Months after hearing arguments, the Michigan Supreme Court has decided to stay out of a personal-injury case at a big-box store that could have consequences for retailers in the state.
The court said it will let an appeals court decision stand against Menards, the Wisconsin-based home improvement chain, which was sued after a shopper was struck by a pickup truck after leaving a Bay City store in 2011. Virginia Rawluszki died from her injuries two years later at age 72.
Her family said Menards should have installed stop signs to slow down traffic at a crosswalk. The retailer, however, said the risk of being hit in a parking lot is open and obvious – a key legal standard in Michigan that often protects property owners from liability.
You’ve got a square building with a square, rectangular parking lot. There’s nothing else around,” Menards attorney Alan Sullivan told the Supreme Court in January. “There’s nothing else that is different, unusual … at all when you’re out there.”
But two courts declined to dismiss the lawsuit. The Supreme Court, in a unanimous order Friday, said it won’t get involved, leaving an appeals court decision in favor of Rawluszki’s family and sending the case back to a Bay County judge for trial or possible settlement.
“It doesn’t have the strongest precedent of a written opinion, but it’s the second-best thing the Supreme Court could have done: Let a jury decide,” attorney Philip Ellison, who argued on behalf of the family, said Monday.
In a court filing, Sullivan said the presence of vehicles moving in a parking lot should be obvious to “an average person with ordinary intelligence.”
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