Friday, December 05, 2025

Oklahoma woman sues Mercy Joplin after injuring her face in hallway fall


An Ottawa County, Oklahoma woman filed a lawsuit against Mercy Joplin claiming she caught her leg on a metal frame in a narrow hallways, fell and injured her face.

According to the petition, Cheryl Brock was in Mercy's emergency room February 10, 2024 while her husband was seeking medical care when the accident occurred.

From the petition:

After registering at the triage desk, Plaintiff’s husband was taken to the emergency department examination suites with Plaintiff in tow. Plaintiff stepped outside her husband’s examination suite at some point to use the restroom in the common hallway just outside the examination suites.








After Plaintiff exited the restroom, she started walking down the common hallway to return to her husband’s examination suite. At the same time, an employee of Defendant was walking the opposite direction coming toward Plaintiff, so Plaintiff moved toward the right of the hallway.

A large metal frame device which resembled a hospital bed was positioned upright along the right wall of the hallway. Defendant’s employee and Plaintiff passed each other in the hallway near where the metal frame device was positioned along the wall. 

As Plaintiff was looking at the employee, Plaintiff’s foot caught one of the legs of the metal frame that,
unbeknownst to Plaintiff, was protruding further into the walkway. The legs of the metal frame caused Plaintiff to fall forward, whereupon she landed face first onto the hard tile floor and sustained injury to her face.

The metal frame and legs extending into the hallway constituted a dangerous condition in that it created a trip and fall hazard.

Defendant Mercy Joplin, by and through its employees, placed the metal frame in the hallway and positioned so as to create the dangerous condition.

Defendant Mercy Joplin knew or could have known about the metal frame positioned in the hallway in sufficient time to have remedied, barricaded, or warned about it.








The fall aforesaid and the injuries and damages suffered by Plaintiff as described below were the direct and proximate result of the negligence, carelessness, acts and/or omissions of Defendant Mercy Joplin, in one, more, or all the following particulars to wit:

a. by not keeping its premises in a reasonably safe condition free of hazards;

b. by not performing proper, frequent, and adequate inspections of the premises to discover the trip and fall hazard presented by the metal frame;

by failing to remedy, barricade, or warn about the trip and fall hazard created by the metal frame when such hazard existed for a sufficient period of time that

c. Defendant knew or could have known about it; and

d. by positioning the metal frame in the hallway with its legs protruding outward so as to create a trip and fall hazard;

Defendant’s failure to use ordinary care, as aforesaid, directly caused or contributed to cause Plaintiff to sustain bodily injury to her head and neck. Plaintiff has incurred a substantial sum for medical care and treatment. Plaintiff was caused and continues to have pain, suffering, loss of life’s enjoyment, diminished quality of life, and inconvenience as a result of her injuries.

Brock, who is represented by Patrick Martucci of Johnson, Vorhees and Martucci, is asking for damages and a jury trial.

9 comments:

Anonymous said...

How about look where you’re walking and taking personal responsibility for your own welfare

Anonymous said...

Sometimes beds have to be in hallways. It's not suddenly a tripping hazard just because it's outside of a room. I guess Mercy should have posted a sign on all sides of the bed saying "CAUTION: BED"?

Anonymous said...

I don't believe in suing. I am sure Mercy will take care of her medical issues. Accidents happen.

Anonymous said...

FFS! Pull your head out of your butt and be aware of what's around you. People are ridiculous anymore...

Anonymous said...

Ok so I know personally where she is talking about and where the bathrooms are located for one there is a large area where yes they keep extra beds, wheelchairs, chairs etc. Also those hallways are wide enough if done right to get 2 beds down them at the same time so they are not that “narrow”. If it was just an employee walking past without a patient on a bed or in a wheelchair there would have been no reason for this person to move over so far that they would have tripped because no beds or wheelchairs are left in the immediate hallways outside of the rooms, just the alcove by the bathrooms down by the door on the ER waiting room side. There are to many EMS workers bringing patients in for them to leave beds in the rest of the hallways.

Anonymous said...

Hey it's JVM again, suing over nonsense

Anonymous said...

Someone looking for an easy payday. I owned a construction company. A couple of years ago a lady looking at her phone walked into a barricaded fenced area in freeman’s parking lot. It was 100% HER fault. However, our insurance settled with this POS for $45,000 to avoid a trial. If it had been up to me, we would have fought it. But the insurance company said it would cost more to fight it. It’s sickening that these vultures are always looking to sue. Sadly, it doesn’t hurt the insurance company, but our premiums go sky high!

Anonymous said...

Yes, No one takes Responsibility for themselves, it always has to be someone else's fault. As long as they can find another vulture attorney under a rock who will file a frivolous lawsuit to cash in to pay for their debts -

Just look out on Case Net for Cheryl Brock, in Jasper County - and see her 6-cases about her not paying her rent, payday loans, unpaid medical bills - and when you look up a lot of these slip-in-falls - they all have financial problems until they find a business or medical facility and a cheap azz attorney to represent them.

Anonymous said...

Unfortunately Mercy will probably settle with this person rather than spend money litigating it. It's called "a business decision" - instead of spending $75,000 on attorney fees to defend the case, they'd rather spend $50,000 settling it. I used to see it happen a lot when I was in the insurance/risk management business in the corporate segment.