Dillon v. Wal-Mart 2720

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Mississippi
DecidedSeptember 14, 2020
Docket3:18-cv-00481
StatusUnknown

This text of Dillon v. Wal-Mart 2720 (Dillon v. Wal-Mart 2720) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dillon v. Wal-Mart 2720, (S.D. Miss. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF MISSISSIPPI NORTHERN DIVISION

NATALIE DILLON PLAINTIFF

V. CAUSE NO. 3:18-CV-481-CWR-FKB

WAL-MART 2720; DEFENDANTS WAL-MART STORES EAST, LP; and JOHN DOES 1-3

ORDER Before the Court are Defendants Wal-Mart 2720 and Wal-Mart Stores East, LP’s Motion for Summary Judgment; Defendants’ Motions in Limine; and Plaintiff Natalie Dillon’s Motion to Exclude Defendant’s Expert. The matters are fully briefed and ready for adjudication. I. Factual and Procedural History A. Dillon’s Alleged Shoplifting This lawsuit involves Plaintiff Natalie Dillon shopping at the Wal-Mart store in Madison, Mississippi (Wal-Mart 2720), on August 12 and August 27, 2017. On both occasions, Dillon, accompanied by her three children, used the self-checkout registers before leaving the store. Wal- Mart’s security cameras captured surveillance videos of each check-out. On August 12, 2017, Dillon paid $116.05 for her items. Wal-Mart claims that she left the store with $160 worth of items, though—thus shoplifting the remaining $54.76 worth of items. Though the parties disagree with how many items Dillon correctly scanned and whether some of the scanning failures were Dillon’s error or the machine’s error, Dillon agrees that the video shows her “apparently failing to scan other items when she turned her attention to her children.” Pl. Response at 11. For example, Dillon admitted in her deposition that she failed to scan items like a box of Fiber One snacks and a box of Smart Peanut Butter Snacks. Dillon acknowledged that she scanned other items simultaneously, which caused at least one of them to fail to scan. She also agreed that she left Wal-Mart without paying for these items. After exiting the store, a Wal-Mart employee stopped Dillon for having two unbagged frozen pizzas in her cart that did not appear on her receipt. The surveillance video revealed that Dillon had not taken the pizzas out of the cart to scan them. Dillon returned to the scanner and paid

for the pizzas, but did not scan or pay for any of the other items that were later to be called into question. Wal-Mart’s then-“asset protection associate,” Michael Griffin, did not observe the surveillance video on August 12 in real time. He says he was notified by a Wal-Mart employee that Dillon was stopped about the unscanned pizzas. Griffin later studied the surveillance video of Dillon’s self-checkout on August 12 and believed that she had “skip-scanned” groceries. Wal-Mart says Griffin did not file shoplifting charges at this point because he did not know Dillon’s identity and was waiting to see Dillon again to identify her. That opportunity to identify Dillon came 15 days later, when Dillon returned to the store

to shop with her three children. She paid $137.71, but as she headed out through the vestibule, Griffin, who had apparently watched the live video surveillance of Dillon using the self-checkout scanner,1 stopped her and accused her of shoplifting $16.09 worth of items. The video showed Dillon failing to scan at least one “Smart One Meal.” Dillon later admitted in her deposition that she failed to scan this item. Griffin took Dillon and her children to a detention room. He stated that Dillon had not paid for her groceries, which Dillon denied and showed her receipt. Griffin informed Dillon that he had

1 Dillon says that Griffin had also followed her around the store, taking photos of her on his personal phone. She claims this is against Wal-Mart policy. Wal-Mart policy, however, prohibits employees taking pictures of shoplifters under the age of 18. been watching her and pointed to a receipt of hers on his “receipt board” from a prior trip she made to Wal-Mart.2 Griffin also informed Dillon she could never come into another Wal-Mart or Sam’s Club or she would be arrested. At some point, Griffin called the police. Dillon asked to be let go and Griffin allegedly agreed to let her go—if she signed a document.3 With crying children at her side and wanting to bring them home, Dillon signed the

document. Dillon also testified in a deposition that Griffin would not let her call her husband, who is an attorney, but that 15 minutes into her detention he instructed her to call someone to pick up her kids. When she did, Wal-Mart employees would not let Dillon walk her children to her neighbor’s car and instead kept her detained. After the children left the room, Dillon alleges that Griffin threatened to have the Mississippi Department of Human Services come take her children away. Dillon remained detained at Wal-Mart until the Madison Police came and arrested her for shoplifting. Griffin signed criminal affidavits against Dillon for both instances of alleged shoplifting. Her trial was set for February 1, 2018. The case was dismissed after Griffin, who had been fired by Wal-Mart by that time,4 did not appear. Evidence submitted in this litigation shows that he was

terminated in December 2017 for stopping a customer for shoplifting and prematurely calling the police on that person, in violation of Wal-Mart policies. Dillon states that she was “devastated” by her arrest. She was afraid to leave her house, and became withdrawn and isolated. She saw a psychiatrist who diagnosed her with PTSD and

2 The parties have not stated, but presumably this receipt is from Dillon’s August 12, 2017, checkout. 3 The parties have not explained the nature of this document. 4 Griffin was fired for stopping and accusing a customer of shoplifting, despite the fact the customer produced a receipt for the merchandise, in violation of Wal-Mart’s shoplifting policies. Wal-Mart has a policy and procedure manual, called AP-09, which employees refer to as “the Bible.” It identifies the steps asset protection associates must follow when dealing with a customer suspected of shoplifting. AP-09 identifies four elements that must be present before an asset protection associate can approach a customer and investigate the unlawful taking of merchandise: (1) selection and possession of merchandise; (2) concealment or dispossession of the merchandise; (3) continued possession of merchandise; and (4) passing the last point of sale without paying for the merchandise. said she was having panic attacks. At her deposition, Dillon stated she continues to see a psychiatric nurse practitioner, who prescribes medication for depression. Dillon submitted evidence stating that, as a result of her arrest, “she was depressed, anxious, lost weight, began to self-isolate, and was having severe panic attacks.” B. Threat to sue letters

On September 6, 2017, Dillon received two letters, each titled “Settlement Offer,” from Wal-Mart’s attorney. Each letter threatened to sue her unless she paid $200 per accused shoplifting incident. These letters were generated by Palmer Recovery Attorneys, PLLC. Reginald Harrion, the attorney who signed the letters, said he did not review them before they were mailed to Dillon, as (he claimed) the language in the letter is boilerplate that is not person-specific. Dillon argues that the letters were part of a broader Wal-Mart scheme to intimidate and defraud customers. She points to a deposition of Wayne Bowen, head of Wal-Mart’s loss recovery department, who testified that his performance evaluation was based on how much money his department collected. Dillon then points to Wal-Mart emails showing that Mr. Bowen’s

Department directed outside counsel to increase revenue generated by these threat-to-sue letter by at least seven percent. The documents show a $15 million goal for civil recovery.

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Dillon v. Wal-Mart 2720, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dillon-v-wal-mart-2720-mssd-2020.