AUBREY MITCHELL, INDIVIDUALLY AND ON BEHALF OF ALL THE HEIRS AT LAW AND WRONGFUL DEATH BENEFICIARIES OF DEVIN R. MITCHELL, DECEASED, AND MYRTLE MITCHELL, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS THE NATURAL MOTHER AND NEXT FRIEND OF AUBREONNA D. MITCHELL, A MINOR v. RIDGEWOOD EAST APARTMENTS, LLC, UAH PROPERTY MANAGEMENT, L.P. AND TAVARIS FRANSHAY COLLINS
NO. 2015-CA-01484-SCT
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI
12/15/2016
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 06/09/2015; TRIAL JUDGE: HON. JAMES T. KITCHENS, JR.; COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: CLAY COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT; DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 12/15/2016
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANTS: DAVID RANDALL WADE; DENNIS C. SWEET, III; JEFFREY GRAY BAKER HOUSTON
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES: WALTER WILLIAM DUKES; DRURY SUMNER HOLLAND
NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - PERSONAL INJURY
BEFORE DICKINSON, P.J., KITCHENS AND KING, JJ.
KITCHENS, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:
¶1. In the early-morning hours of January 1, 2012, sixteen-year-old Devin Mitchell was
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
¶2. On December 31, 2011, Queenie Walker, a tenant of Ridgewood East Apartments since 2003, invited her cousins, Devin Mitchell, then sixteen years of age, and Aubreonna Mitchell, then fourteen years of age, to spend the night at her apartment. At midnight, Devin, Aubreonna, and Walker‘s three daughters went outdoors to celebrate the new year. Around 1:00 a.m. or 1:30 a.m., Devin visited with Porsha Ewing, who also resided at Ridgewood East, outside the window of her nearby apartment, for about an hour. The girls returned into Walker‘s apartment, but Devin remained outside. Because it was late, Walker called for Devin to return inside also. Devin replied, “I‘m coming . . ..”
¶3. As Devin was returning, three, four, or five shots rang out from above Walker‘s apartment. Walker realized that Devin had been shot when she saw him on the ground “not moving” just fifteen feet from the door to her apartment. Walker‘s daughter dialed 911 on a cellular telephone, because Walker “was shaking so bad.” According to the incident report
¶4. At her deposition, Walker testified that “the guy” came down the stairs and that she asked him what he had done and “started screaming at him” and “cursing at him.” Walker stated that “the guy” was Tavaris Collins, that he was “[r]unning around after the shooting,” and that his eyes were dilated and “he looked spaced out” and appeared to be “on something.” According to Walker, Collins had put away the gun he had used in the shooting and was wielding a different Tech-9 handgun, which he set on the ground “as if he was trying to show me . . . that he didn‘t do it.” Collins was arrested when the police arrived, around 2:57 a.m.1
¶5. Devin was taken by ambulance to the Clay County Hospital, from which he was transported by helicopter to a Tupelo hospital where he died of a bullet wound to the head.
¶6. According to an affidavit of the Ridgewood East Apartments property manager, Felecia Finley, Collins was not a resident of the complex. He was a visitor of Yashia Davis, who had been a resident of the apartment complex since 2010. Davis lived at Ridgewood East Apartments with her two children. Porsha Ewing testified at Collins‘s criminal trial that Collins had been staying at Ridgewood East with his girlfriend, Davis, for two years. Collins was the father of one of Davis‘s children and he would stay to babysit his child while Davis worked.
¶7. On September 7, 2012, Devin‘s parents, Aubrey Mitchell, individually and on behalf
¶8. On March 18, 2014, Ridgewood East designated Bruce A. Jacobs, Ph.D., as an expert in criminology. The trial court denied Ridgewood East‘s first summary judgment motion, which had been filed on October 9, 2013. Ridgewood East filed its second motion for summary judgment on March 31, 2014, arguing that no genuine issue of material fact existed with respect to foreseeability. Attached to the motion was Jacobs‘s affidavit. Jacobs, who examined crime data from the West Point Police Department for the three-year period preceding the shooting, opined that no atmosphere of violence existed at Ridgewood East.3
Having reviewed the police report of the incident, area crime data, and the deposition testimony of the witnesses, he concluded that no evidence existed that tended to put Ridgewood East on notice that Collins posed a threat to residents.
¶9. The Mitchells responded on July 11, 2014, and sought further discovery. Attached to the response were various West Point Police Department incident reports from 2009 to 2013 involving Ridgewood East. On February 27, 2015, the Mitchells designated John A. Harris, B.S., M.S., as an expert in the field of premises liability and security. Harris stated in his affidavit, which was filed on March 29, 2015, that, in his professional opinion and within a reasonable degree of certainty, the shooting was foreseeable because it was reasonably foreseeable that: (1) residents and guests of the apartment would celebrate New Year‘s Eve, (2) on New Year‘s Eve, residents and guests “may engage in the use of drugs or alcohol,” (3) residents and guests might violate the 10:00 p.m. curfew on New Year‘s Eve, (4) residents and guests would violate the apartment handbook rule against public drunkenness, (5) residents and guests might violate the apartment handbook “rule against weapons on the property in the absence of management or security officers on the property at the time” to ensure the rule‘s enforcement, (6) a resident or guest could be injured if the apartment‘s rules
¶10. Ridgewood East‘s second motion for summary judgment was heard on May 15, 2015. The trial court entered its order granting summary judgment to Ridgewood East on June 16, 2015. It found that, while Collins had lived on, or visited daily, the property for approximately two years, the apartment possessed neither actual nor constructive knowledge of his presence, since he had not been added to Davis‘s lease and no complaints previously had been filed involving him. The trial court further found that the Mitchells had not rebutted the conclusions of Dr. Jacobs, and that Harris‘s affidavit did not address whether an atmosphere of violence existed at Ridgewood East or whether Ridgewood East was on notice of Collins‘s violent nature. The trial court determined that no genuine issue of material fact existed with regard to foreseeability.
¶11. The Mitchells filed a motion for relief from summary judgment pursuant to
¶12. The Mitchells argue on appeal that Collins himself constitutes an unreasonably dangerous condition and that Ridgewood East had constructive knowledge both of his
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶13. We review a trial court‘s grant of summary judgment de novo. Borries v. Grand Casino, Inc., 187 So. 3d 1042, 1045 (Miss. 2016) (citing Davis v. Hoss, 869 So. 2d 397, 401 (Miss. 2004)). “The judgment sought shall be rendered forthwith if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”
ANALYSIS
1. Whether Ridgewood East had constructive knowledge of Tavaris Collins‘s violent nature.
¶14. The Mitchells argue that, because Ridgewood East is federally subsidized and subject
¶15. Plaintiffs must, in order to recover on a negligence claim, demonstrate “that the
¶16. This Court has considered cases involving actual knowledge of the assailant‘s violent nature. In the case of Galanis v. CMA Management Company, 175 So. 3d 1213, 1214 (Miss. 2015), the mother of Andreas Galanis, who had been murdered by his roommate, Bobby Batiste, filed a premises-liability action against the owners and management of the apartment complex where the murder had occurred. The trial court granted summary judgment, having determined that the owners and management could not be held liable for failing to warn Galanis of Batiste‘s violent tendencies. Id. at 1214. This Court reversed the judgment and remanded the case because evidence in the record showed that Batiste had filed a “resident concern form” in which he complained about a prior roommate. Id. The letter indicated that Batiste could not “take it anymore” and that he did not “want to get violent.” Id. at 1215.
Batiste continued that he hoped “this get[s] resolved soon because I really don‘t want to take
¶17. In another case, the assailant, who had days before shot and grazed the victim, returned to the apartment complex, where he shot and killed the victim. Thomas v. Columbia Group, LLC, 969 So. 2d 849, 852 (Miss. 2007). The Court reversed and remanded the trial court‘s grant of summary judgment because the complex had knowledge of the assailant‘s violent nature:
The apartment manager at Shady Lane knew about the first shooting at least two days after it happened. Even if she did not hear about the shooting until two days after it happened, it was still several days before the second shooting, resulting in Thomas‘s death, occurred. There is even testimony that the apartment manager “knew something like this was going to happen,” and that she was going to do something about it.
Id. at 854-55. The Court held that, based in part on “the manager‘s statement that she was going to ban and evict [the assailant] as well as improve security,” the record presented a genuine issue of material fact. Id. at 855.
¶18. This Court has not considered, however, the issue of whether an attack is foreseeable based on the property owner‘s constructive knowledge of an assailant‘s violent nature. Constructive knowledge is defined as “‘information or knowledge of a fact imputed by law to a person (although he may not actually have it), because he could have discovered the fact by proper diligence, and his situation was such as to cast upon him the duty of inquiring into it.‘” Doe ex rel. Brown v. Pontotoc Cty. Sch. Dist., 957 So. 2d 410, 417 (Miss. Ct. App. 2007) (quoting Black‘s Law Dictionary 1062 (6th ed. 1990)).
¶19. To show that Ridgewood East by proper diligence could have discovered Collins‘s
(c) Authority to deny admission to criminal offenders
Except as provided in subsections (a) and (b) of this section and in addition to any other authority to screen applicants, in selecting among applicants for admission to the program or to federally assisted housing, if the public housing agency or owner of such housing (as applicable) determines that an applicant or any member of the applicant‘s household is or was, during a reasonable time preceding the date when the applicant household would otherwise be selected for admission, engaged in any drug-related or violent criminal activity or other criminal activity which would adversely affect the health, safety, or right to peaceful enjoyment of the premises by other residents, the owner, or public housing agency employees, the public housing agency or owner may--
(1) deny such applicant admission to the program or to federally assisted housing....
§ 5.855 When am I specifically authorized to prohibit admission of individuals who have engaged in criminal activity?
(a) You may prohibit admission of a household to federally assisted housing under your standards if you determine that any household member is currently engaging in, or has engaged in during a reasonable time before the admission decision:
(1) Drug-related criminal activity;
(2) Violent criminal activity;
(3) Other criminal activity that would threaten the health, safety, or right to peaceful enjoyment of the premises by other residents; or
(4) Other criminal activity that would threaten the health or safety of the [public housing agency] or owner or any employee,
§ 5.903 What special authority is there to obtain access to criminal records?
(a) Authority. If you are a [public housing agency] that administers the Section 8 program and/or the public housing program, this section authorizes you to obtain criminal conviction records from a law enforcement agency, as defined in § 5.902. You may use the criminal conviction records that you obtain from a law enforcement agency under the authority of this section to screen applicants for admission to covered housing programs and for lease enforcement or eviction of families residing in public housing or receiving Section 8 project-based assistance.
(b) Consent for release of criminal conviction records.
(1) In order to obtain access to records under this section, as a responsible entity you must require every applicant family to submit a consent form signed by each adult household member.
¶20. In support of their argument, the Mitchells attach Davis‘s lease agreement which required that she yearly recertify to Ridgewood East the “income and composition of [her] household... for the purpose of determining [her] rent and assistance payment.” A 2010 request for transfer indicated that Davis had “[a]dded a second child to the household,” and listed herself, Yashia Davis, and two minor children, Cedrickus Hodges and Yavarian Collins. The Mitchells also submitted to the trial court the transcript of Porsha Ewing‘s testimony from Collins‘s criminal trial. Ewing testified that Collins had been staying with his girlfriend at Ridgewood East for “[m]aybe about two years.” According to the Mitchells, “[i]f
¶21. To find that knowledge of Collins‘s criminal record was imputed to Ridgewood East, this Court first must determine that Ridgewood East had a duty to inquire into it. But the HUD regulations presented by the Mitchells are merely permissive: Ridgewood East was authorized, not required, to deny admission to criminal offenders if it:
determine[d] that an applicant or any member of the applicant‘s household is or was, during a reasonable time preceding the date when the applicant household would otherwise be selected for admission, engaged in any drug-related or violent criminal activity or other criminal activity which would adversely affect the health, safety, or right to peaceful enjoyment of the premises by other residents . . ..
¶22. Nothing in the record demonstrates that Ridgewood East at any point undertook to obtain the criminal records of its tenants and that, in the event a tenancy applicant had a criminal record, it had a policy of denying admission. Indeed, this Court recently rejected the argument that an apartment complex could assume a heightened duty of care by adopting a policy of conducting background checks of prospective tenants. Compare Galanis, 175 So. 3d at 1221 (Kitchens, J., dissenting) (“A jury could find that Batiste‘s stealing Galanis‘s debit card was within the realm of foreseeable harm that was within the risk being taken by 21 Apartments allowing someone with a criminal history to live in its apartment complex. . . . After all, is not the purpose of having a policy to exclude residents with a criminal history to avoid the commission of crimes on the apartment complex‘s premises?“), with Galanis, 175 So. 3d at 1218 (“21 Apartments—as premises owner—already owed Galanis—as an invitee—a duty of reasonable care. Certainly, the Galanises may argue to the jury that 21 Apartments breached its duty to warn of known dangers by failing to reveal the results of Batiste‘s background check when it matched Batiste and Galanis as potential roommates. But that is an issue of breach, not duty.“)
¶23. Even under the standard articulated in the Galanis dissent, the Mitchells’ claims fail. Davis‘s (and Walker‘s) lease permitted Ridgewood East to terminate a tenant‘s lease in the following relevant circumstances:
(3) drug related criminal activity engaged in[,] on[,] or near the premises[] by any tenant, household member, or guest, and any such activity engaged in on the premises by any other person under the tenant‘s control;
(4) determination made by the Landlord that a household member is illegally using a drug;
(5) determination made by the Landlord that a pattern of illegal use of a drug interferes with the health, safety, or right to peaceful enjoyment of the premises by other residents;
(6) criminal activity by a tenant, any member of the tenant‘s household, a guest or another person under the tenant‘s control:
(a) that threatens the health, safety, or right to peaceful enjoyment of the premises by other residents (including property management staff residing on the premises);
(b) or that threatens the health, safety, or right to peaceful enjoyment of their residences by persons residing in the immediate vicinity of the premises;
(10) if the Landlord determines that the tenant, any member of the tenant‘s household, a guest or another person under the tenant‘s control has engaged in the criminal activity, regardless of whether the tenant, any member of the tenant‘s household, a guest or another person under the tenant‘s control has been arrested or convicted for such activity.
¶24. A 2011 lease addendum stated, in pertinent part, that:
- The Resident [or] any member at the Resident‘s household, or a guest or other person under the Resident‘s control shall not engage in or facilitate criminal activity on or near the project including, but not limited to, violent criminal activity or drug-related criminal activity.
- The Resident or any member of the Resident‘s household shall not permit the dwelling unit to be used for, or to facilitate, criminal activity, including, but not limited to, violent criminal activity or drug-related criminal activity.
“Violent criminal activity” means any felonious criminal activity that has as one of its elements the use, attempted use, or threatened use of physical force against the person or property of another.
. . .
- One or more violations of section 1 or 2 of this lease Addendum constitutes a substantial violation of the Lease and material noncompliance with the Lease. Any such violation is grounds for termination of tenancy and eviction from the unit.
¶25. The lease agreement and addendum allowed for termination in the event a tenant, or a member of the tenant‘s household or a guest, engaged in a criminal activity. The lease agreement and addendum did not mandate a background check or indicate that the landlord would terminate the lease based on the results of a background check if one were to be conducted. Additionally, the Ridgewood East lease required its tenants yearly to recertify the composition of their respective households. A consent form was required to allow HUD to obtain records “verifying employment and income of individuals participating in specified programs and . . . to conduct analyses of the employment and income reporting of these individuals.”
¶26. The Ridgewood East policies differ from those of the apartment complex discussed by the dissent in Galanis. In that case, 21 Apartments had required that tenants “agree[] to an investigation of [his or her] ‘credit, character, and reputation,’ including a criminal background check.” Galanis, 175 So. 3d at 1221 (Kitchens, J., dissenting). There, the apartment complex employed a “‘zero tolerance’ policy for criminal history,” meaning that persons having a criminal history would be denied admission. Id. No evidence in the record demonstrates that such policies existed at Ridgewood East.
¶28. The Mitchells next analogize this case to a slip-and-fall claim in which the constructive knowledge of a dangerous condition is imputed to the property owner based upon the length of time the dangerous condition existed. “If the dangerous condition was created by someone not associated with the operation of the store, the plaintiff must produce evidence demonstrating that the operator had actual or constructive knowledge of the condition.” Drennan v. Kroger Co., 672 So. 2d 1168, 1170 (Miss. 1996) (citing Downs v. Choo, 656 So. 2d 84, 86 (Miss. 1995)). “Constructive knowledge is present where, based on the length of time that the condition existed, the operator exercising reasonable care should have known of its presence.” Drennan, 672 So. 2d at 1170 (citing Waller v. Dixieland Food Stores, Inc., 492 So. 2d 283, 285 (Miss. 1986)). The Mitchells argue that, in this case, Ridgewood East “had two years to discover [that Collins] was living at Ridgewood East Apartments and to require his consent to a criminal background check if he wanted to remain a member of Yashia Davis‘s household at Ridgewood East Apartments.” (Emphasis in original.)
¶29. In Drennan, 672 So. 2d at 1168, a woman slipped and fell at a Kroger grocery store. This Court reversed the trial court‘s grant of a directed verdict to Kroger because “Drennan produced evidence demonstrating that Kroger should have been aware from past conditions,
¶30. Finally, the Mitchells argue that the policies of Ridgewood East allowed it “reasonably [to] enter the apartment units in order to enforce the rule against authorized [sic] persons living on the property.” The Ridgewood East Resident Handbook required that “[g]uests staying longer than two nights at a time or more than two nights per week must be registered at the rental office. NO guests may stay on a permanent basis. Failure to adhere to this policy is a violation of your lease agreement.” And it is true that the lease agreement provided that the landlord was permitted to “enter the unit for the purpose of making
¶31. Because Ridgewood East did not have constructive knowledge of Collins‘s violent nature, this issue is without merit.
2. Whether Ridgewood East‘s property rules and policies rendered third-party criminal acts foreseeable by imposing a duty on Ridgewood East to prevent rule and policy violations.
¶32. The Mitchells argue that the two-prong test by which foreseeability in premises liability cases involving third-party assaults may be proved is not the ”exclusive method of proving foreseeability . . . .” (Emphasis in original.) They continue that “where a defendant has assumed duties defined by the words and terms of a written contract, evidence of those contractual duties can be sufficient evidence to prove ‘foreseeability’ in premises liability cases involving third-party criminal assaults . . . .” According to the Mitchells, Ridgewood East‘s rules and policies prohibited weapons, alcohol, illicit drugs, public drunkenness, fighting, or verbal altercations and, therefore Ridgewood East “clearly breached [its] duty to enforce the rules.”
¶34. In Galanis, this Court found Doe to be distinguishable, because Galanis was a premises-liability case: ”Doe stands for the proposition that one may assume a duty of reasonable care where one previously did not exist,” but “the contract in Doe created Wright‘s duty of reasonable care, whereas 21 Apartments already owed a duty of reasonable care to Galanis.” Galanis, 175 So. 3d at 1217-18. The Court found that Doe could be applicable “if 21 Apartments had contracted with someone to provide security, and the Galanises had tried to sue that party,” but that such was not the case: “21 Apartments did not
¶35. Similarly, here, Ridgewood East owed only a duty of reasonable care to prevent foreseeable harm to Devin Mitchell. And while the Guest Policy in the Resident Handbook, which was incorporated by reference into the lease agreement, prohibited alcoholic beverages, loitering in the parking lot, public drunkenness, fighting, disturbances, verbal altercations, threats, or weapons on the grounds7 and the lease contract permitted Ridgewood East to terminate the lease if a tenant or guest used an illicit drug or engaged in “drug related activity,” it cannot be said that by incorporating policies and rules into the lease agreement, Ridgewood East assumed a contractual duty to tenants and guests to prevent any and all violations of the rules, even those of which it had no actual or constructive knowledge.
¶36. No genuine issue of material fact exists with regard to foreseeability of a third-party criminal act based on the existence of Ridgewood East‘s policies and rules. This issue is without merit.
CONCLUSION
¶37. Because no genuine issue of material fact exists in the record before this Court on the question of the foreseeability of the tragic shooting death of Devin Mitchell, we affirm the Circuit Court of Clay County‘s grant of summary judgment to Ridgewood East.
¶38. AFFIRMED.
WALLER, C.J., DICKINSON, P.J., KING, COLEMAN, MAXWELL AND BEAM, JJ., CONCUR. RANDOLPH, P.J., AND LAMAR, J., NOT PARTICIPATING.
Notes
Dr. Jacobs stated that the data he reviewed revealed the following:
- Not a single homicide occurred at the property in that three-year period.
- Not a single robbery (armed or strong arm) occurred at the property in
that three-year period. - Not a single rape or sexual assault occurred at the property in that three-year period.
- Not a single nondomestic aggravated assault occurred at the property in that three-year period.
- Not a single gun crime of any kind occurred at the property in that three-year period.
- Not a single person was seriously injured in any act of predatory (stranger-on[-]stranger) violence during that three-year period.
No evidence in the record supports the Mitchells’ assertion that:
Defendants assumed other duties under the lease agreement as well, including but not limited to, a duty to (1) reasonably stop and question guests on the property; (2) to reasonably require guests to provide identification; (3) to reasonably enter apartment units to determine whether unauthorized persons were living in the unit . . . .
