MEMORANDUM JUDGMENT & ORDER
Table of Contents
I. Introduction.388
II. Factual Allegations.389
III. Law.390
A. Motion to Dismiss.390
1. Statement of a Claim.390
a. Standard and Scope of Review.390
b. Claims .390
1. Public Nuisance.390
A. Causation.391
B. Special Harm.392
i. Physical and Emotional Injury.392
ii. Pecuniary Injury.393
2. Negligence.394
A. Duty.394
B. Causation.395
3. Products Liability.396
2. Personal Jurisdiction.396
a. Standard of Review.396
b. New York Long Arm Statute.397
c. Criteria for Claims Involving Firearms Sales.397
B. Amending the Complaint.398
IV. Application of Law to Facts .398
A. Motion to Dismiss.398
1. Statement of a Claim.398
a. Public Nuisance .398
b. Negligence.399
e. Products Liability.400
2. Personal Jurisdiction.400
B. Amending the Complaint.401
V. Conclusion.•..401
I. Introduction
While working at a Wendy’s restaurant in Flushing, New York in May 2001, eighteen-year-old Jaquione Johnson was shot in the head in the course of an attempted robbery. The weapon used was an illegally acquired semi-automatic pistol.
The two perpetrators ordered Wendy’s employees to go down to the basement. There they were lined up, them heads covered with plastic bags, and, one by one, they were shot in the head. Five were killed. Johnson and one other were severely injured. The incident acquired the appellation “The Wendy’s Massacre.”
Johnson sues the gun’s manufacturer (Bryco Arms), the wholesaler (B.L.Jennings), the distributor (Acusport Corp.), and the retailer (Atlantic Gun & Tackle, Inc.). Causes of action for public nuisance, negligence, design defect, breach of warranty, and strict liability are claimed.
Atlantic Gun & Tackle moves to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which
For the reasons set out below the motion to dismiss the products liability claims is granted. Discovery will proceed on the public nuisance and negligence claims and on the issue of personal jurisdiction.
Normally an examination of evidence is not useful in deciding a motion to dismiss. Courts limit themselves to considering the legal basеs for the causes of action alleged and assume the plaintiffs version
of
facts to be true. In evaluating the legal sufficiency of this plaintiffs claims, however, it is desirable to briefly review Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (“ATF”) crime-gun trace data and the marketing practices of the gun industry. Preliminary examination of this material is prudent in light of recent cases interpreting New York law as requiring specific factual backgrounds in order to state a cause of action for public nuisance and negligence against the firearms industry.
See Hamilton v. Beretta U.S.A. Corp.,
II. Factual Allegations
Plaintiff was shot with a .380 caliber semiautomatic pistol by one of the robbers, John Taylor or Craig Godineaux. The gun allegedly was acquired by Taylor or Godi-neaux following a trail of possession during which the weapon repeatedly changed hands, both legally and illegally. It is contended that the firearm was (1) manufactured by Bryco Arms in California; (2) sold to B.L. Jennings in Nevada; (3) sold to Acusport in Ohio; (4) sold to Atlantic Gun & Tackle in Ohio; (5) sold to Angela Freeman, a resident of Ohio, with the retailer’s knowledge that she was purchasing it on behalf of Bernard Gardier because he could not legally purchаse it himself; (6) illegally transported by Gardier and one Jamal Gales to New York City, and there illegally sold by them to an unknown individual; and (7) sold twice more before coming into the possession of Taylor or Godineaux.
Plaintiff alleges that defendants’ sales and distribution practices created, contributed to and maintained the illegal secondary gun market through which this handgun moved until it did its deadly work. This underground market, it is contended, depended upon defendants’ irresponsible business practices, such as multiple firearms sales and straw purchases. It is argued that defendants knew or should have known that their guns were being sold on the underground market and repeatedly used in the commission of crimes, but, because they gained significant revenue from illegal firearms sаles, they failed to adopt basic policies and practices that would greatly decrease the number of guns reaching criminals; and that the defendants created and contributed to this illegal secondary market despite the knowledge that it was reasonably foresee
III. Law
A. Motion to Dismiss
1. Statement of a Claim
a. Standard and Scope of Review
Pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6), a defendant may move to dismiss for “failure to state a claim upon which relief may be granted.” Defendant has the burden of proving “beyond doubt that the plaintiff can prove no set of facts in support of his claim [that] would entitle him to relief.”
Conley v. Gibson,
In reviewing a Rule 12(b)(6) motion, the task of the court “is merely to assess the legal feasibility of the complaint, not to assay the weight of the evidence which might be offered in support thereof.”
Geisler v. Petrocelli,
b. Claims
1. Public Nuisance
A public nuisance under New York law exists when there is a substantial interference with a public right.
See Copart Indus., Inc. v. Consol. Edison Co. of New York,
A. Causation
Persons who join or participate in the creation or maintenance of a public nuisance are liable jointly and severally for the wrong and resulting injury.
Simmons v. Everson,
“[Cjreation of a public nuisance in the aggregate arises where it is difficult or impossible to separate the injury done by one contributing actor from that done by another and where the injury imposed by each contributing actor individually doеs not constitute a substantial interference with a public right.”
NAACP,
In
Johnson v. Beemiller,
this court dismissed a case brought against various firearms manufacturers and distributors because causation was predicated on conduct creating a public nuisance only in the aggregate.
B. Special Harm
A private plaintiff does not have standing to bring a public nuisance cause of action unless he or she shows some harm different from that suffered by the public generally.
532 Madison Ave. Gourmet Foods, Inc. v. Finlandia Center, Inc.,
The fact that multiple persons are injured does not make the nuisance such a common one аs to exclude redress by a private individual; an action may be maintained by one who is not the sole sufferer when the grievance is not common to the whole public, but is shared by a number or even a class of persons.
Lansing v. Smith,
i. Physical and Emotional Injury
Physical injuries to particular persons are generally sufficient to constitute harm different in kind under New York law.
See Andersen v. Univ. of Rochester,
The Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit has held that, under California law, the physical and emotional trauma suffered by gunshot victims is different in kind from “the danger, fear, inconvenience, and interference with the use and enjoyment of public places that affect the tenor and quality of еveryday life” experienced by the general public as a result of gun violence.
Ileto v. Glock,
Dismissal of the public nuisance suit in
NAACP
was based on the finding that the organization failed to prove it suffered harm different in kind from the general population in New York as a result of the imprudent marketing practices of the defendant gun manufacturers and distributors.
ii. Pecuniary Injury
Pecuniary injury may constitute harm different in kind so long as it is not common to an entire community.
532 Madison Avenue Gourmet Foods, Inc. v. Finlandia Center, Inc.,
2. Negligence
To prevail on a negligence claim, a plaintiff must establish the following elements under New York law: (1) that the defendant owed him or her a duty of care; (2) that the defendant breached this duty by engaging in conduct posing an unreasonable risk of harm and (3) that defendant’s breach proximately resulted in damage to the plaintiff.
See, e.g., Aldus v. Glens Falls City Sch. Dist.,
A. Duty
“A defendant generally has no duty to control the conduct of third persons so as to prevent them from harming others, even where as a practical matter defendant can exercise such control.”
D'Amico v. Christie,
In
Hamilton v. Beretta,
the New York Court of Appeals held that persons killed by illegally obtained handguns are not owed a duty by handgun manufacturers to exercise reasonable care in the marketing and distribution of their handguns.
Id.
at 240,
Upon a showing that a specific class of manufacturers or dealers play a disproportionate role in supplying the criminal "gun-trafficking market, the
Hamilton
court suggested that a duty may be imposed. It discussed doing so under the negligent entrustment theory: “[This] doctrine might well support the extension of a duty to manufacturers to avoid selling to certain distributors in circumstances where the manufacturer knows оr has reason to know those distributors are engaging in substantial sales of guns into the gun-trafficking market on a consistent basis.”
Id.
at 237,
B. Causation
The defendant’s acts or omissions must have been the proximate cause of the plaintiffs injury. To satisfy this element, a plaintiff must establish that the defendant’s negligence was a substantial foreseeable factor in bringing about his or her injury.
See, e.g., Nallan v: Helmsley-Spear, Inc.,
An intervening act by a third party does not necessarily break the causal connection between the defendant’s negligence and a plaintiffs injury.
Derdiarian,
In
Hamilton
the New York Court of Appeals left open the possibility that, despite subsequent legal 'purchasers or even thieves, a causal connection might be shown between the harm suffered by gunshot victims and the conduct of members
3. Products Liability
Under New York law a design defect results when the product as designed is unreasonably dangerous for its intended use.
Micallef v. Miehle Co.,
“The mere act of manufacturing and selling a handgun does not give rise to liability absent a defect in the manufacture or design of the product itself.”
Hamilton v. Accu-tek,
Those who carry on abnormally dangerоus activities are strictly liable for the harm inflicted by that activity.
Spano v. Perini,
2. Personal Jurisdiction
a. Standard of Review
A defendant may move for lack of jurisdiction over his or her person pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(2). If a defendant does not object to the assertion of personal jurisdiction in the
b. New York Long Arm Statute
Personal jurisdiction in diversity cases is determined in accordance with the law of the forum state.
Arrowsmith v. United Press Int’l,
[A] court may exercise personal jurisdiction over any non-domiciliary ... who in person or through an agent ... commits a tortious act without the state causing injury to person or property within the state ... if he (i) regularly does or solicits business, or engages in any other persistent course of conduct, or derives substantial revenue from goods used or consumed or service rendered, in the statе....
N.Y. C.P.L.R. § 302(a)(3).
In addition to demonstrating that all requirements for jurisdiction under this subsection are met, plaintiff must establish that an exercise of jurisdiction would comport with federal due process. Due process requires that: (1) the defendant has sufficient “minimum contacts” with the State of New York to justify the exercise of personal jurisdiction; and (2) the assertion of jurisdiction is reasonable under the circumstances.
Int’l Shoe Co. v. Washington,
c. Criteria for Claims Involving Firearms Sales ■
The
NAACP
case, noting that the harm alleged went beyond that of simply placing firearms into the stream of commerce, developed criteria “to serve as guideposts” in analyzing the appropriateness of the exercise of jurisdiction over gun manufacturers and distributors in a public nuisance case.
NAACP v. A.A. Arms, Inc.,
1) crimes' committed in New York with the defendant’s handguns; 2) total number of handguns that defendant manufactured or sold in the United States; 3) number of handguns sold by the defendant in New York; 4) value of gun-related products sold by the defendant in New York; 5) number of “trace” handguns linked to criminal investigations in New York that are attributable to the defendant; 6) sales prices of the defendant’s handguns ...; 7) type of gun and its intended use ...; 8) connection with the defendant’s related companies; 9) distribution methods and their possible effects on crimes in New York; and 10) the defendant’s total revenue from the United States and New York markets.
Id. at *4. Total number of handguns manufactured, sold and traced in New York and the ■ United States and distribution practices with a possible effect on crime in New York were found to be “particularly salient.” Id. at *5.
The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure encourage allowing amendment of a complaint. Rule 15(a) reads:
A party may amend the party’s pleading once as a matter of course at any time before a responsive pleading is served.... Otherwise a party may amend the party’s pleading only by leave of court or by written consent of the adverse party; and leave shall be freely given when justice so requires.
In exercising discretion to grant leave to amend, courts “should be guided by the underlying purpose of allowing amendment to facilitate a decision on the merits.” 3 Moore’s Federal Practice § 15.14[1];
see also Foman v. Davis,
Courts may deny a motion to amend on the basis of undue delay, bad faith or dilatory motive, undue prejudice to the opposing party, or futility of the amendment.
Id.
“The Rule in this Circuit has been to allow a party to amend its pleadings in the absence of a showing by the non-movant of prejudice or bad faith.”
Block v. First Blood Associates,
TV. Application of Law to Facts
A. Motion to Dismiss
1. Statement of a Claim
a. Public Nuisance
Plaintiff alleges that defendants’ marketing, distribution and salеs practices create a secondary illegal gun market, leading to a public nuisance in New York. He is a private litigant seeking monetary damages for injury to himself. He does not seek injunctive or any other equitable relief.
Alleged are facts sufficient to make out a prima facie claim of public nuisance. Plaintiff states that the defendants’ marketing, distribution and sales practices unreasonably interfere with the property, health, safety and comfort of the general public by facilitating the diversion of large numbers of firearms from the legal primary market to the illegal underground market. Such business practices include straw purchases (sales to a person authorized to buy firearm but buying on behalf of someоne not so authorized such as a felon or youth); multiple purchases (sales of a number of guns to the same consumer at the same time); and repeat sales (sale of a number of guns to the same person over a relatively short period of time). Plaintiff contends that defendants continued to engage in these practices despite knowledge, through ATF crime-gun traces and other sources, that their-firearms were disproportionately being diverted into the illegal market and that one of the guns moving through that illicit channel caused his injuries.
Plaintiff does not allege that the defendants created and contributed to this public nuisance in the undifferentiated aggregate; rather, he argues they should be held jointly and severally liable. Instead of suing multiple members of the firearms
The injuries claimed are different in degree and in kind from those suffered by the general public. Plaintiff alleges that he has suffered permanent physical and emotional injuries as a result of the shooting. His physical injuries include permanent brain damage and paralysis. Psychologically, he has suffered severe emotional trauma as a result of the execution-style shootings he was forced to witness, as well as survivor’s guilt due to the fact that he was only one of two people to survive while five of his colleagues were killed. He further claims loss of livelihood, alleging that he will never be able to hold meaningful employment, complete his education, or live on his own. Plaintiffs injuries from the shooting, while clearly diffеrent in degree, are also different in kind from the danger, fear, inconvenience, and interference with the use and enjoyment of public places that affect the tenor and quality of everyday life experienced by the general public as a result of the threat of gun violence.
b. Negligence
Since plaintiff states facts that establish a duty on the part of gun compa-niés to exercise reasonable care in the marketing and sales of their product, it is premature to dismiss his negligence claim. The claim involves the sort of factual scenario envisioned in Hamilton by the New York Court of Appeals. In particular, plaintiff alleges that defendants were a direct link in the causal chain that resulted in his injuries and that they were in the best рosition to prevent the foreseeable harm he suffered. Discovery is needed to determine whether he should be allowed to proceed on this theory.
Because the firearm used in the Wendy’s massacre was recovered, plaintiff can identify the manufacturer, wholesaler, distributer and retailer of the gun. He contends that the distributor, Acusport, negligently entrusted the firearm in question to the retailer, Atlantic Gun & Tackle, despite the knowledge that it was consistently engaging in sales that diverted guns into the illegal, underground firearms market. He further alleges that Atlantic Gun & Tackle sold the gun in question to Angela Freeman although it knew or should have known that she was a straw purchaser who was buying the gun on behalf of Bernard Gardier who could not legally purchase it himself. Although the firearm subsequently changed hands illegally a number of times before ultimately coming into the possession of plaintiffs attackers, it is alleged that defendants were put on notice that this kind of transfer would foreseeably occur. Plaintiff relies upon ATF data establishing that a high proportion of defendants’ guns were the subject of crime-gun traces.
Plaintiff also contends that defendants are part of a small group of corrupt or negligent gun companies which play a disproportionate role in supplying the illegal gun market. He alleges that defendants’
The New York Court of Appeals decision in Hamilton was, in part, predicated on the inability in that case to determine whether a high incidence of traces was attributable to irresponsible conduct on the part of certain members of the gun industiy. Nearly three years later, significantly more evidence is available. In NAACP, extensive discovery and detailed expert testimony based upon ATF data and other material demonstrated that it could be concluded that the defendant gun companies had engaged in irresponsible marketing, distribution and sales practices and that they could, voluntarily and through easily implemented changes, keep thousands of handguns from diversion into criminal use in New York. Acusport was one of the defendants in that case. Another study, using research obtained and analyzed in the course of the NAACP case, reports that, from 1996-2000, Atlantic Gun & Tackle had 909 gun traces with trafficking indicators. (Trafficking indicators include guns with obliterated serial numbers, multiple purchases in which more than one gun was sold to one individual, guns recovered in a state other than where they were bought, and guns traced back to a store that repeatedly reports firearm thefts.) See Americans for Gun Safety Research, Selling Crime: High Crime Gun Stores Fuel Criminal 6-7, 9 (Jan.2004). The evidence provided by NAACP expert testimony and other authoritative rеports lends support to plaintiffs allegations and, in conjunction with the direct causal connection alleged between defendants’ business practices and plaintiffs injuries, is sufficient to sustain the negligence claim against a Rule 12(b)(6) motion.
c. Products Liability
Plaintiff alleges that defendants distributed and sold a defective firearm because it was designed without a safety or anti-theft device. He further claims breach of the warranty of merchantability because of the lack of proper safety devices. Finally, he alleges defendants should be strictly liable because firearms constitute ultrahazardous activities.
This is not a valid claim upon which relief can be granted. Plaintiff has not alleged that the gun used was in defective condition. Under New Yоrk law the absence of a safety device does not give rise to liability under a design defect or breach of warranty theory. Plaintiff, however, argues that the law warrants reconsideration in light of the fact that the technology to make guns safer is now available. To do so, however, would require a balancing of the risk versus the utility of incorporating safety devices into the design of firearms, an approach thus far expressly rejected by the courts.
Plaintiffs products liability claims fail as a matter of law. They are dismissed.
2. Personal Jurisdiction
Plaintiff has made a prima facie showing sufficient to establish personal jurisdiction over Atlantic Gun & Tackle pursuant to New York’s long arm statute. He alleges it has committed the torts of public nuisance and negligence outside this state, causing him severe physical and emotional
Finally, plaintiff claims that further discovery will allow him to acquire evidenсe establishing even more of the factors for determining personal jurisdiction set forth in NAACP. Because the elements for determining personal jurisdiction in a case such as this are fact-intensive, it is appropriate to deny the motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction pending further discovery.
B. Amending the Complaint
There are no circumstances warranting denial of the motion to amend the complaint. Since Atlantic Gun & Tackle has not yet filed a responsive pleading, plaintiff may amend his complaint as of right as to that defendant. Although Acusport has filed an answer, it would not be prejudiced by plaintiffs proposed amendments. The amended complaint simply advances additional details; it does not include new claims or any оther information that could not have been deduced from the original complaint. No additional resources, beyond those already contemplated, are required to proceed with discovery. Although plaintiff moved to amend his complaint subsequent to the filing of defendants’ motion to dismiss, the proposed amendments have no prejudicial effect on the motion.
V. Conclusion
The motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim is denied except that plaintiffs products liability claims are dismissed. The motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction is denied with leave to renew after further discovery. The motion to amend the complaint is granted.
Discovery will proceed on an expedited basis under the direction of the magistrate judge.
SO ORDERED.
