Demelash v. Ross Stores, Inc.

20 P.3d 447
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 26, 2001
Docket45638-5-I
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 20 P.3d 447 (Demelash v. Ross Stores, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Demelash v. Ross Stores, Inc., 20 P.3d 447 (Wash. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

20 P.3d 447 (2001)

Ayalew DEMELASH, individually, Appellant,
v.
ROSS STORES, INC., a foreign corporation, d/b/a Ross Dress for Less; and David Feldman and "Jane Doe" Feldman, husband and wife and their marital community; and Sandra Bates and "John Doe" Bates, wife and husband and their marital community, Respondents.

No. 45638-5-I.

Court of Appeals of Washington, Division 1.

March 26, 2001.

*451 Eileen C. Sussex, Everett, for Appellant.

D. Michael Reilly, Michael King, Steven Jensen, Lane Powell Spears Lubersky, Seattle, for Respondent. *448 *449

*450 BAKER, J.

Ayalew Demelash sued Ross Dress for Less after its security agents detained him on suspicion of shoplifting. He prevailed on none of his claims and he now appeals, assigning error to pretrial discovery orders, summary judgment orders, evidence rulings, order for directed verdict, and denial of motion for new trial. Because the trial court erred in refusing to allow discovery of evidence about Ross Stores' conduct in other shoplifting incidents, we reverse the discovery orders and summary judgment on Demelash's Consumer Protection Act and RCW 49.60 claims. In addition, the question of whether Ross Stores reasonably retained Demelash's coat for 16 days requires reversal of summary judgment on his conversion claim. Finally, we hold that the trial court may properly impose sanctions under CR 37 and CR 26(g) for Ross Stores' unjustified resistance to discovery.

I

Ayalew Demelash is an Ethiopian immigrant with limited English skills. On January 2, 1998 he purchased a tan-colored coat from Ross Dress for Less. Two days later, he returned to the store wearing the somewhat wrinkled coat, to consider the purchase of another coat. At some point during his shopping, Ross Stores security agents determined that he was acting suspiciously and focused security cameras on him. The video tape Ross Stores later produced during discovery has a three-minute gap in the middle of the tape where no filming occurred, as well as a segment where the agents filmed another customer.

When the agents resumed filming Demelash, he was modeling a black coat in the women's department. When he finished with the coat, he took a wrinkled, tan coat from the rack near him and put it on. He replaced it with the black coat and hung it on the rack. When Demelash left the store, a security officer pursued and detained him. He escorted Demelash to a small office in the basement of the store, where two security officers questioned him about the coat he was wearing and photographed him. They demanded his identification and also asked him to sign an acknowledgement of shoplifting, despite his evident difficulty understanding English. Demelash declined.

Within minutes, Seattle Police officers arrived, who patted down Demelash and examined his identification. After about 40 minutes, the police returned all of Demelash's belongings to him except for his coat and allowed him to go home to retrieve a sales receipt for the coat. Demelash returned with the sales receipt, which the Ross agents verified. Although Demelash ultimately left the store with the understanding that he would not be charged with shoplifting, Ross Stores refused to relinquish the coat.

After two weeks, Demelash retained counsel because his coat had not been returned to him. Within two days, Demelash's coat arrived at his home, with no explanation by Ross Stores for the delay. Two days later, Demelash received a letter from Ross Stores' corporate counsel in California accusing him of wrongfully taking the coat and demanding $200.

Demelash instead sued Ross Stores on a multitude of claims including conversion, discrimination, Consumer Protection Act (CPA) violations, assault, battery, false arrest/imprisonment, breach of contract, and negligent training/supervision. During discovery, Demelash propounded interrogatories and requests for production (requests), paraphrased as follows:

Interrogatories # 6-7: All information related to any customer complaint of unlawful discrimination, CPA violations, harassment, extortion, breach of contract, false imprisonment, assault and battery from all stores for the period 1988 through the present date.
Request for Production # 3: All documents associated with answer to Interrogatories # 6-7 above.
Request for Production # 4: All materials related to Ross Stores' investigations in *452 response to customer allegations identified in response to Interrogatory # 7.
Request for Production # 10: All documents related to the security activities at the downtown Seattle store including surveillance, training, incident investigation, suspect detention, maintenance of incident reports, property assessment, demand and collection of civil fees and pursuit of criminal prosecution.
Request for Production # 11: Copies of all demand letters sent by Ross Stores counsel to shoplifting suspects.

Four months later, after serving general "preliminary objections," Ross Stores produced its answers, omitting answers to a number of interrogatories and requests including those listed above. It did not move for a protective order.

When the parties could not resolve their discovery disputes, Demelash moved to compel discovery. In its response, Ross Stores moved for a protective order. The trial court ordered Ross Stores to produce answers to interrogatories # 6 and # 7, and requests # 3 and # 4, limited to a four-year period, and permitted production in the form of summarized computer records. It also ordered production of documents requested in requests # 10 and # 11. Production was required within 14 days. The trial court granted fees of $500 to Demelash. Ross Stores moved to reconsider, which the court granted in part by limiting the demand letter request (request # 11) to only those recipients living in the state of Washington during the last four years.

Ross Stores did not comply with the court's orders. Although it did produce an 1,149 page computer generated report in response to interrogatories # 6 and # 7, and requests # 3 and # 4, the report did nothing more than provide the dates, names of customers, and a one or two word subject heading regarding the nature of the complaint, most of which related to personal injury and not to the requests of Demelash. In response to request # 10, Ross Stores only produced its training manuals. In response to request # 11, it first stated that the demand letters were forthcoming, then that a disk of the letters from its counsel would be produced "soon," and finally, that Ross Stores possessed no such letters and that Demelash should seek discovery directly from the attorney from whom Ross Stores had said it had requested the demand letters.

After two months, during which Ross Stores produced many of the other answers and documents ordered, but failed to provide the documents relating to other customer incidents, Demelash again filed a motion to compel, and again requested sanctions. Ross Stores opposed the motion, asserting that it had produced everything it was ordered to produce. It reargued privilege and work product in support of its refusal to produce documents responsive to request # 10, mischaracterized the discovery orders, and denied that it had any documentation responsive to request # 11. The trial court denied Demelash's motion.

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Bluebook (online)
20 P.3d 447, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/demelash-v-ross-stores-inc-washctapp-2001.