Memorandum Decision
1 Teresa Ockey sued Club Jam and Jam in the Marmalade, LLC (the Club) for personal injuries she sustained after a ladder she was using inside the Club collapsed unexpectedly. The district court granted the Club's motion for summary judgment, and Ockey appealed. Ockey asserts that the ladder the Club produced for her expert to inspect was not the ladder she used the day of her injury. And she argues that "a reasonable inference from the fact that Club Jam produced the wrong ladder ... requires the trial court to reject" the Club owner's deposition testimony, which was integral to the court's decision. We vacate the court's summary judgment and remand for further proceedings.
{2 In September 2010, Ockey was invited to display some of her artwork on a column inside the Club.
3 During discovery, Ockey described the ladder in a deposition as a folding ladder, "six feet tall, ... aluminum," that had "some yellow on it," looked old, and had clearly "been used a lot." Before climbing the ladder, Ockey claimed, she repositioned it "maybe a foot to 18 inches" away from the column, allowing her to face the column directly and hang her art over the top of the ladder. Crofts's deposition testimony described the ladder differently. He testified that the ladder was "a yellow aluminum and fiberglass ladder" that was "eight feet tall," not six feet tall as Ockey had claimed. Crofts also offered a different account of Ockey's accident, claiming that she positioned the ladder alongside the column so she would have to turn sideways to hang the pictures. Brian Morris, the Club's owner, testified in a deposition that he believed the ladder was nine feet tall. He also stated that the Club used the ladder daily before and after the injury and that there had been only one other injury involving the ladder-Morris -cut his hand on a ceiling fan while using the ladder some time before Ockey's injury. Four days after Morris's deposition, Ockey visited the Club with an expert to inspect the ladder following a request under rule 34 of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure. The ladder produced for inspection was eight feet tall and matched Crofts's description. Ockey insisted that the eight-foot ladder was not the one she used the day of her injury, and her expert confirmed that the ladder produced by the Club could not have been positioned in the way Ockey had described.
14 The Club moved for summary judgment, arguing that any dangers posed by the ladder "were open and obvious" and that the
T5 Ockey submitted with her response an affidavit from her expert, F. David Pierce, which stated that it was "impossible for the Ladder [he] inspected to have been the one Ms. Ockey was using when she fell" because "the Ladder was too wide for her to reach the column to hammer nails into it while standing on the steps." Ockey also pointed to testimony from her two friends who used the ladder within days of her injury to finish hanging her art. They both testified that the ladder was six-feet tall, not eight- or nine-feet tall as the Club owner and manager claimed. Finally, Ockey highlighted other testimony that she argued showed the ladder was involved in other injuries, including Payne's assertion that Crofts told her that the "ladder has been nothing but trouble" and Smith's statement that after the accident, Crofts had described the ladder as "jinxed." Crofts claimed that he was referring to Morris's ceiling-fan injury, not any other incidents. Ockey's response did not identify any specific injuries involving the ladder other than Morris's and her own.
T6 The district court granted the Club's motion for summary judgment. The court appeared to rely heavily on Morris's description of the frequent use of the ladder and the Club's sparse history of personal injuries: "[IIntegral to this Court's decision [is] that the ladder in question had been used without incident countless times prior to and after Ms. Ockey's accident and that it had no obvious defects." As a result, the court stated, whether the ladder produced for inspection was the same ladder Ockey used the day of her injury "is not important and does not create a genuine issue of material fact. Even if the original ladder contained a hidden defect, there is simply no evidence that Club Jam knew or should have known of the defect, as evidenced by the frequent use of the ladder." The court also awarded the Club costs in the amount of $3,826.40.
17 Ockey appeals She argues that the district court should not have granted the Club's motion for summary judgment. We review a district court's decision to grant summary judgment for correctness. Overstock.com, Inc. v. SmartBargains, Inc.,
18 For Ockey's negligence claim to survive summary judgment, she needed to establish that there was a dispute of material fact about whether the Club breached a duty it owed to Ockey and whether that breach caused her injuries See Torrie v. Weber County,
9 When reviewing a district court's decision granting summary judgment, we view "the facts and all reasonable inferences drawn therefrom in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party"-in this case, Ockey. See Orvis v. Johnson,
[ 10 The dispute over the identity of the ladder is material to Ockey's negligence claim in at least two respects. First, viewed in the light most favorable to Ockey, it raises questions about the reliability of Morris's testimony regarding the number of injuries that resulted from the ladder's use. Perhaps the ladder the Club produced at inspection was involved in just one other injury, but another ladder at the Club was involved in others. Or perhaps Morris concealed the real ladder and is not being truthful about the identity of the ladder, the number of injuries associated with it, or its condition. Cf. Model Utah Jury Instructions CV 128 (2d ed.2014) ("If you believe any witness has intentionally testified falsely about any important matter, you may disregard the entire testimony of that witness, or you may disregard only the intentionally false testimony."). In any event, disputing the identity of the ladder implicitly disputes Morris's account of the Club's safety record, which is material to the question of whether the Club had notice that the ladder Ockey used was defective and therefore breached a duty when it failed to warn her of its condition.
111 Second, rule 87 of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure empowers district courts to impose sanctions for spoliation-when a party "destroys, conceals, alters, tampers with or fails to preserve" evidence. Utah R. Civ. P. 37). Among other things, the court may "strike all or part of [the party's] pleadings, ... render judgment by default on all or part of the action," award attorney fees, or "instruct the jury regarding an adverse inference." Id. R. 37(0)@)(D), (E), (F). District courts have "broad discretion" to determine if a party's conduct justifies the imposition of sanctions and, if so, which sanction is appropriate to the circumstances. Gorostieta v. Parkinson,
113 Other jurisdictions have recognized that a sanction for spoliating relevant evidence can create an issue of fact and preclude summary judgment. Seq, eg., Kitchens v. Brusman,
1 14 Consequently, we conclude that granting the Club's motion for summary judgment was inappropriate in these cireumstances; the district court should have addressed the potential effects of spoliation on the credibility or reliability of the Club's summary judgment evidence and whether Ockey's assertions in that regard created a genuine issue of material fact precluding summary judgment. And in response to Ockey's request for rule 37 sanctions, the court should have resolved the question of whether the ladder the Club produced was the original ladder and, if not, the cireumstances that had led to its production for Ockey's inspection rather than the original. If the court determined that it was not the original ladder, then it would have to determine whether Ockey was entitled to a discovery sanction and, if so, whether the chosen sanction precluded summary judgment. Thus, the resolution of the issues surrounding Ockey's evidence that the ladder the Club produced was not the ladder it originally provided for her to use to hang her artwork has potentially significant implications with regard to the resolution of the Club's summary judgment motion that were not taken into account by the district court.
115 In reaching this conclusion, we express no opinion regarding whether the Club destroyed or concealed the ladder; whether rule 37 sanctions would be justified if it did; which sanction, if any, would be appropriate; or even whether summary judgment might ultimately be available in this case. Each of those questions is within the purview of the district court, because unlike an appellate court, it "deal[s] first hand with the parties and the discovery process," Morton v. Continental Baking Co.,
1 16 We recognize that our decision today may not provide the district court with the same degree of guidance appellate courts endeavor to provide to aid the resolution of issues that will undoubtedly arise on remand. See, e.g., State v. Low,
117 Accordingly, we vacate the district court's order granting the Club's motion for summary judgment and remand for further proceedings consistent with this decision.
Notes
. In reviewing a district court's grant of summary judgment, we view "the facts and all reasonable inferences drawn therefrom in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party'" and recite the facts accordingly. Orvis v. Johnson,
. Ockey also contends that the court's award of costs against her was an abuse of discretion. Because we conclude that the Club was not entitled to summary judgment, the Club is also not entitled to court costs under rule 54(d). See Utah R. Civ. P. 54(d) ("[CJosts shall be allowed as of course to the prevailing party unless the court otherwise directs ...." (emphasis added)).
. See Burns v. Cannondale Bicycle Co.,
. On remand, the district court may have the unenviable task of sorting through a variety of potentially complex procedural questions upon which Utah's appellate courts have so far provided little guidance. If the Club spoliated the ladder as Ockey claims, the court will need to determine whether rule 37 sanctions are warranted, and if they are, which sanction is appropriate under the circumstances. And it may still need to decide whether the spoliation issue is ultimately a question of fact that should be determined by a jury. See Beers v. Bayliner Marine Corp.,
