Ford v. Edmondson Village Shopping Center Holdings

CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 2, 2021
Docket1656/19
StatusPublished

This text of Ford v. Edmondson Village Shopping Center Holdings (Ford v. Edmondson Village Shopping Center Holdings) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ford v. Edmondson Village Shopping Center Holdings, (Md. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

HEADNOTE: KATHLEEN FORD, ET AL. V. EDMONDSON VILLAGE SHOPPING CENTER HOLDINGS, LLC, NO. 1656, SEPTEMBER TERM, 2019.

NEGLIGENCE - - PREMISES LIABILITY- - DUTY OF CARE - - CRIMINAL ACTS OF THIRD PERSONS ON LEASED PREMISES - - STATUS OF EMPLOYEE OF TENANT ON LEASED PREMISES - - MOTION TO DISMISS.

The appellants’ decedent was killed during a robbery inside a retail store while he was working as the store manager. The store was in a strip mall in Baltimore, where there was a long history of criminal activity on the parking lot including a murder committed the month before. The decedent’s widow and children brought survival and wrongful death claims in negligence against the owner of the shopping center, alleging that it knew about the criminal activity and had a duty to hire security guards and take other measures on common areas of the shopping center to protect occupants of leased premises from foreseeable criminal acts of third persons committed inside those premises.

The appellee filed a motion to dismiss asserting that it did not owe a duty of care to the decedent, as a matter of law. The circuit court granted the motion, ruling that the decedent occupied the status of tenant (not business invitee) at the time of the murder and that the shopping center did not owe a duty to protect him from the criminal acts of third persons committed on the store’s leased premises. This appeal followed.

Held: Judgment vacated and case remanded for further proceedings.

When working inside the Dollar General store, the decedent occupied the status of tenant, not the status of business invitee. Cases concerning whether a landlord has a duty to protect a tenant from the criminal acts of third persons control. Ordinarily, when a landlord has knowledge of criminal activity on common areas that pose a risk of harm to tenants on those areas, it has a duty to take reasonable measures to eliminate conditions contributing to the criminal activity. In Hemmings v. Pelham Wood Ltd. Partnership, 375 Md. 522 (2003), the Court held that when a landlord knew of conditions in the common areas that had led to criminal acts inside tenants’ leased premises, and took steps to correct them but failed to maintain the corrections, a duty arose to protect the tenants from the criminal acts of third persons inside leased premises that could have been averted had the corrections been maintained.

Except for one case decided on certified questions, the Maryland cases addressing whether a duty of care arose on the part of a landlord to protect a tenant from the criminal acts of third persons have been decided on summary judgment or trial records, where the facts have been fully developed. The factual record must be developed before the legal question of duty can be answered because whether such a duty arose will depend upon the factual circumstances, and in particular upon whether similar crimes had been committed and the landlord’s knowledge of such crimes. Although the landlord tenant relationship can give rise to such a duty, whether the duty in fact arose is fact dependent. At this stage of the litigation in this case, when the factual record has not been developed, the legal question whether a duty of care was owed cannot be answered. Circuit Court for Baltimore City Case No. 24-C-19-000229 REPORTED

IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS

OF MARYLAND

No. 1656

September Term, 2019

______________________________________

KATHLEEN FORD, ET AL.

v.

EDMONDSON VILLAGE SHOPPING CENTER HOLDINGS, LLC

Kehoe, Gould, Eyler, Deborah S. (Senior Judge, Specially Assigned),

JJ. ______________________________________

Opinion by Eyler, Deborah S., J. ______________________________________

Filed: July 2, 2021

Pursuant to Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal Materials Act (§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State Government Article) this document is authentic.

2021-07-06 12:25-04:00

Suzanne C. Johnson, Clerk This appeal stems from the tragic death of Deric Ford on August 8, 2017, inside the

Dollar General store in the Edmondson Village Shopping Center (“Shopping Center”).

That night, Mr. Ford was working as the store manager when he was shot and killed by one

of two robbers who entered the store and held him up at gunpoint.

In the Circuit Court for Baltimore City, Kathleen Ford, Mr. Ford’s wife, individually

and as personal representative of Mr. Ford’s estate, together with the Fords’ adult children

(collectively “the Fords”), the appellants, brought survival and wrongful death actions in

negligence against Edmondson Village Shopping Center Holdings, LLC (“Edmondson

Village”), the appellee, which owns the Shopping Center. The Fords alleged that

Edmondson Village failed to take adequate security measures in common areas of the

Shopping Center, causing it to become a “haven” for foreseeable violent criminal activity,

and thereby proximately causing Mr. Ford’s murder in the Dollar General store.

Edmondson Village moved to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim for

which relief could be granted, arguing that as a matter of law Mr. Ford was not a business

invitee and that it did not owe Mr. Ford a duty to protect him from the criminal acts of third

persons inside Dollar General’s leased premises. The court granted the motion.

The Fords noted this timely appeal, raising two issues, which we have rephrased

and combined as follows:

Did the circuit court err in dismissing the Fords’ negligence claims on the ground that Edmondson Village did not owe Mr. Ford a duty to protect him from the criminal acts of third persons that took place on the Dollar General store premises? We hold that when Mr. Ford was murdered inside Dollar General, his status vis-à-

vis Edmondson Village was that of tenant to landlord. We further hold that at this stage of

the litigation, the facts are not sufficiently developed to answer the legal question whether

Edmondson Village owed Mr. Ford a duty to protect him from the criminal acts of third

persons on the Dollar General premises, by providing security guards or other security

measures in the common areas of the Shopping Center. We shall vacate the judgment and

remand for further proceedings.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

On review of the dismissal of a complaint for failure to state a claim for which relief

may be granted, we accept all well-pleaded facts as true. Wheeling v. Selene Fin. LP,

___Md.___, No. 27, Sept. Term 2020, 2021 WL 1712318, at *5 (filed April 30, 2021);

O’Brien & Gere Eng’rs, Inc. v. City of Salisbury, 447 Md. 394, 403-04 (2016). Like the

court below, we consider the facts alleged in the operative complaint and any supporting

exhibits incorporated into it. See RRC Northeast, LLC v. BAA Maryland, Inc., 413 Md.

638, 643 (2010). Dismissal is warranted if, even assuming the truth of all well-pleaded

factual allegations and drawing all reasonable inferences from those allegations in favor of

the plaintiff, the plaintiff still would not be entitled to relief. O’Brien & Gere Eng’rs, 447

Md. at 403-04.

Whether a complaint fails to state a claim for which relief may be granted is a

question of law. Ceccone v. Carroll Home Servs., LLC, 454 Md. 680, 691 (2017).

Accordingly, we review a circuit court’s decision to grant a motion to dismiss without

deference, to determine whether the ruling was legally correct. See Lamson v. Montgomery

2 Cty., 460 Md. 349, 360 (2018); Patton v. Wells Fargo Fin. Maryland, Inc., 437 Md. 83, 95

(2014).

FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

The First Amended Complaint is the operative pleading in this case. It contains a

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Bluebook (online)
Ford v. Edmondson Village Shopping Center Holdings, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ford-v-edmondson-village-shopping-center-holdings-mdctspecapp-2021.