The plaintiff brought an action in the Superior Court against The Loft, Inc. (Loft), and two of its former employees, Gino Rida and David Miller. The complaint set forth several counts which included counts against the employees for assault and battery and counts against Loft for negligent
Loft moved at the close of the plaintiff’s evidence and again at the close of all the evidence for a directed verdict on the negligent retention count. Its motions were denied. After the verdict was returned against it on that count, Loft moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. Mass.R.Civ.P. 50(b),
The plaintiff’s theories of liability — negligent hiring or negligent retention of an employee by an employer — have been recognized by a number of jurisdictions, including Massachusetts.
Carson
v.
Canning,
The doctrine states that an employer whose employees are brought in contact with members of the public in the course of the employer’s business has a duty to exercise reasonable care in the selection and retention of his employees. These principles have been explained in the following manner: “An employer must use due care to avoid the selection or retention of an employee whom he knows or should know is a person un
It is the negligent retention aspect of the doctrine that formed the basis of the jury’s verdict against the defendant. “Negligent retention . . . occurs when, during the course of employment, the employer becomes aware or should have become aware of problems with an employee that indicated his unfitness, and the employer fails to take further action such as investigating, discharge or reassignment.”
Garcia
v.
Duffy,
In this case, the plaintiff contended that Loft was negligent because the evidence demonstrated that Loft knew that Rida had a criminal record and did nothing to determine its nature or extent, or to assure itself that Rida’s past criminal activities were not such, in the circumstances, as to present a danger to customers. According to the plaintiff, those circumstances in-
The standard governing a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict is the same as that applicable to a motion for directed verdict.
D’Annolfo
v.
Stoneham Housing Authy.,
The evidence examined in the light most favorable to the plaintiff would have permitted the jury to find the following facts. The incident that resulted in the plaintiff’s injuries occurred in Worcester on October 14, 1984, at a bar owned by" Loft. At that time, the bar was actually a complex of five different bars, providing disco music for dancing on the premises. It had a seating capacity of five hundred people. Loft employed two uniformed police officers to control any disturbance. In addition, Loft hired four individuals whose functions were to check identifications and help maintain order. It was
Loft had assumed ownership of the business in September, 1984. It retained as its employees Rida and a number of other individuals, including Miller. Rida was employed as a bartender. In that role he met members of the public on a regular basis. His duties included taking orders for drinks from customers, making drinks, and handling customer complaints.
Sometime after Loft had acquired the business, and before October 14, 1984, its comanager, James Flynn, had a conversation with a Worcester police officer, one Alan Stuart, who was employed by Loft on a part-time basis. Flynn was concerned about a possible shortage in receipts from the bars and asked Stuart for suggestions on how to deal with the problem. Stuart told Flynn that Flynn should check his help and be careful about them, that Loft employed people who had problems in their past. He advised Flynn to check on Loft’s bartenders, particularly those who had past problems. Flynn then told the police officer that he knew that Rida had a criminal record. 5 The jury could find that neither Flynn nor anyone else in Loft’s management made any attempt to check on Rida’s background or experience, made no inquiry of him as to job or character references, and did not ask him to fill out an employment application.
The incident that involved Rida and the plaintiff occurred in the following manner. In the late evening of Saturday, October 13, 1984, the plaintiff, accompanied by one Kohler and others, went to Loft. There they proceeded to the second floor, where there was dancing. Because there was standing room
The evidence disclosed that Loft, prior to the incident, knew that Rida had a criminal record. That fact, by itself, is not enough to establish, as matter of law, Loft’s negligence. See
Evans
v.
Morsell,
We emphasize again that our decision does not mean that an employer cannot hire or retain a person known to have a criminal record. 8 Circumstances will differ from case to case, and what might be a . perfectly acceptable hiring or retention under one set of circumstances might be highly unreasonable under another.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
The jury also found against Rida. It returned a verdict in favor of Loft on a count that alleged vicarious liability for an assault and battery committed by its employees.
In Carson v. Canning, supra, the plaintiff brought an action against the defendant, a pawnbroker, for negligence. He claimed that he had pledged his property to the defendant and that the defendant’s manager had absconded with it. The plaintiff was allowed to recover on the ground that the manager was an unfit person for his trust and that the defendant could and would have found that out if he had used ordinary care.
Most of the jurisdictions that have recognized the existence of this cause of action have held that liability exists on the part of the employer entirely independent of the employer’s liability under the principles of respondeat superior.
Porter
v.
Thompson,
Rida’s criminal record was placed in evidence. It consisted of a series of offenses that arose out of a single incident that occurred on July 19, 1981. The record showed that Rida had pleaded guilty on January 8, 1982, to charges of (1) assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon, to wit, a knife, (2) assault with intent to commit rape, and (3) kidnapping. He received a one-year sentence on the first charge and was placed on probation for two years on the other charges, the probation to commence after he had served his prison term. He was on probation at the time of the incident that was the basis of the plaintiff’s complaint.
For us to hold that an employer can never hire a person with a criminal record or retain such a person as its employee “at the risk of being held liable for his tortious assault flies in the face of the premise that society must make a reasonable effort to rehabilitate those who have gone astray.”
Williams
v.
Feather Sound, Inc.,
Obviously, the nature of the employee’s criminal record is important. An employee’s past conviction of larceny by check would not make the employer liable, on the basis of the doctrine of negligent hiring or negligent retention, for the employee’s subsequent rape of a customer.
Evans
v.
Morsell,
In the instant case, Rida’s record consisted of violent acts, and his similar acts caused the plaintiff’s injuries.
We agree with the majority of jurisdictions that hold that there is no requirement, as matter of law, that the employer make an inquiry with law enforcement agencies about an employee’s
possible
criminal record, even where an employee is to deal regularly with the public.
Garcia
v.
Duffy,
