Fogal v. Coastal Restaurant Management, Inc.

452 F. Supp. 2d 1286, 2004 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 30027, 2004 WL 4969698
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Georgia
DecidedApril 19, 2004
Docket403CV098
StatusPublished

This text of 452 F. Supp. 2d 1286 (Fogal v. Coastal Restaurant Management, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fogal v. Coastal Restaurant Management, Inc., 452 F. Supp. 2d 1286, 2004 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 30027, 2004 WL 4969698 (S.D. Ga. 2004).

Opinion

ORDER

EDENFIELD, District Judge.

I. INTRODUCTION

This case sounds like a really bad joke. In fact, it stems from one. As described in both industry and mainstream media, a prankster’s been posing as a police officer and calling restaurants, convincing managers to strip search employees for suspected crimes. 1 Both managers and employees have fallen for the prank, with some searches “going the distance” and thus *1288 giving rise to allegations of harassing sexual contact. Id

That’s essentially what plaintiff Deborah J. Fogal claims happened in this ease, where a prankster called — collect—defendant Coastal Restaurant Management, Inc.’s (CRMI’s) Taco Bell restaurant, spoke with co-defendant Morgan Shane Denson (one of the store’s managers) and convinced him — and Fogal — to strip search her for evidence of a coin purse theft (and her car for marijuana possession).

Fogal now sues CRMI and Denson for, inter alia, emotional distress and sexual harassment. Doc. # 1. While she believes that Denson was not part of the hoax and took no pleasure from it, nevertheless he was her supervisor, doc. # 25 at 157-58, so she seeks to hold CRMI liable on respon-deat superior grounds. Doc. #1 ¶ 27. Denson and CRMI both move the Court for summary judgment 2 (doc. ## 26, 31) and for leave to amend the Court’s scheduling Order to add additional witnesses. Doe. ## 73-74.

II. BACKGROUND 3

Fogal was a virginal, 19-year-old preacher’s daughter and Georgia Southern University student when she began work at CRMI’s Statesboro, Georgia Taco Bell store in 9/02. Doc. # 25 at 8, 10, 12, 24, 32-33, 158. She had never met Denson before, nor socialized with him outside of work. Id. at 36-37. Nor did Denson ever act inappropriately or express any romantic interest toward her prior to the hoax. Id. at 38. And she had never seen him act inappropriately toward anyone else. Id.

Both Fogal and Denson worked the evening shift on 11/25/02, when the male prankster called the store collect and Den-son was summoned to the store’s office phone. Doc. # 25 at 44, 53, 65; # 40 at 32, 42, 67-68, 74; doc. # 43. The caller claimed “he was a Statesboro police officer and that they had received a complaint that a [customer’s] purse had been stolen, change purse had been stolen.” Doc. # 40 at 74, 76. He gave no name or rank, nor stated how much change had been stolen, and Denson didn’t ask. Id. at 74-77. He also told Denson that Denson’s supervisor, Debra Moore, “was on the phone with [the caller’s] captain [and] that she knew about the charges — or that the purse had been stolen.” Id. at 77.

Denson “asked him who supposedly stole the purse.” Id. The caller “described a female employee” and “that description fit Ms. Fogal.” Id. at 78. So, Denson summoned Fogal, then working a cash register, to the office. Id. at 79; doc. # 25 at 57. He explained to her what the caller told him, then handed her the phone. Doc. # 40 at 82. The caller told her “that there was a purse stolen with a lot of money in it, and I fit the description of the person who stole it.” Doc. # 25 at 60. She came to believe that the caller was a “detective.” Id.

. To Fogal, Denson seemed confused by the call. Id. at 61. The two would both spend the better part of the next two hours alone in the restaurant’s office together, interacting with the caller. During that time, Fogal got “on the phone with the [caller] ... every now and then.” Doc. # 25 at 65-66. Still, she could not precise *1289 ly remember (on 8/23/03, the date of her deposition) what was said by whom:

Q. What was said next?
A. I don’t remember.
Q. What’s the next thing you remember being said?
A. About like the cops can either arrest me and do a strip search or whether they could do one there.
Q. You said they. Who’s they?
A. The police.
Q. So you said the cops could come and arrest you and do a strip search, or they could do one there. What does that mean?
A. The manager at Taco Bell.
Q. So it was your understanding that your choice was to have policemen come and arrest you and take you somewhere to be strip searched or to have [Denson] strip search you?
A. Yes, ma'am.
Q. Who told you it was your choice?
A. [Denson],

Doe. # 25 at 61-62.

Fogal at that time made no inquiry to confirm that the call was genuine:

Q. All right. Why did you agree to have Mr. Denson do this strip search?
A. I didn’t want to be arrested.
Q. But when you made the decision to be strip searched, it was your understanding that the man on the phone was a detective?
A. Yes, ma'am.
Q. Now you knew this man had called collect; correct?
A. Yes. I hadn’t thought about that, really.
Q. And what was your understanding as to what police department he was from?
A. I didn’t.
Q. You weren’t told he was with the Statesboro police?
A. No, ma'am.
* * *
Q. Did you get on the phone with the man?
A. Every now and then. 4
Q. Did you get on the phone to give your consent [to the strip search by Denson]?
A. No ma'am, I said it outloud (sic).

Doc. # 25 at 64-66 (footnote added).

While Denson verbally relayed parts of the caller’s communication to her, Fogal acknowledges that Denson also “thought, you know, this was stupid and you know, stuff like that,” and he otherwise did not suggest anything independently to her. Doc. # 25 at 67-68. To that end:

Q. Mr. Denson would relay to you what the man said on the phone said; correct?
A. Uh-huh, yes, ma'am.
Q. And Mr. Denson expressed to you his personal opinion that the goings on were stupid; correct?
A.

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Bluebook (online)
452 F. Supp. 2d 1286, 2004 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 30027, 2004 WL 4969698, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fogal-v-coastal-restaurant-management-inc-gasd-2004.