Derek Lemaire v. David Richard

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 6, 2013
DocketCA-0013-0581
StatusUnknown

This text of Derek Lemaire v. David Richard (Derek Lemaire v. David Richard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Derek Lemaire v. David Richard, (La. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

13-581

DEREK LEMAIRE

VERSUS

DAVID RICHARD, ET AL.

**********

APPEAL FROM THE FIFTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF LAFAYETTE, NO. C-20091231 HONORABLE DURWOOD WAYNE CONQUE, DISTRICT JUDGE

JOHN D. SAUNDERS JUDGE

Court composed of Ulysses Gene Thibodeaux, Chief Judge, John D. Saunders, and Phyllis M. Keaty, Judges.

REVERSED AND REMANDED.

Gregory Kent Moroux Onebane Law Firm P. O. Box 3507 Lafayette, LA 70502-3507 (337) 237-2660 COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANTS/APPELLEES: Dave’s Gun Shop David Richard Linda Richard James Kirk Piccione Piccione & Piccione P. O. Box 3029 Lafayette, LA 70502 (337) 233-9030 COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE: Jeremiah Deare

Charles William Ziegler IV Attorney at Law P. O. Box 53513 Lafayette, LA 70505-3513 (337) 234-1100 COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT: Derek Lemaire SAUNDERS, Judge.

This is a vicarious liability case in which a gun shop manager accidentally

discharged his own gun, shooting a customer. The manager‟s gun discharged as he

was disassembling it in order to compare it to the customer‟s malfunctioning gun,

as they were both Glock 19 pistols. The customer sustained a gunshot wound on

the right side of his chest, and he filed suit against the manager, the gun shop

owner, and the lessor of the property for damages arising from this injury. The

lessor was dismissed from the suit, and the manager reached a settlement. After a

bench trial on the issue of the shop‟s liability, the trial court ruled in favor of the

shop, finding no vicarious liability. The plaintiff appeals. For the reasons

discussed herein, we reverse and remand.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Plaintiff, Derek Lemaire (hereinafter “Lemaire”), purchased a gun from

defendants, Dave Richard and Linda Richard d/b/a Dave‟s Gun Shop (hereinafter

“the shop”). Shortly thereafter, the gun jammed. Lemaire contacted the manager

of Dave‟s Gun Shop, Jeremiah Deare (hereinafter “Deare”) on November 10, 2008,

regarding the problem. Deare invited him to bring the gun to the shop for

inspection. Deare testified that “we said bring it by. We can take a look at it and

see if there‟s anything---I mean, you can look at something, „Oh, yes. That piece is

broken.‟ If there was nothing obvious about it, we don‟t do repairs so we would

send it back to the factory for him.”

Lemaire arrived at the shop sometime around 7:00 p.m. that evening.

Although each parking space in the lot is available to customers of any store in the

shopping center, Lemaire parked his truck directly in front of the gun shop. The

shop‟s hours are 9:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. The parties disputed the frequency with

which the shop stays open after hours, but there is no dispute that the door was unlocked at the time Lemaire arrived. Another customer was present in the shop,

talking to Deare. Dave Richard, the shop‟s owner (hereinafter “Richard”), was

present as well, working on inventory. Lemaire waited for Deare to finish with the

other customer before discussing his gun.

After that, Deare‟s testimony conflicts with that of Lemaire. Lemaire

testified that he did not initially bring the gun into the shop because “I never bring

a loaded weapon into a shop until I tell someone. There‟s no sign on the door to

say, „Leave your gun unloaded,‟ like some gun shops, but just to be safe.” He

testified that as he was leaving the shop to retrieve his gun from his truck and bring

it back to the shop, Deare followed him out to the parking lot to assist him, at

which point the incident occurred.

In contrast, Deare testified that Lemaire retrieved the gun from his truck and

brought it back inside the store, at which point “[w]e ran through a couple of

possibilities of what it was. We offered to send it back. That offer was refused. If

I remember correctly, it was, „I‟ll keep shooting and see if it fixes itself.‟” Deare

later testified that they disassembled the gun in the shop but were not able to

determine why it was malfunctioning. Deare testified that at that point, Lemaire

left the shop with the gun, having refused to send the gun back to Glock, its

manufacturer. Deare testified that he left as well, locking up the shop for the night

and walking out to the parking lot, where the incident then occurred.

A police report by investigating detective Glenn Landry states that after

being Mirandized, Deare told the detective that he walked outside to the parking

lot, where he saw Lemaire, who then began discussing the jamming problem. The

report states that this conversation led to disassembling Deare‟s gun and thus the

shooting incident in the parking lot. Nowhere does the report mention Lemaire

ever entering the shop that night. 2 Richard testified that he did not speak to Lemaire that night, although he saw

Lemaire enter the shop and then leave with Deare. There is also conflicting

testimony as to whether Deare locked the door on his way out to the parking lot.

Richard testified that he saw Deare lock the door on his way out and believed he

was leaving for the night. Deare‟s testimony is similar. Lemaire testified that

Deare did not lock the door when he followed Lemaire outside because they

intended to return to the shop.

Two police officers who were the first to arrive on the scene testified at trial

that the lights were on in Dave‟s Gun Shop. One of them, Sergeant Paul Matte,

testified that the shop door was not locked:

Q: When you went into Dave‟s, did Dave come out before you went into Dave‟s Gun Shop?

A: No, sir.

Q: When you went into Dave‟ Gun Shop, was the door locked?

Q: So you went in and met Dave inside?

A: Yes, sir.

Deare testified that he did not unlock the shop door after the shooting.

Richard testified that he was not aware of the incident until police arrived and he

saw flashing lights outside, at which point he unlocked the door to exit the shop

and see what was going on.

Deare testified that in going outside with Lemaire he intended to say

goodbye to Lemaire and leave for the day; then once outside, it occurred to him

that he could compare Lemaire‟s gun to his own. Lemaire testified that Deare was

accompanying him to retrieve the gun out of customer courtesy.

3 Deare and Lemaire then met at Lemaire‟s truck, which was still parked

outside the shop. Deare told Lemaire he was going to take a look at his own gun to

compare it to Lemaire‟s, or to remove the slide from his own gun and test it in

Lemaire‟s. Lemaire heard Deare remove his own gun from its holster. Lemaire

began packing his gun into its case in the back seat of his truck. Lemaire testified

that Deare never touched the gun Lemaire brought in; Deare touched only his own

gun. Deare testified, rather, that “I took his apart and we put his back together, and

it was in the truck,” clarifying later that he disassembled Lemaire‟s gun on the

passenger side front seat of Lemaire‟s truck. Deare testified that he saw no parts

broken and did not see an obvious cause of malfunction in Lemaire‟s gun. Deare

testified at his deposition that he then wanted to look at his own gun to compare it

to Lemaire‟s in order to identify a source of malfunction “to warrant sending it

back to Glock.” As Deare was disassembling his own gun, which requires pulling

the trigger, Lemaire came around either the corner of his truck or around its open

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