Norris Goode, Jr. v. Huguenot Springs, LLC

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedJuly 30, 2024
Docket1497232
StatusUnpublished

This text of Norris Goode, Jr. v. Huguenot Springs, LLC (Norris Goode, Jr. v. Huguenot Springs, LLC) 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
Norris Goode, Jr. v. Huguenot Springs, LLC, (Va. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA UNPUBLISHED

Present: Judges Beales, AtLee and Malveaux Argued at Richmond, Virginia

NORRIS GOODE, JR. MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 1497-23-2 JUDGE RICHARD Y. ATLEE, JR. JULY 30, 2024 HUGUENOT SPRINGS, LLC, ET AL.

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF POWHATAN COUNTY Joseph M. Teefey, Jr., Judge

Malik N. Drake (Law Office of Malik N. Drake, PLLC, on brief), for appellant.

Julie S. Palmer (Stanley P. Wellman; Harman, Claytor, Corrigan & Wellman, on brief), for appellees Huguenot Springs, LLC and Reza Omarzai.

No brief or argument for appellees Jacob Moore and Jesse Ray Moore.

In this appeal, we consider whether the trial court erred by sustaining a demurrer to a

negligence claim because the defendants, Huguenot Springs, LLC, and Reza Omarzai, had

neither a duty to protect the plaintiff, Norris Goode, Jr., from a criminal assault, nor a duty to

control the criminal actors’ behavior. Goode argues that Huguenot Springs and Omarzai had

duties under the facts as alleged in his amended complaint, and alternatively, that they

voluntarily assumed a duty to warn or protect him. For the following reasons, we affirm the trial

court’s judgment.

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

“Because this case was decided below on demurrer, we accept as true the well-pleaded facts

set forth in the amended complaint and all inferences fairly drawn therefrom.” Terry v. Irish Fleet,

Inc., 296 Va. 129, 133 (2018). “We are not bound, however, by the ‘conclusory allegations’ set

forth in the amended complaint.” Id. (quoting Brown v. Jacobs, 289 Va. 209, 212 n.2 (2015)).

In 2016, Jacob and Jesse Moore were renting property in Powhatan County from Huguenot

Springs. Omarzai was “a member, manager, and/or officer of Huguenot Springs.” Goode contacted

Omarzai and received his permission to fish in a pond on the property that the Moores were renting.

Omarzai did not notify the Moores that he had given Goode permission to fish.1

Goode entered the property to fish the next day. The Moores noticed Goode “and began

yelling at [him] from afar.” The men approached, and the Moores asserted that “one of them . . .

was responsible for stocking the pond with fish, and therefore the fish belonged to them.” After a

“heated discussion,” the Moores “brutally attacked” Goode with a knife, inflicting severe injuries to

his head and arm. This attack was “wholly unprovoked and unreasonable.” Goode was transported

to a hospital, where imaging revealed that “a knife blade . . . had broken off” during the attack and

was stuck in his skull. Goode endured extensive medical treatment, resulting in over $600,000 in

medical bills and related expenses. Further, he suffered, and continues to suffer, from “pain,

physical limitations, and mental anguish as a result of injuries he suffered.”

In his amended complaint, Goode alleged that as the “owner of the property,” and having

knowledge of the Moores’ presence on the leased property, Huguenot Springs was “in position to

exert great control over the course of events that transpired,” but failed to do so. In other words, by

1 Given the posture of this case, we accept as true the complaint’s allegation that Huguenot Springs had the authority to grant Goode permission to fish in the pond. Terry, 296 Va. at 133. The record does not contain a written lease agreement between Huguenot Springs and the Moores. -2- granting Goode permission to fish without informing the Moores, as tenants, Omarzai created a

“special relationship” between (1) Huguenot Springs and the Moores, and (2) Huguenot Springs and

Goode. Given those relationships, Huguenot Springs’ control over the property, and Goode’s status

as an invitee, Goode maintained that Huguenot Springs and Omarzai had a duty to warn and protect

him “from the foreseeable danger of a criminal assault” when he entered the property to catch fish

that belonged to the Moores. In Goode’s view, Huguenot Springs and Omarzai orchestrated a

“dangerous environment” that “antagoniz[ed]” the Moores by granting Goode access to the

property, which resulted in “an unreasonable risk of harm” to Goode. Accordingly, Goode sought a

total of $4,000,000 in compensatory and punitive damages for Huguenot Springs’ and Omarzai’s

negligence.

Huguenot Springs and Omarzai demurred, arguing in relevant part that they did not owe

Goode a duty to warn of or protect him from others’ criminal actions because there was not a

“cognizable ‘special relationship’” between them and Goode, or between them and the Moores.

They further argued that the complaint failed to allege facts sufficient to demonstrate that they were

on notice of “an imminent probability of harm” to Goode.

After a hearing, the trial court found that the amended complaint “failed to allege a

recognized special relationship between” Huguenot Springs and Omarzai and either Goode or the

Moores. In addition, the court ruled that there was no duty to warn or protect Goode because the

criminal assault was not reasonably foreseeable. Finally, the court found that neither Huguenot

Springs nor Omarzai had voluntarily assumed a duty to protect Goode from the criminal assault.

Accordingly, it sustained the demurrer and dismissed with prejudice Huguenot Springs and Omarzai

as defendants.2

2 The trial court also dismissed with prejudice Goode’s negligent infliction of emotional distress claim against Huguenot Springs and Omarzai. Goode does not challenge that ruling on appeal. -3- II. ANALYSIS

We review “a circuit court’s decision to sustain a demurrer de novo.” Givago Growth,

LLC v. iTech AG, LLC, 300 Va. 260, 264 (2021). “A demurrer tests the legal sufficiency of the

facts alleged in a complaint assuming that all facts alleged therein and all inferences fairly drawn

from those facts are true.” Id. We further “interpret those allegations in the light most favorable

to the plaintiff.” Taylor v. Aids-Hilfe Koln e.V., 301 Va. 352, 357 (2022) (quoting Coward v.

Wellmont Health Sys., 295 Va. 351, 358 (2018)).

A. Huguenot Springs and Omarzai did not have a duty to warn or protect Goode against unforeseeable criminal conduct.

Goode argues that the trial court erred by sustaining the demurrer, finding no special

relationships existed that required Huguenot Springs and Omarzai either (1) to warn and protect

Goode against the Moores’ criminal actions, or (2) to control the Moores’ criminal conduct.

Goode contends that by granting him permission to fish, Huguenot Springs and Omarzai both

implied that anyone who might be legally present on the property also had notice of, and

consented to, Goode’s fishing and assured his safety while he did so. He alleges that Huguenot

Springs and Omarzai had a duty to warn him that the land was occupied. He also contends that

because Huguenot Springs and Omarzai knew that Goode’s presence would “anger or

antagonize” the Moores by infringing on their “enforceable property rights” in the land or the

Goode also sued the Moores for assault and battery and intentional infliction of emotional distress. On November 8, 2021, the trial court entered a partial final judgment order under Rule 1:2(a), dismissing with prejudice Jacob Moore as a defendant. Goode did not appeal that partial final judgment order under Rule 1:2(b), so it is final, and Jacob Moore’s unopposed motion to dismiss him as a party in this appeal is granted.

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