BOUDREAU v. SHAW'S SUPERMARKETS INC

CourtDistrict Court, D. Maine
DecidedJuly 18, 2019
Docket2:17-cv-00259
StatusUnknown

This text of BOUDREAU v. SHAW'S SUPERMARKETS INC (BOUDREAU v. SHAW'S SUPERMARKETS INC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
BOUDREAU v. SHAW'S SUPERMARKETS INC, (D. Me. 2019).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

DISTRICT OF MAINE

JEFFREY BOUDREAU, AS ) PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE OF THE ) ESTATE OF WENDY BOUDREAU, ) ) PLAINTIFF ) CIVIL NO. 2:17-CV-259-DBH ) V. ) ) SHAW’S SUPERMARKETS, INC., ) ) DEFENDANT )

DECISION AND ORDER ON PLAINTIFF’S MOTION FOR SANCTIONS AND DEFENDANT’S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

A violent grocery store murder in 2015 generated this civil lawsuit. Without provocation, one customer murdered another customer in the store’s ice cream aisle on a summer afternoon. Later that year, the murderer was sentenced to life in prison.1 In 2017, the personal representative of the victim’s estate (her husband) brought this wrongful death lawsuit against the grocery store for negligence, arguing that the store should have foreseen the danger and taken preventive action.2 The defendant moved for summary judgment, and the plaintiff opposed the motion and moved for sanctions because most of the store video for the days and weeks preceding the murder is missing. After oral

1 See Maine Dep’t of Corrections, Prisoner/Probationer Search, available at https://www1.maine.gov/cgi-bin/online/mdoc/search-and-deposit/detail.pl?mdoc number1=153612 (last visited July 1, 2019). I take judicial notice of the sentence under Fed. R. Evid. 201(b)(2). argument on June 6, 2019, I deny the motion for sanctions and grant the motion for summary judgment. BACKGROUND UNDISPUTED FACTS Shaw’s operates a grocery store in Saco, Maine. The deceased victim,

Wendy Boudreau, was a regular customer. So was the murderer, Connor MacCalister. On August 19, 2015, MacCalister brutally murdered Boudreau by slitting her throat with a knife in the store’s ice cream aisle. MacCalister has said that she selected Boudreau partly because she was an older woman who would be less able to resist. Pl.’s Add’l Statement of Mat. Facts (PASMF) at ¶¶ 66- 67 (ECF No. 84). Despite the efforts of store personnel and customers, including two EMTs shopping in the store at the time, Boudreau did not survive. MOTION FOR SANCTIONS FOR SPOLIATION

During discovery, the plaintiff requested all the Saco store video showing MacCalister’s appearance and behavior in Shaw’s in the days and weeks preceding the murder. The store had 48 motion-activated video cameras that produced recordings that could be viewed contemporaneously or at a later date. McCourt Dep. 52-53 (ECF No. 56-10). If video from a particular day was not saved, that data was overridden as the hard drive became full. According to Senior Asset Protection Specialist Warren McCourt, that occurred about every 3- 4 weeks, such that there were generally 3-4 weeks of data available at any given

time. See McCourt Aff. II (ECF No. 96-3). In this case, however, Shaw’s has provided video only for the day of the murder and for some of MacCalister’s transactions two days earlier,3 but not for other days and weeks preceding the incident. That missing video is the subject of the spoliation dispute. Although earlier cases articulate a federal court’s inherent authority to grant relief for spoliation of evidence, in 2015 the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure

adopted a major amendment of the spoliation rules for electronically stored information. Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(e) now occupies the field, to the exclusion of a federal court’s inherent authority and, for the most part, state law:4 “New Rule 37(e) . . . forecloses reliance on inherent authority or state law to determine when certain measures should be used.” Adv. Comm. Note to 2015 Amendment; Gonzalez-Bermudez v. Abbott Lab PR Inc., 214 F. Supp. 3d 130, 161 (D.P.R. 2016) (quoting the Advisory Committee Note). Rule 37(e) now provides:

If electronically stored information that should have been preserved in the anticipation or conduct of litigation is lost because a party failed to take reasonable steps to preserve it, and it cannot be restored or replaced through additional discovery, the court: (1) upon finding prejudice to another party from loss of the information, may order measures no greater than necessary to cure the prejudice; or (2) only upon finding that the party acted with the intent to deprive another party of the information’s use in the litigation may: (A) presume that the lost information was unfavorable to the party; (B) instruct the jury that it may or must presume the information was unfavorable to the party; or (C) dismiss the action or enter a default judgment.

3 At oral argument I learned that the earlier video was preserved because MacCalister had cash register receipts in her pocket when she was arrested showing transactions on that earlier day as well as the cash register line involved. 4 Whether and when there is a duty to preserve remains a decision based on “a common-law duty” “when litigation is reasonably foreseeable,” and the Rule “does not attempt to create a new According to Rule 34(a)(1)(A), “electronically stored information” includes “photographs [and] . . . images . . . stored in any medium from which information can be obtained either directly or, if necessary, after translation . . . into a reasonably usable form.” The 2006 Advisory Committee Note to that Rule

subsection says that the definition “is expansive and includes any type of information that is stored electronically,” and that “[r]eferences elsewhere in the rules to ‘electronically stored information’ should be understood to invoke this expansive approach.” Id. Thus, under the amended Rule, Shaw’s store video is electronically stored information. At oral argument, I asked the lawyers what I should treat as the record for purposes of resolving the spoliation motion. What follows reflects what they told me.

Immediately following the murder, Shaw’s preserved for the police that day’s video of the Saco store showing the victim and MacCalister (but not the actual murder because no camera covers the ice cream aisle, see McCourt Dep. 15:18-21), as well as MacCalister’s transactions two days earlier. That video has been made available to the plaintiff. At the outset of the lawsuit and the beginning of discovery, both parties’ lawyers believed there was no other video. As a result of the 2018 deposition of the store’s Senior Asset Protection Specialist, however, the parties learned that on the day of the murder Shaw’s

not only transferred the day’s relevant video onto a disk for the police, but also “physically removed the two hard drives and a black Intellex box on which the video for the last 30 days or so was stored and set them aside in the server room5 at the store.” McCourt Aff. II ¶ 12. McCourt “taped a sign to the Intellex box, which stated ‘DO NOT TOUCH THIS HARD DRIVE—YOU NEED TO CONTACT WARREN OR RICK6 FIRST.’” Id. When asked after his 2018 deposition “to

retrieve the three hard drives that were set aside,” he reported that “two were nowhere to be found. Although we found the Intellex box, it only contained images from 2016 and none from 2015, when the murder occurred.” Id. ¶ 13. The lawyers for both parties confirmed this information.7 The record does not reveal how this state of affairs came to be, nor what happened to the hard drives that McCourt originally preserved. The plaintiff did not pursue further discovery on the topic of the missing video.8 At oral argument, I asked the plaintiff’s lawyer what the plaintiff wanted

by way of remedy if I found a Rule violation (her legal memorandum had made varying requests).

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BOUDREAU v. SHAW'S SUPERMARKETS INC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boudreau-v-shaws-supermarkets-inc-med-2019.