DANIEL G. MARTIN, Magistrate Judge.
After Plaintiff Monique Fultz ("Fultz") slipped and fell while shopping at a Target store, she filed this lawsuit against Defendant Target Corporation ("Target") alleging negligence under Illinois common law. In turn, Target filed a third-party complaint against Prestige Maintenance USA, Ltd. ("Prestige"), which provided overnight housekeeping services at that particular store under a contract with Target. The parties consented to this Court's jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 636(c), and Target has moved for summary judgment against Fultz. Because there is no genuine issue of material fact and Target is entitled to judgment as a matter of law on Fultz's negligence claim, the Court grants Target's Motion for Summary Judgment [59].
On May 3, 2012, Fultz arrived at the Target Broadview store at about 8 a.m. to do some shopping. The store was not very busy or crowded. That day Fultz was wearing platform shoes with high heels. The platform of the soles of the shoes was about 1 inch high and the heels were about 2 to 3 inches high. After shopping for about ten minutes, Fultz slipped and fell. Prior to falling, Fultz was walking through an aisle of the store, carrying her purse and an item of clothing in her right hand and a cell phone in her left hand which she was holding up to her left ear. When she fell, Fultz was talking on her cell phone with her sister. Video from the day of the incident shows that at about 8:38 a.m., Fultz's left foot slipped and she fell to the floor, landing on her buttocks and left hand.
Geneva Martin, a store employee, came to Fultz's assistance seconds after the fall. Martin did not see Fultz fall nor ask her how she fell. Martin observed Fultz standing and in an upright position. Martin testified that she "scooted" her feet across the floor and found the floor to be dry and "not slippery at all." Doc. 65 at 18, ¶ 20. Fultz disputes, however, whether the floor that Martin "scooted" her feet across was the precise area where Fultz actually fell. But it is undisputed that Fultz did not see or feel any liquid, solid material, debris, or anything else on the floor that could have caused her to fall. Martin visually inspected the floor after Fultz's fall and found it to be dry, not slippery, and without the presence of anything that could have posed a hazard, although Martin did not feel the area of the floor where Fultz fell with her hands.
That morning Martin arrived at the store between 7:30 a.m. and 7:45 a.m., before the store's 8:00 a.m. opening. Between the time of her arrival and the store's opening, Martin walked through the front end of the store, including the area where Fultz later fell. Martin's pre-opening walk-through included checking to make sure the floors were clean, dry, and generally safe for customers to shop. Martin testified that she specifically recalls walking through the front end of the store before it opened on May 3, 2012 and at that time, the particular aisle where Fultz would later fall had no obstructions, liquid, or slippery substances on the floor.
A Guest Incident Report filled out by another store employee when Fultz returned to the store later that day, indicates that the floor was clean and dry at the time of Fultz's fall, that her clothes were not wet or damaged, and that no object was involved in the fall. Fultz signed the Guest Incident Report and testified that the information contained on the report is true and accurate. Fultz did not tell any store employee that any foreign substance or object caused her to fall. Fultz claims that she was told by a cashier after the incident that the store "had multiple complaints that the floors were slippery after they bluff [sic] the floors" and that "our customers do complain a lot that our floors are very slippery" and that "they are even slippery for them." Doc. 65 at 21, ¶ 2; Doc. 60-2 at 32:15-18; 33:4-6.
The store's surveillance video shows that in the approximately fourteen minutes immediately proceeding Fultz's fall, over a dozen customers walked through the same area without slipping and without any other apparent difficulty. The store's video also shows that in the seconds immediately following Fultz's fall, two customers and a store employee came to Fultz's aid or spoke to her and, in doing so, stepped on or near the same area of the floor on which Fultz had fallen. None of those people appeared to slip or to have any other type of difficulty. Additionally, in the approximately eleven minutes after Fultz fell and after she had left the area, at least ten other customers walked through the same area without slipping or having any other apparent difficulty.
Summary judgment is appropriate when there is no genuine issue of fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). In determining whether a genuine issue of material fact exists that precludes summary judgment, the Court construes all facts and inferences in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.
The parties agree that Illinois law governs the extent of Target's liability in this diversity action.
Here, Fultz's theory of liability is that the floor was unreasonably slippery because Target buffed the floor and left behind a foreign substance, which it knew or should have known would create a hazard. Target argues that Fultz cannot present sufficient evidence to create a genuine issue of material fact as to whether a foreign substance was on the floor or whether the floor was negligently treated or maintained.
Target first argues that there is no evidence that there was any foreign substance or object on the floor where Fultz fell. The Court agrees with Target that there is no evidence demonstrating that there actually was any liquid, debris, foreign object, or other substance on the floor where Fultz fell. It is undisputed that Fultz does not know what caused her to slip or what caused her to fall. Fultz "neither saw nor felt any substance or object on the floor that could have caused her to fall." Doc. 65 at 4 and 18, ¶ 19. Fultz admitted that the floor was clean and dry, her clothes were not wet after the fall, and no object caused to her fall. Additionally, Fultz did not tell any Target employee that any foreign substance or object caused her to fall.
It is further undisputed that prior to the store's opening on the day Fultz fell, Target employee Geneva Martin walked through the particular aisle where Fultz would later fall and found no obstructions, liquid, or slippery substances on the floor. Martin visually inspected the floor after Fultz's fall and found it to be clean, dry, not slippery, and without the presence of anything that could have posed a hazard. Finally, the store's video surveillance shows over a dozen people walking through the same area in the fourteen minutes before Fultz's fall without slipping or having any apparent difficulty; two customers and a store employee stepping on or near that area in the seconds immediately following Fultz's fall, again without slipping or having any apparent difficulty; and at least ten other people walking through the same area in the eleven minutes following Fultz's fall, again without slipping or having any apparent difficulty. Fultz, therefore, has failed to create an issue of material fact that Target, or one of its employees, was responsible for a foreign substance on the floor.
Fultz argues that an issue of fact exists as to whether the floor was slippery because Target had buffed it. Fultz asserts that "there is evidence of a foreign substance on the floor that, after being applied, could have made the floor unreasonably slippery." Doc. 65 at 9. "In Illinois, the mere waxing or oiling of a floor is not negligence per se."
Courts have held that plaintiffs cannot prevail on a negligence claim against defendants where they fail to put forth any evidence that the floors were excessively slippery, other than subjective characterizations about the appearance of the floor.
In
Likewise, in
Here, other than her current subjective characterization of the floor as slippery, the only evidence to support Fultz's theory of an unreasonably slippery floor is her deposition testimony that a Target cashier told her that Target had previously received multiple complaints of slippery floors after the floors had been buffed. Assuming this fact to be true, it is not enough to avoid summary judgment on the issue of Target's alleged responsibility for a dangerous condition on the floor. Fultz has provided no evidence that the particular area of the floor on which she fell had been buffed or treated shortly before she fell. Moreover, as the plaintiffs in
Although there is no evidence that Target negligently created the allegedly slippery condition of the floor, Target may still be liable if its employees knew of a dangerous condition or if Target's employees should have discovered a dangerous condition in the exercise of reasonable care but did not.
Fultz has presented no evidence that Target employees knew that the particular area where Fultz fell was slippery prior to her fall or that Target should have known that the precise area where Fultz fell was slippery. Target employee Geneva Martin performed a walk-through of the particular area where Fultz would fall prior to the store's opening and found that the aisle where Fultz would later fall had no obstructions, liquid, or slippery substances on the floor. Fultz, herself, admitted that she does not know what caused her to slip and fall and did not see or feel any liquid, solid material, debris, or anything else on the floor that could have caused her to fall. Fultz also signed a Guest Incident Report the day she fell acknowledging that the floor was clean and dry at the time of her fall, that her clothes were not wet or damaged, and that no object was involved in the fall. Finally, a review of the store surveillance video indicates that the particular area where Fultz fell was not slippery. The video shows over twenty people walking through the area of Fultz's fall in the minutes before and after the fall without slipping and without any apparent difficulty. Faced with this evidence, a reasonable trier of fact could not conclude that Target knew or should have known of the alleged slippery floor.
Once again, the only evidence Fultz cites in support of her position that Target knew or should have known that the floor was slippery comes from a Target cashier who Fultz says told her that the store "had multiple complaints that the floors were slippery" after it buffed the floors. Doc. 65 at 21, ¶ 2. As noted above, Fultz presents no evidence that the precise area of the floor where she fell had been waxed, polished, buffed or had undergone any other type of treatment close to the time of her fall. Fultz provides no evidence that there was a prior complaint of slipperiness in the particular area of the floor where she slipped or that anyone had slipped in that area before. As Target notes, there is also no evidence indicating that the cashier who told Fultz there had been complaints of slipperiness after buffing had any idea what area of the store Fultz fell or that the cashier was even referring to the area where Fultz fell as opposed to a completely different area of the store.
In
The facts in this case are even stronger than
Similarly, there is no evidence here that the particular area of the floor on which Fultz slipped and fell had been negligently buffed or buffed at all. There is no evidence that Target knew or should have known that the particular area where Fultz fell was slippery before she fell. Fultz's attempt to distinguish
In the end, Fultz's theory of a slippery floor due to buffing is nothing more than a guess. Fultz concedes that "it is true that one can only guess whether the Defendant is at fault." Doc. 65 at 5. Nevertheless, Fultz opposes summary judgment because "it is possible that the floor was unreasonably slippery."
For these reasons, Target's motion for summary judgment is granted. Pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 54(b), the Court finds that there is no just reason to delay the entry of final judgment as to Fultz's negligence claim asserted against Target. The Clerk is directed to enter judgment in favor of Defendant Target Corporation and against Plaintiff Monique Fultz. Target's claim against Prestige remains pending. A status hearing is set for March 10, 2016 at 9:30 a.m.