Robert and Annie Simmons filed suit against the Kroger Company, Lawrence Elder, the store manager, and Gregory Walker, a store security guard, jointly and severally
Robert Simmons asked a store butcher how to slice a country ham which he had at home. The butcher offered to slice it for him, so Simmons sent his son home to get the ham. When his son returned, Simmons went into the parking lot to meet him. Relying on information from a store clerk, who has never been identified, Walker, in uniform and carrying a gun, followed Simmons into the parking lot and asked him to return to the store with him. Simmons, an attorney, asked if Walker had probable cause to stop or arrest him and was told that he had been seen eating some candy. According to Simmons’ affidavit, he attempted to turn and walk away, and Walker grabbed his arm and told him if he did not come with him he would be arrested for resisting arrest. Simmons was taken up a flight of stairs to the store’s security office. Simmons told Walker that he considered himself under arrest and wanted his wife, also an attorney, to be present. Walker told him that he was not under arrest. Elder, the store manager, told Mrs. Simmons, who had been shopping but who was now present, that the office was off limits to customers. Mrs. Simmons told her husband that if he was not under arrest, he needed to get his things and leave. Walker then told Mrs. Simmons that if she did not leave, she would be arrested for criminal trespass. Elder told Simmons he was not going anywhere and slammed the door. According to both Walker’s deposition and Simmons’ affidavit, no further questions were asked, and after some time, Simmons was released.
Without stating its reasons therefor, the trial court granted Kroger’s motion for summary judgment on the Simmonses’ claims of false arrest and tortious misconduct. The remaining counts of false imprisonment, battery and loss of consortium were tried before a jury which returned a verdict in the amount of $23,300 in favor of the Simmonses. The Simmonses now appeal the grant of summary judgment on the false arrest and tortious misconduct claims. See
Culwell v. Lomas & Nettleton Co.,
1. The trial court in this case denied the defendants’ motion for summary judgment on the false imprisonment claim but granted it as to the false arrest claim. Because the elements of false imprisonment and false arrest are different, the denial of summary judgment on one claim does not preclude the grant of summary judgment on the other. See OCGA §§ 51-7-1 through 51-7-3; OCGA §§ 51-7-20 through 51-7-22;
Kemp v. Rouse-Atlanta,
Malice, the final element comprising the tort of false arrest, is defined by statute as “a general disregard of the right consideration of mankind, directed by chance against the individual injured.” OCGA § 51-7-2. See
Pinkston v. City of Albany,
2. A business owes the public a duty to protect its invitees from
abusive language and conduct on the part of its employees.
Doe v. Village of St. Joseph,
Appellees argue that the Georgia Shoplifter’s Act bars a claim of tortious misconduct. This is an overbroad reading of the statute as well as the cases which have construed it. OCGA § 51-7-60 insulates a merchant and his agents from liability for words spoken in the course of an arrest or detention only if there was a basis for a reasonable belief that the person detained was in fact engaged in shoplifting in the store.
Swift v. S. S. Kresge,
Judgment reversed.
