Matherne’s Supermarket testified that they did not
    know how the particular liquid arrived on the floor, who put it there, or how long it
    had been on the floor before Ms. Salzman fell.
    Still, it is undisputed that the store experienced chronic and habitual leaks
    from its prepackaged and repackaged meat products prior to Ms. Salzman’s fall. The
    manager and assistant manager testified that leaking of meat juice, particularly from
    the store’s repackaged products, was an ongoing issue. Ms. Wells, the on duty
    assistant manager, observed the liquid on the floor after Ms. Salzman fell. She
    testified that she recognized the liquid on the floor as “chicken juice.” Ms. Wells
    acknowledged that she had previously seen “chicken juice drippings” on the floor of
    the store. She also agreed that it was not unusual to see “juice drippings” on the
    floor of the grocery store.
    Mr. Schwaibold, the store manager, was not present the day Ms. Salzman
    slipped and fell; however, he similarly testified that leaking of meat juice from the
    store’s prepackaged and repackaged meat products was not a rare occurrence. In
    fact, he testified that it “happens a lot. You see it every day, every other day, every
    couple of days. It happens more than you would think it does.” He testified that
    there was “always a lot of chicken juice.” Mr. Schwaibold acknowledged that
    leaking packages was a regular issue that the store tried to address. Apparently, the
    leaking was consistent enough that, according to Mr. Schwaibold, the store
    implemented procedures to specifically address the issue, including training store
    employees to walk the display case to check for leaking packages, as well as the
    aisles to look on the floor for puddles from leaking packages. When employees
    found a leaking package, it would be sent back for repackaging, and when employees
    observed puddles on the floor of the store, they were to use the rag they carried with
    them to wipe up any spills. Mr. Schwaibold stated that the store also offered plastic
    bags for customers to use, at the customer’s discretion, to prevent leaking. Even so,
    22-CA-404                                 20
    the leaking of meat juice from the store’s prepackaged and repackaged meat products
    continued to be an issue. The leaking occurred consistently enough that Mr.
    Schwaibold testified that store employees saw it “every day, every other day, every
    couple of days.” Despite the store’s knowledge that its packaged meat products and
    repackaging methods led to hazardous puddles of meat juice on the floor, Matherne’s
    Supermarket was apparently unsuccessful in remedying the condition.
    Creation of a hazardous condition includes both direct action and the failure
    to act. Deshotel, 
    850 F.3d at 748
    . In this case, there is direct testimony that there
    apparently had been uncorrected, continuous and recurrent leaking for some time
    before Ms. Salzman’s fall. The evidence reveals that Matherne’s Supermarket knew
    of the risk of leaking and failed to prevent it. Whether a failure to fix the leaking of
    meat packaged products created the injury-causing condition is a question for the
    fact-finder to decide. Therefore, based on the circumstances in this case, we find the
    evidence is sufficient to establish a genuine issue of material fact exists for trial as
    to whether Matherne’s Supermarket created the condition that caused Ms. Salzman’s
    fall. Here, as in Deshotel, Matherne’s Supermarket was aware of and had undertaken
    steps to address the condition—in this case an issue with the packaging of its meat
    products, and particularly its repackaged products, that resulted in the leaking of
    meat juice on the floor—but apparently was unsuccessful, failing to remedy the
    issue. As the court in Deshotel stated, our holding “only permit[s] a jury to find
    [Matherne’s Supermarket] created the hazard; we make no such finding ourselves.”
    
    Id.
     Likewise, Ms. Salzman must satisfy the other provisions of La. R.S. 9:2800.6(B),
    which are not before us on appeal, before Matherne’s Supermarket can be held liable.
    Nevertheless, we find that Ms. Salzman has presented sufficient evidence to show a
    genuine issue of material fact exists for trial and the jury’s determination.
    DECREE
    Considering there is evidence sufficient to establish a genuine issue of
    22-CA-404                                 21
    material fact exists relating to whether Matherne’s Supermarket created the injury-
    causing condition in this case, we find summary judgment at this stage of the
    proceedings is inappropriate. Accordingly, we reverse the trial court’s judgment
    granting summary judgment in favor of Defendants and remand the matter for
    further proceedings in line with this opinion.
    REVERSED AND REMANDED
    22-CA-404                                 22
    SUSAN M. CHEHARDY                                                                CURTIS B. PURSELL
    CHIEF JUDGE                                                                      CLERK OF COURT
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    ROBERT A. CHAISSON                                                               LINDA M. WISEMAN
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    CORNELIUS E. REGAN, PRO TEM                      FIFTH CIRCUIT
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    REPRESENTED BY COUNSEL, AS LISTED BELOW:
    22-CA-404
    E-NOTIFIED
    40TH DISTRICT COURT (CLERK)
    HONORABLE J. STERLING SNOWDY (DISTRICT JUDGE)
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Document Info

Docket Number: 22-CA-404

Judges: J. Sterling Snowdy

Filed Date: 6/22/2023

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/21/2024