Coury v. City of Tampa

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedNovember 27, 2024
Docket2D2023-2165
StatusPublished

This text of Coury v. City of Tampa (Coury v. City of Tampa) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coury v. City of Tampa, (Fla. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF FLORIDA SECOND DISTRICT

JORDON COURY,

Appellant,

v.

CITY OF TAMPA,

Appellee.

No. 2D2023-2165

November 27, 2024

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Hillsborough County; Anne-Leigh Gaylord Moe, Judge.

Benjamin L. Crawford and Brian M. Giddings of Giddings Crawford, PLLC, Brandon, for Appellant.

Andrea Zelman, City Attorney, and Ursula D. Richardson, Chief Assistant City Attorney, Tampa, for Appellee.

LABRIT, Judge. After more than two years of litigation and after discovery closed, the City of Tampa moved for summary judgment on the grounds that there was an absence of evidence supporting Jordon Coury's negligence claim. Mr. Coury filed no evidence in response. The trial court granted the City's motion and entered final judgment for the City. On appeal, Mr. Coury argues that this was error; he maintains that the City never met its initial burden of production, so the burden never shifted to him to produce evidence in support of his claim. We disagree and affirm the judgment. I. This case arises from an incident that occurred in the summer of 2020 after George Floyd's death in Minneapolis sparked nationwide protests. One such protest developed in downtown Tampa on May 31, 2020. Mr. Coury alleges that on that day, a City of Tampa police officer fired rubber bullets into a crowd of peaceful protesters, and that one of the rubber bullets struck him in the back of the head and injured him. Mr. Coury filed a negligence complaint against the City on March 19, 2021. His complaint alleged that the City failed to properly vet, train, supervise, and direct its police officers, and that this failure caused injury and damages. On April 27, 2021, the City answered Mr. Coury's complaint, denied his allegations, and asserted several affirmative defenses including sovereign immunity. The parties exchanged written discovery early in the litigation, although the bulk of it is not in the record on appeal. The record indicates that Mr. Coury and the City served written interrogatories on each other, and that they answered each other's interrogatories, but neither the interrogatories nor the answers are in the record. Mr. Coury also served, and the City responded to, requests for admission and requests for production. The City denied the majority of Mr. Coury's requests for admission, including requests asking the City to admit that it was negligent and that the officer was negligent in firing rubber bullets into a crowd. The City also responded to most of Mr. Coury's requests for production, while objecting to three of them. Mr. Coury did not move to compel responses to these requests, and neither party served any additional written discovery after their initial exchanges. At some point

2 in 2021 the parties deposed the officer involved in the incident and the City's Chief of Police. But neither party timely filed the deposition transcripts with the trial court, as discussed below. On December 15, 2021, the trial court entered a case management order setting pretrial deadlines. It established March 1, 2023, as the fact discovery deadline, giving the parties an additional fourteen and a half months to complete discovery. It also set Mr. Coury's expert disclosure deadline for March 31, 2023, and the City's expert disclosure deadline for April 30, 2023. The trial court then set the case for trial in December 2023, and it required the parties to file dispositive motions by June 29, 2023. On that June 29 deadline—and more than two years after Mr. Coury filed suit—the City filed its motion for summary judgment. The City argued "that summary judgment should be granted because [Mr. Coury] does not have evidence to prove his claim[]." The City explained that the parties had exchanged written discovery and deposed two witnesses, that the expert disclosure deadlines had passed, and that no experts were disclosed. The City then separately reviewed each negligence theory Mr. Coury's complaint raised (negligent hiring, negligent training, and negligent supervision) and argued that Mr. Coury lacked evidence to support each one. For instance, in addressing Mr. Coury's negligent training theory, the City argued that there was no evidence in the record on which a jury could find that the City failed to adequately train its officers. 1 As to Mr.

1 The City raised two additional arguments with respect to Mr.

Coury's negligent training theory. It argued that sovereign immunity barred it, and that the two witnesses the parties deposed both testified that the City trained its officers on how to use the weapon in question.

3 Coury's negligent supervision theory, the City argued that the law required Mr. Coury to prove that the officer in question was unfit, that the City knew he was unfit, and that the officer was acting outside the scope of his employment when the incident occurred. See M.V. v. Gulf Ridge Council Boy Scouts of Am., Inc., 529 So. 2d 1248, 1248 (Fla. 2d DCA 1988); Acts Ret.-Life Cmtys. Inc. v. Est. of Zimmer, 206 So. 3d 112, 115 (Fla. 4th DCA 2016). The City maintained that there was no evidence of these elements either and that there was no dispute that the officer acted within the scope of his employment. Mr. Coury timely filed a response to the City's motion, but he did not address these particular arguments. Mr. Coury argued instead that the City "fail[ed] to provide any evidence whatsoever in accordance with Florida Rule of Civil Procedure 1.510," and that he did not have to rebut the City's motion until it "actually file[d] a Motion for Summary Judgment with evidence demonstrating it is entitled to Summary Judgment as a matter of law." Given his position, Mr. Coury did not file any evidence with his response. But he further argued that the City's motion was premature because he had not deposed the Mayor yet, and because the City had not deposed him or an eyewitness to the incident. The City scheduled the summary judgment hearing for September 7, 2023. A week before the hearing date, Mr. Coury filed a newspaper article with the trial court, and the City filed the officer's deposition. Mr. Coury moved to strike the City's filing, arguing that rule 1.510(c)(5) required the City to file any supporting evidence at the time it filed its summary judgment motion and not mere days before the hearing.

The City did not focus on these arguments at the summary judgment hearing, however, and they were not the basis for the trial court's ruling.

4 The hearing was held as scheduled on September 7. The trial court first addressed Mr. Coury's motion to strike and granted it, finding the City's filing of the officer's deposition untimely. 2 The parties then presented their summary judgment arguments, with the City arguing that "the entire basis of [its] motion [wa]s the lack of support for the elements of [Mr. Coury's] claim," and pointing out that Mr. Coury filed nothing in response. For his part, Mr. Coury reiterated his position that it was not his burden to file summary judgment evidence because the City had not met its initial burden as the movant. Mr. Coury also argued, however, that deposition testimony from the officer and the Chief of Police supported his claim, and that he intended to call multiple witnesses—including a law enforcement expert—to testify in support of his claim at trial. When the trial court asked Mr. Coury where it could find this evidence in the record, Mr.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Stahl v. Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corp.
283 F.3d 254 (Fifth Circuit, 2002)
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.
477 U.S. 242 (Supreme Court, 1986)
Leon Modrowski v. John Pigatto
712 F.3d 1166 (Seventh Circuit, 2013)
Mv v. Gulf Ridge Coun. Boy Scouts of America, Inc.
529 So. 2d 1248 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1988)
Raeburn Bedford v. John Doe
880 F.3d 993 (Eighth Circuit, 2018)
Michael Wease v. Ocwen Loan Servicing, L.L.C., et
915 F.3d 987 (Fifth Circuit, 2019)
Acts Retirement-Life Communities Inc. v. Estate of Zimmer
206 So. 3d 112 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2016)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Coury v. City of Tampa, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coury-v-city-of-tampa-fladistctapp-2024.