Franklin C. Olson v. Rustic Bar, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedNovember 23, 2015
DocketA15-442
StatusUnpublished

This text of Franklin C. Olson v. Rustic Bar, Inc. (Franklin C. Olson v. Rustic Bar, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Franklin C. Olson v. Rustic Bar, Inc., (Mich. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

This opinion will be unpublished and may not be cited except as provided by Minn. Stat. § 480A.08, subd. 3 (2014).

STATE OF MINNESOTA IN COURT OF APPEALS A15-0442

Franklin C. Olson, Appellant,

vs.

Rustic Bar, Inc., Respondent

Filed November 23, 2015 Reversed and remanded Chutich, Judge Dissenting, Ross, Judge

St. Louis County District Court File No. 69DU-CV-14-999

James W. Balmer, Falsani, Balmer, Peterson, Quinn & Beyer, Duluth, Minnesota (for appellant)

Steven E. Tomsche, Erica A. Weber, Tomsche, Sonnesyn & Tomsche, P.A., Minneapolis, Minnesota (for respondent)

Considered and decided by Chutich, Presiding Judge; Ross, Judge; and Stauber,

Judge.

UNPUBLISHED OPINION

CHUTICH, Judge

Appellant Franklin C. Olson challenges the district court’s order granting

summary judgment to respondent Rustic Bar, Inc. on his negligence claim. He argues that the district court erred in determining, as a matter of law, that his injury was not

foreseeable because Rustic Bar lacked sufficient notice of the wrongdoers’ dangerous

propensities before the bar brawl in which Olson was injured. Because we conclude that

two prior altercations at the Rustic Bar involving the same core group of aggressors raises

a genuine issue of material fact concerning notice, we reverse and remand.

FACTS

Olson broke his leg in the course of a bar brawl that erupted at the Rustic Bar in

West Duluth on Saturday, December 28, 2013. Olson and his wife, Patti Olson, who was

pregnant at the time, met another couple, Thomas Haney and Kristin Reed, at the bar that

evening.

Approximately two hours after the Olsons arrived, four women—Jen Hagadorn,

Karlin Ostrander, and twins Lisa Huffman and Lori Lehet—and two men approached

their table. Shortly after, a bar brawl erupted. Jeff Flynn, the bar’s owner, later learned

that the four women and at least one of the men likely instigated the fight.

Kristin Reed told police that Hagadorn had been trying to antagonize her all

evening and that she had ignored Hagadorn. At one point, Reed noticed Hagadorn on her

phone, and Huffman, Lehet, and Ostrander arrived within minutes of the call. Soon after,

Hagadorn, Huffman, Lehet, and Ostrander surrounded Reed at her table, and Reed

believed that they intended to fight her.

Other witnesses, including Franklin Olson, Patti Olson, Geoffrey Stroud, and

Thomas Haney, corroborate Reed’s account of the events. These witnesses testified that

2 the four women encircled Reed, and Hagadorn grabbed Reed by the hair and jerked her

off the barstool.

Olson was paying his tab at the bar when the fight began. When Olson saw the

fight unfolding, he rushed back to the table to assist his pregnant wife. In the process,

Olson fell to the ground and broke his leg. The direct cause of his injury is unclear, but

for the purposes of the summary-judgment motion, the district court assumed that one of

the four women caused Olson’s injury.

Jeff Flynn, Rustic Bar’s sole shareholder since 2013, was not present for the

brawl. After talking to the two on-duty bartenders about the details of the brawl, Flynn

permanently banned the five instigators from the Rustic Bar.

Olson sued Rustic Bar on an innkeeper-liability theory to recover damages for his

injuries. Olson alleged that Flynn failed to maintain order at the Rustic Bar sufficient to

keep Olson safe from injury by other bar patrons known to be dangerous and violent.

Olson argued that Flynn negligently failed to ban Hagadorn, Ostrander, Huffman, and

Lehet from the Rustic Bar before December 28, 2013.

Discovery revealed two previous fights involving at least three of the four women

deemed to have instigated the December 28, 2013 fight, which Olson argued should have

alerted Rustic Bar to their propensities for violence.

Altercation #1: October 2012; Huffman, Lehet, and Hagadorn.

Olson claimed that the first fight at the Rustic Bar—involving Hagadorn,

Huffman, and Lehet—happened in October 2012. According to Patti Olson, Hagadorn,

3 Huffman, and Lehet tried to “jump” Erin Johnson,1 Patti Olson’s sister, while Johnson

was standing alone at the jukebox. Hagadorn approached Johnson from behind and

pulled Johnson away from the jukebox by her hair. Huffman yelled to Johnson, “I’m

going to f-cking kill you.”

Patti Olson ran to Johnson’s aid, pulling Hagadorn off Johnson. Patti Olson and

Hagadorn fought on the ground until several bystanders pulled them apart. Lehet and

Huffman tried to attack Patti Olson on the ground while she fought with Hagadorn, but

bystanders restrained them.

Owner Jeff Flynn was not present that night and did not recall this fight in his

deposition testimony. Rustic Bar employees ejected Hagadorn, Lehet, and Huffman

immediately following the fight but did not eject Patti Olson or Erin Johnson.

Patti Olson testified that she and Erin Johnson spoke to Jeff Flynn by phone about

the fight, stating that they would not continue to patronize the Rustic Bar while

Hagadorn, Lehet, and Huffman were still welcome. Erin Johnson stated that Flynn told

her that he would not ban Hagadorn, Lehet, or Huffman because they were good

customers.

Altercation #2: Around Labor Day 2013; Hagadorn, Huffman, and Ostrander

According to Olson, the second incident—involving Hagadorn, Huffman, and

Ostrander—occurred between late summer and early fall of 2013. Flynn was present that

night and testified that he saw the women get into a pushing-and-shoving altercation.

1 Johnson stated that as the women walked in, she recognized them and knew Huffman had a reputation as a trained kickboxer.

4 Flynn personally intervened and he warned the women that he would throw them out if

they continued, after which the women apologized and dispersed.2

Rustic Bar moved for summary judgment on Olson’s innkeeper-liability claim,

which the district court granted. The court reasoned that Olson could have established

notice by showing either that (1) Hagadorn, Lehet, Huffman, and Ostrander had a known

propensity for violence, or (2) the brawl evolved in such a way that Rustic Bar staff had

sufficient time to protect patrons from harm. Because the district court determined that

Olson could not establish either form of notice, it did not address the remaining elements

of negligence.

Olson appeals.

DECISION

I. Admissibility of Challenged Evidence

As a preliminary matter, Rustic Bar argues that Olson improperly asks this court to

consider hearsay to establish the bar’s prior notice of the women’s propensity for

violence. Specifically, Rustic Bar challenges the admissibility of Jeff Flynn’s statements

regarding the October 2012 fight reported by Patti Olson and Erin Johnson.

2 Olson initially argued that the court should also consider a third altercation involving Ostrander and Hagadorn. Patti Olson testified that, while she and a friend were smoking in the Rustic Bar parking lot, Ostrander approached them, called her friend a “b-word,” and forcefully shoved her friend aside so Ostrander could stand closer to Olson. Patti Olson stated that she and her friend ignored the women and retreated inside the bar. Because nothing suggested that Rustic Bar staff learned of the third altercation, Olson’s counsel conceded at oral argument that this episode could not contribute to the evidentiary basis for Rustic Bar’s notice.

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