Gardner v. Federated Department Stores, Inc.

717 F. Supp. 136, 1989 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8399, 1989 WL 84664
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJuly 24, 1989
Docket85 Civ. 2816 (WK)
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 717 F. Supp. 136 (Gardner v. Federated Department Stores, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gardner v. Federated Department Stores, Inc., 717 F. Supp. 136, 1989 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8399, 1989 WL 84664 (S.D.N.Y. 1989).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM & ORDER

WHITMAN KNAPP, District Judge.

Jason Gardner brought suit against Federated Department Stores, Inc. (“Federated”), the corporate parent of Bloomingdale’s department store, alleging false imprisonment, false arrest, battery, malicious prosecution and abuse of process. After a four-day trial, the jury awarded damages totalling $2.3 million — $150,000 for the deprivation of liberty, $150,000 for pain and suffering up to the date of the verdict, *138 $500,000 for future pain and suffering and $1,500,000 in punitive damages. Defendant moves to set aside the verdict as excessive and contrary to the weight of the evidence.

For reasons which follow, we deny defendant’s motion except to the extent that we direct plaintiff to remit $490,000 of the amount he was awarded for future pain and suffering. If plaintiff declines to remit that amount, we shall order a new trial limited to the issue of future pain and suffering.

BACKGROUND 1

For approximately five years before the events giving rise to this lawsuit, plaintiff worked, primarily at Bloomingdale’s in Manhattan, as a free-lance promotional model, displaying and selling perfume. On April 16, 1984, he returned to Bloomingdale’s a gray jacket that he had purchased a few days earlier. Although he did not have a receipt for the jacket, the supervisor at the return desk agreed to process the return using a receipt for the same amount of money for a black jacket plaintiff had also purchased.

Three days later, on April 19,1984, plaintiff, wearing the black jacket, returned to the store, this time to visit his friend Ar-ielle Stern. Ms. Stern, who also worked as a free-lance promotional model, gave him some free samples and agreed to meet him for dinner after she finished her shift. As plaintiff waited for her outside the store, James Boyce, a security executive who was second in command for internal corporate investigations and responsible for internal investigations and security audits in Bloomingdale’s stores nationwide, and a second unidentified security officer accosted plaintiff. They twisted his hands behind his back, handcuffed him, picked him up and dragged him back into the store. In full view of customers and employees, they dragged him across the selling floor and pushed him through the swinging doors that opened onto the stairs leading to the security office, causing him to fall and bruise himself. They then picked him up and pulled him up the stairs. Once in the security office, they put him in a cell and searched through his belongings. Other unidentified security officers taunted him, calling him a “blond faggot.”

After plaintiff was unable to produce any document of identification, Boyce told him that it was illegal not to carry identification. He then read plaintiff his Miranda warnings and began to interrogate him, demanding that he reveal who had given him the samples. He threw a bag of clothes at plaintiff, and asked him if he had earlier returned a jacket for credit. Plaintiff refused to answer.

Boyce placed a printed “confession” form in front of plaintiff and directed him to sign it. The form stated that plaintiff admitted that he had stolen merchandise from Bloomingdale’s and agreed not to enter the store for seven years. Plaintiff, denying that he had stolen anything, refused to sign the form and asked to speak with a lawyer. Boyce refused this request.

Plaintiff then asked to go to the bathroom, a request that was at first similarly denied. Then, after a time, another security officer (also unidentified) escorted him to the bathroom and removed the handcuffs. When that officer put the handcuffs back on plaintiff’s wrists to return him to the cell, he fastened them so tightly that they cut him. Later, plaintiff was taken from the cell back to Boyce’s office. When plaintiff again refused to sign the confession form, Boyce came around his desk to where plaintiff, handcuffed and defenseless, was sitting and repeatedly punched him very hard in the ear.

The security officers conversed with one another within plaintiff’s earshot, saying that they “didn’t have anything on him” and that “American Express won’t do anything.” They nevertheless turned him over to the police at about 10:30 P.M. He had been in Bloomingdale’s custody for almost two hours.

The police transported him to Central Booking, fingerprinted and photographed him. He was put into a cell with about thirty-five other prisoners, many of whom, *139 plaintiff learned, had been apprehended on charges of drug dealing or rape. Some of them menaced plaintiff, demanding candy and money and trying to take his watch.

At about 4:30 A.M., Ms. Stern, the coworker with whom he had planned to dine the night before, and her husband secured plaintiffs release by posting $1000 bail. After a few hours, plaintiff went to court to wait for his case to be called. He spent the entire day there and returned on each of the next three days, waiting from early morning to late at night until on the fourth day he was permitted to enter his plea of not guilty. Over the next several months, he was required to make several court appearances until his case was finally dismissed.

After continuing to work in various department stores — including Abraham & Straus which was owned by defendant Federated — for a year after the incident, plaintiff moved to California to try to escape his memories. Unemployed for a time, he now works with Ms. Stern at a catering concern.

Dr. Gerald Appelle, an expert dental witness retained by defendant, examined plaintiff four years after the incident. According to his report, which plaintiff offered in evidence, plaintiff suffers from symptoms consistent with temporo-mandi-bular joint syndrome, a malady commonly known as “TMJ”. His symptoms, which plaintiff testified still continue, include tenderness in his front mandibular joint and left masseter muscle, an inability completely to open his mouth, a jaw that periodically goes out of joint or locks causing a cramp-like pain, and a clogging and buzzing sensation in his ear when he swims or, sometimes, when he showers. According to plaintiff, he can no longer swim, which up until the incident was his favorite means of recreation. Nor can he can eat certain foods or bite down hard. Dr. Appelle was of the opinion that it was “possible that the blow received to the jaw could have resulted in the condition described.” He found it “difficult to evaluate the degree of permanency especially since very little therapy has been received to date.” (Pl.Ex. 11). Dr. Appelle’s report was the only medical evidence on plaintiffs dental condition. 2

Plaintiff testified that since the incident he has experienced severe anxiety when entering a department store or watching a police or courtroom drama on television, has changed from an outgoing person into a “loner”, suffers from low self-esteem, finds it difficult to control his eating and has recurring stomach cramps and diahrrea. He often relives the incident, suffering great emotional pain each time. He worries that he might again be arrested. According to Ms. Stern, he continually washes his hands and appears worried about leaving fingerprints. Plaintiff admitted that he had not made any effort to seek psychiatric treatment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
717 F. Supp. 136, 1989 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8399, 1989 WL 84664, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gardner-v-federated-department-stores-inc-nysd-1989.