Buddy & Pal's III, Inc. v. Stephen Shearer

91 N.E.3d 1000
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 29, 2017
Docket45A03-1703-CT-465
StatusPublished

This text of 91 N.E.3d 1000 (Buddy & Pal's III, Inc. v. Stephen Shearer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buddy & Pal's III, Inc. v. Stephen Shearer, 91 N.E.3d 1000 (Ind. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

Brown, Judge.

[1] Buddy & Pal's III, Inc., appeals from the trial court's denial of its motion for judgment on the evidence and motion to correct error. Buddy & Pal's raises two issues which we consolidate and restate as whether the trial court erred or abused its discretion in denying its motion for judgment on the evidence or its motion to correct error. We affirm.

Facts and Procedural History

[2] Steven Shearer went to a bar operated by Buddy & Pal's at approximately 10:00 or 11:00 p.m. on Saturday, January 16, 2010. Richard Coyle also went to the bar with Anthony Apato and others at about 10:00 or 10:30 p.m., parked behind the building, entered the bar, and danced and had bottles of beer. Coyle left the bar a short time before 2:00 a.m., warmed up his truck for five to ten minutes, and then pulled his truck around to pick up Apato. Shearer exited Buddy & Pal's. As Coyle's truck approached the entrance and as the truck was moving at approximately three to five miles per hour, Coyle's truck struck Shearer. Coyle kept driving.

[3] Schererville Police Officer James Janson and other officers were standing on the sidewalk in front of the building near the entrance, and Officer Janson heard a commotion and people screaming, saw others attempting to attract his attention, was told that a pick-up truck had hit a pedestrian, and was pointed to the truck. As another officer tended to Shearer, Officer Janson entered his police vehicle, caught up with Coyle's truck which had traveled twenty or twenty-five yards to the exit of the parking lot, and activated his lights. Officer Janson exited his police vehicle, approached Coyle and asked him to exit his truck, placed Coyle in handcuffs, and had him sit in the back of the police vehicle. Officer Janson stood outside the police vehicle while he spoke to Coyle. Officer Janson noticed a very strong odor of an alcoholic beverage coming from Coyle's breath, that he was slurring and mumbling a lot, that he was spitting quite a bit while he was talking, and that his eyes were red, bloodshot, and very droopy. When Officer Janson asked him why he did not stop, he replied that he did not know and began to become irritated and use expletives. Officer Janson asked Coyle if he would submit to any field sobriety tests, a portable breath test, or a certified breath test, and Coyle replied that he would not. Officer Janson placed Coyle under arrest for driving while intoxicated and for fleeing the scene or hit and run.

[4] In late October or early November of 2011, Shearer filed an action against Buddy *1002 & Pal's and Coyle. 1 Coyle settled with Shearer in February of 2015. 2 A jury trial was held in November 2016 at which the parties presented the testimony of Shearer, Shearer's mother, Officer Janson, Timothy Heidbreder, who was the owner of Buddy & Pal's, and a manager at Buddy & Pal's. Coyle and Apato were not present at the trial, and portions of their depositions were read into evidence, and a video deposition of Dr. Robert Hanlon who had examined Shearer was also presented.

[5] Timothy Heidbreder, the owner of Buddy & Pal's, testified that Saturdays were the bar's busy nights and that, over the course of the evening, there might be 175 to 190 people there at one time. He indicated that, other than charging for drinks, servers do not keep track of how much a customer is consuming. He testified: "Our rule of thumb is, we'll have ten to twelve to one. In other words, if there's a hundred and twenty people there, we want ten people on the floor, whether they're bartenders, servers, security, people at the door checking ID's." Transcript Volume II at 54. When asked "[a]nd these shot girls, they sell trays of drinks, right," Heidbreder answered affirmatively. Id. When asked if they have quotas to sell for the evening, he answered affirmatively, and when asked if the quotas are minimums, he answered "[n]o, not really" and "there's no minimums." Id. When asked if Buddy & Pal's had a policy regarding over-serving or signs of visible intoxication, Heidbreder replied affirmatively, and when asked how that was conveyed to servers and bartenders, he testified that it was given to them in written form to read and that the manager reviewed it with them line-by-line. He also testified that there were periodic training sessions or discussions by managers. The trial court admitted Buddy & Pal's employee policy manual, which stated that certain documents were required to be given or returned to the manager prior to the start of employment, including Buddy & Pal's Inc.'s Liquor/Beer Pouring Policy and Responsible Alcohol Service Acknowledgement form, and that certain types of conduct would result in immediate termination, including violations of its pouring policy.

[6] In the portions of his deposition read into evidence, Coyle testified that, prior to arriving at Buddy & Pal's, he and Apato were at a friend's house and that he did not have anything to drink while there. He testified that he drove his truck, and Apato rode with him, to Buddy & Pal's and arrived "closer to ten." Id. at 153. Coyle testified he had "about two beers" of Miller Lite, that he did not have any shots, that the beer was in bottles, and that he paid using cash. Id. at 154. When asked "[w]as it out of like the beer tubs or was it from the bar," Coyle answered "[f]rom the bar," and when asked if he purchased them or if someone else bought them for him, he answered "I purchased them." Id. Coyle indicated he felt "fine" when he purchased and paid for his last beverage, that he felt "fine" when he left Buddy & Pal's, and that he was not intoxicated after he left. Id. at 147, 155. When asked *1003 "[w]hen you got into your ... truck, did you feel the same as you did when you purchased the last beverage," Coyle answered "I felt sober," and when asked "[w]ould it be the same condition," he replied "[b]etter." Id. at 147. He indicated that he felt "better" at the time he entered and began to drive his truck than when he purchased his last beverage. Id. Coyle testified "I heard people screaming like whoa, whoa, whoa, and that's when I pulled up and by the time I got it in park, a cop got me" and "I had pulled right up and as I put it in park he was already there" and "[h]e pulled right there and he yanked me out of the truck." Id. at 156-157.

[7] Officer Janson testified that he had been a police officer for thirteen and one-half years and his duties included driving while intoxicated and alcohol related offenses, and he described signs of alcohol impairment. He testified that Buddy & Pal's closed at 2:00 a.m. and officers were present in the parking lot to make sure there were no problems.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
91 N.E.3d 1000, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buddy-pals-iii-inc-v-stephen-shearer-indctapp-2017.