Michaels v. Taco Bell Corporation
Filing
116
OPINION and ORDER - For the reasons stated, Defendant's motion 54 to exclude Plaintiff's expert testimony is GRANTED. Karlin's expert report is stricken and Karlin is precluded from testifying at trial. Dated this 27th day of September, 2012, by U.S. Magistrate Judge John V. Acosta. (peg)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF OREGON
PORTLAND DIVISION
JEANNE MICHAELS,
Civ. No. 10-1051-AC
Plaintiff,
OPINION AND ORDER
v.
TACO BELL CORPORATION, a California
corporation
Defendant.
ACOSTA, Magistrate Judge:
Introduction
Plaintiff Jeanne Michaels seeks to introduce expert engineering testimony to support her
negligence claims against Defendant Taco Bell Corporation for damages resulting from injuries
allegedly suffered when she slipped and fell on a wet floor near the front entrance of a Taco Bell
restaurant. Defendant moves to exclude Plaintiffs expert, David Karlin, because his opinions do
OPINION AND ORDER
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not meet the prerequisites for expert testimony admissibility established by Federal Rule ofEvidence
702 and Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 509 U.S. 579 (1993). The court finds that
Karlin's methods and ultimate opinion do not meet the standard for reliability established under
1
those authorities and therefore grants Defendant's motion.
Background
The incident facts relevant to Defendant's motion are not disputed. Defendant owns and
operates a Taco Bell restaurant located at 725 NE Weidler Street in Pmiland, Oregon. On Januaty
8, 201 0, Plaintiff dined at this Taco Bell restaurant. After eating, Plaintiff began to walk out of the
store when she slipped and fell on the floor near the restaurant's entrance. The floor at that location
was wet from having been recently mopped. A sandwich-style yellow warning sign was posted at
the mopped area.
Allegations
Plaintiffs negligence allegations are simple, clear, and straightforward. She asserts:
The cause of the injuries suffered by Plaintiff was the negligence of
Defendant, by and through the actions and/or inactions of its employees acting within
the scope and course of their employment with Defendant, in one or more of the
following particulars:
a.
Failing to maintain the floor of the restaurant in a reasonably safe
condition;
b.
Allowing water and/or mop water and/or a slippety substance to come
into contact with and remain on the floor of the restaurant when
Defendant knew, or in the exercise of reasonable care should have
known, that the substance created an unreasonable risk of harm to
1
Defendant's motion appears in the court docket as No. 54. Plaintiff filed a motion to
exclude Defendant's rebuttal expert, which motion appears as No. 63 in the court docket. At
hearing on the parties' respective motions, Plaintiff withdrew her motion. Thus, the court
considers only Defendant's motion to exclude.
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customers in the store;
c.
Failing to install a non-slip surface on the floor of the store; and
d.
Failing to warn Plaintiff of the dangerous condition.
Third Amended Complaint, ~ 8 (Docket No. 67).
Plaintiff's Expert
Plaintiff hired David Karlin ("Karlin"), a consulting engineer, to provide expett testimony
regarding the slip resistance of the flooring material in the area of the Taco Bell restaurant where
Plaintiff's fall occurred. Karlin is a mechanical engineer. He received his B.S. in mechanical
engineering in 1984 from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology ("MIT") and his M.S. in
mechanical engineering from MIT in 1986. He is a licensed professional engineer in Oregon,
Washington, California, and Hawaii. Karlin's memberships in professional organizations include
the Society of Automotive Engineers, the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, an arson
investigators organization, and three separate accident reconstructionist organizations. His resume
(Exhibit 11, Supplemental Declaration ofDavid Karlin, Docket No. 73) also discloses an extensive
list of "Special Studies," the subjects of which primarily have been accident investigation and
reconstruction of vehicle collisions and their related environments. He is registered as a Traffic
Accident Reconstructionist by the Accreditation Commission for Traffic Accident Reconstruction.
Karlin's resume shows that on January 31, 2008, he became a certified English XL Tribometrist
(CXLT). A tribometer is an instrument that measures friction between two surfaces, and Karlin used
an English XL tribometer to conduct his slip-resistance testing in this case.
Plaintiff's Expert's Opinion
Karlin's expert rep01t is dated January 23,2012, and its substantive text comprises less than
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three pages. Attached to his rep01t are twenty-two pages of photographs taken from the Taco Bell
restaurant's surveillance video which captured Plaintiff's fall. The report's text documents the
results of Karlin's May 20,2010, testing of the floor surface of the Taco Bell restaurant in the area
of Plaintiff's fall, and sets out his conclusions from that testing. The portions of his report relevant
to Defendant's motion are set out below:
CONCLUSIONS
1.
The tile floor was very slippe1y when wet with water or soap solution.
2.
The tile floor was slightly slip resistant when dampened, then dry-mopped.
3.
The tile floor (on the day of our inspection) was moderately dirty with a
significant residue remaining after multiple cleaning passes.
4.
A Taco Bell employee wet-mopped most of the restaurant lobby in the
incident video; two slip incidents occurred within a 13 second period during
and just after mopping.
5.
Floor tiles with measurably better slip-resistance were available for this use.
This floor may also be made safer with an appropriate floor finish or etching.
METHODS AND PROCEDURES
During the course of our investigation, T AI' performed the following:
1.
Reviewed a provided surveillance videotape and downloaded specific frames.
2.
Measured, inspected and photographed the incident floor on May 20, 2011.
3.
Tested the slip resistance of the tile floor surface using the English XL
Variable Incidence Tribometer (Slip-Resistance Tester) in accordance with
ASTM Fl679 and all current calibration standards.
4.
Reviewed excerpts from the Taco Bell employee manual regarding floor
cleaning.
2
"TAl" is the abbreviation for the name of the engineering consulting firm that employs
Karlin.
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5.
Reviewed building codes and accessibility standards.
6.
Prepared this report.
DATA AND OBSERVATIONS
1.
The incident Taco Bell fast food restaurant (Figure 1) had two entrances,
from the east (Figure 2) and from the west. The slip occurred near the east
door (Figure 3), on the way to the restroom and near the rubbish counter
(Figure 4). The floor was sloped vety slightly uphill to the n01ih and
downhill to the east.
2.
We measured both a brown and a tan 8 inch square tile in the area of the slip
(Figure 5). There was little measurable difference between them. When
tested inaccordancewith ASTMF1679, the tiles had a wet slip index of0.15.
We also tested with the Taco Bell cleaning solution (0.14) and after an
employee damp mopped the tiles (0.53 after a short dtying time). The floor
was found to be relatively dirty after the employee mopped (Figure 6). Wet
ASTM F1679 testing was repeated after the mopping and the floor had a wet
slip index of0.13.
3.
The employee manual directed the following:
a.
b.
Types of Cleaners- "KADET Quarry Tile Floor Cleaner ... 1
packet per 4 gallons." (TBC00169)
c.
4.
Prevent slips and fall - "Mop small areas at a time."
(TBC00142)
Mopping Floors- During the Day- "Use the yellow-handled
mop ONLY in the kitchen" and "Damp mop a 10' x 10'
area." (TBC00178)
The Taco Bell employee in the video mopped the whole dining room lobby
and some of the dining room over several minutes, without pausing for areas
to dry or putting out signs to warn of the various wet floor areas. Around the
time 17:07, after mopping the whole dining room lobby, the employee drags
the wet mop around the dining room lobby periphery on her way back to the
kitchen. The subject slipping incident occurred about 30 seconds later. We
extracted 20 frames from the provided video covering just over 5 minutes of
time (Figures 7-26, provided). Figure 7 shows the employee beginning
mopping operations with a yellow handled mop five minutes before the
accident occurred, Figure 17 shows another customer slipping but catching
herself on a nearby counter, and the incident slip occurred 13 seconds later,
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in Figure 22.
5.
Building codes and accessibility standards indicate that this restaurant floor
should be "firm, stable and slip-resistant" and not sloped more than 1 part in
20 (5 percent).
ANALYSIS AND DISCUSSION
1.
No regulations currently exist that define what the minimum slip index value
should be for public areas. A common industry practice is to consider any
surface that has a slip index of 0.5 or higher to be slip resistant.
2.
The floor tiles were slippery when wet. The floor tiles were slip resistant
when carefully cleaned with a damp mop, then air dried slightly.
3.
Floor etching technology may be available to permanently increase the slip
resistance of tile floor surfaces. Commercial floor mats may be an assist but
can contaminate customer shoes and cause tripping incidents. Mats must be
kept meticulously clean to be effective. Engineered floor finishes are
available to modestly increase the slip resistance of a stone tile floor.
4.
Incidentally, in several Kentucky Fried Chicken restaurants we found the
American 0 lean Quarry Natural N46 Indoor/Outdoor tile. These tiles were
specified by Kentucky Fried Chicken and tested by us with ve1y high slip
resistance in the similar restaurant lobby application. These American Olean
tiles are good examples of slip-resistant flooring that is suitable for use in the
ordering and eating areas of Kentucky Fried Chicken and Taco Bell
restaurants. It is our understanding the Kentucky Fried Chicken and Taco
Bell are sister companies.
5.
The Taco Bell employee in this incident used a yellow handled mop, the
kitchen mop, to maintain the dining room floor. Kitchen mops typically
contain grease and particles of food that would likely make the dining room
floor slippery, even with proper mopping teclmiques. Additionally, this
employee did not use proper mopping techniques, as outlined in the Taco Bell
employee manual. Specifically, she did not work in 10 by 10 areas and did
not properly sign the wet areas, then rewetted a new slippery path as she
pushed the mop back into the kitchen?
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3
Karlin's full report is attached as Exhibit 10 to the Supplemental Declaration of David
Karlin (Docket No. 73) ("Supp. Karlin. Decl.").
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Defendant's Motion
Defendant asserts two grounds for excluding Karlin's testimony. First, Defendant contends
that the methodology Karlin used to evaluate the slip resistance of the floor was umeliable.
Defendant argues that Karlin did not properly validate and calibrate his tribometer in accordance
with established industry standard American Society for Testing and Materials ("ASTM") F2508-11,
"Standard Practice for Validation and Calibration of Walkway Tribometers Using Reference
Surfaces" ("F2508"). Defendant points out that Karlin instead used the ASTM 1679-04 Standard
Test Method for Using a Variable Incidence Tribometer ("F1679"). Defendant argues that Karlin's
failure to use the new F2508 standard rendered his test results invalid, and that his lack ofknowledge
about the standard shows he is not qualified as a slip-resistance expert because he is not aware of
current industry standards and practices.
Second, Defendant asserts that Karlin failed to reliably apply the testing methods to the facts
of this case. Karlin tested the slipperiness of the floor under various conditions, including creating
a small puddle of water on the floor, spraying the tiles with Taco Bell cleaning solution, and
mopping the tiles with water and leaving them to d1y both partially and completely. Defendant
contends that Karlin's opinions about the slip resistance of the floor tiles under these tested
conditions are inelevant, because they are dissimilar to the conditions of the tiles at the time Plaintiff
slipped and fell.
In her response brief, Plaintiff argues that Karlin's academic and professional background
render him qualified to give his opinion regarding the slip resistance of the floor. Plaintiff contends
that Karlin was following reliable industJy procedures when he tested the floor on May 20, 2011,
using the ASTM F1679 method. Plaintiff acknowledges that F1679 was officially withdrawn by
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ASTM in 2006, but contends that Fl679 is still available for purchase through ASTM and is still
widely used by tribometrists. Plaintiff also points out that Karlin had his tribometer calibrated by
the manufacturer, Excel Tribometers, on May 18, 2011, just two days prior to the testing. Plaintiff
notes that the manufacturer did not use the F2508 standard for calibration, but instead followed the
Fl679 method. Additionally, Plaintiff contends that Karlin's repmt of the floor testing is relevant
because the floor was wet when Plaintiff slipped, and that his wet, dry, and soap tests were proper
because it is impossible to know the exact contaminants that were present on the mop and on the
floor at the time of Plaintiffs accident.
Legal Standard
Federal Rule of Evidence ("Rule") 702 provides:
If scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge will assist the trier of fact to
understand the evidence or to determine a fact in issue, a witness qualified as an
expert by knowledge, skill, experience, training, or education, may testify thereto in
the form of an opinion or otherwise, if (I) the testimony is based upon sufficient facts
or data, (2) the testimony is the product of reliable principles and methods, and (3)
the witness has applied the principles and methods reliably to the facts of the case.
FED. R. EVJD. 702.
Under Rule 702, the district court is tasked with the gate-keeping function assigned by
Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 509 U.S. 579 (1993) (Daubert!), to determine the
admissibilityofex pe1twitnesstestim ony. Kumho Tire Co., Ltd v. Carmichael, 526U.S. 137,141,
147 (1999). "Faced with a proffer of expert scientific testimony, then, the trial judge must
determine at the outset ... whether the expert is proposing to testify to (1) scientific knowledge that
(2) will assist the trier of fact to understand or determine a fact in issue. This usually entails a
preliminmy assessment of whether the reasoning or methodology underlying the testimony is
scientifically valid and of whether that reasoning or methodology properly can be applied to the facts
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Daub ert applies to the testimony of
in issue." Daubert I, 509 U.S. at 592-93 (footnote omitted).
lized know
engineers and other experts who possess technical and other specia
ledge. Kumho Tire,
enough." Daubert v. Merrell Dow
526 U.S. at 141. An exper t's "bald assurance of validity is not
Pharm.,Inc., 43 F.3d 1311, 1316 (9th Cir. 1995) (Daubert!!).
Factors to be considered when determining if the testimony is reliab
le scientific knowledge
the relevant scientific community,
are whether the theory or teclmique is generally accepted in
whether it has been subjected to peer review and publication, wheth
er it can be and has been tested,
and whether the know n or potential
whether standards exist to control the teclmique's operations,
however, is a flexible one, with the
rate of en·or is acceptable. Daubert I, at 593-94. The inquiry,
conclusions they generate. !d. at
focus solely on the principles and methodology used, not on the
502 (9th Cir. 1994) (the district
594. See also Claar v. Burlington Northern R. Co., 29 F.3d 499,
the reasoning and methodology"
court is "both authorized and obligated to scrutinize carefully
ogy Group, P. C., Case No. 03-1192underlying the exper t's testimony); Tyson v. Oregon Anesthesiol
inadmissible expert conclusions that
HA, 2008 WL 2371420, at *15 (D. Or. June 6, 2008) (finding
were "vague and inadequately supported with specific, relevant
statistical analysis"). Other relevant
not be reasonable measures of the
factors may be considered, and the factors listed in Daubert may
o Tire, 526 U.S. at 147-153. As
reliability of expert testimony in a particular case. !d. at 594; Kumh
the Supreme Court observed, Daub ert's factors "may or may not
be pertinent in assessing reliability .
nor rule in, for all cases and for all
. . The conclusion, in our view, is that we can neither rule out,
. . . Too much depends upon the
time the applicability of the factors mentioned in Daubert .
Tire, 526 U.S. at 150 (citations and
particular circumstances of the particular case at issue." Kumho
intemal quotations omitted).
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A threshold question in determining the admissibility of expert testimony is whether the
proffered testimony will assist the trier of fact. Daubert I, 509 U.S. at 592. Expert witness
testimony is unnecessmyunless the subject matter "is beyond the common knowledge of the average
lay person." United States v. Hanna, 293 F.3d 1080, 1086 (9th Cir. 2002) (quotation omitted).
Thus, "even if [the expert] testimony may assist the trier offact, the trial court has broad discretion
to admit or exclude it." Beech Aircraft ColjJ. v. United States, 51 F.3d 834, 842 (9th Cir. 1995) (per
curiam) (quotation omitted).
Rulings on the admissibility of expert testimony under Rule 702 are committed to the sound
discretion of the trial court. Gen. E/ec. Co. v. Joiner, 522 U.S. 136, 141-42 (1997).
Discussion
1
Is the Proffered Testimony Expert Testimony?
The court's initial inquiry is whether Karlin's testimony consists of"scientific, technical,
or other specialized knowledge" such that Rule 702's requirements must be applied. Clearly, it
does. Karlin's testimony purports to measure the slip resistance of the Taco Bell restaurant's tile
floor under several different test conditions. Karlin used is an English XL Tribometer, an
instrument that measures friction between two surfaces, to quantifY the slip resistance values for
each test condition. Measuring, quantifYing, and analyzing the slip resistance under various
conditions of surfaces that come in contact with one another is a subject "beyond the knowledge
of the common knowledge of the average lay person." Thus, the subject of the testimony
involves the kind of "technical knowledge" contemplated by Rule 702.
II.
Is Karlin An Expert?
Defendant does not dispute that Karlin is an expert, and the record supports the
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conclusion that he is an expert as contemplated by Rule 702. Karlin is a licensed mechanical
engineer who holds two degrees from MIT. He has substantial experience as a consulting
engineer, in particular with respect to vehicle accident reconstruction. He is certified to use the
English XL Tribometer. Karlin is a qualified expert, specifically, a qualified mechanical
engineer, for purposes of Rule 702 and Daubert's requirements.
III.
Is Expert Testimony Needed to Assist the Trier of Fact?
Plaintiffs Third Amended Complaint specifies four ways in which Defendant allegedly was
negligent: (1) failing to maintain the floor of the restaurant in a reasonably safe condition; (2)
creating an umeasonable risk of harm when Defendant allowed mop water and/or a slippery
substance to remain on the restaurant floor; (3) failing to install a non-slip surface on the floor of the
store; and (4) failing to warn Plaintiff of the dangerous condition. Expert testimony is not needed
to assist the jury in determining the first two specifications, and Karlin's proffered opinion address
only one of the remaining two specifications.
Simple facts anchor Plaintiffs case: she suffered injuries when she slipped and fell on a wet
tile floor near the entrance of a Taco Bell restaurant. Three of her four legal theories are equally
simple. The first specification of negligence asserts that Taco Bell employees failed to maintain the
floor in a safe condition by not keeping it dry and the second contends that they allowed it to remain
wet. These allegations target acts or omissions of Defendant's employees at the particular store,
whose conduct allegedly resulted in the wet floor on which Plaintiff slipped. The concept that a tile
floor is slippery when wet is not one beyond the common knowledge of the average lay person.
Plaintiffs counsel effectively conceded this conclusion at hearing on Defendant's motion, when he
was unable to explain how Karlin's testimony was needed to help a jury understand these two
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theories. Thus, Karlin's expert testimony is not necessary to assist the jury in determining these two
specifications of negligence.
With respect to the fourth specification, failure to warn of the wet floor, Karlin offers no
testimony at all. His report contains no discussion of nor opinion about Defendant's alleged failure
to warn of the allegedly wet floor. Neither does Karlin present himself as a warnings expert: his
report, his resume, and the background information offered during his deposition do not address this
topic. Thus, Karlin's testimony is irrelevant to the jury's consideration of Plaintiffs fourth
specification of negligence and, therefore, is inadmissible.
This leaves Plaintiffs third specification of negligence, Defendant's alleged failure to install
a non-slip surface on the floor of the Taco Bell restaurant, as the subject on which Karlin's expert
testimony might assist the jury. Summarized, on this issue Karlin's testimony includes a description
of the testing and measurements he performed on the Taco Bell restaurant's floor material, his
findings of the floor's slip resistance under various conditions, and his opinion about the floor tiles'
slip resistance. The comi now examines Karlin's expert testimony, as it relates to this issue, under
the requirements of Rule 702 and Daubert.
IV.
Is the Expert Testimony Reliable?
A.
Karlin's Use of the F1679 Standard.
Defendant argues that Karlin's testimony should be excluded because the method used to
calibrate his tribometer rendered the device unreliable for testing the floor tiles. On this point
Defendant's argument is straight forward:
Karlin used the wrong standard to calibrate his
tribometer; thus, the measurements produced by his testing are not reliable under Rule 702 and
Daubert. Karlin used the American Society for Testing and Materials's ("ASTM") Fl679 standard
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for calibrating his tribometer, about which Defendant makes two observations. First, Fl679 provides
only instructions for how to use a tribometer; it is not a standard for calibrating it. Second, the
ASTM withdrew the Fl679 standard in September 2006, almost five years before Karlin relied on
it to conduct his testing in this case, and replaced it in March 2011 with the F2508 standard. At oral
argument, Defendant further pointed out that prior to ASTM's publication ofF2508 there was no
standard at all against which tribometers could be uniformly calibrated and that even the
manufacturer of the English XL Tribometer acknowledge F2508 as the applicable standard.
Summarized, Plaintiff responds that ASTM withdrew Fl679 "for a violation of form and
style" by referring to "proprietary apparatus where alternatives exist," but that it continued as the
recognized industty standard for using a tribometer. Plaintiff also argues that currently, and
particularly at the time Karlin conducted his testing, F2508 was not generally accepted in the
industty because only two months had passed between ASTM's adoption ofF2508 in March 2011
and Karlin's testing in May 2011. Plaintiff further notes that Karlin had his English XL tribometer
calibrated by the manufacturer just two days before he conducted his testing, thus fmiher ensuring
that his tribometer was properly calibrated and, thus, capable of making accurate, reliable
measurements.
The court is not persuaded by Defendant's argument that Karlin's use of the F 1679 standard
renders his test results unreliable. First, Karlin testified that the F1679 standard was the recognized
yardstick for using tribometers when conducting slip-resistance testing. Defendant's evidence does
not dispute this assetiion but instead questions whether F 1679's content constitutes a proper standard
at all. Whatever its shortcomings, however, Karlin's testimony establishes that at the time of his
testing, F1679 was in general use to calibrate tribometers.
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Second, Defendant's evidence does not establish that at the time of Karlin's testing in May
2011, F2508 was generally accepted in the industry as the standard for calibrating tribometers.
Plaintiff points out that even though the two principals of Excel Tribometers LLC were members of
the ASTM committee that developed the F2508 standard, that company used F1679 to calibrate his
tribometer two months after F2508 was adopted days and just days before Karlin conducted his
testing in this case. Further, Plaintiff presented two reports to support her position that Karlin
properly relied on the Fl679 standard in conducting his testing. The first report is by Zurich Services
Corporation, published in August 2011, and contains a detailed analysis of the accuracy of two
tribometer models, one of which is the English XL. (Nichols Amended Supplemental Declaration,
Ex. I.) The Zurich report attests to the accuracy of the English XL without ever mentioning the
F2508 standard. The second report discusses testing of the English XL and concludes that it is
suitable and reliable for measuring the slip resistance of wet and d1y surfaces, including flooring.
(Nichols Amended Supplemental Declaration, Ex. 2.) The report contradicts Defendant's assertion
that prior to F2508's adoption reliable and uniform calibration of tribometers could not be
accomplished.
Rule 702 requires expert testimony to be a product of reliable methods that have "'general
acceptance' in the relevant expert community." Kumho Tire Co., Ltd v. Carmichael, 526 U.S. 137,
156 (1999). The court finds that the F2508 standard had not at the time ofKarlin's May 2011 testing
gained the general acceptance Rule 702 requires. The court thus concludes that the methodology
Karlin used is reliable and that his opinion should not be excluded for failing to use the F2508
standard.
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C.
Methodology and Application
The remaining issue in determining the admissibility of Karlin's testimony is whether the
testimony is "the product of reliable principles and methods" and whether Karlin "has applied the
principles and methods reliably to the facts of the case." FED. R. EVID. 702. The court concludes
that Karlin's execution of the slip resistance tests does not meet Daubert's reliability requirements.
Because Karlin failed to adequately apply his methods to the facts of this case, his testimony is
inadmissible.
First, Karlin's report lacks information key to supporting the reliability of his methods and
testing of the floor tiles. He concludes that"[f]loor tiles with measurably better slip-resistance were
available for this use," but nowhere in his repmt does Karlin identify the manufacturer and model
of floor tile actually used in the Taco Bell restaurant where Plaintiffs fall occurred. He provides no
information about the manufacturer's specifications regarding the tested tile's slip resistance or
whether the tested tile, as manufactured, met government or accepted industry standards for slip
resistance. Also absent is any identification ofthe other floor tiles he claims were better and whether
these tiles were available for use at the time the subject floor tiles were purchased and installed in
the Taco Bell restaurant.
Equally critical on this point is Karlin's deposition admission that he did not know even what
kind oftile was present in the Taco Bell restaurant when he tested it. When asked at deposition, he
replied, "it's a light brown or mauve 8-by-8 tile" but did not know the kind of tile or whether it is
a tile generally used in commercial facilities. (Declaration of Jean 0. in Support of Defendant's
Motion to Exclude (Docket No. 56), Exhibit 3, at 5) (hereinafter "Karlin Dep."). Karlin failed to
satisfactorily explain why, when he had adequate oppmtunity to acquire and incorporate this
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knowledge into his testing, he failed to do so. That the information was available to Karlin is
undisputed. In its brief supporting its motion and at hearing on its motion, Defendant's counsel
represented, and Plaintiffs counsel did not refute, that in February 2011, Plaintiff deposed Michael
Singhose, a Taco Bell architect, who identified the type of tile used and discussed the rationale for
its use at the restaurant where Plaintiff fell. Def. Memo 5.
Second, Karlin does not explain in his report the reasons he used the testing methods
described in his report and how those various methods are relevant to the conditions of the tile floor
present at the time of Plaintiffs fall. In fact, the record shows that Karlin's testing assumptions are
unsupported by evidence that they duplicated or attempted to duplicate the conditions present when
Plaintiff fell. Karlin tested the tile floor using soap solution, but he testified in deposition that he did
not know whether any soap solution was used to mop the floor on the day of Plaintiffs fall and, in
fact, specifically acknowledged he was told by an employee at the restaurant that "they never used
soap during the day." Karlin Dep. 7; Defendant Taco Bell Corporation's Memorandum in Support
of Motion to Exclude David Karlin as an Expert and Strike His Expert Report ("Def. Mem. ") 9.
Karlin also tested the tiles after creating a small puddle of water on the floor, but neither the written
record or the still photos taken from the surveillance CD depicting Plaintiffs fall show a puddle on
the floor where Plaintiffs fall occurred. Supp. Karlin Dec!., Ex. 10, at 8-27. Indeed, Plaintiffs
Third Amended Complaint contains no such allegation. And, a soda spill had occurred and had been
mopped up in the area of Plaintiffs fall just before it occurred, but none of Karlin's testing included
the use of soda, whether before or after it had been mopped up. Def. Memo. 9, 11; Karlin Dep. 8-10.
Finally, Singhose described at deposition Taco Bell's standard process for cleaning floors at the
restaurant where Plaintiff fell and identified the floor cleaner solution used (Def. Memo. 5), yet
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Karlin's report contains no mention of this information and no explanation why such information
was not relevant to his testing or to the validity of his conclusions. In sum, Karlin's report lacks
information directly relevant to the court's assessment of the validity of his testing methodology and
whether his methodology was reliably applied to the facts of this case.
Third, Karlin could not explain in his deposition why his test results showed that tiles
mopped and left damp were less slippeqthan tiles mopped and left to dry completely. Even to a lay
person this comparative result is counterintuitive, yet when asked about the result during his
deposition, Karlin simply replied, "I don't know." (Karlin Dep. 18). Given Karlin'sreport statement
that "[a] common industry practice is to consider any surface that has a slip index of0.5 or higher
to be slip resistant," his finding that the damp floor exceeded this alleged industry standard but a dry
floor did not, - with no explanation for how that result could occur - fmther undermines the
reliability and validity of his methodology.
In Kumho Tire the Supreme Court affirmed the trial comt' s exclusion of plaintiffs expe11
testimony based on reasoning applicable here. The trial court "did not doubt" the qualifications of
plaintiffs expert mechanical engineer, but nonetheless excluded the expert's testimony because "it
initially doubted, and then found unreliable, 'the methodology employed the expert in analyzing the
data"' he obtained from his inspection and the scientific basis, "'if any,"' for his analysis. Kumho
Tire, 526 U.S. at 153 (quoting the district court). Here, Karlin clearly is a qualified mechanical
engineer but, as Kumho makes clear, that a witness is a qualified expert in a field or on a subject does
not by itself make relevant or admissible whatever opinion he or she proposes to offer. As did the
trial court in Kumho Tire, this court finds unreliable the expert's methodology used in gathering and
then analyzing the data in this case.
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On this point, the Court spoke with equal clarity that the trial court's task is to apply
Daubert's requirements to determine the reasonableness of the expert's methodology in the case at
hand, not its reasonableness generally.
Kumho Tire, 526 U.S. at 153-54.
Here, Karlin's
methodology is not a reliable approach to determining whether Defendant in this case was negligent
in "failing to install a non-slip surface on the floor of the store." As described above, there are
serious questions about the validity of the data he used and assumptions he made, and he failed to
consider material information in conducting his testing and analysis- information that either was
available to him or could have been obtained by him. The expert mechanical engineer's testimony
in Kumho suffered similar dispositive flaws in both methodology and factual assumptions and here,
as in Kumho Tire, the result is similarly dispositive of the proffered opinion.
In sum, the court has found that the subject of Karlin's expert testimony properly relates only
to one of Plaintiffs four allegations of negligence, that Defendant "[failed] to install a non-slip
surface on the floor of the store." As to that allegation, Karlin's testimony lacks the underlying
reliability necessary under Daubert to be relevant to the jury's determination whether Defendant
acted negligently in installing the floor tile material present at the time Plaintiff fell. Consequently,
Karlin's testimony is inadmissible.
Order
For the reasons stated above, Defendant's motion to exclude Plaintiffs expert testimony is
t /l)f____
GRANTED. Karlin's expert report is stricken and Karlin is precluded from testifYing at trial.
x7-1!
DAThD tl•i?/
of Scp 20!2.
(
~.-)
__ I
Jolm V. Acosta
U.S. Magistrate Judge
\_/
OPINION AND ORDER
18
{PES}
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