Jae-Soo Yang Kim v. Pereira Enterprises, Inc.

694 F. Supp. 200, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9511, 1988 WL 94876
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedAugust 4, 1988
DocketCiv. A. 82-5885
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 694 F. Supp. 200 (Jae-Soo Yang Kim v. Pereira Enterprises, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jae-Soo Yang Kim v. Pereira Enterprises, Inc., 694 F. Supp. 200, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9511, 1988 WL 94876 (E.D. La. 1988).

Opinion

McNAMARA, District Judge.

This Minute Entry supplements the Minute Entry dated June 29, 1988, in which the court granted the Summary Judgment Motion filed by Defendants, Abe Pereira, Jr., Pereira Enterprises, Inc., Lafourche Novelty Company, and National Union Fire Insurance Company. The court granted the Summary Judgment Motion for the following written reasons.

FACTS

On January 3, 1982, an unknown person fired a bullet through a boarded window of a lounge located in Houma, Louisiana. The bullet ultimately struck and killed Mr. Jung-Kwang Kim, a patron inside the lounge. The assailant was never identified and a motive for the shooting was never established.

On May 6, 1982, Mr. Kim’s widow filed suit in state court, naming as defendants: Pereira Enterprises, Inc., (owner and lessor of the building and lounge where the incident occurred); Abe L. Pereira, Jr. (Chief Executive Officer of Pereira Enterprises, Inc.); National Union Fire Insurance Company (liability insurer of Pereira Enterprises, Inc.); Edward Lamar Franks (lessee-operator of the lounge where the incident occurred); the City of Houma and the State of Louisiana through the Department of *201 Public Safety, Office of Alcoholic Beverage Control. The Plaintiff alleged various tort claims and unfair trade practices.

On December 22, 1982, Mr. Kim’s widow and karate school filed suit in federal court, naming as Defendants: Pereira Enterprises, Inc.; Abe Pereira, Jr.; National Union Fire Insurance Company; Edward Lamar Franks; Mayor and City Council of the City of Houma; Lafourche Novelty Company, Inc. (owner of certain novelty coin-operated machines which were placed on the premises where the incident occurred); Donald Rains (alleged silent partner of Edward Franks); Pereira-Rains Enterprises (a non-entity); Accredited Surety & Casualty Company; and Donald G. Bollinger, Secretary, Department of Public Safety, State of Louisiana. The Plaintiffs alleged various tort claims and violations of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO), 18 U.S.C. § 1962(a-e). Plaintiffs subsequently dismissed Franks and Accredited Surety & Casualty Company.

In December 1983, the Clerk for the U.S. District Court entered a default against Defendant Donald Rains due to his failure to plead or otherwise defend. In April 1984, this court granted the Motion to Dismiss filed by Defendants, the Mayor and City Council of the City of Houma. In August 1985, Defendant Donald Bollinger was dismissed from the suit by agreement of the parties, and this court stayed the federal trial pending the conclusion of similar causes in state court.

In October 1985, the matter was tried in state court. The state court found that, as a matter of fact, Mrs. Kim failed to sustain her burden of proof against any defendants and dismissed plaintiff’s suit in its entirety at plaintiff’s costs. The judgment specifically stated:

Without going into the testimony adduced at trial, which is almost as voluminous as the record in this proceeding, the Court finds that the evidence elicited at the trial does not support the Plaintiff’s contention that 1. The premises were defective. 2. That [the Pereira] group of defendants knew or should have known that a shooting was about to occur and 3. That [the Pereira] group of defendants practiced an unfair and deceptive act upon Mr. Kim.
Neither Lafourche Novelty Company, Pereira Enterprises, Inc., nor Abe Pereira in any manner participated in the management or the day-to-day operation of the establishment. The only relationship between Pereira Enterprises, Inc., Abe Pereira and the lessee of the premises was that Pereira Enterprises, Inc. was the lessor and Mr. Franks was the lessee of the property. Mr. Franks did operate the business and there is some indication that he did so with a silent partner, a Mr. Donald Ranes (sic).

The trial court judgment was affirmed on appeal. Joe-Soo Yang Kim v. Pereira Enterprises, Inc., et al., 513 So.2d 559 (Louisiana Appellate First Circuit 1987). The Appellate Court specifically stated:

The Plaintiff’s theory of the case depended upon a showing that Mr. Pereira, Mr. Raines and others had engaged in “one scheme” and to the extent that there was violence at other lounges in the “scheme” it placed Pereira Enterprises and Lafourche Novelty Company on notice; for these reasons they should have taken whatever precautions were necessary to prevent violence at [the lounge] or to give notice to the patrons of [the lounge]. The court felt that this was too attenuated and excluded ... testimony and evidence.
We feel the trial court was correct in excluding the evidence as simply too attenuated. However, even considering the excluded testimony, Plaintiff’s case is no stronger than it was without the excluded evidence.
There is nothing to support Plaintiff’s theory of a “Mafia Network” and a program of intimidation against certain lounges except for vague rumors and hints made by confessed drug abusers and criminals.
*202 The Plaintiff/Appellant never effectively establishes any relationship between Mr. Pereira and Mr. Raines other than that of lessor/lessee, commercial obligor/obligee and lessor/lessee of vending equipment. No one during three days of testimony and the introduction of an excess of eighty exhibits suggested that Abe Pereira was in anyway involved with or connected with any type of elicit activity.

As to the Plaintiffs claim based on Louisiana’s Unfair Trade Practices and Consumer Protection Law, LSA-R.S. 51:1404, the Appellate Court stated:

Appellant would suggest that the act is so broad that virtually every tort committed by a commercial defendant would be considered an unfair and deceptive trade practice. Although the act was intentionally broadly written so as to leave a determination of the type of violation which comes within the ambit of the statute to the Commission and the courts, the Appellant’s broad stroke of coverage under the Act should be rejected as inappropriate and not intended to be covered by the Legislature in enacting LSA-R.S. 51:1405-1409.
This particular cause of action must also fail for the same reasons that the Appellant’s other causes of action fail. The Appellant has not met her burden of proof. She has not shown that Mr. Pereira or Pereira Enterprises, in fact, operated the lounges in- question, that there was a conspiracy, joint venture or scheme to defraud anyone, that there was any connexity between the shooting of Mr. Kim and any other illegal or “unfair” trade practices which may have taken place at any lounges including [the lounge where the incident occurred].

Subsequent to the state court judgment, the federal court Plaintiffs abandoned all claims, except the RICO claim, against the remaining Defendants: Pereira Enterprises, Inc.; Lafourche Novelty Company, Inc.; Abe Pereira; and National Union. In February 1988, this court ordered the Plaintiffs to file a RICO case statement as prescribed by the Eastern District’s RICO Standing Order.

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Related

Matter of Chapman
132 B.R. 132 (N.D. Illinois, 1991)
Ritchie v. Carvel Corp.
714 F. Supp. 700 (S.D. New York, 1989)
Kim v. Pereira Ent.
873 F.2d 295 (Fifth Circuit, 1989)

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Bluebook (online)
694 F. Supp. 200, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9511, 1988 WL 94876, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jae-soo-yang-kim-v-pereira-enterprises-inc-laed-1988.