JYQUIS THOMAS v. TRENCH TRAINING SYSTEMS, LLC

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedDecember 29, 2023
Docket22-2857
StatusPublished

This text of JYQUIS THOMAS v. TRENCH TRAINING SYSTEMS, LLC (JYQUIS THOMAS v. TRENCH TRAINING SYSTEMS, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
JYQUIS THOMAS v. TRENCH TRAINING SYSTEMS, LLC, (Fla. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF FLORIDA SECOND DISTRICT

JYQUIS THOMAS,

Appellant,

v.

TRENCH TRAINING SYSTEMS, LLC; D-1 SPORTS FRANCHISE, LLC; D-1 TRAINING, INC., TAMPA; and TAYLOR SCOTT,

Appellees.

No. 2D22-2857

December 29, 2023

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Hillsborough County; Emmett Lamar Battles, Judge.

Brian C. Tackenberg, John G. Crabtree, Charles M. Auslander, and Linda A. Wells of Crabtree & Auslander, LLC, Key Biscayne; and Brian L. Elstein of Jack Bernstein, P.A., Tampa, for Appellant.

Eric O. Husby, Land O'Lakes, for Appellee Trench Training Systems, LLC.

No appearance for remaining Appellees.

KHOUZAM, Judge. Jyquis Thomas timely appeals a final order dismissing with prejudice his negligence complaint as to Trench Training Systems, LLC. Mr. Thomas contends on appeal that the trial court should not have dismissed the complaint because it states a cause of action or, in the alternative, he should have been granted leave to amend. Because we agree with Mr. Thomas that the complaint states a cause of action, we reverse the dismissal without reaching the issue of amendment. BACKGROUND Mr. Thomas initiated this action in July 2019 by filing a one-count complaint against Trench as the only defendant. The complaint alleged that Trench had negligently failed to properly install and maintain synthetic turf at an athletic training facility, ultimately causing Mr. Thomas to be injured while training on the dangerous turf as Trench's business invitee at Trench's instruction. Trench answered the complaint without moving to dismiss it. Mr. Thomas filed a reply. A little more than a year later, in August 2020, Mr. Thomas filed an amended complaint. The amended complaint added four defendants and new counts. Count I remained as a negligence claim against Trench, largely tracking the original complaint. Counts II through V were new negligence claims against the new defendants, alleging each had some ownership interest in or possession and control of the premises. Two of the new defendants—but not Trench—jointly moved to dismiss the new claims against them. They argued a lack of personal jurisdiction and also asserted that the complaint was deficient for containing inconsistent and commingled theories of negligence. The trial court ultimately granted the motion on two bases: first, that the complaint failed to establish personal jurisdiction over the two moving defendants, and second, that it "commingled theories of negligence without setting them out." The court dismissed the amended complaint and granted Mr. Thomas twenty days to amend it.

2 Mr. Thomas did so in November 2020. The second amended complaint included the same claims against the same defendants but added new allegations seeking to remedy the deficiencies the court had found. The defendants who had previously moved to dismiss did so again, and one ultimately prevailed on personal jurisdiction again. About eight months after the second amended complaint was filed, Trench filed its first motion to dismiss. Therein, Trench largely adopted some of the arguments from the prior defendants' motion to dismiss, asserting that the complaint failed to state a cause of action because its factual allegations were inconsistent and the theories of negligence were inappropriately commingled. The court granted Trench's motion, dismissed the second amended complaint, and granted Mr. Thomas leave to file a third amended complaint. The third amended complaint is the operative one in this case. In response to the court's prior dismissals, the count against Trench now incorporates only some of the general allegations—those involving Trench but not those addressing only other defendants. The count against Trench includes alternative theories of negligence as to Trench. The other counts raise similar claims against other people and entities alleged to be involved with the facility where the injury occurred. With respect to the count against Trench, the complaint expressly alleges the following. Trench had an agreement with the owners and possessors of the subject premises to provide athletic training there. On the day in question, Mr. Thomas was at the facility to receive training services from Trench in preparation for the 2019 NFL draft. Mr. Thomas was there as a business invitee and received a receipt from Trench after contracting for training services with Trench.

3 The complaint alleges that sometime prior, Trench had negligently installed and maintained synthetic turf in the area it was using to train Mr. Thomas. Trench knew or should have known that the turf in that area was dangerous. As Mr. Thomas was training in that area, "the negligently installed and maintained synthetic turf shifted under his feet which caused [Mr. Thomas] to rupture his Achilles tendon," inflicting serious injury. This occurred because Trench's employee "negligently instructed [Mr. Thomas] to train on the synthetic turf even though [the employee] knew or should have known that the synthetic turf had holes in it, had not been properly installed or maintained, was not properly fixed to the floor and constituted a dangerous condition." Although the complaint includes the Trench employee's name in the factual recitation, the employee is not named as a defendant. The complaint alleges that Trench owed several duties to Mr. Thomas, including to maintain the property it used to train clients, to train its employees properly, and to correct or warn of dangerous conditions it knew or should have known about. It alleges Trench breached these duties by failing to adequately train its employees and failing to properly install, maintain, or warn about the dangerous turf condition it knew or should have known about due to its possession and greater knowledge of the premises. It alleges Trench is vicariously liable for the negligence of its employee who trained Mr. Thomas in the course and scope of his employment with Trench. The complaint alleges that these negligent acts were the direct and proximate cause of Mr. Thomas's bodily injuries and other damages. Trench moved to dismiss the third amended complaint, largely reasserting the same arguments from its motion to dismiss the second amended complaint. Specifically, Trench asserted that the complaint

4 failed to state a cause of action because the "allegations against Trench are sparse to non-existent" and it contained "contradictory allegations" about who possessed and controlled the premises. Trench also relied on the court's prior ruling that the complaint inappropriately commingled theories of negligence, asserting the complaint should be dismissed because Mr. Thomas "ha[d] not done as the Court instructed." At a hearing, the trial court granted Trench's motion to dismiss with prejudice. It ruled: I think the Court has been clear about the—I understand about the—I can't call it anything else but the very long and convoluted presentation of preliminary paragraphs and the theory that, somehow or other, you're intertwining that to be able to plead in the alternative. I can't understand a 2019 case where we're still talking about the, quite frankly, "We'll figure it out as we go along." The commingling of different theories of negligence has been brought up on more than one occasion. That continues to persist. This—this pleading does not present facts—facts alleging negligence on the part of Trench. At best, it's all conclusory in nature. And there's more than simply saying that they had a duty and they breached a duty, and—and this doesn't contain that plain statement of facts. And, in fact, I don't see any allegations of Trench having ownership, control, or anything over the premises here. I don't see anything that's alleged that establishes a duty or a breach.

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JYQUIS THOMAS v. TRENCH TRAINING SYSTEMS, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jyquis-thomas-v-trench-training-systems-llc-fladistctapp-2023.