Bouve & Mohr, LLC v. Banks

618 S.E.2d 650, 274 Ga. App. 758, 2005 Fulton County D. Rep. 2343, 2005 Ga. App. LEXIS 772
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJuly 14, 2005
DocketA05A0687
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 618 S.E.2d 650 (Bouve & Mohr, LLC v. Banks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bouve & Mohr, LLC v. Banks, 618 S.E.2d 650, 274 Ga. App. 758, 2005 Fulton County D. Rep. 2343, 2005 Ga. App. LEXIS 772 (Ga. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

618 S.E.2d 650 (2005)
274 Ga. App. 758

BOUVÉ & MOHR, LLC,
v.
BANKS.

No. A05A0687.

Court of Appeals of Georgia.

July 14, 2005.
Reconsideration Denied July 28, 2005.

*651 Thomas Carlock, Mary Greene, Renee Little, Carlock, Copeland, Semler & Stair, Atlanta, for appellant.

James Goldstein, Jonathan Hayes, Atlanta, for Appellee.

PHIPPS, Judge.

Joceyline Banks sued Bouvé & Mohr, LLC (B & M), the owner of the apartment complex where she lived, alleging that she had been raped and robbed in her apartment because B & M had negligently failed to repair a broken windowpane through which the intruder had gained entry. In its answer and discovery responses, B & M denied that Banks had been raped. After learning that evidence relevant to the alleged rape had been destroyed at the direction of the investigating police officer, Banks moved for spoliation sanctions against B & M, asserting that the officer had acted as its agent. Both Banks and B & M's counsel sought attorney fees incurred in litigating the spoliation issue. The trial court found that B & M was responsible for the spoliation and therefore ordered that the jury would be instructed at trial that Banks had been raped. The court denied as premature, however, the requests for attorney fees. B & M appeals, arguing that the spoliation sanctions were not justified and that the court should have granted its fee request. We granted interlocutory review and now affirm the trial court's grant of spoliation sanctions but remand for prompt consideration of B & M's attorney fees request.

Although the court did not conduct an evidentiary hearing on the spoliation claim, undisputed facts relevant to the issue were before the court based on deposition testimony and other evidence developed during pre-trial discovery. The record shows the following:

After Banks reported to the East Point Police Department (Department) that she had been raped at knife point in her apartment on February 3, 2001 by an unknown *652 intruder, a Department officer took her to the Rape Crisis Center at Grady Hospital, where she was examined and rape kit evidence was collected. On February 5, Banks informed B & M of the attack and "further stated that she could no longer remain in [her] apartment because of what had happened there." B & M agreed to refund her rent and security deposit on the condition that she sign a document releasing B & M from liability for any claims related to the rape. Banks signed the document on February 6, 2001, three days after the alleged rape, but repudiated it shortly thereafter through her attorney.

At the time of the alleged rape, B & M employed off-duty Department officers as security guards at the apartment complex. One such officer was Detective Robert Gray, who was assigned by the Department to investigate Banks's rape complaint. Gray closed the investigation on February 18, 2001, citing lack of interest on Banks's part.[1] He put a note in the file stating that the case could be reopened if Banks later contacted the Department.

On March 9, 2001, Banks sued B & M, alleging that its negligent failure to repair the broken windowpane permitted access to her apartment and was a proximate cause of the rape. Before filing suit, Banks's attorneys notified the Department by letters on February 22, 2001 and March 5, 2001 that Banks intended to file a civil suit as a result of the rape and asked that all evidence related to the rape be preserved. After the suit was filed, both Banks and B & M tried to subpoena the rape kit from Grady Hospital, but neither side was successful because the kit was in the possession of the Rape Crisis Center (Crisis Center), a separate entity from the affiliated hospital.

On July 25, 2002, Crisis Center employee Paulette Barnes wrote to the Department stating that the Crisis Center had Banks's rape kit and that the Department could pick it up if Banks was "planning on filing charges for the incident." Barnes testified by affidavit that, shortly after she sent the letter, she began receiving telephone calls from a B & M attorney asking for the rape kit. Barnes responded that she would release the kit only to the police, and she then called the Department to ask if they planned to pick it up. On August 22, 2002, Gray picked up the kit from the Crisis Center.[2] At his deposition on September 9, 2002, Gray testified that the rape kit was then in the Department's possession.

On October 15, 2002, B & M filed a motion asking the trial court to order that the rape kit and other crime scene evidence in the Department's possession be tested by the Georgia Bureau of Investigation (GBI). Banks opposed the motion, arguing that the Department had closed its investigation of the rape case; that it had a conflict of interest because Gray had worked as an off-duty security guard for B & M; and that, in any event, the rape kit had already been analyzed by Grady Hospital. Accordingly, Banks asked the court to deny B & M's motion and to order that the rape kit and other crime scene evidence held by the Department be given to her.

Before the trial court ruled on these motions, deposition testimony revealed that the Department had destroyed Banks's rape kit. At his January 2003 deposition, Department Lieutenant Edward Bradley testified that, on or about November 13, 2002, he had taken the rape kit from the Department evidence refrigerator and destroyed it at Gray's direction. According to Bradley, as part of his yearly practice of cleaning out and disposing of unneeded evidence in closed cases, he had asked the Department detectives to give him the status of cases for which evidence was being held in the refrigerator. Gray informed *653 him that the Banks case was closed and her rape kit could be destroyed.

Bradley also testified that Department records showed that on February 3, 2001, evidence collected at the Banks crime scene had been logged in at the Department, including bedding from the apartment and a white washcloth, which Banks said was used to wipe her genital area after the rape. After examining the logged-in evidence, Bradley confirmed that the white washcloth was missing. According to Bradley, after evidence is logged in, only he and the Department Chief can access the evidence storage area. Bradley testified that he did not know where the washcloth was, that he had not destroyed it, and that Department records did not reflect that anyone had removed it from the storage area or destroyed it.

Gray was deposed again in January 2003. He testified that he logged the rape kit into evidence at the Department the same day he got it from the Crisis Center in August 2002. He further testified that immediately after his first deposition in September 2002, a B & M attorney asked him to check with the GBI to determine if it would process the rape kit. Gray agreed, even though there was no law enforcement reason for the kit to be processed. Thus, Gray testified, at his request another detective removed the kit from the Department's evidence refrigerator in November 2002 and took it to the GBI, but the GBI refused to process evidence from a closed case. According to Gray, the kit was then returned to the Department, and he called B & M's lawyers to report that the GBI would not process it.

Contrary to Gray's testimony, Department log-in records do not show that the rape kit was logged in in August 2002.

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Bluebook (online)
618 S.E.2d 650, 274 Ga. App. 758, 2005 Fulton County D. Rep. 2343, 2005 Ga. App. LEXIS 772, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bouve-mohr-llc-v-banks-gactapp-2005.