Opinion ID: 30756
Heading Depth: 2
Heading Rank: 2

Heading: Sufficiency of the Evidence of Wal-Mart's Negligence.

Text: 9
10 As this case was removed to federal court under our diversity jurisdiction, we look to Texas law for the substantive standards defining Wal-Mart's duty of care to its customers. In Texas, a customer, such as Dixon, is an invitee. As such, business owners like Wal-Mart owe a duty to exercise reasonable care to protect her from dangerous conditions in the store known or discoverable to it. 7 Notably, this is a duty requiring only reasonable care by the business owner: Texas courts have repeatedly stated that businesses are not insurers of an invitee's safety. 8 Therefore, to prove premises liability on the part of a business owner, a plaintiff must show: 11
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13 (3) the owner/operator did not exercise reasonable care to reduce or eliminate the risk; and 14 (4) the owner/operator's failure to use such care proximately caused the plaintiff's injuries. 9 15 In this case, Wal-Mart did not contest that the plastic binder on the floor constituted an unreasonable risk of harm or that Dixon was in fact injured in a trip and fall caused by this binder. Wal-Mart disputes only Dixon's allegation that it had constructive knowledge of the presence of the plastic binder on the floor. Therefore, the sole issue on appeal is whether Dixon established a sufficient evidentiary basis on which a reasonable jury could find that Wal-Mart had constructive knowledge of the plastic binder's presence on the floor. 16
17 On appeal, Dixon reiterates her trial contention that Wal-Mart had constructive knowledge of the plastic binder's presence, given its proximity to Wal-Mart employees and the length of time — at least eight hours — that inferentially it had been at that spot on the floor. She maintains that either of these propositions establishes a sufficient evidentiary basis for presenting this issue to a jury. We shall deal with each of these claims in order. 18
19 The argument that constructive knowledge can be inferred from the close physical proximity of an unreasonable risk to the employees of a premises owner was recently rejected by the Texas Supreme Court in Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Reece. 10 In that case, a Wal-Mart employee walked directly past a puddle of liquid on the floor, but did not notice the liquid until after the plaintiff had slipped on it and fallen. The plaintiff maintained that Wal-Mart had constructive knowledge by virtue of the employee's propinquity to the puddle, despite the employee's undisputed lack of actual knowledge of the liquid's presence. Wal-Mart argued that, as none of its employees knew of the spill, the plaintiff failed to bear her burden of proving knowledge, constructive or actual, on the part of a premises owner. The plaintiff in Reece did not adduce any evidence of what caused the spill or — more importantly — how long prior to her slip and fall the spill had occurred. The jury found in the plaintiff's favor, and the Texas appellate court affirmed the verdict based solely on the proposition that the Wal-Mart employee's proximity to the puddle satisfied the element of Wal-Mart's constructive knowledge of the puddle's existence. 20 In the Texas Supreme Court, Wal-Mart insisted that alone an employee's proximity to a hazard cannot establish constructive knowledge. Wal-Mart argued that such a rule would (1) require omniscience of a premises owner, (2) not a provide premises owner with a fair opportunity to inspect, correct, or warn invitees of the risk, and (3) impose constructive knowledge instantly, at the moment a hazard is created, and thus make a premises owner a de facto insurer of invitees' safety. 11 The Texas Supreme Court agreed with all of Wal-Mart's arguments, reversed the trial court and the intermediate appellate court, and rendered a take-nothing judgment against the plaintiff. 12 In so doing, the Reece court announced the rule that proximity evidence alone is insufficient to establish constructive notice absent some indication that the hazard existed long enough to give the premises owner a reasonable opportunity to discover it. 13 21 Reece further establishes that physical proximity evidence is relevant only in case-by-case determinations of constructive knowledge based on the length of time that the risk has been present. A plaintiff might be able to show, for instance, that a shorter presence is required to establish constructive knowledge for a conspicuous hazard that is near a premises owner's employees than for an inconspicuous hazard that is remote from such employees. 14 Still, the rule in Texas is that temporal evidence, not proximity evidence, is the sine qua non of a premises owner's constructive knowledge. 15 22 Dixon argued before the district court that Wal-Mart's motion for judgment as a matter of law should be rejected because the accident happened two feet from a cashier. She did not argue that this is only an additional factor for determining the reasonableness of Wal-Mart's constructive knowledge based on her temporal evidence. Neither did she adduce any evidence at trial of the conspicuousness of the plastic binder on the floor. She argued only that the plastic binder's proximity to Wal-Mart employees serves as an independent basis for finding that Wal-Mart had constructive knowledge of the plastic binder's presence on the floor. Yet, Reece mandates the conclusion that the accident's occurrence just two feet from a cashier is, by itself, nondeterminative of Wal-Mart's constructive knowledge. Thus, Dixon's proximity argument and her reliance on proximity evidence fails the legal standard under Texas law for determining a premises owner's constructive knowledge.
23 Dixon asked the jury to infer that the plastic binder was on the floor constantly for more than eight hours until her late afternoon accident, presumably having been dropped there in the early morning by the magazine or newspaper suppliers. This is simply unreasonable, given the totality of the evidence proffered at trial. Our standard of review mandates that we draw all reasonable inferences in favor of Dixon, and the applicable substantive law in this case requires a premises owner to exercise reasonable care vis-à-vis an invitee. 16 Under Texas law, a premises owner's constructive knowledge is predicated on temporal evidence because a premises owner is not an insurer of an invitee's safety, and therefore a premises owner must have the opportunity — sufficient time — to exercise reasonable care to reduce or eliminate the risk. 17 24 Most often, the reasonableness of constructive knowledge of a premises owner is defined in terms of the minimum time required for a risk to exist before it can constitute constructive knowledge. 18 To establish a premises owner's constructive knowledge of the presence of an unreasonable risk of harm, a plaintiff generally must prove that the risk existed for a time sufficiently long to permit the premises owner (or his employees) to (1) discover it and (2) correct it. For this reason, defendant premises owners often respond, as Wal-Mart did in the instant case, that the risk existed for such a brief period of time that, as premises owner, it had insufficient time for the peril to be recognized and corrected. 19 Fealty to her pleading burden and to the only evidence she was able to adduce motivated Dixon to imply at trial that (1) the source of the plastic binder was the magazine and newspaper suppliers who visited the store more than eight hours prior to her accident, and (2) the plastic binder lay there the entire eight hours, just steps from the cash register, without being seen. 25 For the jury to make this inference, however, was logically unreasonable, particularly in light of the evidence submitted by Wal-Mart, which was undisputed by Dixon. Wal-Mart's front-end manager, Jean Chatham, testified that it is part of our job constantly to survey the area in which Dixon fell and to pick up any trash. Chatham's job description required her to patrol this particular area approximately once every five minutes, specifically looking for any trash, debris, puddles, or merchandise that should be removed from the area. She further testified that the cashiers go through the same training regimen as do the managers, and that every employee is responsible for making sure that foreign objects are picked up and that any potential risk is promptly eliminated. This testimony was confirmed by the assistant store manager, Luther Fairley, who noted that picking stuff up off the floor isn't just one person's responsibility but ... belongs to all the employees at Wal-Mart. 26 In addition, the Store Director, Greg Smith, explained that all Wal-Mart employees are trained according to company policy [t]o be on the look-out at all times for merchandise on the floor, including such items as a plastic binder and other type trash. He confirmed Chatham's testimony that the front-end managers are responsible for patrolling the area around the check-out registers, making rounds approximately every five minutes or so. [T]hey do make the rounds, he said, just like myself even, my assistant managers, all of us make the rounds. We obviously try to keep everything as much as possible a hundred percent free of trash, debris and any type of safety hazard. 27 Smith noted further that, in addition to giving responsibility for cleaning activities to cashiers, front-end managers, assistant managers and himself, Wal-Mart employs a safety team, which patrols the entire store and constantly trains the employees. Smith explained: 28 What they look for is specific hazards and basically what their job duty is — we cover it every day. It's constant training. We have morning and evening meetings with our associates and the safety team does demonstrations. We do spill demonstrations. We do demonstrations on picking up trash, and we have a specific safety team, but it's everybody's duty to maintain the sales floor, including myself.... [I]t's just part of my job and my duties to keep the floor clean. 29 Also, a maintenance crew, comprising a minimum of two employees, is on duty during the busy times of the day, between say 10 [in the morning] and eight o'clock at night. Their singular job function is to walk around with a broom, dust pan and a mop and clean the floors. 30 The result of Wal-Mart's policies, its training programs, and the cleaning responsibilities of all Wal-Mart employees is palpable. Smith testified that approximately five million customers use the Longview Wal-Mart store each year, averaging about 13,700 customers each day, but that only some 50 accidents occur per year. None of this evidence — none of the testimony of Chatham, Fairley or Smith — was challenged or contradicted by Dixon. 31 Given this extensive evidence of constant searches for hazards by myriad Wal-Mart employees, and the dearth of temporal evidence by Dixon of the presence of the hazard any closer to her fall in time than eight hours, the conclusion is inescapable that any plastic binder dropped by the vendors that morning could not possibly have remained at the location of her fall for those many hours without being discovered. And, absent evidence of some other, believable period of the plastic binder's presence prior to the fall, no reasonable jury could find negligence by Wal-Mart based on constructive knowledge of the risk. When the sole source of the hazard advanced by Dixon is eliminated as being a virtual impossibility, her burden of proof of constructive knowledge fails. 32 During argument before the district court on Wal-Mart's renewed motion for judgment as a matter of law, Dixon's attorney explained that Wal-Mart must have had constructive knowledge of the presence of the plastic binder because 33 it might be something from the magazines. They stock the magazines at eight o'clock. If it was left from eight o'clock that morning to five o'clock that afternoon, that's certainly not prudent (emphasis added). 20 34 It strains credulity, let alone the bounds of logic and reason, that a plastic binder large enough to entangle Dixon's feet and cause her to fall could have lain on the floor in such a high-traffic area of the store for at least eight hours. This area was traversed by thousands of customers that day, and was under the constant surveillance of numerous Wal-Mart employees as well. Yet, Dixon would have the fact-finder believe that the plastic binder lay there for more than eight hours without a single person noticing it, let alone picking it up and removing it. She adduced no evidence that anyone — neither a customer nor an employee — noticed the plastic binder lying on the floor for over eight hours during the busiest portion of the business day in one of the most heavily trafficked areas of the store. 35 That is simply not credible. When the only source of the binder on which Dixon presented evidence is eliminated as constituting an impossibility, she is left without proof of a source, and thus without proof that the binder had been in place (1) long enough for knowledge of its presence to be imputed to Wal-Mart, but (2) not so long as to defy reason. 36 In fact, Dixon's proximity argument works in favor of Wal-Mart on this point, not against it. We have shown that it is a logical impossibility that this plastic binder remained on the floor for at least eight hours when it was only feet away from the cashiers, other Wal-Mart employees, and a legion of customers. Had the binder been dropped no later than 8:00 a.m., then in light of the evidence submitted by Wal-Mart, the plastic binder simply could not have lain there all that time without having been seen and removed. The obvious flaw in Dixon's theory is the premise that the only way the binder could have gotten to the place of the accident was to have been dropped there that morning by a vendor. Yet Dixon offered no evidence of any other source or of any time closer to the accident to place the plastic binder on the floor at the site of her trip and fall. The result is that Dixon has not met her burden to plead and prove credible facts to support even an inference of constructive knowledge of this risk on the part of Wal-Mart. 37 In a similar case, Wal-Mart Stores Inc. v. Gonzalez, the Texas Supreme Court rejected a plaintiff's logic that the presence of dirt on spilled macaroni salad justified the inference that the macaroni had been on the floor long enough to impute constructive knowledge to Wal-mart of this risk to its customers. The court explained that 38 [d]irt in macaroni salad lying on a heavily-traveled aisle is no evidence of the length of time the macaroni had been on the floor. That evidence can no more support the inference that it accumulated dirt over a long period than it can support the opposite inference that the macaroni had just been dropped on the floor and was quickly contaminated by customers and carts traversing the aisle. 21 39 The result of the Gonzalez court's rejection of this evidentiary basis for the plaintiff's implying that the risk existed for a long time was that there was no evidence that the macaroni had been on the floor long enough to charge Wal-Mart with constructive notice of this condition. 22 Concluding that the plaintiff thus failed to meet her evidentiary burden in pleading notice, the Supreme Court reversed the trial verdict in her favor. 23 40 The instant case presents the logical converse of Gonzalez. Simply because most cases focus on the minimum time requirement for constructive knowledge does not mean that there is not a maximum temporal proximity as well. Put another way, a plaintiff asserting premises-owner liability is not free to assert that a risk continued to exist unabated for some illogically long period, regardless of the factual context. If it were otherwise, plaintiffs could assert constructive knowledge of risks that were proved to have existed days or even weeks earlier. Without any reasonable limit on such temporal arguments, premises owners would indeed become de facto insurers of invitees' safety. 24 41 In this case, Dixon would infer constructive knowledge from evidence of a span of time that is simply too long to be credible. Moreover, her inference is not supported by the totality of the evidence presented at trial; on the contrary, the inference that she was able to sell to the jury is totally refuted by that very evidence. She simply asks too much of a jury to believe that the only source of the plastic binder on which Dixon tripped — the magazine suppliers — were last present more than eight hours before her fall, and that the plastic binder lay there undetected all that time. Dixon's inability to show a credible source of the hazard within a reasonable period — a time between (1) the instant before her fall and (2) an hour so remote from her fall that the plastic binder could not help but have been discovered — dooms her case. Once the early morning vendors are eliminated as even a remotely possible source, Dixon can point to no believable proximate explanation for the plastic binder's having come to rest at the point of the accident. We are thus left with a plaintiff who has failed to meet her burden of establishing Wal-Mart's constructive knowledge on the basis of plausible temporal evidence.