Morner v. Giuliano

857 N.E.2d 602, 167 Ohio App. 3d 785, 2006 Ohio 2943
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 12, 2006
DocketNos. CA2005-09-371 and CA2005-09-372.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 857 N.E.2d 602 (Morner v. Giuliano) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morner v. Giuliano, 857 N.E.2d 602, 167 Ohio App. 3d 785, 2006 Ohio 2943 (Ohio Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

Young, Judge.

{¶ 1} Plaintiffs-appellants, Sara Morner and her parents, David and Ann Morner, and defendant-appellant, Matt Giuliano, appeal a decision of the Butler County Common Pleas Court granting summary judgment in favor of defendantsappellees, Mark A. Alfers and his parents, Mark E. and Nancy Alfers, and intervening defendant-appellee, State Farm Fire and Casualty Company.

{¶ 2} On the evening of October 13, 2001, Mark A. Alfers invited a number of his classmates to his parents’ house following a high school soccer match. The students attending the gathering included Sara Morner and Matt Giuliano. At the time, Mark and Giuliano were 17 years old, and Sara was 16 years old. Mark’s parents were not home at the time the party was held, nor had they given Mark permission to host a party.

{¶ 3} At some point during the evening, Giuliano obtained Mark’s pump-action air rifle from one of the other students at the party, Graham Crane. The air rifle *788 was loaded with BBs. Giuliano went outside onto a balcony with the air rifle or BB gun and shot several times at an outside flood light in the Alfers’s back yard. Each shot missed.

{¶ 4} Giuliano then went downstairs and began shooting at people. His purpose in shooting at others was not to cause them serious injury, but only to “aggravate” them or “to get a rise” out of them. He expected that the BB would cause any person he shot a “stinging sensation” and a “welt.” First, he went into the living room and shot Betsy Browe in the leg while she was sitting on the couch. According to Giuliano, the BB “didn’t break her jeans or didn’t hurt her at all.” Soon thereafter, Giuliano shot Sean Lehmann. According to Giuliano, Lehmann expressed no painful reaction to being shot, but instead, wanted to shoot the BB gun himself. Giuliano would not let him take the gun.

{¶ 5} After shooting Browe and Lehmann, Giuliano went outside to the back yard and shot at the flood light several more times. Again, all the shots missed. Giuliano then went to a neighboring yard. From there, he saw several people, including Graham Crane and Sara Morner, walk out onto the upstairs balcony of the Alferses’ home. Giuliano decided to shoot at them to aggravate them. Again he expected to cause them a stinging sensation or a welt. He was standing approximately 20 to 25 feet from the balcony, and the balcony was approximately 10 to 15 feet above him, when he fired a BB at Crane, Morner, and the others. When Giuliano fired the shot, Crane yelled out, “Heads up!” or “Duck!” to the others present. When Sara heard this, she turned around to see what Crane was yelling about and was struck in the eye with the BB.

{¶ 6} Sara immediately went back inside the Alferses’ residence. Giuliano walked around to the Alferses’ front yard. Just at that time, Mark A. Alfers was returning to his residence from a quick trip he had made to a fast-food restaurant along with several of his friends, including Alicia Brewer and Brett Noonan. Giuliano decided to shoot at Noonan with the BB gun. However, when Giuliano fired, his shot missed Noonan and hit Brewer in the side. Mark took Brewer inside. After he came back outside, Mark took the BB gun away from Giuliano and asked him, ‘What the heck was that? What are you doing?” Giuliano replied that he was not sorry. 1

{¶ 7} In the meantime, several people attended to Sara Morner. They got her a washcloth for her eye, which was bleeding. At first, Sara did not wish to seek medical attention because of an incident that had occurred at Mark’s residence about two weeks earlier. On that occasion, Mark, Sara, Brett Noonan, and Brett *789 Fiehrer were upstairs in Mark’s bedroom. Noonan took Mark’s BB gun and fired a BB at the floor. The BB ricocheted off the floor and struck Fiehrer in the ankle, becoming partially imbedded there. The teenagers had dug the BB out of Fiehrer’s ankle. Sara told her father what had happened. Sara’s father warned her not to go around BB guns anymore and that if she saw one, she should leave.

{¶ 8} When Giuliano saw that he had caused Sara a more serious injury than he had intended, he apologized to her. Sara forgave him. She then decided she needed to seek medical treatment. Sara was taken to a hospital where it was discovered that the BB had done serious damage to her left eye. As a result of her injury, Sara can no longer see out of her left eye.

{¶ 9} On October 10, 2003, Sara and her parents, David and Ann Morner, filed a complaint against Giuliano, Mark A. Alfers, and Mark’s parents, Mark E. and Nancy Alfers. The Morners alleged that Giuliano was negligent in shooting at Sara with a BB gun and that the Alfers were negligent in controlling or maintaining the BB gun that Giuliano used to shoot Sara. The Morners also alleged that Mr. and Mrs. Alfers were negligent in permitting a large number of teenagers to congregate at their residence without appropriate adult supervision, knowing that the BB gun was at their residence and was accessible to those teenagers. The Morners further alleged that Mark was negligent in failing to warn his guests about a known hazard and in failing to protect them from it.

{¶ 10} In their answer to the Morners’ complaint, the Alfers denied all of the material allegations in the complaint that were directed against them, and alleged that the Morners’ injuries and damages “were caused by independent, intervening and/or superseding acts, events, negligence and/or omissions of persons other than [the Alferses].” The Alferses also brought a cross-claim against Giuliano, arguing that any damages sustained by the Morners “were the direct and proximate result of [Giuliano’s] negligence,” and that if judgment was rendered against the Alferses, the Alferses were entitled to contribution or indemnity from Giuliano for those damages.

{¶ 11} At the time of the incident, Giuliano’s father had a homeowners policy with State Farm Fire and Casualty Company. Giuliano was one of the named insureds under the policy. On March 15, 2004, State Farm filed an intervening complaint for declaratory judgment, seeking a declaration that State Farm was not obligated under the terms of the policy to defend or indemnify Giuliano against the Morners’ claims.

{¶ 12} On August 16, 2004, State Farm moved for summary judgment with respect to its declaratory-judgment action, arguing that it was entitled to a declaration that it was not obligated to defend or provide coverage to Giuliano by virtue of several of the policy’s exclusions, among them, those excluding “expected or intended” injury and “willful and malicious” conduct. On that same day, *790 the Alferses moved for summary judgment with respect to the Morners’ claims, arguing that none of them was negligent with respect to the events that led to the Morners’ injuries.

{¶ 13} On August 5, 2005, the trial court awarded the Alferses and State Farm summary judgment. Specifically, the trial court found that there was no negligence on the part of Mark A. Alfers or his parents, Mark E. and Nancy Alfers, either in failing to warn Sara Morner about the BB gun or Giuliano, or in storing a loaded BB gun at their residence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
857 N.E.2d 602, 167 Ohio App. 3d 785, 2006 Ohio 2943, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morner-v-giuliano-ohioctapp-2006.