Jeanne Spatz, the plaintiff in a trip and fall case, appeals the entry of final summary judgment in favor of the defendant premises owner. We affirm.
In her complaint, the plaintiff alleged that while at the Embassy Retirement Home of Margate she “tripped and fell when her foot got caught on a loose and unsecured mat, partially covering a carpeted floor.” The plaintiff alleged that the defendant premises owner was negligent for failing to maintain the premises in a reasonably safe condition and negligent for failing to warn her of the alleged dangerous condition. In the plaintiffs deposition, when asked to describe what she tripped on and how she fell, the plaintiff indicated that her foot got caught on a large, unsecured rug that had a pattern and that was a different color from the underlying carpet. In that deposition, the plaintiff also indicated that she had worked at the retirement home as a patient coordinator and that she visited the facility several times a week as her mother and brother were residents. The defendant premises owner moved for summary judgment, asserting that the plaintiffs own deposition established that it was entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
Florida Rule of Civil Procedure 1.510, which governs motions for summary judgment, provides that the adverse, non-moving party “shall identify, by notice mailed to the movant’s attorney at least 5 days prior to the day of the hearing, or delivered no later than 5:00 p.m. 2 business days prior to the day of the hearing, any summary judgment evidence on which the adverse party relies.” Despite the rule’s requirements, plaintiffs counsel filed no response to the motion until the day prior to the hearing. In the late-filed response, the plaintiffs counsel asserted that the plaintiff had tripped at an area near a door’s threshold where there was a loose and unsecured area in the carpet. Plaintiffs counsel attached to the response a photograph, depicting an area of worn carpet in front of a door, and the plaintiffs answer to an interrogatory in which she described the accident as occurring when her “foot got caught under an unsecured piece of carpet” and caused her to fall.
Under these circumstances, the trial court entered summary judgment in favor of the defendant premises owner and refused the plaintiffs counsel’s request for an opportunity to amend the complaint to conform to the newly-asserted version of events regarding the cause of the fall. We find no error in that ruling.
We begin our analysis with two well-recognized principles of law. The first is that when faced with a motion for summary judgment, the trial court is limited to the issues raised by the pleadings.
See, e.g., Fernandez v. Fla. Nat’l Coll., Inc.,
Lastly, any amendment of the complaint to allege the loose carpet theory asserted by counsel at the summary judgment hearing would be futile because the plaintiff would be confronted with her own deposition testimony, wherein she plainly asserted that she tripped and fell when her foot got caught under an area rug.
See Stanford,
Affirmed.
