Amber Wood v. Michael Aaron Cook

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 9, 2018
Docket334901
StatusUnpublished

This text of Amber Wood v. Michael Aaron Cook (Amber Wood v. Michael Aaron Cook) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Amber Wood v. Michael Aaron Cook, (Mich. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

AMBER WOOD, UNPUBLISHED January 9, 2018 Plaintiff-Appellee,

v No. 334901 Macomb Circuit Court MICHAEL AARON COOK, LC No. 2015-002461-NI

Defendant/Cross-Defendant, and

RHONDA ANNE COOK,

Defendant, and

HEAD UP L.L.C., doing business as PB’S SPORTS GRILLE, doing business as SHARKS REEF,

Defendant/Cross-Plaintiff- Appellant.

Before: STEPHENS, P.J., and CAVANAGH and K. F. KELLY, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

In this dramshop action, defendant-appellant, Head Up L.L.C. d/b/a PB’s Sports Grille d/b/a Sharks Reef (“defendant” or “the bar”), appeals by leave granted1 an order which denied defendant’s motion for summary disposition of plaintiff’s claims, held that plaintiff was entitled to an adverse inference due to spoliation of evidence, and granted plaintiff leave to amend her pleadings. We reverse.

I. BASIC FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

1 Amber Wood v Michael Aaron Cook, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered December 21, 2016 (Docket No. 334901).

-1- At approximately 1:46 a.m. on January 18, 2015, defendant Michael Cook (“Cook” or “AIP”) drove a van owned by his mother, defendant Rhonda Cook, through defendant’s wall. Plaintiff, who was outside on the patio smoking at the time, was injured when a large pole fell on her. Plaintiff alleged that Cook was angry over being ejected from, and refused re-entry into, the bar and that the anger caused him to intentionally drive the van into the bar. On July 16, 2015, plaintiff filed a complaint against Cook, Cook’s mother, and the bar. The claims against Cook and his mother were for negligence and liability under the owner’s liability statute, respectively. Plaintiff sued defendant for violation of the dramshop act, MCL 436.1707 et seq., and for ordinary negligence. Plaintiff’s dramshop claim alleged that defendant knew or should have known that Cook was intoxicated and that plaintiff breached its duty not to serve alcohol to any person who was visibly intoxicated. Plaintiff’s negligence claim against defendant alleged that defendant owed a duty to reasonably respond to situations on the premises which posed a risk of imminent and foreseeable harm to customers such as plaintiff and that defendant breached that duty by failing to call, notify, or otherwise reasonably expedite the involvement of the police when Cook was visibly intoxicated inside the bar and forcibly removed from the bar.

Multiple individuals testified by deposition. Nikki Twyman, the waitress who served Cook that night, testified that she noticed that Cook started to look intoxicated and should not be served any more alcohol. She told one of the bouncers to inform the manager that Cook looked visibly intoxicated. Twyman then removed the alcoholic drinks from Cook’s table. Later, she saw Cook pick up a bottle of beer from another table. Bar manager Steven Giacoma testified that the usual procedure was for the waitress to tell a bouncer that the customer needed to be cut off and that the bouncer would inform a manager that the customer would no longer be served. Giacoma testified that he identified Cook as being visibly intoxicated and told the entire staff that Cook was cut off and should not be served any more alcohol. After Cook picked up the beer from the other table after being cut off, Giacoma told a bouncer to remove Cook from the premises. The bouncer took away the beer and escorted Cook out of the bar. Giacoma testified that he cut off alcohol for Cook at the first sign that Cook was visibly intoxicated. He did not observe Cook being loud or belligerent, but noticed that Cook was “a little wobbly” and concluded that he should not have any more alcohol to drink.

No one from the bar called the police when Cook was ejected or refused re-entry. They did, however, call the police after Cook drove the van into the bar. When police responded to the scene, an off-duty manager, Darcy Nieuwenbroek, told the officers that Cook’s actions inside and outside the bar had been video-recorded by security cameras. Nieuwenbroek told police that she would save the video recording, but only bar owner Kelly Pendleton could download the video to a disc. The police asked Nieuwenbroek to have Pendleton provide a copy of the video recording to them. Pendleton ultimately saved the video from 1:36 a.m., shortly before Cook was first escorted out of the bar. Cook drove the van into the building and Nieuwenbroek called the police at 1:44 a.m. That saved portion of the video was copied and given to the police. According to later deposition testimony from Officer Neate, that was all the video the police requested from defendant. The digital video recording (DVR) system used by defendant’s bar’s security cameras saved video recordings for approximately 64 days before re-recording over the old videos. All other security video of Cook at defendant’s bar on January 17 and 18, 2015 was apparently recorded over before plaintiff filed her dramshop and negligence actions against defendant.

-2- Defendant moved for summary disposition of both plaintiff’s dramshop and negligence actions pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(8) and (10). Defendant argued that it was entitled to summary disposition of plaintiff’s dramshop action because there was no evidence that defendant’s employees served or provided alcohol to Cook while he was visibly intoxicated. With regard to plaintiff’s negligence claim, defendant argued that the dramshop act was plaintiff’s exclusive remedy for damages and that defendant’s only duty as the premises owner was to reasonably expedite the involvement of the police, which defendant’s employees did. Defendant argued that there was no evidence that Mr. Cook posed an imminent risk of harm to defendant’s customers when he was removed from the premises or when he was refused re-entry. Once Cook’s behavior became dangerous, defendant’s employees immediately called the police.

Plaintiff argued that the security camera video recording would have shown that Cook displayed visible signs of intoxication during the time he was still being served alcohol by defendant’s employees, and that she was entitled to an adverse inference jury instruction due to defendant’s destruction of the video recording which would have shown Cook before 1:36 a.m. on January 18, 2015. Plaintiff moved to amend her complaint to add allegations that defendant’s bouncers had physically and verbally confronted Cook when he attempted to re-enter the bar, thereby escalating Cook’s anger and prompting him to drive the van into the building. Plaintiff alleged that defendant’s employees’ encounters with Cook demonstrated that Cook posed an imminent and foreseeable risk of harm which required them to call the police before he drove the van into the bar.

The court denied defendant’s motions for summary disposition of plaintiff’s dramshop claim, noting that Twyman conceded that it was possible she served alcohol to Cook while he was visibly intoxicated but just did not remember. Twyman also testified that surveillance camera video would have recorded her if she had served Cook while he was visibly intoxicated. The trial court found that plaintiff was entitled to an adverse inference that it would have shown defendant’s employees serving a visibly intoxicated Cook.

With regard to plaintiff’s negligence claim against defendant, the trial court noted that there is a “common-law duty to exercise due care in undertakings [which] is breached when an individual or entity creates a new dangerous and hazardous condition that injures a plaintiff.” The trial court noted that despite Cook’s visible level of intoxication, defendant’s employees did not offer him water, coffee, or to call a cab. Instead, Giacoma directed his staff to remove Cook from the bar.

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Amber Wood v. Michael Aaron Cook, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/amber-wood-v-michael-aaron-cook-michctapp-2018.