Guijosa v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.

144 Wash. 2d 907
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 4, 2001
DocketNo. 70102-4
StatusPublished
Cited by90 cases

This text of 144 Wash. 2d 907 (Guijosa v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Guijosa v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 144 Wash. 2d 907 (Wash. 2001).

Opinion

Ireland, J.

— Petitioners sought review of the Court of Appeals’ decision affirming the trial court’s judgment in favor of Wal-Mart as to claims of discrimination, malicious prosecution, false imprisonment, battery, and violations of the Consumer Protection Act, chapter 19.86 RCW. At issue is whether the trial court correctly granted a motion for judgment as a matter of law, setting aside the jury’s verdict, on the claim of Consumer Protection Act violations. The record does not contain substantial evidence to sustain the jury’s verdict that Wal-Mart violated the Consumer Protection Act. Therefore, judgment as a matter of law setting aside the jury’s verdict was correctly granted, and we affirm the Court of Appeals’ ruling.

FACTS

On March 16, 1995, Salvador Delgado Guijosa (Delgado), Rogelio Hernandez Guijosa (Guijosa), and Ricardo Hernandez (Hernandez)1 went to the Wal-Mart store in Shelton, Washington to shop for school clothes for Hernandez, who was a high school student.

In the store, the men noticed a display bin of baseball hats priced at $2.50 each. Trial testimony conflicted about whether Delgado and Guijosa were wearing hats when they entered the Wal-Mart store. A store sales associate testified that when the trio approached the bin, only Hernandez was wearing a hat, but that when they walked away from the bin, they each wore a hat. The men testified that all three of them had worn hats into the store. They tried on hats from the bin, and Delgado decided to buy two of them.

[911]*911After Delgado paid for the two hats at the checkstand and before the men left the store, they were stopped by Rhonda Liburdi (Liburdi), a loss prevention associate for WalMart.2 Liburdi, who had been observing the men since they entered the store, accused them of taking the hats they were wearing without paying for them.

Liburdi asked David Opfer (Opfer), another Wal-Mart employee, to assist her. Liburdi and Opfer escorted the three men to the back office area of the store, and Liburdi took the hats the men had been wearing. Guijosa, the only one of the three who spoke English well, told Liburdi that the hats were theirs and that the hat his brother had been wearing was a type not sold at Wal-Mart.

The parties agree that they had difficulty communicating with one another. Guijosa testified that he tried to explain to Liburdi that he had bought the hat Delgado was wearing some weeks earlier and that he had purchased the hat he was wearing at Wal-Mart the previous day. When Liburdi asked for identification, Guijosa declined and advised the other two men not to provide information except to the police.

Liburdi contacted the Shelton Police Department. Officer Michael Hudnell (Hudnell) responded and spoke with the parties. Liburdi told Hudnell that she had seen Guijosa remove the price tag and place one of the store’s hats on his head.3 She stated that the hat worn by Delgado was also taken without being purchased.

Hudnell found the three men cooperative. Based on Liburdi’s allegations, Hudnell wrote citations for theft to Delgado and Guijosa. Hernandez was not cited, and his hat [912]*912was returned to him.4 Liburdi “trespassed” all three men, banishing them from the Wal-Mart store.

Liburdi testified at trial that she had completely forgotten whatever she had done to review the store’s videotapes of the alleged shoplifting incident and that the tapes had been recycled. Plaintiffs claim a sign was posted stating it was store policy that such tapes would be used as evidence in criminal prosecutions. However, the sign was not admitted in evidence, and no evidence was presented as to what the sign actually said.

Guijosa located the receipt for the hat he said was purchased the day before the alleged shoplifting incident.5 Following two court appearances, the theft charges against Delgado and Guijosa were dismissed with prejudice.

PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Delgado, Guijosa, and Hernandez (plaintiffs) then filed a civil complaint against Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., Liburdi, and Opfer (collectively, Wal-Mart), alleging assault and battery, false imprisonment, malicious prosecution, deprivation of civil rights, and violations of the Washington Consumer Protection Act (CPA). Wal-Mart denied all claims.

The case was tried in Mason County Superior Court on August 24-28, 1998. The 12-member jury found that WalMart proved by a preponderance of the evidence that they detained the plaintiffs for a reasonable time and on reasonable grounds. Therefore, Wal-Mart was allowed to assert the shopkeeper’s privilege under RCW 4.24.220, and the jury found for Wal-Mart on the false imprisonment and battery claims. The jury also found for Wal-Mart on the malicious prosecution claim.

In addition, the jury found that Wal-Mart did not dis[913]*913criminate against the plaintiffs. Finally, it found that Wal-Mart did violate the CPA with respect to Delgado and Guijosa.6

After the verdicts were read, the court sent the jury back to the jury room. Plaintiffs’ counsel initially stated that the verdicts regarding the claims of discrimination and violation of the CPA were not inconsistent. Wal-Mart’s counsel asserted that the verdicts were inconsistent and argued that the remedy should be a judgment notwithstanding the verdict on the CPA claim. Plaintiffs’ counsel stated that any objections to the verdict as inconsistent would be waived by a failure to reconcile the verdict before the jury was discharged. After both parties declined the court’s offer to allow reargument, the court discharged the jury.

Wal-Mart subsequently filed a motion for judgment as a matter of law under CR 50(b), asserting that without a finding of discrimination, there was insufficient evidence to find violations of the CPA.

The trial court granted Wal-Mart’s motion, setting aside the jury’s verdict on the CPA claim, and commented as follows:

It is this Court’s view that having tried the case and listened to the evidence being produced that I cannot find that there is sufficient evidence presented by the Plaintiff to support the determination that there was a violation of the Consumer Protection Act, given the determination that there was no discrimination practiced against the [Plaintiffs], and that the [Defendants] had been justified by the Statutory defense in taking the actions that they had.
It would be my impression that the jurors were dissatisfied with the statements of Ms. Liburdi. And I agree that there were substantial inconsistencies developed by the Plaintiff throughout regarding Ms. Liburdi’s positions, plural, that had been taken.
[914]*914However, those questions of evidence produced by the Plaintiffs do not give rise to sufficient facts to support a finding that the Consumer Protection Act was violated, and that deceptive acts had been practiced that were capable of deceiving a substantial portion of the public, thus [ajffecting the public interest....

Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 13-15; Excerpt of Report of Proceedings (RP) at 670.

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Bluebook (online)
144 Wash. 2d 907, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guijosa-v-wal-mart-stores-inc-wash-2001.