Distinguished Executives Transportation, LLC v. Cracker Barrel Old Country Store, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. West Virginia
DecidedMay 10, 2018
Docket2:16-cv-08503
StatusUnknown

This text of Distinguished Executives Transportation, LLC v. Cracker Barrel Old Country Store, Inc. (Distinguished Executives Transportation, LLC v. Cracker Barrel Old Country Store, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. West Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Distinguished Executives Transportation, LLC v. Cracker Barrel Old Country Store, Inc., (S.D.W. Va. 2018).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF WEST VIRGINIA AT CHARLESTON

DISTINGUISHED EXECUTIVES TRANSPORTATION, LLC, and RANDY FREEMAN,

Plaintiffs,

v. Civil Action No. 2:16-cv-08503

CRACKER BARREL OLD COUNTRY STORE, INC.,

Defendant.

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

Pending is defendant Cracker Barrel Old Country Store, Inc.’s (“Cracker Barrel”) motion for summary judgment, filed December 7, 2017. I. Background Defendant Cracker Barrel is a Tennessee corporation with its principal place of business in Tennessee. (Compl. ¶ 3.) Plaintiff Randy Freeman is an African-American male who resides in Williamsburg, Virginia. (Deposition of Randy Freeman (“Freeman Dep.”) 6, 128.) Freeman is the “sole proprietor,” as Freeman phrases it, of plaintiff Distinguished Executives Transportation, LLC (“Distinguished Executives”), which is based in Virginia. (Id. 9, 12-13). Distinguished Executives’ business is, in part, contracting with tour companies or churches to transport tour groups via motor coach. (Id. 12-14.)

On September 6, 2015, Freeman, under a contract between Distinguished Executives and White Star Tours, was driving an all-white church group from Elkhardt Baptist Church, which appears to be located in Virginia, to Branson, Missouri. (Id. 14-15, 30, 38, 72.) Freeman stopped the group for the night at a hotel in Cross Lanes, West Virginia. (See id. 38.) While Freeman completed some paperwork, the group proceeded to

the adjacent restaurant owned by Cracker Barrel (the “restaurant”). (Id. 30.) Freeman came to the restaurant sometime shortly thereafter. (See id.) Freeman waited in line at the restaurant for about fifteen minutes until he could be seated. (Id.) He told the wait staff that he was with the group from White Star; he did

not mention Distinguished Executives. (Id. 101-03.) As he was being seated, Freeman passed a group of three white women from the group at a table for four. (Id. 30-31; 52; 93.) The women, who had already ordered their food, invited Freeman to sit with them, and Freeman accepted. (Id.) The table’s server was Kailee Payne. (See Deposition of Kailee Payne (“Payne Dep.”) 30-31.) According to Freeman, the women’s food arrived around thirty minutes later, at which time Freeman asked Payne if he could order. (Freeman Dep. 31.) Freeman alleges that Payne did

not respond and left the table. (Id.) Payne, on the other hand, claims that she asked Freeman soon after he sat down if she could take his order and that Freeman responded that he was not going to eat. (Payne Dep. 31-32.) Payne alleges that Freeman then left the table and that she did not see him for another ten minutes to an hour when

he returned to the table. (Id. 33-36.) At that time, Payne asserts that Freeman yelled at her in an aggressive tone, “who’s going to take my f--king order?” (Id. 34.) Freeman denies these allegations. (E.g. Freeman Dep. 91.) Payne left the table and reported her story, in tears, to one of the restaurant’s managers, Christopher Goodlet. (E.g.

Deposition of Christopher Goodlet (“Goodlet Dep.”) 133-35; see Freeman Dep. 31.) Without having seen Freeman, Goodlet claims he decided that Freeman should leave the restaurant. (Goodlet Dep. 146-47, 171.) Goodlet’s testimony indicates that he spoke to Freeman only once, whispering such that no one else could hear. (Id.

132-33.) Goodlet told Freeman what Payne had relayed to him and asked Freeman to leave. (See, e.g., id. 132-33; 140, 147.) Goodlet claims that Freeman left the table and proceeded to the retail area of the restaurant, (id. 133, 167-68), which is separate from the dining area, (see Freeman Dep. 37). Goodlet

avers that Freeman acted rudely in the retail area. (Goodlet Dep. 167-68.) Goodlet claims that he had to get back to work, so he gave Freeman his card and information and asked a different manager, Nate McManaman, to escort Freeman out of the restaurant. (Id. 133, 140, 152, 167-68.) Goodlet’s typical response when a customer is unhappy is to ask why and to attempt to resolve the issue. (See id. 124, 128.) In this case, Goodlet believed what Payne had told him without conducting any further investigation. (E.g. id. 159.)

According to Freeman, Goodlet spoke to him twice. Goodlet first informed Freeman of Payne’s story but did not ask Freeman to leave. (See Freeman Dep. 31.) Freeman claims that Goodlet spoke loudly enough for the three women to hear, or that the others could at least understand what Goodlet said based on Freeman’s response. (Id. 87-92.) Freeman denied that he yelled or cursed at Payne and asserts that he had the support of the three women at the table, and Goodlet left. (Id. 35-36, 41, 87- 92.)1 Freeman alleges that an African-American male replaced

1 For this point, Freeman also proffers three statements, written ostensibly by the three women seated at the table with him. (See Pls.’ Ex. C.) The statements, handwritten and not under Payne as the table’s server, and Freeman ordered a drink and food. (Id. 36, 80.) The same African-American male brought Freeman his drink. (Id.) Before Freeman received his food,

Goodlet returned a second time, told Freeman that he believed Payne, and asked Freeman to leave. (Id. 36-37.) Freeman asked to see a manager and walked to the retail area of the restaurant where he spoke with McManaman. (Id. 36-37.) McManaman claims that Freeman was being very loud in the retail area and telling other customers to leave the

restaurant, (Deposition of Nate McManaman (“McManaman Dep.”) 44, 47, 53-54, 58-59), while Freeman avers that he was simply standing in the retail area with a brochure containing the phone number of Cracker Barrel’s headquarters, (Freeman Dep. 37). Freeman and McManaman had a brief conversation, and McManaman told Freeman that he had to believe Payne, that Payne was new, that the restaurant was understaffed and busy that day, and that Freeman had to leave. (Id. 37, 80; McManaman Dep. 43-47; 53-56, 58.) McManaman gave Freeman his business card, and Freeman left. (Freeman Dep. 37, 80; McManaman Dep. 46-47, 56.)

penalty of perjury, are inadmissible as evidence and played no part in the court’s disposition herein. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c)(2). Freeman later called Cracker Barrel’s headquarters about the incident. (Freeman Dep. 39-40.) He received a call back and was told that there would be an investigation, but no

one from Cracker Barrel ever contacted him again. (Id.) Goodlet did not write down anything about the incident, nor did he report it to anyone. (Goodlet Dep. 150.) Neither Goodlet nor Payne felt threatened at any point during the incident. (Id. 168; Payne Dep. 38.) No one yelled at or touched Freeman, and no racial epithets were spoken.

(Freeman Dep. 79-80, 121.) Freeman did not seek medical care or incur any medical costs as a result of the incident. (Id. 94- 95.) Freeman claims that it was the most embarrassing moment of his life, even moreso than when he attended a racially- segregated elementary school. (Id. 51, 128-29.) Freeman does not have records of any economic loss

suffered by either him or Distinguished Executives as a result of the incident. (Id. 111-13; see id. 14-17.) Additionally, Freeman is unaware of any negative comments made by anyone else about him or by anybody about Distinguished Executives at all. (Id. 98-103, 105.) White Star continues to contract with Distinguished Executives. (Id. 34, 95-96.) Andrew Cammarano, Tour Manager for White Star, swears that White Star took no adverse action against Freeman and Distinguished Executives and that he “ha[s] not heard of any harm to [Freeman’s or Distinguished Executive’s] personal or business reputation from an event that occurred at Cracker Barrel.” (Affidavit of Andrew

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