While placing items in a shopping cart before Thanksgiving on November 10, 2011, appellants Michael Doe and Terry Garner, Jr. were detained by police officers in the break room of a Safeway grocery store. Appellants filed suit against appellee, Safeway, Inc., for false imprisonment. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of appellee and dismissed appellants’ case with prejudice. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm.
“Summary judgment is a question of law, which this court reviews de novo.” Han v. Se. Acad. of Scholastic Excellence Pub. Charter Sch.,
A successful claim of false imprisonment requires a plaintiff to establish (1) the detention or restraint of one against his will and (2) the unlawfulness of the detention or restraint. See Enders v. District of Columbia,
II.
Appellants concede that no employee of appellee detained them or arrested them. Appellants argue that the trial court erred because there are material facts other than those appellee set forth in its 12-I(k) statement, citing Spellman v. American Security Bank, N.A.,
Although Spellman indicated that the court must review the remainder of the record to determine if there are any disputed facts, id., it was decided before the Supreme Court’s decision in Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
Summary judgment may have once been considered an extreme remedy, but that is no longer the case. Hollins v. Fed. Nat. Morg. Ass’n, 760 A.2d 56S, 570 (D.C.2000) (“[S]ummary judgment is no longer regarded as an ‘extreme remedy_’”). Indeed, this court has recognized that summary judgment is vital. See Mixon v. Wash. Metro. Area Transit Auth.,
Appellants, citing Smith and Vessels, ask this court to find the grant of summary judgment improper because the trial court ignored the possibility that appellee’s employees could be found liable for false imprisonment on a theory of recklessness. Appellants’ argument is based on a footnote in Vessels, which stated:
Before us, appellant asserts that the case law supports liability when the defendant knowingly gives false information and for this appeal we go no further. Specifically, we do not rule on the question whether the cause of action will lie when, as in appellant’s complaint, the defendant’s action is labeled “malicious” but not necessarily knowing, nor when a defendant acts knowingly but nevertheless without malice nor from personal hostility or desire to offend.
Vessels, supra,
Even if we were to assume that reckless reporting of criminal activity gives rise to liability for false imprisonment, appellants have provided no evidence in the record that suggests appellee’s employees acted recklessly.
III.
Accordingly, the trial court’s order, granting summary judgment in favor of appellee and dismissing appellants’ case, is affirmed.
So ordered.
Notes
. We have held that "[t]he gist of any complaint for ... false imprisonment is an unlawful detention.” DeWitt v. District of Columbia,
. After Celotex, this court clarified the duties of the trial court with respect to searching for disputes of material fact. See Vessels, supra,
. Appellants listed the following facts in their opposition to appellee’s motion for summary judgment: (1) they disagree that they "were not arrested”; (2) they dispute that they were talking on their phones while shopping and that they "kept moving back and forth”; (3) they object to the characterization of the facts
