Hyecha Marshall and her husband, Loyal, were frequent patrons of the Jazz Casino (“Casino”). Mrs. Marshall used a small wheelchair that the Casino provided her as a walker and cart. While walking in an underground tunnel connecting her hotel to the Casino, Mrs. Marshall discovered the elevator was out of service. Therefore, she decided to step onto the escalator, using her wheelchair as a walker. While riding the escalator, she lost her balance and fell to the floor. Her wheelchair subsequently fell down the escalator onto her.
After Mr. and Mrs. Marshall filed a lawsuit against the Casino alleging that the Casino failed to warn about the risks of using the Casino-issued wheelchair as a walker and failing to maintain safe premises, the Casino moved for summary judgment. The Casino argued that Mrs. Marshall had not shown that there was an unreasonably dangerous condition in the Casino that caused her accident. Additionally, the Casino argued it did not have a duty to warn Mrs. Marshall about using its wheelchair as a walker while riding the escalator because the risk of injury was obvious and apparent. Summary judgment is appropriate when all the submitted pleadings and evidence show that there is no genuine issue of material fact. La. C.C.P. art. 966. The trial court granted the Casino’s motion for summary judgment and dismissed the Marshalls’ lawsuit because it found that Mrs. Marshall had not established the Casino owed her a duty, which was an essential element of her negligence action.
The appellate court held that summary judgment was not appropriate because it found there was a genuine issue of fact surrounding the specific mechanics of Mrs. Marshall’s fall. Specifically, there was an issue as to whether Mrs. Marshall fell backwards because she was not holding onto the handrail or because her wheelchair caught in the escalator. The Casino also did not establish if the wheelchair’s weight or size contributed to Mrs. Marshall’s fall.
Furthermore, the appellate court found that the risk of harm from riding up an escalator holding on to a small wheelchair like that issued by the Casino was not necessarily immediately apparent to everyone who encountered the dangerous condition. For example, there were no pictures of the escalator. Pictures could help indicate whether Mrs. Marshall’s use of the wheelchair was reasonable or an open and obvious risk. Additionally, Mrs. Marshall was not engaged in an inherently dangerous activity by riding on an escalator, but rather was using it as intended – to transport people to the Casino. Brown v. Sears, Roebuck and Co., 514 So.2d 439, 445 (La. 1987).
Given these continued factual uncertainties surrounding the specifics of Mrs. Marshall’s fall and the reasonableness of her actions, summary judgment was inappropriate. Therefore, the appellate court remanded the matter for further proceedings in the trial court.
If you are injured on someone else’s property, it is important that you consult with a good attorney to understand the numerous elements you must establish in order to prevail on your claim. There may be evidence useful to proving a claim that only an experienced lawyer can think to present to the fact-finder.
Additional Sources:Marshall v. Jazz Casino Co.
Written by Berniard Law Firm Blog Writer: Megan Richardson
Additional Berniard Law Firm Articles on Open and Obvious Risks: Is An Unmarked Pole in the Middle of a Sidewalk “Open and Obvious?” LSU Student’s Lawsuit Answers that Question