Lorraine M. GREENLEAF and her Husband, Albert M. Greenleaf, Appellants,
v.
AMERADA HESS CORPORATION, a Delaware corporation, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.
Jack Gale, Port St. Lucie, for appellants.
Shelley H. Leinicke of Wicker, Smith, Tutan, O'Hare, McCoy, Graham & Lane, P.A., Fort Lauderdale, for appellee.
PARIENTE, Judge.
Lorraine M. Greenleaf and her husband, Albert M. Greenleaf, appeal an adverse summary judgment in favor of Amerada Hess Corporation, in what is generically referred to as a slip and fall case. Finding that genuine issues of material fact exist as to negligent maintenance and appellee's constructive notice, we reverse.
Appellee runs a combination self-service gas station and food mart. Appellants had stopped for gas. As appellant Lorraine Greenleaf was returning to her car after paying for the gas in the mart, she slipped on a substance identified, alternatively, as water with oil, clear oil or oil. According to the deposition testimony of appellant Lorraine Greenleaf, the spill was only five to six feet from the glass door of the mart where appellee's employee could potentially see the spill and was large enough that she was "soaked" when she fell in it.
In addition, Lois Barker, appellee's former employee who was on duty at the time, testified in her deposition that cleaning of the exterior of the premises was supposed to be done nightly, but that no one usually inspected to insure that this had occurred. She also testified that because she was "pretty sure I was by myself" on the specific day appellant Lorraine Greenleaf was injured, no one would have checked to see if the pump area had been cleaned the previous night. If this was ever done, the manager would be the person doing the inspection. During the day, appellee's employees never went outside to clean up or inspect, venturing outside the store to clean up only if a customer advised the employees of a spill. Portions of appellee's operations manual pertaining to cleaning of the premises and training of the employees were produced and in the record. The testimony of Barker established variations between actual practice and the procedures set forth in the operations manual, it appearing that appellee's procedures were observed only in the breach.
*264 On the other hand, appellant Lorraine Greenleaf had opined in deposition testimony that it did not appear that the substance had been there for a long time. She further speculated that a car had parked there after she went into the store and someone must have obtained a can of oil and improperly poured the oil into the car, which caused the spill. Her speculation as to what occurred, in and of itself, cannot be used to defeat her claim on summary judgment, where other competent evidence exists to support an inference of appellee's actual or constructive notice of the dangerous situation. All evidence and inferences must be construed in favor of the non-moving party. O'Connell v. Walt Disney World Co.,
On the record presented to the trial court, appellee did not successfully carry its burden of conclusively demonstrating that there was no existing genuine issue of material fact as to the critical question of constructive or actual notice. Moore v. Morris,
On appeal, the appellants additionally contend that summary judgment was prematurely granted prior to the expiration of discovery. Although a year had passed since the appellants had filed suit, appellants assert it was appellee's delaying tactics that caused discovery to be so protracted. From a review of the limited record before us, there appears to be support for appellants' position.[1] The general rule is that courts will be reluctant to grant a motion for summary judgment before the parties have had an opportunity to complete discovery. Danna v. Bay Steel Corp.,
Accordingly, we reverse the summary judgment and remand this cause for further proceedings.
FARMER, J., and DOWNEY, JAMES C., Senior Judge, concur.
NOTES
Notes
[1] As an example, defendant objected to production of video tapes used by defendant to train its employees about cleaning up spills over a month after the request was filed, claiming trade secrets, even though defendant had previously been ordered to disclose materials (the station owner's manual) that defendant claimed contained trade secrets. After the trial court overruled the objections, the appellee then filed its response stating that there were no video tapes responsive to the request for production. Such actions constitute discovery abuses and improper delaying tactics.
