Milton Titus, Jr. v. Richard Don Williams

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJune 7, 2001
Docket2001-CA-00921-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Milton Titus, Jr. v. Richard Don Williams (Milton Titus, Jr. v. Richard Don Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Milton Titus, Jr. v. Richard Don Williams, (Mich. 2001).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2001-CA-00921-SCT

MILTON TITUS, JR, LUCY TITUS, LUCY PATRICIA TITUS, CHRISTOPHER TITUS, STEPHANIE TITUS AND RENEE TITUS, THE WRONGFUL DEATH HEIRS AND BENEFICIARIES OF MILTON TITUS, III, DECEASED

v.

RICHARD DON WILLIAMS AND THE FLASH STORE, INC.

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 06/7/2001 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. ANDREW C. BAKER COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: PANOLA COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANTS: CARROLL RHODES NATHANIEL ALANDAS ARMISTAD ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES: HOLLY STUBBLEFIELD MATHEWS JOHN S. HILL STEFFANIE ANNE GRAVES JAMES P. STREETMAN, III NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - PERSONAL INJURY DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 05/01/2003 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

CONSOLIDATED WITH NO. 2001-CA-01653-SCT

MILTON TITUS, JR., LUCY TITUS, LUCY PATRICIA TITUS, CHRISTOPHER TITUS, STEPHANIE TITUS AND RENEE TITUS, THE WRONGFUL DEATH HEIRS AND BENEFICIARIES OF MILTON TITUS, III, DECEASED

THE TOWN OF SARDIS, MISSISSIPPI DATE OF JUDGMENT: 10/1/2001 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. ANDREW C. BAKER COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: PANOLA COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANTS: CARROLL RHODES NATHANIEL ALANDAS ARMISTAD ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE: WILTON V. BYARS, JR. MITCHELL ORVIS DRISKELL NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - PERSONAL INJURY DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 05/01/2003 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

BEFORE SMITH, P.J., DIAZ AND COBB, JJ.

DIAZ, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Plaintiffs Milton Titus, Jr., Lucy Titus, Lucy Patricia Titus, Christopher Titus, Stephanie Titus, and

Renee Titus filed suit in the Circuit Court of the First Judicial District of Panola County against Richard Don

Williams (Williams), The Flash Store, Inc. (Flash Store)1, and the Town of Sardis, Mississippi, seeking

damages for the wrongful death of Milton Titus, III (Titus), who was killed by a third party on the Flash

Store’s property. Plaintiffs alleged that negligence and gross negligence committed by the defendants were

a proximate cause of Titus’s death.

¶2. Williams filed a motion for summary judgment on the basis that, as an absentee landlord, he owed

no duty to Titus and had committed no form of negligence. The Flash Store filed a motion for summary

judgment on the basis that Titus was a trespasser or at best a licensee on its premises and it did not violate

its duty to refrain from willfully or wantonly injuring him. The Town of Sardis filed a motion for summary

judgment on the basis that, as a governmental entity, Sardis is exempt from liability for the performance of

1 On April 16, 1999, by an agreed order of the parties, the circuit court substituted the Flash Store, Inc. as a defendant in the place of original defendant Fakhri H. Safi (known as “Fred”), the manager of the Flash Store.

2 police duties unless its employee(s) acted in reckless disregard of the safety and well-being of any person

not engaged in a criminal activity at the time the injury occurred. The circuit court granted summary

judgment in favor of all defendants.

¶3. The circuit court denied an interlocutory appeal, and final judgment was entered. Plaintiffs filed a

timely appeal.

FACTS

¶4. The Flash Store is a convenience store located at the corner of U.S. Highway 51 and Mississippi

Highway 315 in Sardis, Mississippi. The property and store have been owned by Williams since October

19, 1994. Williams, who lives in Hinds County, has only visited the property twice since purchasing it.

Thus, he is considered an absentee landlord. Williams has leased the store to different corporations or

persons in the past, but the store became the Flash Store on April 28, 1995, through an assignment of a

previous lease held by Jr. Food Mart. (The Flash Store, Inc., was the owner of the Flash Store at the time

the incident in question occurred.)

¶5. The area in which the Flash Store is located is considered undesirable. The parking lot had become

an area where local crowds of young people gathered during the weekends and holidays. Jr. Food Mart

employed a security officer when it occupied the building. The Flash Store had no security personnel.

According to the plaintiffs, scuffles, fights, drug-deals and other inappropriate and illegal activity often

occurred there.

¶6. On January 10, 1998, around 9:00 p.m., a crowd of twenty-five or more people had gathered in

and around the Flash Store parking lot. Two people from the crowd, Eric Kelson (Eric) and Montriel

Butcher (Butcher), began to argue over the fact that Eric's girlfriend was looking at Butcher. Tywon

"Spanky" Kelson (Tywon), Eric's nephew, and Titus, drove up and saw this argument. Tywon and Titus

3 attempted to break up the argument. Butcher informed Titus that the argument was none of his concern

and to stay out of it. Titus responded that Eric was one of his friends and that he did consider it his

business.

¶7. Meanwhile, Fred, instructed his employee, Angela Roberson (Angela), to tell everyone to clear the

parking lot because he had just called the police. The time was 9:16 p.m. The majority of the people left

the premises. Eric left with parties unknown, and Butcher left with his brother, Kirby "Boogie" Butcher,

in Kirby's2 car.

¶8. At 9:18 p.m., two minutes after receiving the call from Safi, Sardis police officers arrived at the

Flash Store. The officers investigated the incident and dispersed what remained of the crowd. Walter

Wheatley (Wheatley), there to pick up his girlfriend, Angela, remained in the parking lot. The Butcher

brothers were no longer at the scene when the officers arrived. Titus and Tywon told the officers that

nothing was going on and that they had not been fighting. They did not ask for any special protection from

the officers nor give the officers any reason to believe that they were in danger. Tywon and Titus left in

Tywon's car. No formal complaints were filed, and no one was arrested.

¶9. According to Wheatley, about forty minutes after this first altercation, the Butcher brothers returned

to the store to get gas for their car. Tywon testified that he and Titus spotted Kirby’s car at the Flash

Store gas pumps and decided they wanted to get the license plate number for the police because a man

named Avery Dillard told Tywon and Titus that Butcher "had a gun and [they] better watch themselves."

Tywon pulled onto the parking lot to get the tag number. Butcher saw them and retrieved a "long gun" from

2 Throughout the remainder of this opinion, Montriel Butcher will be referred to simply as “Butcher,” when both Butcher brothers are mentioned, they will be referred to as the “Butcher brothers.”

4 his brother’s car. Tywon quickly made a U-turn. Butcher fired two shots at the car, striking the rim of the

right front tire.

¶10. Meanwhile, Angela, Fred, and an employee known only by the name of "Al" were inside the Flash

Store. Fred claims he neither saw nor heard any gunshots, while Angela claims she saw the flash from the

gun, but did not hear anything. A couple of minutes later Wheatley came in and informed them that Butcher

had just shot at Tywon and Titus. Angela stated that she knew that Butcher had a bad reputation and was

"in and out of trouble" all the time. Angela and Walter told Fred that he needed to phone the police before

someone got hurt. Plaintiffs allege that Wheatley also urged Fred to close the store, but Fred refused,

telling them that "nothing is going to happen." Fred did not call the police to report the shooting.

¶11.

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