Lead Opinion
This is an appeal by the plaintiff in this civil action, from a judgment entered after the grant of a defense motion for directed verdict, where the trial court found that appellant failed to establish a prima facie ease of negligence. Appellant asks this court to hold that an employer, here appellee Peoples Drug Store (“Peoples”), is liable for damages to the survivors of one of its employees, who was murdered by an unknown third person when the employee departed the premises after closing time, where some criminal activity had been reported in the vicinity of the store. We conclude, under these circumstances, that there is no basis for holding the employer liable and, therefore, we affirm the trial court.
I.
Shortly after midnight on July 5, 1988, James Clement, manager of the Peoples Drug Store at the Naylor Road Shopping Center, was shot and killed by an unknown assailant. The shooting occurred after Clement and security guard Jerome Brown secured and closed the store premises. Brown headed toward the bus stop and Clement began walking toward his car, where his wife was waiting, in the parking lot directly in front of Peoples. As he neared his car, a red Jaguar which had been parked further away in the same lot started up and sped toward him. The Jaguar stopped, and a man armed with a pistol stepped out and ordered Clement to drop the bag he was carrying. Although he complied and dropped his briefcase,
Appellant, the deceased’s widow, filed this action seeking damages from Peoples for
At trial the plaintiff presented the testimony of an expert criminologist, Dr. William Bopp, who testified that Peoples was “on notice” about the dangerousness of the shopping center and that Clement’s death was reasonably foreseeable. Dr. Bopp also testified that Peoples should have implemented a policy that included an armed guard going out into the parking lot, prior to the store’s closing at night, to inspect the parking lot area to ensure the safety of departing employees. If the guard found any suspicious activity, the police should then be notified.
At the close of appellant’s case-in-chief, Peoples moved for a directed verdict. The trial court granted the motion, ruling that “the record includes no evidence that would permit a reasonable juror to find that Peoples had or should have had a heightened or increased awareness of the danger of this particular criminal act.” Judgment was accordingly entered for Peoples, and this appeal followed.
II.
We begin our analysis by observing that if “a party has been fully heard with respect to an issue and there is no legally sufficient evidentiary basis for a reasonable jury to have found for that party with respect to that issue, the Court may grant a motion for judgment as a matter of law....” Super.Ct.Civ.R. 50(a)(1). When a party moves for a directed verdict, the evidence must be viewed “in the light most favorable to the party against whom the verdict is sought.” Bauman v. Sragow,
In our review of a directed verdict we are required to give the non-moving party “the benefit of all reasonable inferences from the evidence.” Corley v. BP Oil Corp.,
The only evidence presented by appellant relating to that point was provided by Dr. Bopp, who testified that in his opinion the murder was reasonably foreseeable. Dr. Bopp relied upon police reports of criminal activity in the shopping center for the three years prior to the shooting of Clement. In analyzing Dr. Bopp’s testimony, the trial court observed that “[m]uch of Dr. Bopp’s opinion was based on his view that there is a special or increased danger at opening or particularly, at closing time. However, the incidents on which he relied did not include a
Specifically, Dr. Bopp testified that Peoples did not follow reasonable procedures and opined that Peoples had “[n]otification in advance that serious crime had occurred in the past and would continue to occur....” According to Dr. Bopp, Peoples was negligent because the standard of care required reasonably prudent operators of a drugstore to: (1) “keep good track of crime. Find out what kind of crime is going on, not just in the store but in the shopping center”; (2) “make sure that proper illumination is in effect in the parking lot and around the store”; and (3) “have the guard go out in the parking lot, make sure there are no loiterers around when the store closes and then let the manager and then the guard leave safely.” As noted, we do not decide whether the standard of care, as defined by Dr. Bopp, was legally sufficient since we are satisfied that under the circumstances the murder was not reasonably foreseeable.
We have previously observed that “[w]hen an intervening act is criminal, this court demands a more heightened showing of foreseeability than if it were merely negligent. Because of ‘the extraordinary nature of criminal conduct, the law requires that the foreseeability of the risk be more precisely shown.’” McKethean, supra,
Appellant contends, however, she met this heightened standard as the standard is defined in District of Columbia v. Doe,
In Doe, a young female student was abducted from inside her elementary school classroom and raped by an unknown intruder. A jury found negligence on the part of school officials and awarded damages. On appeal, the government argued that “the District could not have reasonably foreseen the intervening criminal conduct involved and thus could not be held liable for damages to [the child].” Doe, supra,
In support of that holding we observed that there was evidence that “crimes against persons [had been committed] in and around the school ... [including] a robbery on the
In the present case, unlike Doe, there are no factors which created a situation where the intervening criminal act “should have been reasonably anticipated and protected against.” Lacy, supra,
Indeed, the criminal offenses cited by appellant are, unfortunately, not much different from what is found in scores of other neighborhoods throughout the city. For example, only one offense, a robbery at a nearby Giant supermarket, involved a firearm and no homicides had been reported. Other reported offenses included a shoplifting in the Safeway supermarket located in the same shopping center, a “snatch” of money from the victim’s hand, a stolen automobile, a robbery which included the brandishing of a knife, and other robberies in which weapons were not used. Six of the offenses had occurred at the drug store where Clement worked, but none involved weapons or any significant physical harm to the victims: there were two “snatches” of money out of cash registers, three apprehensions of shoplifters, and one assault upon a security guard. And, as we have already noted, none of the criminal offenses occurred at the closing time of Peoples, or of any of the other stores in the shopping center.
We have observed that an “urban crime problem ... does not put any additional duty on grocery stores to insure the safety of their customers against all harm.” Ellis v. Safeway Stores, Inc.,
In sum, we conclude there is ample support for the trial court’s ruling that there were no facts or circumstances from which a jury could find that “Peoples had or should have had a heightened or increased awareness of the danger of this particular criminal act.” Accordingly, the trial court did not err in ruling that the evidence was insufficient as a matter of law and that a directed verdict was required. Accordingly, the judgment is
Affirmed.
Notes
. Appellant also claims that the trial court "erred in excluding the testimony of an expert witness who would have testified that “the lighting [outside the store] was below industry standards and would have demonstrated that the lighting was poor enough to provide excellent covering and concealment for the robbers while they observed their victim." Because we find that appellant failed to sustain her burden of showing that the murder was foreseeable, we need not reach that issue.
. The record is silent concerning the contents, if any, of the briefcase; however, Clement was not carrying any money from the store.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in the result:
I concur in the affirmance of the judgment, but on a different ground. Mrs. Clement faded, in my view, to show by expert testimony either that Peoples had violated the applicable standard of care or that any alleged violation was the proximate cause of her husband’s murder.
The principal theory espoused by Dr. Bopp, Mrs. Clement’s expert witness, was that Peoples should have conducted an “armed sweep” of the parking lot at closing time. Dr. Bopp opined that the security guard, on seeing the red Jaguar, would have been obliged to call the police. These steps,
Mrs. Clement also claimed that Peoples violated the standard of care by failing to provide proper lights outside the store. Even if the testimony and exhibits proffered in support of this theory had been admitted, however, there was no showing, nor could there be, that this alleged breach of duty “ha[d] a substantial and direct causal link” to [Mr. Clement’s] murder. See District of Columbia v. Freeman,
Mrs. Clement did not come close to showing that the tragedy was Peoples’ fault, or that an impartial jury could reasonably find that it was. I would therefore affirm the judgment for the foregoing reasons without reaching the rather perplexing (to me) issue of “foreseeability.”
