Henry Fletcher v. CFRA, LLC

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 8, 2017
DocketM2016-01202-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Henry Fletcher v. CFRA, LLC (Henry Fletcher v. CFRA, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Henry Fletcher v. CFRA, LLC, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

03/08/2017

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE November 16, 2016 Session

HENRY FLETCHER v. CFRA, LLC

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Davidson County No. 14C1630 Hamilton V. Gayden, Jr., Judge

No. M2016-01202-COA-R3-CV

Henry Fletcher (“Plaintiff”) sued CFRA, LLC (“CFRA”), which owns and operates an International House of Pancakes (“IHOP”) restaurant in Antioch, Tennessee, alleging that CFRA was liable for the actions of its IHOP employee, Kenneth W. Hale, Jr. (“Hale”), in connection with an assault upon Plaintiff committed by Hale. The Circuit Court for Davidson County (“the Trial Court”) granted summary judgment to CFRA. Plaintiff appeals the grant of summary judgment. We find and hold that CFRA made a properly supported motion for summary judgment, that Plaintiff failed to show that there are genuine disputed issues of material fact that would preclude summary judgment, and that CFRA was entitled to summary judgment as a matter of law. We, therefore, affirm the grant of summary judgment to CFRA.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Affirmed Case Remanded

D. MICHAEL SWINEY, C.J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which J. STEVEN STAFFORD, P.J., W.S., and BRANDON O. GIBSON, J., joined.

David J. Weissman and Benjamin K. Raybin, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Henry Fletcher.

Mark S. LeVan and Christopher M. Jones, Nashville, Tennessee, and Charles T. Hvass, Minneapolis, Minnesota, for the appellee, CFRA, LLC. OPINION

Background

Hale had been hired as a dishwasher working third-shift at the IHOP. When Hale was hired by IHOP and at the time of the assault upon Plaintiff, Hale was on parole for aggravated battery and felony firearm convictions.

The assault giving rise to this suit (“the Assault”) occurred on May 12, 2013. At approximately 6:30 a.m. on that day, Plaintiff and a friend, DeAries Holland (“Holland”), were customers at IHOP. When Plaintiff and Holland left IHOP, there was a dispute about whether their bill had been paid. Hale and a waitress approached Plaintiff and Holland in the IHOP parking lot, and the issue regarding the bill was resolved. Plaintiff and Holland then left the IHOP parking lot. Hale, who had clocked out after finishing his shift, was picked up by his girlfriend, and they also left the IHOP parking lot. Hale and his girlfriend and Plaintiff and Holland drove to a nearby apartment complex where the Assault occurred.

Plaintiff sued CFRA alleging that it was vicariously liable for Hale’s actions and that it also was directly liable for negligent premises security and for negligently hiring and supervising Hale. CFRA filed a motion for summary judgment supported by, among other things, the deposition testimony of Hale, Hale’s girlfriend, Plaintiff, and two IHOP employees.

Hale’s girlfriend, Sandi F. Cox, testified that she and Hale were living together in the Saxony Apartments at the time of the Assault. Cox testified that Hale had started working at the IHOP approximately a month prior to the Assault. Hale had interviewed for a job as a waiter, but he was not hired as a waiter due to his criminal background. Instead, Hale was hired as a dishwasher working third-shift.

Cox testified that Hale called her on the day of the Assault to tell her that he was finished working, and she could pick him up. Cox stated that after that initial telephone conversation, she called Hale back and asked him to get her some orange juice because she was feeling unwell. During that second telephone call, Hale told Cox about a verbal confrontation he had with Plaintiff and Holland in the IHOP parking lot. She stated that Hale told her that “two guys tried to skip out on their bill,” that he had gone out to the parking lot with a waitress to get them to pay, and that “they threatened to shoot him.” Cox further stated:

Well, he told me that he was very calm about it, he didn’t get upset with the threat. And I told him I was proud of that, I was proud of him for that. 2 Because when someone makes threats to you, that can normally trigger anger, and so I was proud of him keeping his cool. But that was basically it.

Cox testified that when she pulled into the IHOP parking lot, Hale was inside the IHOP. Cox was driving a red Chevy Aveo, and she had her four-year old son in the car with her. Cox noticed a yellow Dodge Charger in the IHOP parking lot. When Hale got into Cox’s car, Cox mentioned the yellow Dodge Charger because she “really like[d] those cars.” Hale told Cox that the people in the yellow Dodge Charger were the ones who had threatened him.

The yellow Dodge Charger pulled out of the IHOP parking lot before Cox pulled her car out of the lot. Cox was driving, and Hale was in the passenger seat. Cox stated that she noticed as she was driving that the yellow Dodge Charger was behind her car. She stated:

We both - - well, we both began to panic because we know they left before us. And he had previously threatened - - well, the people in the car had previously threatened [Hale]. And they threatened to shoot him, and so we were both panicking because we didn’t know if the threat was credible or not. And so he didn’t want us to drive home because he didn’t want us to go exactly where we live and they know where we live, so he told me to turn going toward Chimney Top Apartments because he had a friend that lived there.

Cox testified that her ex-husband also lived at the Chimney Top Apartments (“Chimney Top”).

Chimney Top is a gated community, and Cox had to enter a code to get through the gate. Cox explained that she knew the Chimney Top emergency code because she previously had lived at Chimney Top. Cox input the code and pulled through the gate. The yellow Dodge Charger pulled through the gate right behind her. Cox drove toward the back of the apartment complex toward where Hale’s friend lived. The yellow Dodge Charger followed. Cox pulled into a parking spot, and Hale got out of the car. Hale told Cox to leave and take her son home. Cox did so and did not stay to see what happened.

Cox stated that before she left Chimney Top she saw two people get out of the yellow Dodge Charger, one through the driver’s door and one through the passenger’s door. Hale started walking toward his friend’s apartment. Cox stated that Hale was walking away and “it looked as if [the people from the yellow Dodge Charger] were proceeding towards him.” 3 Cox went home. She stated that Hale telephoned her as she was arriving home and asked her to pick him up “on the road past Summit, which is the apartment complex right next to Chimney Top.” She picked Hale up, and they went home. When they got home, Hale told Cox: “That they got into it. He fought with them, and that he hit them - - hit one of them.” Hale then telephoned Cox’s mother, his mother, and the police.

Cox was shown a video taken at the IHOP, and she stated that it showed the yellow Dodge Charger leaving the IHOP. She stated: “He makes it to the bottom of the hill, and it looks as if he is backing into this - - it’s a little cut area, it’s not an actual road.” She stated that the video then showed her car passing the yellow Dodge Charger and the yellow Dodge Charger pulling out and following her car.

Kara March (“March”), the waitress who accompanied Hale out to the IHOP parking lot, testified that she was working at IHOP as a server, but she was not the person who served Plaintiff and Holland on the date of the Assault. On the date of the Assault, March had just finished cleaning a table “or something” and:

[Hale] came out and he was like, “Are you guys going to let them walk out?” And I had said, “Who?” And he said, “The table back here.” At the time, he’s walking, so I follow him shortly behind. And I believe we have - - we’ve seen pictures of that.” . . .

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