Marty Dean Goodman, Jr. v. Wal-Mart Stores East, LP

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedMay 20, 2025
Docket0862243
StatusUnpublished

This text of Marty Dean Goodman, Jr. v. Wal-Mart Stores East, LP (Marty Dean Goodman, Jr. v. Wal-Mart Stores East, LP) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marty Dean Goodman, Jr. v. Wal-Mart Stores East, LP, (Va. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA UNPUBLISHED

Present: Judges Beales, O’Brien and Lorish Argued at Lexington, Virginia

MARTY DEAN GOODMAN, JR. MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 0862-24-3 JUDGE LISA M. LORISH MAY 20, 2025 WAL-MART STORES EAST, LP, ET AL.

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF DANVILLE James J. Reynolds, Judge

W. Barry Montgomery (KMP Law, on briefs), for appellant.

David R. Berry (Guy M. Harbert, III; Gentry Locke, on brief), for appellees.

Marty Dean Goodman, Jr. challenges the Danville Circuit Court’s decision to strike the

evidence of his malicious prosecution claim against Wal-Mart Stores East, LP, Wal-Mart Stores,

Inc., (“Wal-Mart”), and Michael Travis Gregory. The circuit court found that Goodman failed to

prove, as a matter of law, that Gregory and Wal-Mart lacked probable cause to prosecute him for

shoplifting. On appeal, Goodman argues that the surveillance video evidence on which the

criminal complaint was based did not depict him concealing merchandise or transferring it into

different boxes. At the very least, he argues, whether the evidence constituted probable cause

was a question for the jury. Finding no error, we affirm.

* This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413(A). BACKGROUND

In November 2021, while employed as an asset protection investigator at Wal-Mart,

Gregory filed a criminal complaint against Goodman, accusing him of stealing from the Wal-Mart

Supercenter in Danville. Gregory alleged that in October of the same year, Goodman “selected a

speaker valued at $49.98, removed its contents, placed them in a speaker packaging valued at

$19.98 and purchased the item at the lower price.” Shortly after Gregory filed the complaint,

Goodman was arrested and charged with larceny in violation of Code § 18.2-103.

In November 2022, Goodman went to trial on the larceny charge in the Danville General

District Court. Both Goodman and Gregory testified, the Commonwealth played surveillance video

evidence, and Goodman argued that he was not the person in the surveillance videos.1 At the

conclusion of trial, Goodman was found not guilty.

In February 2024, Goodman sued Gregory and Wal-Mart for malicious prosecution.2

Before trial, Goodman moved for an adverse inference jury instruction based on spoliation of

evidence. He alleged that Wal-Mart failed to preserve a relevant store surveillance video showing

Goodman’s conduct in the store on the day in question. Goodman argued that Gregory deliberately

waited 30 days to file the criminal complaint because Wal-Mart has a policy of retaining videos for

30 days before automatically deleting them, that Wal-Mart deliberately retained some videos but not

others, and that the lost video may have been favorable to him. Goodman requested that the jury be

instructed to presume that the deleted video evidence would have been unfavorable to Gregory and

1 Gregory testified that the videos played at the criminal trial were “the exact same thing” as the videos that were later played at the civil trial for Goodman’s malicious prosecution claim. 2 Goodman initially sued Gregory and Wal-Mart for malicious prosecution and defamation, but the defamation claim was dismissed for exceeding the statute of limitations. Goodman later filed an amended complaint alleging only malicious prosecution. -2- Wal-Mart. Wal-Mart filed a brief in opposition, but the circuit court never issued a ruling on the

motion.

At trial, the parties introduced several surveillance videos showing a man with his back

turned to the camera handling two speaker boxes, at least one of which is open, moving around the

store, putting one box back on a shelf, and checking out with the remaining box. Goodman

admitted that he was the person in the videos, that he put two speakers in his shopping cart, and that

he put one speaker box on a shelf before checking out with the other. Gregory and Wal-Mart

moved to strike the case after Goodman presented his evidence, which the circuit court denied

because “the existence of probable cause, at this point, is a defense burden,” and the court did not

find that they had proved its existence. Then, during the defense’s case in chief, Gregory testified

that after he observed Goodman leave with the speaker, he went to the sales floor and found that the

box Goodman had placed on the shelf contained a speaker of a different brand. Gregory and Wal-

Mart then introduced photographs of a speaker box with a speaker inside it that did not match the

branding of the box. Gregory testified that the photographs depict the speaker box that Goodman

put back on the shelf.

Gregory and Wal-Mart renewed their motion to strike, arguing that Goodman’s “conduct on

that video is probable cause to believe he’s either switching merchandise or at a very minimum, he’s

concealing merchandise.” In response, Goodman first referenced his motion for an adverse

inference jury instruction, arguing that Wal-Mart admitted that they had exclusive control of the

videos and it would take very little to preserve them and that a video of Goodman taking the

speakers off the shelf had not been preserved. Goodman argued that this “goes to credibility.” The

court disagreed, explaining that “how [the speakers] came to be there is irrelevant” given that

Goodman admitted to their being in his possession in the store. Goodman then opposed the motion

to strike on the basis that Gregory and Wal-Mart failed to produce sufficient evidence of probable

-3- cause and that the existence of probable cause was a factual question for the jury to decide.

Goodman noted that Gregory’s credibility was at issue because Gregory gave a “self-serving

statement . . . saying here’s what this video shows” and that “[t]he jury . . . may have different ideas

of what it shows and what it doesn’t show.”

The circuit court granted the motion to strike, concluding that the facts were not in dispute

and that the video evidence constituted probable cause to file a criminal complaint for shoplifting.

According to the court, “[n]o reasonable jury could look at [the evidence], understanding anything

about videos, understanding anything about how stores function, and not come to the conclusion

that’s probable cause.” The court entered judgment as a matter of law in favor of Gregory and Wal-

Mart.

Goodman timely appealed.

ANALYSIS

“[A] motion to strike at the conclusion of the plaintiff’s case-in-chief . . . tests whether his

evidence is sufficient to prove it.” Tahboub v. Thiagarajah, 298 Va. 366, 371 (2020). “A circuit

court should only grant a defendant’s motion to strike when . . . the evidence is insufficient to prove

a cause of action.” Bd. of Supervisors of the Cnty. of Albemarle v. Route 29, LLC, 301 Va. 134, 150

(2022). “We review a circuit court’s decision on a motion to strike in the light most favorable to the

non-moving party, and the non-moving party ‘must be given the benefit of all substantial conflict in

the evidence, and all fair inferences that may be drawn therefrom.’” Dill v. Kroger Ltd. P’ship I,

300 Va. 99, 109 (2021) (quoting Egan v. Butler, 290 Va. 62, 73 (2015)). Whether the evidence at

trial establishes an element of the statute “as a matter of law,” is a legal question we review de novo.

Graydon Manor, LLC v. Bd. of Supervisors, 79 Va. App. 156, 167 (2023).

To prevail in an action for malicious prosecution, a plaintiff must prove by a preponderance

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