Diаne Parker was injured when a sliding glass door in the bathroom of her Four Seasons Hotel room shattered. The hotel admitted negligence and a jury awarded Parker $20,000 in compensatory damages, which was reduced to $12,000 after a motion for set-off was granted. The district court declined Parker’s request to put the question of punitive damages to the jury, finding her evidence insufficient as a matter of law. We reverse and remand for further proceedings on the question of punitivе damages.
I.
Four Seasons asserts that the federal courts lack jurisdiction over this diversity suit because the amount in controversy does not exceed $75,000, citing the ultimate award of $12,000. But the requirements for diversity jurisdiction (including the amount in controversy) must be satisfied only at the time the suit is filed. Rosado v. Wyman,
immediately looked up at the overhead track and said: “Looks like the stopper moved again!” ... He explained that the hotel had recently undergone renovations, and that a “bunch” of the newly installed sliding glass doors had exploded because the overhead track stoppers were not working properly. That allowed the door-handles to crash into the walls and cause the glass doors to explode. This was one of the rooms on the “do not sell” list. You might want to check yours.
R. 101-7, at 2. Taking Gartin’s advice, Schiavon checked the sliding door in her bathroom in the adjoining room and determined that it suffered from the same defect.
Parker also uncovered evidence suggesting that the sliding door in her room had shattered before the incident that caused her injury, and that the door had been replaced. An October 2007 email between third party contractors working on door breakage issues revealed that several rooms configured in the same manner as Parker’s room had similar issues:
Bob-
Here is an update from Contract Mirror & Supply on the shower doors at the Four Seasons. CMS installed 150 tub doors, 136 shower doors, and 136 sliding barn doors during the renovation. We have had one shower door break (room 4401) and five sliding glass barn doors break (rooms 3427, 3527, 3627 twice, and 4419). The cause of the shower door breakage was identified and all of the shower doors were inspected to be sure that there were no additional problems. Since the X27 rooms represent 80% of the barn door failures these rooms were examined to identify what was different in these rooms that may have caused the problems. The thicker wall construction in this room leaves less clearance for the door (+/- ⅛ clearance versus +/- 1" in other rоoms) and the tight tolerance may contribute to the breakage because the door may deflect up to ⅛ if someone pulls on the door while operating it which would allow the corner of the glass to hit the stone. CMS has been working with Jim DeFily to add corner protection to the glass to protect the corners in the event of impact and CMS is also researching a continuous bottom guide that was suggested by the hotel.
R. 101-2.
The hotel conceded negligence and so the only issue for trial was damages. But
II.
Parker proceeded pro se through much of the litigation in the district court and also represented herself in this appeal. A trial court is obligated to liberally construe a pro se plaintiffs pleadings. Erickson v. Pardus,
Under Illinois law, property owners owe to their invitees a duty to maintain the premises in a reasonably safe condition. Ward v. K Mart Corp.,
After the case had been transferred to the docket of Judge Shah and shortly before trial, Four Seasons submitted a motion seeking to prohibit the plaintiff from presenting a claim for punitive damages to the jury. Although the hotel characterized its filing as a motion in limine, it was really a motion for partial summary judgment on the issue of punitive damages, and the district court appeared to treat it as such. Judge Shah considered whether Parker had presented sufficient evidence to meet the standard for punitive damages under Illinois law, specifically whether she had evidence of wilful and wanton conduct by the defendant. Judge Shah agreed with Judge Leinenweber that Parkеr had sufficient evidence to present to the jury a premises liability claim founded on negligence but concluded that the same evidence was insufficient as a matter of law to prove the wilful and wanton conduct that could justify punitive damages.
Parker’s primary claim on appeal is that the district court erred when it concluded that her claim for punitive damages failed as a matter of law. Four Seasons contends that we should review the district court’s deсision for abuse of discretion because it involves the admission or exclusion of evidence, matters peculiarly within the competence of the district court. But the basis of the court’s decision was whether a particular claim could be sustained as a matter of law, not whether evidence should be admitted or excluded.
Under Illinois law, “punitive or exemplary damages may be awarded when torts are committed with fraud, actuаl malice, deliberate violence or oppression, or when the defendant acts willfully, or with such gross negligence as to indicate a wanton disregard of the rights of others.” Kelsay,
Illinois courts distinguish negligence from wilful and wanton conduct. Stojkovich,
The district court focused on Sto-jkovich, Loitz and Salazar in finding that Parker did not meet the Illinois standard for punitive damages. In Loitz, the plaintiff was injured when the barrel оf his Remington shotgun exploded, injuring his hand. Remington had received reports of ninety-four shotgun barrel explosions resulting in injury for this particular model. But the company had investigated every reported incident and determined the cause in each instance to be shells that had been reused and overloaded by the user of the gun. The court concluded that Remington’s conduct was not wilful and wanton in part because guns are inherently dangerous instrumentalities and so the mere oсcurrence of an explosion without more does not establish a level of misconduct sufficient to justify punitive damages. Loitz,
In Stojkovich, the plaintiff was injured while attempting to escape from an elevator that had stalled between the second and third floors of the historic Chicago building. The elevator had stalled on seventeen prior occasions and five of the stoppages had resulted in passengers being trapped. In each prior instance, the elevator was serviced and became operable again. The elevator was never taken out of service and the true problem was not diagnosed until after the plaintiff fell down the shaft while trying to leave the stalled elevator. There was no evidence that the company responsible for maintaining the elevator had ever failed to respond to service calls, failed to attempt to repair the pro
Salazar addressed the duty of a landowner to a trespasser on the land. The trespasser, a homeless person, was beaten to death on the defendant’s unsecured property. His survivors alleged that the property was in such a state of disrepair and abandonment that it posed structural, sanitary and social hazards that rendered it unreasonably dangerous even to trespassers. In Illinois, landowners owe trespassers a duty only to refrain from wilful and wanton conduct. The court declined to find that the landowner could be held responsible for the criminal acts of a third party against a trespasser where the plaintiff lacked evidence that the landowner engaged in any intentional act or knew of other injuries or аccidents caused by the allegedly dangerous condition. Without that knowledge, the court concluded that allowing the property to fall into disrepair did not rise to the level of wilful and wanton conduct.
With those standards in mind, we turn to Parker’s evidence of wilful and wanton conduct here. The affidavit from Schiavon and the email from the contractor working on the door issues were Parker’s best evidence that the hotel knew there was a serious problem with the sliding doors at the time the room was rented to Parker. Parker had the admission of the hotel’s engineer that the stopper had moved “again,” that a “bunch” of the newly installed sliding glass doors had exploded because the overhead track stoppers were not working properly, that the doors were crashing into the walls and exploding, and that rooms affected by the problem had been placed on a “do not sell” list. See Barton v. Chicago & N.W. Transp. Co.,
Although competing inferences could be drawn from this evidence, on summary judgment we draw all reasonable inferences in favor of the party opposing judgment, in this instance, Parker. Construing this evidence in Parker’s favor, it would be fair tо infer that the Four Seasons knew that there was a problem with the glass doors generally, that the door in Parker’s room had previously shattered, and that there was a problem with the stopper that allowed the door handle to come into contact with the wall, resulting in the shattering of the glass door. It would also be fair to infer that the hotel knew that the problem had not been fixed as of the time that Parker checked into the room, and that the room had been taken out of service for that very reason, and placed on a “do not sell” list. Yet the hotel rented the room to Parker anyway. Although Parker may not have presented evidence that the glass door explosions had previously resulted in injury, at this stage she need only show that injury was reasonably foreseeable. See Barton,
Parker asserts that her case is more like Mathias v. Accor Economy Lodging, Inc.,
Parker’s case falls somewhere between Mathias on the one hand and Stojkovich, Salazar or Loitz on the other. In both Stojkovich and Loitz, the defendants investigated the problem and believed they had addressed any danger. In Loitz, a case involving a product the court characterized as inherently dangerous, Remington could not control user errors in overloading shells and the company had investigated the problem in good faith, finding no flaws in the construction of the shotgun. See also Barton,
Four Seasons vigorously disagrees with Parker’s characterization of the facts. The hotel has evidence that, if credited by the fact-finder, counters those inferences. Four Seasons may have thought it repaired the problem. Parker’s room could have been pulled from service for some other reason, and Parker’s sister may not be a credible witness when weighed against the building engineer, Gartin, who may have a different recollection. These are issues for a fact-finder to decide. Barton,
We must briefly address a few other issues. Parker contends that the district court abused its discretion when it allowed her attorney to withdraw prior to trial. We review for abuse of discretion a district court’s decision to grant a motion to withdraw in a civil case. Stafford v. Mesnik,
That said, Parker, having raised one meritorious issue on appeal, also makes a number of poorly founded arguments in her brief. To the extent that we do not address a particular issue raised in the briefs, it is because we have concluded that the issue does not merit discussion.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. This door is referred to in the record as a "barn door.” Apparently, it is separate from or in addition to a shоwer door.
. Judge Leinenweber found this email admissible under the residual exception to the hearsay rule. Parker v. Four Seasons Hotels, Ltd.,
. In deciding the legal issue under review here, the district court also determined the admissibility of certain evidence, namely, the email regarding door problems. Admissibility is a threshold question because a court may consider only admissible evidence in assessing a motion for summary judgment. Gunville v. Walker,
