Aubrey Mitchell v. Ridgewood East Apartments, LLC

205 So. 3d 1069, 2016 Miss. LEXIS 523
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 2016
DocketNO. 2015-CA-01484-SCT
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 205 So. 3d 1069 (Aubrey Mitchell v. Ridgewood East Apartments, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aubrey Mitchell v. Ridgewood East Apartments, LLC, 205 So. 3d 1069, 2016 Miss. LEXIS 523 (Mich. 2016).

Opinion

*1071 KITCHENS, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶ 1. In the early-morning hours of January 1, 2012, sixteen-year-old Devin Mitchell was shot to death outside the apartment of his cousin, Queenie Walker, at Ridgewood East Apartments in West Point, Mississippi. Mitchell’s family sued Ridgewood East, alleging, inter alia, premises liability. The Circuit Court of Clay County granted summary judgment to Ridgewood East. Finding that no genuine issue of material fact exists with regard to whether Mitchell’s murder was foreseeable to Ridgewood East Apartments, we affirm the judgment of the Circuit Court of Clay County,

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶2. On December 31, 2011, Queenie Walker, a tenant of Ridgewood East Apartments since 2003, invited her cousins, Devin Mitchell, then sixteen years of age, and Aubreonna Mitchell, then fourteen years of age, to spend the night at her apartment. At midnight, Devin, Aubreon-na, and Walker’s three daughters went outdoors to celebrate the new year. Around 1:00 a.m. or 1:30 a.m., Devin visited with Porsha Ewing, who also resided at Ridgewood East, outside the window of her nearby apartment, for about an hour. The girls returned into Walker’s apartment, but Devin remained outside. Because it was late, Walker called for Devin to return inside also. Devin replied, “I’m coming ....”

¶ 3. As Devin was returning, three, four, or five shots rang out from above Walker’s apartment. Walker realized that Devin had been shot when she saw him on the ground “not moving” just fifteen feet from the door to her apartment. Walker’s daughter dialed 911 on a cellular telephone, because Walker “was shaking so bad.” According to the incident report prepared by police, the call was received at 2:55 a.m. on January 1, 2012. Walker went out to Devin and assured him that help was on the way.

¶ 4. At her deposition,' Walker testified that “the guy” came down the stairs and that she asked him what he had done and “started screaming at him” and “cursing at him.” Walker stated that “the guy” was Tavaris Collins, that he was “[rjunning around after the shooting,” and that his eyes were dilated and “he looked spaced out” and appeared to be “on something.” According to Walker, Collins had put away the gun he had used in the shooting and was wielding a different Tech-9 handgun, which he set on the ground “as if he was trying to show me ,.. that he didn’t do it,” Collins was arrested when the police arrived, around 2:57 am. 1

¶ 5. Devin was taken by ambulance to the Clay County Hospital, from which he was transported by helicopter to a Tupelo hospital where he died of a bullet wound to the head.

¶ 6. According to an affidavit of the Ridgewood East Apartments property manager, Felecia Finley, Collins was not a resident of the complex. He was a visitor of Yashia Davis, who had been a resident of the apartment complex since 2010. Davis lived at Ridgewood East Apartments with her two children. Porsha Ewing testified at Collins’s criminal trial that Collins had been staying at Ridgewood East with his girlfriend, Davis, for two years. Collins was the father of one of Davis’s children and he would stay to babysit his child while Davis worked.

*1072 ¶ 7. On September 7, 2012, Devin’s parents, Aubrey Mitchell, individually and on behalf of the heirs at law and wrongful death beneficiaries of Devin Mitchell, and Myrtle Mitchell, individually and as the natural mother and next friend of Au-breonna Mitchell, a minor (collectively the Mitchells), filed their first amended complaint against Ridgewood East Apartments, Antelope Investment Properties, 2 which conducted its business as Ridgewood East Apartments, UAH Property Management, L.P., the management company which operated Ridgewood East Apartments, Collins, and nine Doe defendants, in the Circuit Court of Clay County (collectively Ridgewood East). The Mitchells alleged, inter alia, that Ridgewood East had actual or constructive knowledge of the prior violent criminal conduct of Collins and that an atmosphere of violence existed at Ridgewood East at the time of the shooting.

¶ 8. On March 18, 2014, Ridgewood East designated Bruce A. Jacobs, Ph.D., as an expert in criminology. The trial court denied Ridgewood East’s first summary judgment motion, which had been filed on October 9, 2013. Ridgewood East filed its second motion for summary judgment on March 31, 2014, arguing that no genuine issue of material fact existed with respect to foreseeability. Attached to the motion was Jacobs’s affidavit. Jacobs, who examined crime data from the West Point Police Department for the three-year period preceding the shooting, opined that no atmosphere of violence existed at Ridgewood East. 3 Having reviewed the police report of the incident, area crime data, and the deposition testimony of the witnesses, he concluded that no evidence existed that tended to put Ridgewood East on notice that Collins posed a threat to residents.

¶ 9. The Mitchells responded on July 11, 2014, and sought further discovery. Attached to the response were various West Point Police Department incident reports from 2009 to 2013 involving Ridgewood East. On February 27, 2015, the Mitchells designated John A. Harris, B.S., M.S., as an expert in the field of premises liability and security. Harris stated in his affidavit, which was filed on March 29, 2015, that, in his professional opinion and within a reasonable degree of certainty, ■ the shooting was foreseeable because it was reasonably foreseeable that: (1) residents and guests of the apartment would celebrate New Year’s Eve, (2) on New Year’s Eve, residents and guests “may engage in the use of drugs or alcohol,” (3) residents and guests might violate the 10:00 p.m. curfew on New Year’s Eve, (4) residents and guests would violate the apartment handbook rule against public drunkenness, (5) residents and guests might violate the apartment handbook “rule against weapons on the property in the absence of management or security officers on the property at the time” to ensure the rule’s enforcement, (6) a resident or guest could be injured if the apartment’s rules and policies were not enforced; and that it was *1073 unreasonable “for a reasonably prudent apartment manager/operator to shift the entire burden of enforcing the complex’s policies and rules to the residents or even to the guests , at the complex,” and that Ridgewood East’s breach of the duty of care applicable to “reasonably prudent apartment owners, managers and operators” caused or contributed to the shooting.

¶ 10, Ridgewood East’s second motion for summary judgment was heard on May 15, 2015. The trial court entered its order granting summary judgment to Ridgewood East on June 16, 2015. It found that, while Collins had lived on, or visited daily, the property for approximately two years, the apartment possessed neither actual nor constructive knowledge of his presence, since he had not been added to Davis’s lease and no complaints previously had been filed involving him. The trial court further found that the Mitchells had not rebutted the conclusions of Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
205 So. 3d 1069, 2016 Miss. LEXIS 523, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aubrey-mitchell-v-ridgewood-east-apartments-llc-miss-2016.