Ex Parte Harold L. Martin Distributing Co.
Ex Parte Harold L. Martin Distributing Co.
Opinion
Harold L. Martin Distributing Company, Inc., d/b/a Martin Food Mart No. 5 ("Martin"), sought certiorari review of a judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals, which reversed a summary judgment entered in its favor against Terry Joanne Williams. We granted review; we now reverse and remand.
The operative facts out of which this action arose are set forth in the opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals:
Williams v. Harold L. Martin Distributing Co., [Ms. 2971300, May 21, 1999]"[Martin] owns several gas station/convenience stores in the Hamilton area. [Martin] was a `jobber' for [Chevron U.S.A., Inc. (`Chevron')], and it sold Chevron's gasoline and its other fuel products through its outlets.
"Around noon on February 27, 1995, Williams drove her automobile into the gas-pump area of one of [Martin's] stores to buy gasoline. Williams had been to this convenience store before . . . . After Williams finished filling her tank with gasoline, she walked toward the entrance of the store to pay for her gasoline. Before she reached the entrance, she tripped and fell outside the front door, in the area of the sidewalk, curb, and wheelchair ramp. Williams was injured as a result of her fall."
Williams sued Martin and Chevron, alleging that Martin "had negligently constructed and negligently maintained a wheelchair ramp and adjacent curb and sidewalk and that its negligence had caused her to fall and be injured." Id. at 307. The trial court granted the defendants' motions for a summary judgment, and Williams appealed. The Court of Civil Appeals, with two Judges dissenting, reversed the judgment insofar as it related to Martin, but affirmed the summary judgment insofar as it related to Chevron. We granted Martin's petition for certiorari review to determine whether the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals, as to Martin, is consistent with caselaw established by this Court.1 We conclude that it is not.
In this premises-liability case, the elements of negligence "`are the same as those in any tort litigation: duty, breach of duty, cause in fact, proximate or legal cause, and damages.'" E.R. Squibb Sons, Inc.v. Cox,
Williams's theory of the case was that Martin had negligently constructed and maintained the "sidewalk, curb, and wheelchair ramp." In support of this theory, she presented the affidavit testimony of *Page 315
her expert, Rud Robison, who, she says, "identified a number of verytechnical ways in which the area where [she] fell was not in compliance with the construction standards promulgated by the Americans with Disabilities Act[,
The fatal defect in Williams's case is that she failed to present evidence indicating that the "very technical ways" in which she says Martin failed to comply with the ADA were, in any way, involved in a chain of causation resulting in her fall. In fact, she could not identifythe cause of her fall. In this connection, she testified by deposition as follows:
"Q. [By Martin's counsel] Thank you. Yes. Now, back to my second part of my question, I'm just trying to find out if you can say, only if you can say, do you remember what part of the curb it was that you say you tripped on?
"A. [By Williams] No, I don't.
"Q. Would you agree with me that as far as you know you think you tripped on the curb itself?
"A. As far as I know. That's what I think I tripped on.
"Q. Well, is your allegation that you tripped?
"A. Yes. There was nothing else there.
"Q. Right. And was it one foot got caught?
"A. Yes.
". . . .
"Q. The fact that there is that wheelchair ramp, that didn't have anything to do with your particular trip, did it?
"A. I don't know, because I really didn't see — you know — I really didn't see what I tripped on. I didn't notice anything there at the time.
"Q. Okay. So you couldn't say one way or the other what it was that caused you to trip, is that fair to say?
"A. Right. There was nothing there when I got up that I could tell.
"Q. Okay. Would it be fair to say that you would have to, at least sitting here, you would have to speculate as to whether it was the curb, this part of the curb to the right of where you fell or part of the curb to the left of where you fell? That would be just speculation, would it not?
"A. Right."
(Clerk's Record, at 196-98.) (Emphasis added.)
Williams also testified that nothing blocked her view of the curb. She stated that she was aware that curbs present an element of risk and that when encountering a curb she should take care to avoid injury. The unavoidable conclusion one must draw from Williams's testimony is that the cause of her fall is a matter of pure speculation.
But Alabama juries are not permitted to speculate as to the cause of an accident. See Brookwood Medical Ctr. v. Lindstrom, 1980526, February 11, 2000]
This case is analogous to Tice v. Tice,
For these reasons, the trial court properly granted Martin's summary-judgment motion. Therefore, the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals, to the extent it reversed the summary judgment, is reversed and the cause is remanded.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Hooper, C.J., and Maddox, Houston, See, Lyons, Brown, Johnstone, and England, JJ., concur.
Other differences in the cases were illustrated by Judge Thompson in his dissent in this case:
Williams v. Harold L. Martin Distributing Co., supra, 769 So.2d at 312 (Thompson, J., dissenting) (citations omitted)."In Woodward, the plaintiff claimed that on a night when she was visiting the defendant's hospital for the first time, she tripped and fell over an unmarked curb. A flat wheelchair ramp had been cut into the sidewalk at the location of her fall. The plaintiff in Woodward testified in her deposition that as she exited the hospital's parking garage she encountered a bright light that shone in her face. The plaintiff testified that the contrast between the light in the parking garage and the light outside caused the walkway where she fell to give the appearance of `one massive area of cement.'
"In the present case, Williams had visited [Martin's] gasoline station previously; in Woodward, the plaintiff had never before been to the defendant's hospital. Williams testified that her accident occurred at noon. In Woodward, the plaintiff fell at night, after allegedly being blinded by a bright light. Although it was an overcast day when Williams fell, the record contains no evidence of anything that might have obstructed her view, such as the alleged blinding effect of the light in Woodward."
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Ex Parte Harold L. Martin Distributing Company, Inc., D/B/A Martin Food Mart No. 5. (In Re: Terry Joanne Williams v. Harold L. Martin Distributing Company, Inc., D/B/A Martin Food Mart No. 5 and Chevron U.S.A., Inc.)
- Cited By
- 51 cases
- Status
- Published