Kiray v. Hy-Vee, Inc.

716 N.W.2d 193, 2006 Iowa App. LEXIS 282, 2006 WL 778707
CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedMarch 29, 2006
Docket04-1716
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 716 N.W.2d 193 (Kiray v. Hy-Vee, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kiray v. Hy-Vee, Inc., 716 N.W.2d 193, 2006 Iowa App. LEXIS 282, 2006 WL 778707 (iowactapp 2006).

Opinion

MAHAN, J.

Elite Kiray appeals the district court’s judgment in her action for defamation, false imprisonment, and racial discrimination. She argues the district court erred when it (1) determined a qualified privilege applied to Hy-Vee, Inc. (Hy-Vee) employees’ communications; (2) refused to grant her proposed jury instruction that control over a person’s property can serve to restrain that person; (3) dismissed her discrimination claim; and (4) denied her claim based on Batson v. Kentucky, 476 U.S. 79, 106 S.Ct. 1712, 90 L.Ed.2d 69 (1986). We affirm.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings

Elite Kiray stopped at the Waterfront Hy-Vee in Iowa City sometime around 9:20 a.m. on May 17, 2001. She first deposited a check at the bank branch located just inside the store, then proceeded to shop for groceries. She purchased a whole catfish, dish soap, and bread. All of her groceries and her' receipt were placed in a Hy-Vee bag. As Kiray proceeded to leave, however, the Sense-O-Matic security system gates located at the front of the store alerted. Though Kiray claims not to have heard the alarm, Hy-Vee Second Assistant Manager Eric Kearney and bank employee Leslie Raker did.

*196 At the time of the incident, Hy-Vee was testing the Sense-O-Matic system to determine whether to install it in other stores. The system had had several false alarms. For example, it had alerted to items that had been purchased at Hy-Vee and failed to deactivate at the check-out, to employee I.D. badges, and to items from other stores that had not been deactivated such as shoes, purses, and other leather goods.

The facts that follow are somewhat disputed. According to Kiray, Kearney walked up behind her and grabbed her grocery bag. He then walked back toward the security gates, away from Kiray and the store’s exit. He directed Kiray to walk through the gates with her purse. He asked Kiray for her purse, and then walked through the gates himself. He placed Kiray’s purse on the bank’s counter, then directed Kiray to walk through the gates with her grocery bag. He took the grocery bag, placed it on the bank’s counter with the purse, and then directed Kiray to walk through the gates. Kearney then told Kiray to wait while he got another employee. Kiray stood by the gates upset and crying. Kearney returned with another Hy-Vee manager, Michelle Patterson. Patterson carried a hand-held scanner wand. She made Kiray remove her shoes to be scanned, then scanned her body. When the alarm did not alert, Patterson walked the grocery bag back through the security gates. The alarm on the gates went off. Patterson then deactivated the tag on the package of catfish. Kearney returned Kiray’s groceries and apologized.

According to Kearney, after he heard the security alarm, he approached Kiray and asked her if there was something in her grocery bag Hy-Vee had failed to deactivate. He never believed she was shoplifting and therefore never accused her of shoplifting. He told Kiray it was not uncommon that an item would fail to deactivate, and that the catfish was the likely culprit. He asked her permission to move her grocery bag back through the gates. When the alarm did not sound, he assured her the same problem had happened before, and asked her permission to move her purse through the gates. When the alarm still did not sound, Kearney told Kiray her shoes or clothing might be activating the alarm. He asked her to walk through the gates without the groceries or her purse. The alarm alerted to Kiray. Because he could still could not find what was causing the alarm to falsely alert, he decided to use the scanner wand. In order to make Kiray more comfortable, he asked Patterson, a female manager, to use the wand. He asked Kiray if she was willing to wait while he retrieved Patterson, and she assented. At some point in her interaction with Kearney, Kiray told him she was not “like those other blacks that steal from [Hy-Vee], she was a Christian from Africa.” Kearney never mentioned race.

While Kearney was locating Patterson, Raker, the bank employee who had waited on Kiray earlier that morning, approached Kiray and told her it was common for the alarms to sound. She explained the many innocent ways Kiray could have set off the alarm. She also explained that Hy-Vee was trying to find whatever had set off the alarm so she would not set off the alarm again at Hy-Vee or at other stores.

Patterson approached Kiray with the wand and asked her to remove her shoes. When the wand did not alert to Kiray’s shoes or clothing, Patterson asked if she could take the grocery bag back through the gates. She explained that if the package was turned the wrong way, the gate might not alert. Kiray consented, and Patterson passed the bag back through the *197 gates. When the alarm sounded, Patterson found and deactivated the catfish package. She gave the groceries back to Ki-ray. She apologized to Kiray explaining that, like they thought, the problem had been Hy-Vee’s. Kiray became very upset. Patterson apologized again. Kearney came back to apologize, and Kiray became emotional and left. At no time did Patterson believe or accuse Kiray of shoplifting. Nor did she mention Kiray’s race.

According to Kiray, she returned to the store a few minutes later to get the name of the cashier whom she had paid for the groceries. Allen Dix, the Hy-Vee Store Director, asked Kiray what had happened. She told Dix she had been accused of stealing and that she did not steal like “those other black people.” Dix observed Kiray was visibly upset, and told her that if she were that upset, “we probably didn’t do our job correctly and we hadn’t handled things right because our goal is not to have the customer leave the store that unhappy.” Dix also apologized.

Kiray brought claims of battery, false imprisonment, defamation, and discrimination against Hy-Vee and Kearney. After jury voir dire, Kiray’s counsel requested a hearing pursuant to Batson v. Kentucky. The following exchange occurred:

Plaintiffs counsel: Your Honor, thank you. This is pursuant to Batson v. Kentucky. There were two African American jurors in the prospective panel. The Defendant struck both of those jurors. I think I don’t need to hear any sort of explanation with respect to Ms. Davis.
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I don’t have an issue with — I mean, I think I can understand, I don’t need to hear an explanation with respect to Ms. Davis. But I think under Batson, when the only African American jurors go out on peremptory exercise by a party, there at least has to have some sort of a showing what those bases were, and I didn’t see any for Mr. Grant, frankly.
Court: Mr. Abernathy?
Defense counsel: Well, Mr. Grant started with [sic] was similar to the Plaintiff in this case in that he is not a born citizen in the United States. He also, in response to questions from Plaintiffs counsel, expressed a clear opinion that he did not think the expression equal justice under law that appears before the United States Supreme Court building applied universally in this country, which concerns me as to whether or not he would be fair and impartial.

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716 N.W.2d 193, 2006 Iowa App. LEXIS 282, 2006 WL 778707, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kiray-v-hy-vee-inc-iowactapp-2006.