IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA
No. COA19-101
Filed: 18 February 2020
Mecklenburg County, No. 17-CVS-18381
STARR LYNN SHEPARD, Plaintiff,
v.
CATAWBA COLLEGE, Defendant.
Appeal by plaintiff from order entered 10 July 2018 by Judge Adam M. Conrad
in Superior Court, Mecklenburg County. Heard in the Court of Appeals 16 October
2019.
Tin, Fulton, Walker & Owen, PLLC, by Cheyenne N. Chambers, for plaintiff-
appellant.
Hedrick Gardner Kincheloe & Garofalo LLP, by M. Duane Jones, Luke P.
Sbarra, and Leila W. Rogers, for defendant-appellee.
STROUD, Judge.
Plaintiff appeals trial court order allowing defendant’s motion for summary
judgment and thus dismissing plaintiff’s action. Because plaintiff has forecast
evidence -- viewed in the light most favorable to her and giving her the benefit of any
inferences from the evidence -- which presents a genuine issue of material fact as to
defendant’s negligence as the proximate cause of her injuries sustained in her fall on
defendant’s bleachers, we reverse and remand for further proceedings.
I. Background
SHEPARD V. CATAWBA COLL.
Opinion of the Court
On 6 October 2017, plaintiff filed a complaint against defendant alleging that
she was injured by defendant’s negligence in maintaining its bleachers. Plaintiff
alleged she was attending a baseball game, and when she stood up and began to move
from her seat, a “wooden slat . . . moved in such a way that it allowed her foot to get
caught under an adjacent wooden slat and caused her to be thrown off balance and
she fell down the bleachers and was severely and permanently injured.” Defendant
answered plaintiff’s complaint, denying the allegations of negligence and alleging
plaintiff’s contributory negligence as a defense.1 On 18 May 2018, defendant filed a
motion for summary judgment under North Carolina Civil Procedure Rule 56. On 10
July 2018, the trial court granted summary judgment in favor of defendant. Plaintiff
appeals.
II. Summary Judgment
Plaintiff contends the trial court erred in granting summary judgment in favor
of defendant.
A. Standard of Review
The standard of review for a motion for summary
judgment requires that all pleadings, affidavits, answers to
interrogatories and other materials offered be viewed in
the light most favorable to the party against whom
summary judgment is sought. Summary judgment is
properly granted where there is no genuine issue of
material fact to be decided and the movant is entitled to a
judgment as a matter of law.
1 The defense of contributory negligence is not at issue on appeal, and we will not address it.
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Harrington v. Perry, 103 N.C. App. 376, 378, 406 S.E.2d 1, 2 (1991) (citation omitted).
A defendant is entitled to summary judgment as to
all or any part of a claim, N.C.G.S. § 1A–1, Rule 56(b)
(1990), if the pleadings, depositions, answers to
interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the
affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to
any material fact and that defendant is entitled to
judgment as a matter of law. Specifically, a premises owner
is entitled to summary judgment in a slip and fall case if it
can show either the non-existence of an essential element
of the plaintiff's claim or that the plaintiff has no evidence
of an essential element of her claim. Only if the movant-
defendant makes its showing is the nonmovant-plaintiff
required to present evidence. If the defendant makes its
showing, the plaintiff is required to produce a forecast of
evidence showing that there are genuine issues of material
fact for trial. All inferences of fact must be drawn against
the movant and in favor of the nonmovant.
Nourse v. Food Lion, Inc., 127 N.C. App. 235, 239, 488 S.E.2d 608, 611 (1997)
(citations, quotation marks, and brackets omitted), aff’d per curiam, 347 N.C. 666,
496 S.E.2d 379 (1998); see Bostic Packaging, Inc. v. City of Monroe, 149 N.C. App.
825, 830, 562 S.E.2d 75, 79 (2002) (“Summary judgment is a drastic measure, and
it should be used with caution, especially in a negligence case in which a jury
ordinarily applies the reasonable person standard to the facts of each case.”).
B. Factual Background
Viewing the forecast of evidence in the light most favorable to plaintiff, see
Nourse, 127 N.C. App. at 239, 488 S.E.2d at 611, the evidence tends to show that on
18 March 2016, plaintiff was a spectator at a college baseball game at Newman Park.
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Opinion of the Court
Plaintiff’s son was the pitcher in his second season of playing for defendant, Catawba
College. The spectators were seated on wooden bleachers which were constructed in
1934.
Plaintiff was seated in her “usual spot” near the press box, further up in the
bleachers than her husband, who customarily sat closer to the field at their son’s
games, but he was close enough to plaintiff to have a “perfect view” of her. Plaintiff
testified that she stood up from her seat when she suddenly fell, falling about 13 to
15 feet down the bleachers and landing on the pavement, breaking her back as her
“head went into the fence.” Plaintiff does not remember the fall itself as she suffered
major injuries that caused memory loss.
Plaintiff did not recall what happened between her fall and regaining
consciousness in the hospital, but she stated during her deposition that she
remembered she felt an issue with her foot being “trapped” immediately before her
fall occurred. Plaintiff stated in her deposition that “I was seated in the bleachers
along the first base side three rows down from the press box. I stood up, stepped to
the right; the board flexed, caught my toe and I fell down the bleachers to the ground
below.” Plaintiff recalled that her foot felt “heavy, trapped, heavy, something stuck,
something not right about it, like something was hanging onto it or it couldn’t -- it
couldn’t go anywhere.”
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Opinion of the Court
Plaintiff’s husband testified that he saw plaintiff stand up, then he turned his
head toward the field, and in the next moment saw that his wife had fallen down the
bleachers. Plaintiff’s husband stated she told him “[t]hat her foot got caught, that
she couldn’t get her foot -- evidently a board gave way and her foot fell underneath
and that propelled her down the steps.” Due to the severity of plaintiff’s injuries, she
was immediately taken to the hospital by an ambulance and her husband went with
her so neither she nor her husband examined or took photographs of the exact spot
where she fell at the time. Although plaintiff could not identify a specific board she
fell on, at her deposition, plaintiff identified the place where she had been sitting by
marking the “[g]eneral area” with a green X on a photograph of the bleachers.
On 7 December 2016, plaintiff’s expert witness, Mr. David Harlowe, examined
the bleachers. Mr. Harlowe noted in his report that he had “been performing risk
management work in the athletic and fitness industries for over 21 years.” Mr.
Harlowe stated in his deposition that his inspection was delayed until December 2016
because plaintiff’s counsel had been unable to get permission from defendant for him
to do an inspection.
Plaintiff’s counsel had notified defendant of plaintiff’s claim by certified mail
on 11 May 2016, within two months after her fall, and specifically requested “access
to the stadium so that our expert witness can inspect the stadium.” Plaintiff’s counsel
also asked defendant to
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Opinion of the Court
accept this letter as our formal request to inspect and
notice, pursuant to the law prohibiting spoliation, to not
alter, repair, destroy, change, modify or take any remedial
measure to change the condition of the stadium as it
existed on the date in question prior to our opportunity to
conduct a full inspection of the facility.
Plaintiff’s counsel sent another certified letter to defendant on 14 June 2016, again
repeating his request for access to the stadium for inspection by plaintiff’s expert
witness.2 The letter stated, “I again point out Catawba College is on notice to not
alter, repair, destroy, change, modify or take any remedial measures to change the
condition of Newsome Park as it existed on the date in question prior to our
opportunity to conduct a full inspection and analysis of the facility.” In August 2016,
plaintiff’s counsel repeated his request to defendant’s insurance carrier.
Despite plaintiff’s repeated requests for defendant to preserve the condition of
the bleachers pending an inspection, on 7 December 2016, the day Mr. Harlowe went
to do the inspection, the bleachers in the area noted by plaintiff as where she fell were
being disassembled. Mr. Harlowe saw workers and equipment in the area where they
were disassembling “where the incident happened.” Because several rows of boards
in the area had already been removed, Mr. Hawlowe had to do the inspection of that
area “from the sidewalk at the bottom.” Mr. Harlowe stated in his deposition that the
2 The record indicates that defendant received both certified letters.
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Opinion of the Court
bleachers in that area were disassembled either that day or the day before his arrival.
“Only the metal frame” was left in the area where plaintiff had fallen.
In his inspection of the rest of the stadium, Mr. Harlowe “discovered multiple
examples of rot and decay in other sections of the stadium where spectators were
exposed to dangerous conditions.” Mr. Harlowe’s report noted that “[o]n initial
viewing, the stadium looked like a relic from the World War II era in which it was
constructed. My first impression was that it was a stadium in disrepair that had
been neglected for many years.” “According to the Catawba College athletic website,
the Newman Park grandstand was erected in 1934. The site also states the ‘recent’
improvements were completed in 1996 and 2004, but does not state that the bleachers
were updated in either of those projects.”
Because the bleachers in the area where plaintiff fell had been disassembled
just prior to his arrival, Mr. Harlowe was unable to take photographs of that area of
the bleachers as it had existed when plaintiff fell, but he had access to photographs
of the area taken prior to December 2016. The photos attached to the report show
discolored wooden boards on a metal frame. “[T]he boards that made up the
walkways and stairs for the stadium were old and rotting. Make-shift steps had been
created by someone over the years to fill the large gap between seatboards and
footboards.” “[T]he wood used for stairs, footboards and seatboards was in poor
condition throughout the stadium and particularly in the section where the plaintiff
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Opinion of the Court
fell.” “The gap between seatboards and footboards in the stadium averaged
approximately 13 1/2”. This is three times larger than the recommended 4” gap stated
by the [Consumer Product Safety Commission].” Mr. Harlowe opined “that the
bleachers in Newman Park have never been inspected by a qualified person.” “When
viewing the wood used it is my opinion that the wood was either untreated or had
surpassed its life-expectancy for safe use because of the visible rotting viewed at the
time of the inspection.” Mr. Harlowe concluded from his inspection
that Catawba College has severely neglected the bleachers
in the Newman Park baseball stadium which directly led
to the plaintiff being injured. The inspection showed that
most of the footboards, seatboards, and make-shift steps
have been present for many years and show advanced signs
of rot and lost rigidity when stepped on. It is evident from
the condition of the bleachers that no safety inspections
have ever occurred or if they have then the school has never
taken any actions to correct the hazards. It is my opinion
that the bleachers should have been condemned many
years ago and replaced with aluminum bleachers.
Additionally, the fact that a work crew was in the process
of dismantling the bleachers while I was inspecting the
stadium, and without any visible permit, shows that the
school was trying to fix the problem under the radar to
potentially reduce their liability in this case. In my opinion
this was a direct admission of guilt on their part for their
negligence in taking care of the stadium bleachers.
Defendant’s forecast of evidence contradicts some of plaintiff’s evidence
regarding her location and actions at the time of the fall. For example, Mr. Jeffrey
Childress, defendant’s assistant athletic director and director of tennis at the time of
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Opinion of the Court
plaintiff’s fall, testified that plaintiff was standing on the steps and holding the
railing when she turned to look back, perhaps watching a foul ball, and missed a step
and fell. Mr. Childress did not believe the condition of the steps contributed to her
fall. Two other witnesses, both Catawba College students who were working at the
game, also testified plaintiff was quickly descending the steps when she fell and that
they had attended other games at this stadium and had never had any issues nor
known of any issues with the bleachers. But no matter which witnesses a jury finds
most credible, for purposes of summary judgment, we must view the evidence in the
light most favorable to plaintiff. See id.
C. Negligence Claim
Plaintiff contends the trial court erred in granting summary judgment in favor
of defendant because she established a prima facie case of negligence.
In order for a negligence claim to survive summary
judgment, the plaintiff must forecast evidence tending to
show (1) that defendant failed to exercise proper care in the
performance of a duty owed plaintiff; (2) the negligent
breach of that duty was a proximate cause of plaintiff’s
injury; and (3) a person of ordinary prudence should have
foreseen that plaintiff’s injury was probable under the
circumstances. . . .
The ultimate issue which must be decided in
evaluating the merits of a premises liability claim is
determining whether Defendants breached the duty to
exercise reasonable care in the maintenance of their
premises for the protection of lawful visitors. In order to
prove a defendant’s negligence, a plaintiff must show that
the defendant either (1) negligently created the condition
causing the injury, or (2) negligently failed to correct the
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Opinion of the Court
condition after actual or constructive notice of its existence.
A landowner is under no duty to protect a visitor against
dangers either known or so obvious and apparent that they
reasonably may be expected to be discovered and need not
warn of any apparent hazards or circumstances of which
the invitee has equal or superior knowledge. However, if a
reasonable person would anticipate an unreasonable risk
of harm to a visitor on his property, notwithstanding the
lawful visitor’s knowledge of the danger or the obvious
nature of the danger, the landowner has a duty to take
precautions to protect the lawful visitor.
Burnham v. S&L Sawmill, Inc., 229 N.C. App. 334, 339–40, 749 S.E.2d 75, 79–80
(2013) (citations, quotation marks, ellipses, and brackets omitted). Further,
[w]hile not an insurer of its customers’ safety, defendant is
charged with knowledge of unsafe conditions of which it
has notice and is under a duty of ordinary care to give
warning of hidden dangers. Evidence that the condition
(causing the fall) on the premises existed for some period
of time prior to the fall can support a finding of constructive
notice.
Carter v. Food Lion, Inc., 127 N.C. App. 271, 275, 488 S.E.2d 617, 620 (1997).
The owner or proprietor of premises is not an insurer of the
safety of his invitees. But he is under a duty to exercise
ordinary care to keep that portion of his premises designed
for their use in a reasonably safe condition so as not to
expose them unnecessarily to danger, (but not that portion
reserved for himself and his employees), and to give
warning of hidden dangers or unsafe conditions of which he
has knowledge, express or implied.
McElduff v. McCord, 10 N.C. App. 80, 82, 178 S.E.2d 15, 17 (1970) (citation and
quotation marks omitted).
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Opinion of the Court
Defendant contends plaintiff failed to establish two key requirements for her
claim: proximate cause and notice of the alleged defective condition. Both of
defendant’s arguments focus on plaintiff’s inability to identify the exact place where
she fell and the condition of the exact board at issue. Defendant contends that since
plaintiff cannot identify the exact place where her foot was trapped, she cannot show
either defendant’s notice of a defective condition in that spot or that a defective
condition in that spot was the proximate cause of her fall. We turn first to notice of
the alleged defective condition.
1. Notice of Defective Condition
Defendant argues plaintiff did not present any
conclusive evidence demonstrating where she fell, or
identified any specific condition of the bleachers that
contributed to her fall. Since Mrs. Shepard and her expert
did not identify the location and cause of her fall, it is
impossible for Catawba to have had actual or
constructive notice of an unknown and unidentified
defective condition that allegedly caused Mrs. Shepard to
fall. As such, Mrs. Shepard has failed to forecast any
evidence of a prima facie case of negligence against
Catawba.
Defendant primarily relies on Roumillat v. Simplistic Enterprises, Inc., 331
N.C. 57, 414 S.E.2d 339 (1992) abrogated by Nelson v. Freeland, 349 N.C. 615, 507
S.E.2d 882 (1998),3 in contending plaintiff failed to demonstrate it had constructive
3 Nelson v. Freeland, 349 N.C. 615, 507 S.E.2d 882 (1998), notes that the distinction in the level of
care needed for invitees versus licensees, as noted in Roumaillat, is abolished, but Roumillat’s
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Opinion of the Court
knowledge of the allegedly defective condition. In Roumillat, the plaintiff slipped and
fell in a parking lot of a Bojangles restaurant. Id. at 61, 414 S.E.2d at 340-41.
Plaintiff contended that there was slippery grease-like substance in the parking lot
and this caused her to fall. Id. at 61, 414 S.E.2d at 341. The Supreme Court held that
the plaintiff failed to forecast any evidence, other than her “bald assertion” that the
“defendant knew or should have known of the greasy substance in its parking lot.”
Id. at 65, 414 S.E.2d at 343. The Court noted that the area was well-lit and plaintiff
had “exited the restaurant within a few feet of the path she used to enter the
restaurant, and her husband himself, less than an hour before, successfully traversed
the very area on which plaintiff slipped.” Id. at 66, 414 S.E.2d at 343-44.
As there was no indication of how long the substance had been there, how it
got there, or that any of the defendant’s employees had been notified of its presence,
the Supreme Court noted that
[w]hen the unsafe condition is attributable to third parties
or an independent agency, plaintiff must show that the
condition existed for such a length of time that defendant
knew or by the exercise of reasonable care should have
known of its existence, in time to have removed the danger
or to have given proper warning of its presence.
Id. at 64, 414 S.E.2d 343 (citation and quotation marks omitted) (emphasis modified).
discussion of the law regarding actual or constructive notice of a defective condition is still
precedential.
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Opinion of the Court
The Court contrasted the plaintiff’s fall on the substance to the fall of a grocery
store customer on an alleged unsafe condition created by a third party in Warren v.
Rosso:
In Warren, a grocery store patron slipped and fell as
a result of human excrement that was deposited on the
floor of defendant’s store. In support of its motion for
summary judgment, defendant submitted affidavits of
three employees, each stating that the excrement was
deposited immediately before plaintiff stepped in it.
Plaintiff submitted her own affidavit contradicting
defendant’s evidence that the excrement had fallen onto
the floor immediately prior to her stepping in it. In her
affidavit, plaintiff stated that the excrement was dried and
had footprints in it. In her answers to defendant’s
interrogatories, plaintiff stated that she was at the
checkout counter for approximately fifteen minutes and
during that time she saw no one enter or leave the store.
Moreover, in her affidavit, plaintiff stated that an
employee of the store informed her that he knew the
excrement was on the floor but that it was not his job to
clean it up. On this basis, the Court of Appeals concluded
that a dispute existed as to a material fact regarding the
length of time the excrement was actually on the floor,
making summary judgment for defendant inappropriate.
Id. at 65, 414 S.E.2d at 343.
The Supreme Court also noted Southern Railway, where the plaintiff “slipped
and fell on some grain lying in a work area in which plaintiff regularly walked and
had slipped time after time.” Id. at 65-66, 414 S.E.2d at 343 (quotation marks
omitted). The plaintiff in Southern Railway forecast evidence that
[d]espite receiving complaints about the presence of the
grain, defendant never took steps to remedy the situation.
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Opinion of the Court
Because defendant was on notice of the dangerous
condition and plaintiff had no choice but to encounter the
condition in completing his job duties, the question of the
reasonableness of defendant’s failure to take additional
precautions was for the jury to decide.
Id. at 66, 414 S.E.2d at 343 (citation omitted).
The primary difference between this case and Roumillat is that the unsafe
condition in Roumillat was created by a third party, so evidence of the time period the
condition had existed was crucial to show the defendant’s notice or constructive notice
of the condition. As to the greasy spot in the Bojangle’s parking lot, the Court quoted
Hinson v. Cato’s, Inc:
Even if a negligent situation could be
assumed here, had it existed a week, a day, an
hour, or one minute? The record is silent; and
since the plaintiff must prove her case, we
cannot assume, which is just a guess, that the
condition had existed long enough to give the
defendant notice, either actual or implied.
The plaintiff has failed to meet the
requirements which permit the cause to be
submitted to the jury.
271 N.C. 738, 739, 157 S.E.2d 537, 538.
Id. at 67, 414 S.E.2d at 344.
Roumillat and defendant’s argument both address unsafe conditions created
by a third party. But in this case, the alleged dangerous condition was not created
by a third party; the bleachers were constructed by defendant in 1934 and defendant
was responsible for maintenance of the bleachers since their construction. This
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Opinion of the Court
situation cannot be compared to an ephemeral greasy spot of which the landowner
had not been notified, which may have existed only for “a week, a day, an hour, or
one minute[.]” Id.
Plaintiff must show “that the condition had existed long enough to give the
defendant notice, either actual or implied.” Id. Here, plaintiff did forecast evidence
that the dilapidated condition of the bleachers had existed for a long time and
defendant should have discovered the condition upon reasonable inspection.
Plaintiff’s evidence tends to show that defendant failed to maintain or inspect the
wooden bleachers constructed over 80 years ago and used regularly for sporting
events and that the wooden boards had deteriorated and weakened throughout the
entire structure; this is evidence of at least constructive notice of the dangerous
condition of the bleachers.
The ultimate issue which must be decided in evaluating the
merits of a premises liability claim, however, is whether
the defendant breached the duty to exercise reasonable
care in the maintenance of its premises for the protection
of lawful visitors.
Reasonable care requires that the landowner
not unnecessarily expose a lawful visitor to
danger and give warning of hidden hazards of
which the landowner has express or implied
knowledge. This duty includes an obligation
to exercise reasonable care with regards to
reasonably foreseeable injury by an animal.
However, premises liability and failure to
warn of hidden dangers are claims based on a
true negligence standard which focuses
attention upon the pertinent issue of whether
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Opinion of the Court
the landowner acted as a reasonable person
would under the circumstances.
Rolan v. N.C. Dep’t of Agric. & Consumer Servs., 233 N.C. App. 371, 382, 756 S.E.2d
788, 795 (2014) (citations, quotation marks, ellipses, and brackets omitted).
Plaintiff’s forecast of evidence was not based upon a claim of an individual
weakened or broken board which may not have been discovered, even if defendant
had regularly inspected and maintained the bleachers, but instead tends to show that
the entire structure had been neglected for many years. The wooden boards were
rotting and decaying such that even a cursory inspection, according to plaintiff’s
expert, would have revealed the defective condition. Plaintiff’s evidence is sufficient
to create a genuine issue of material fact that defendant knew, or should have known
in the exercise of reasonable care, of the dangerous conditions created by the allegedly
rotting and decaying boards in the bleachers.
2. Proximate Cause
Defendant also argues that plaintiff has failed to show that the defective
condition of the bleacher was the proximate cause of her fall. Since plaintiff could
not identify the exact place where her foot was caught, defendant contends she cannot
show that a defective board caused her fall. Defendant focuses on two cases -- Gibson
v. Ussery, 196 N.C. App. 140, 143, 675 S.E.2d 666, 668 (2009) and Hedgepeth v. Rose’s
Stores, 40 N.C. App. 11, 14, 251 S.E.2d 894, 896 (1979) -- in contending plaintiff failed
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to properly forecast evidence that the allegedly defective bleachers were the
proximate cause of her injuries.
In Gibson, this Court affirmed the trial court’s order granting a directed verdict
for the defendant, 196 N.C. App.140, 146, 675 S.E.2d 666, 670 (2009), based upon the
absence of any evidence that a defective condition of stairs caused plaintiff to fall:
plaintiff presented evidence in the form of witness
testimony that Cynthia fell forward on the staircase, and
that she did not appear to trip on anything. Testimony also
showed that she was one of several to descend the
staircase, but the only one to fall; none of the witnesses
noticed any problems with the condition of the staircase as
they descended. One witness testified that she went back
to inspect the stairs and found the third step from the
bottom to wobble to and fro under her foot. However, there
was no testimony about which stair Cynthia fell on and no
testimony that anyone observed what caused her to fall.
We agree with the trial court’s conclusion that this
evidence, taken in the light most favorable to plaintiff, does
not permit a finding of all elements of a negligence claim
against defendants. In evaluating the record, we look for
evidence that takes the element of proximate cause out of
the realm of suspicion. All of the testimony, taken in the
light most favorable to plaintiff, provides no more than
mere speculation that defendants’ alleged negligence was
the proximate cause of Cynthia’s fall and the injuries that
may have resulted from it. Doubtless Cynthia was injured
in some manner as a result of her fall, but there is
insufficient evidence to support a reasonable inference that
the injury was the result of defendants’ negligence.
Id., at 144, 675 S.E.2d at 668–69 (emphasis added) (quotation marks omitted).
In Hedgepeth, the plaintiff contended that the defendant failed to maintain
stairs in a reasonably safe condition based upon a slick, worn metal strip on the
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Opinion of the Court
stairway and the presence of potted plants on the steps which prevented her from
using the stairrail.
The only evidence introduced by the plaintiff as to
the condition of the step on which she fell was that it was
worn and that it was very slick. Plaintiff, however, does not
know on which step she fell, or even which foot slipped and
caused her to fall. There is no evidence in this record that
the condition of the step upon which plaintiff slipped was
any different from that of the entire flight of steps. Plaintiff's
evidence tending to show that the steps had a metal strip
on them, and that the metal strip was worn and that the
steps were very slick apparently refers to all the steps.
This is not sufficient evidence to support a finding by the
jury that the steps had become so worn that their use would
be hazardous to the store’s patrons. The unsupported
allegations by the plaintiff that the set of steps on which she
fell were worn or slick, without evidence of the particular
defective condition that caused the fall, is insufficient to
overcome a motion for a directed verdict.
40 N.C. App. 11, 14–15, 251 S.E.2d 894, 896 (emphases added) (quotation marks
omitted).
This Court also rejected the plaintiff’s argument that the obstruction of the
stairrail by plants caused her fall, since she did not actually know what caused her
to trip, and she could only speculate that she would have been able to avoid a fall by
holding onto the rail
Plaintiff has the burden to show the cause of her fall. The
evidence introduced by plaintiff leaves the cause of her fall
a matter of conjecture. There is no presumption or
inference of negligence from the mere fact that an invitee
fell to his injury while on the premises, and the doctrine of
res ipsa loquitur does not apply to a fall or injury of a
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Opinion of the Court
patron or invitee on the premises, but the plaintiff has the
burden of showing negligence and proximate cause.
Plaintiff has failed to meet this burden.
Id. at 16, 251 S.E.2d 894, 897 (citations and quotation marks omitted).
This case is different from Gibson and Hedgepeth because plaintiff did clearly
identify the place she was sitting in the bleachers, “along the first base side three
rows down from the press box[,]” that she stood, stepped to the right, felt a board flex,
catch her toe, and trap her foot, which resulted in her fall. See Gibson 196 N.C. App.
at 144, 675 S.E.2d at 668–69; Hedgepeth, 40 N.C. App. at 14–16, 251 S.E.2d at 896–
97. Plaintiff had marked the spot with an “X” on a photograph to illustrate her
statements in her deposition. Further, plaintiff’s husband witnessed her stand up in
the area and saw where she fell.4 Plaintiff’s expert provided a detailed report as to
the negligence of defendant in failing to weather-treat, repair, replace, or otherwise
address outdoor rotten wooden bleachers with boards that were at least 75 years old,
perhaps much older.
Defendant also argues that Mr. Harlowe did not inspect the area where
plaintiff fell because she did not identify where she fell: “Even Mrs. Shepard’s expert,
David Harlowe, testified that he inspected and took photos on the opposite side of the
stadium from where Mrs. Shepard was sitting. Again, this was because Mr. Harlowe
4 Defendant’s witnesses contend that plaintiff did not fall at her seat but that she was walking down
the steps when she fell. But for purposes of summary judgment, we must take the evidence in the
light most favorable to plaintiff. Nourse, 127 N.C. App. at 239, 488 S.E.2d at 611. There is a genuine
issue of material fact regarding where plaintiff fell.
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Opinion of the Court
did not know where Mrs. Shepard fell so his inspection was focused on the entire
stadium.” (Emphasis added.) But we agree with plaintiff that this argument
misrepresents Mr. Harlowe’s testimony:
[Defendant] misrepresented Harlowe’s deposition
testimony by asserting that he inspected the entire
stadium because he did not know where Mrs. Shepard fell.
Harlowe knew where Shepard fell. In fact, when Harlowe
visited Catawba he noticed at the outset that Catawba
was in the process of reconstructing the bleachers in
question: They were actually disassembling -- they had
taken down the first three or four rows near the press box
I don’t know what they did, but those boards were gone.
And when asked why he did not visit the grandstand
sooner, Harlowe testified that he waiting for Catawba’s
permission to inspect the premises.
(Citations, quotation marks, ellipses, and brackets omitted.)
While defendant is correct that plaintiff was unable to identify the exact board
she stepped on, she did identify the specific area where she was sitting and then fell.
Plaintiff’s evidence also shows that the boards in the bleachers were over 75 years
old, rotting, decaying, and flexed easily. Plaintiff testified that the board flexed
easily, trapping her foot, and causing her fall.
Although we have already noted the essential factual differences between
Gibson and Hedgepeth, we find it imperative to note another distinguishing feature
of this case -- the potential spoliation of the evidence by defendant. Here, where
defendant was on notice of plaintiff’s claim and her repeated requests to inspect the
bleachers prior to any destruction or repair of the area, the evidence of defendant’s
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Opinion of the Court
removal of the boards in the exact area where plaintiff fell immediately prior to the
inspection by Mr. Harlowe creates an “adverse inference” against defendant that
evidence from an expert inspection of the area where plaintiff fell would be harmful
to defendant:
“Destruction of potentially relevant evidence
obviously occurs along a continuum of fault—ranging from
innocence through the degrees of negligence to
intentionality.” Welsh v. United States, 844 F.2d 1239, 1246
(6th Cir. 1988). Although destruction of evidence in bad
faith “or in anticipation of trial may strengthen the
spoliation inference, such a showing is not essential to
permitting the inference.” Rhode Island Hospital, 674
A.2d at 1234 (citations omitted); see Vodusek v. Bayliner
Marine Corp., 71 F.3d 148, 156 (4th Cir. 1995) (adverse
inference proper where plaintiffs, although not acting in
bad faith, permanently destroyed relevant evidence during
investigative efforts), and Henderson v. Hoke, 21 N.C. 119,
146 (1835) (“[i]t is sufficient if [the evidence] be suppressed,
without regard to the intent of that act”); see also Hamann
v. Ridge Tool Co., 213 Mich.App. 252, 539 N.W.2d 753,
756–57 (1995) (“[w]hether the evidence was destroyed or
lost accidentally or in bad faith is irrelevant, because the
opposing party suffered the same prejudice”).
McLain v. Taco Bell Corp., 137 N.C. App. 179, 184, 527 S.E.2d 712, 716 (2000).
The timing of defendant’s disassembly of the exact area of the bleachers where
plaintiff had fallen immediately prior to Mr. Harlowe’s inspection could have been an
unfortunate and innocent coincidence, but taking the evidence in the light most
favorable to plaintiff, see Nourse, 127 N.C. App. at 239, 488 S.E.2d at 611, the record
not only allows an adverse inference as to the condition of the boards in the area
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Opinion of the Court
against defendant, but would also allow an inference that defendant’s destruction of
the evidence was in bad faith.5 See generally McLain, 137 N.C. App. at 184, 527
S.E.2d at 716.
At the summary judgment hearing, defendant’s counsel purported to address
the spoliation argument as follows:
Your Honor, typically in these cases what would happen is
an engineer would go out. Mr. Chandler [,plaintiff’s
counsel,] through the deposition testimony, went out to the
facility. There’s been some allegation in the brief of
spoliation of evidence, and by answering your question I can
also respond to spoliation. There is actually no spoliation.
Mr. Chambers [(sic)] was there, took video of the facility.[6]
And typically in those circumstances an engineer would go
out and would say, well these boards are in or not in
tolerance, an accepted tolerance. And there would be
weight, a load that would be put on them, and an engineer
would be able to calculate the energy that’s put on a board
and the engineer would be able to say, well these are within
or without of tolerance and accepted standards. Those
standards are usually the ANSI standards or ASTM
standards for bleacher safety or general engineering
standards. An engineer would be able to say, based on this
load and the amount of energy, these aren’t safe stairs. We
know video was taken by Mr. Chandler when he entered
the facility, when he had access to the facility.
5 Defendant’s counsel before the trial court and on appeal stated to the trial court that his firm was
not yet involved in the case between June 2016 and December 2016. Defendant’s counsel appeared in
the case when the answer was filed in December 2017. We are not suggesting any bad faith on the
part of defendant’s counsel.
6 It is unclear how an attorney’s video of the bleachers could substitute for testing of the strength of
the boards. The record before this Court did not explain why defendant never responded to plaintiff’s
counsel’s requests for access to the facility for a formal inspection by the expert witness.
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(Emphasis added.)
But in actuality defendant’s counsel did not explain why the disassembly of the
stadium was not spoliation. Instead, defendant’s attorney explained the type of
inspection typically done in “these cases” and although plaintiff’s expert was prevented
from doing that type of inspection where plaintiff had fallen, he proceeded to argue a
video tape was sufficient and comparable to “an engineer . . . able to calculate the
energy that’s put on a board and . . . able to say, well these are within or without of
tolerance and accepted standards.” As plaintiff’s counsel argued in response:
Well, I think what our expert would say is that the stadium
was full of rotten boards. I mean, in his report he says: It
is in my opinion the bleachers should have been condemned
many years ago and replaced. And that’s what actually
happened in this case after we requested to inspect the
stadium. We sent three letters to the college, two to the
college, one to the college’s insurance company, asking to
allow our expert to come inspect the stadium. We got no
response to that. Now they want to take the position, well
you can just go on down there and inspect the stadium any
time you want to. Well, that wasn’t what they said. They
didn’t call me up or send me a letter or send me an e-mail
and say, you can go inspect the stadium any time you want.
They basically ignored us until they started tearing the
stadium down. Coincidentally, our expert happened to
show up unannounced because I eventually told him, look,
they are not going to respond to us. You might as well try
to go in and get in the stadium, see if you can do your
inspection. The day he showed up, they are already
dismantling the stadium. They didn’t replace one or two
boards, they are replacing all the boards, which supports
our position that it wasn’t just one board or two boards or
three boards, the entire stadium had these boards that
were rotten, that had shown advanced signs of weather and
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Opinion of the Court
age and loss of rigidity.
Furthermore, even if defendant’s alleged non-responsiveness to the request for
inspection coupled with the timing of the disassembly was innocent, the prejudice to
plaintiff is the same. See id.
Taking the evidence in the light most favorable to plaintiff, she has established
the requisite forecast of evidence for a claim of negligence: defendant owed a duty to
plaintiff to inspect and maintain the bleachers to ensure they were not in a dangerous
state of disrepair; defendant’s failure to properly exercise that duty and maintain the
bleachers resulted in weakened and unstable boards which caught plaintiff’s foot and
caused her fall; plaintiff’s serious injury was foreseeable in light of the fact that the
bleachers were approximately 82 years old and composed of weakened and rotting
wood; and due to the age and state of the wood defendant had at the very least,
constructive notice of the defect. See Burnham, 229 N.C. App. at 339–40, 749 S.E.2d
at 79–80. Plaintiff sufficiently identified the place she fell and the reason for her fall.
To the extent plaintiff’s evidence lacks detail as to the state of the boards in the exact
area from which she fell, the jury could draw an adverse inference from defendant’s
removal of the boards after plaintiff’s repeated requests to not change the area before
inspection. See McLain, 137 N.C. App. at 184, 527 S.E.2d at 716.
III. Conclusion
The only question before this Court is whether plaintiff forecast enough
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Opinion of the Court
evidence to survive summary judgment. Taking the evidence in the light most
favorable to her and drawing all inferences in her favor, the evidence presents a
genuine issue of material fact as to exactly where and how plaintiff fell. Based upon
plaintiff’s evidence, a jury could find that defendant failed to use reasonable care to
inspect and maintain the wooden bleachers; that many of the boards were weakened
and unstable; and that plaintiff’s foot was caught on a weakened board that flexed
when she stood up, tripping her and causing her to fall. A jury could also infer from
defendant’s disassembly of the bleachers after plaintiff’s repeated requests to allow
inspection that the results of such an inspection of the area where plaintiff fell would
have been harmful to defendant. We reverse the order of the trial court granting
summary judgment in favor of defendant and remand for further proceedings
consistent with this opinion.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Judge INMAN concurs.
Judge BERGER concurs in the result only.
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