Minkler v. Chumley

747 So. 2d 720
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 8, 1999
Docket32,558-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 747 So. 2d 720 (Minkler v. Chumley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Minkler v. Chumley, 747 So. 2d 720 (La. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

747 So.2d 720 (1999)

Ronald D. MINKLER, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Gary CHUMLEY as the Parent And Legal Guardian of His Minor Son, Ethan Chumley, Defendant-Appellee.

No. 32,558-CA.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

December 8, 1999.

*721 Rice & Kendig by William F. Kendig, Shreveport, Counsel for Appellant.

Daryl Gold, Shreveport, Counsel for Appellee

Before WILLIAMS, GASKINS & PEATROSS, JJ.

PEATROSS, J.

Plaintiff, Ronald D. Minkler, appeals a judgment dismissing his claims against Defendant, Gary Chumley, as parent and legal guardian of his minor son, Ethan Chumley. For the reasons stated herein, we reverse and render judgment in favor of Plaintiff.

FACTS

This suit arises out of a violent encounter between Plaintiff, the general manager of Southern Trace Country Club ("Southern Trace") in Shreveport, Louisiana, and then 16-year-old Ethan Chumley ("Ethan"), on the premises of Southern Trace. At the time of the incident, Ethan was an unemancipated minor who lived with his parents.

Southern Trace maintains the Azalea Grill as one of its restaurants for members. Payment for meals contemporaneously with service is not accepted at the Azalea Grill; rather, club members who eat at the restaurant sign a guest ticket at the time of service and each month receive an inclusive bill for their meals that month.

*722 In the summer of 1996, one of the club's members, Ron Atkinson, contacted Southern Trace concerning his monthly bill which indicated several charges ostensibly incurred by his son, David. David, however, had not signed the tickets or incurred the charges; and it was suspected that another person or persons had signed David's name. Southern Trace agreed to absorb those losses, and Mr. Atkinson requested that the club positively identify anyone signing David's name to a ticket. Mr. Atkinson informed Southern Trace that David would cooperate with this procedure and produce identification when requested.

On August 3, 1996, a Saturday afternoon, a group of approximately a dozen youths entered the Azalea Grill. The group had previously been asked to leave the pool area for being too disruptive. Ethan and four or five of the other youths sat at one table while the rest sat at other tables. A waiter took the order of the youths at Ethan's table, and Ethan signed the ticket, in the amount of $42.15, with the name "David Atkinson." The restaurant staff, having been alerted to the problem with the Atkinson account, contacted Plaintiff.

Plaintiff approached Ethan's table and asked the youths who among them was David Atkinson. Plaintiff testified that the youths replied, "None of us." Plaintiff then asked whether one of them had signed the ticket, and the youths told him, "No, it was two guys that had just left." At that point, Plaintiff spoke with his staff and learned that no one had left the restaurant and that Ethan was the one who had signed the ticket.

Plaintiff approached Ethan and told him that he had been identified as the signatory, whereupon Ethan admitted that he had signed the ticket. Plaintiff then asked Ethan if his name was David Atkinson, and Ethan stated that it was. When Plaintiff asked him why he had earlier denied being David Atkinson, Ethan said that it made no difference, that he was David Atkinson and that he could sign the ticket. Plaintiff then informed Ethan of the problems with the Atkinson account and the arrangement agreed to by David and his parents that he would cooperate and produce identification when signing for meals. At that point, Ethan told Plaintiff that he had no identification on his person.

Plaintiff then asked Ethan to discuss the matter in another area, and the two walked over to a foyer near the hostess stand where Barbara Johnson was also present. Plaintiff again explained to Ethan that he was expected to produce identification because of the problems with the Atkinson account and that when he did so, he could continue with his meal. Ethan responded with the excuse that approximately two weeks earlier he had been arrested for drunk driving in Texarkana and that the Texarkana police had taken his license. Plaintiff stated that Ethan then took out his wallet, "flashed" it open and shut and said, "See, I don't have one." Ethan denied having any other form of identification on his person.

Having no tangible identification available, Plaintiff then decided to call the Atkinsons to have them identify Ethan's voice as that of their son. Plaintiff requested the Atkinsons' telephone number from Ethan, who gave Plaintiff a telephone number he later admitted to having made up on the spot. Plaintiff received no answer when he called the telephone number Ethan had given him and, on having his staff retrieve the Atkinsons' telephone number from club records, discovered the two telephone numbers did not match. Plaintiff confronted Ethan with the discrepancy and explained that it was necessary for Ethan to identify himself before he could allow him to return to his friends. Plaintiff testified that, at that point, Ethan had made a number of comments concerning who he was, that his father had given him permission to sign tickets and that Plaintiff would not have a job by Monday if he did not leave him alone. Plaintiff *723 conceded that that might be the case, but he continued to try to obtain an identification because he was following the Atkinsons' instructions. Plaintiff offered to wait with Ethan upstairs in his office until he could reach the Atkinsons, to which, according to Plaintiff, Ethan responded:

"This is getting ridiculous. I am not waiting around for anything. I am who I say I am. You won't have a job Monday if you continue pushing this and I am leaving."

Ethan then turned to walk out of the restaurant.

With Ethan's back to him, Plaintiff saw that Ethan's wallet was of the breast pocket oblong type and protruded from Ethan's back left pants pocket one to two inches. Plaintiff said that, "in an attempt to ID him," he reached out and took the wallet. Ethan turned back and demanded the return of his wallet, and Plaintiff explained that he would return the wallet after looking through it for identification.

When Plaintiff turned to look at the wallet in a better light, his back was to Ethan. It was Plaintiffs testimony that Ethan suddenly charged him from behind and slammed him into a nearby wall. The impact was sufficient to cause a 36-inch long break in the sheetrock where Plaintiff struck the wall. Ethan then pinned Plaintiff against the wall and tried to reach around him to retrieve his wallet when another club employee, George Becker, who was off duty at the time, pulled Ethan off of Plaintiff. In the melee that followed, Mr. Becker was struck in the face by Ethan. The trio fell to the floor with Mr. Becker on the bottom and Ethan between him and Plaintiff. At that point, Ethan yelled for help from his friends, but Plaintiff warned them away. The police were summoned and Ethan agreed to calm down and remain at the scene.

When the police arrived, Ethan initially maintained that he was David Atkinson and perpetuated the lie about the loss of his license in a DWI stop. One of the officers was familiar with Ethan, however, and knew that he was not David Atkinson. Another member of the restaurant staff also recognized Ethan. It was not until he was confronted with his own name that Ethan admitted his identity.

At trial, it was stipulated that Ethan signed David Atkinson's name to the guest ticket. Ethan, however, denied that anyone asked him to remain at the club until his identification could be confirmed.

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