Patton v. Strogen

908 So. 2d 1282, 2005 WL 1959516
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 17, 2005
Docket39,829-CW
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 908 So. 2d 1282 (Patton v. Strogen) 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
Patton v. Strogen, 908 So. 2d 1282, 2005 WL 1959516 (La. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

908 So.2d 1282 (2005)

Maple PATTON, Plaintiff-Respondent
v.
Stevenson STROGEN, II, Stevenson Strogen, Geneva Strogen, Anthony G. Davis, Linden Asset Management Co., Lee Jeter, ABC Insurance Company, DEF Insurance Company and XYZ Insurance Company, Defendants-Applicants.

No. 39,829-CW.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

August 17, 2005.

*1284 Hicks, Hubley, Marcotte & Rhodes by Lydia M. Rhodes, Shreveport, for Plaintiff.

Cook, Yancey, King & Galloway by Sidney E. Cook, Jr., Matthew R. May, Shreveport, for Defendant-Applicant Linden Asset Management Company.

William G. Nader, for Defendants-Respondents Stevenson Wayne Strogen II, Stevenson Wayne Strogen & Geneva Strogen.

Before GASKINS, DREW and LOLLEY, JJ.

LOLLEY, J.

After the shooting death of her 18-year-old son Shamocus Patton, Maple Patton filed suit against a number of persons and entities she alleged were responsible for his murder. The instant dispute concerns the liability of one of these defendants, Linden Asset Management Company ("Linden"). Linden, the owner of a part of the property where the shooting took place, filed a motion for summary judgment on the issue of its liability for Shamocus' death. The Twenty-Sixth Judicial District Court, Parish of Bossier, State of Louisiana, denied the motion, and Linden sought supervisory review. For the following reasons, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.

FACTS

Linden is the owner of North Market Plaza, a shopping center situated on the west side of North Market Street, a busy four-lane highway with a center turn lane in Shreveport, Louisiana (the "shopping center"). The shopping center sits on the west side of a large parking lot extending eastward toward North Market Street. There are two stand-alone businesses in the parking lot near the center of the eastern edge fronting North Market, the Taco Bell being one of them. Linden does not own a Taco Bell or that restaurant's parking lot, which is partially separated from the shopping center parking lot by a concrete divider approximately 6" high and 12" wide. Station One, a popular teen club, was the northernmost tenant in the shopping center. The club, through its owner, Anthony Davis, leased its building from Linden.

On the evening of Friday, August 25, 2000, the club was open and, as usual, was full to capacity with patrons. In addition, the large shopping center parking lot was completely full of cars belonging to club patrons, as well as would-be club patrons. According to Shreveport Police Department ("SPD") Officer Daniel Atkins, Station One was a club that police routinely had "all type of problem[s] with every weekend. Basically fighting, shooting, basic drive-by shooting and stuff like that." He described the parking lot crowd as a "gang environment." The officer said that the club itself had hired three or four off-duty SPD officers to work security on the weekend. In addition, SPD assigned additional on-duty officers to watch the area as well.

The overflow crowd from the club often spilled into the nearby Taco Bell, onto North Market itself and across North Market Street to the Texaco on the east side of the street. Officer Atkins said that "just by driving through [on Friday and Saturday night] the crowd was so large the people couldn't hardly come through on North Market for the kids walking across the street and loitering on the parking lot." The officer said that police had been trying to get the club to close because there had been "a bunch of major accidents there." In the past, SPD had closed off some of the entrances to the shopping center parking lot for further control.

In Officer Atkins' opinion, the owner of the club had not provided enough security *1285 for crowd control in the parking lot. Officer Atkins had in the past personally made some misdemeanor arrests in the shopping center parking lot; he said the arrestees were "speeding, spinning their cars around, fighting, basically disorderly." However, no weapons were involved in the arrests made by Officer Atkins.

Earlier on the evening of August 25, 2000, someone from the Taco Bell called police complaining of an unruly group of teens on the restaurant's lot. There also had been an auto accident on the shopping center parking lot that night. Officer Atkins arrived at the scene at about 11:30 p.m. in his marked police unit for "police visibility" "so they can hold down the trouble." There were three other police officers in the shopping center parking lot when Officer Atkins arrived, and the officer described the parking lot as "very well lit." In reference to a question about the physical features of the parking lot, the officer described it as "very safe" considering the lighting. Officer Atkins said that none of the teens on the lot were looking at the car wreck, they were "pretty much just walking around, hanging around the cars, playing loud music, going in and out of Taco Bell; just basically hanging on the parking lot." He described the lot as "packed" and said "we barely had room to turn."

After driving through the shopping center parking lot, Officer Atkins pulled into the Taco Bell parking lot. When he pulled in, Shamocus was walking through that parking lot, as was Marcus Green, another teenager. Apparently, earlier that evening, Green and 17-year-old Stevenson Strogen, II got into an argument at a high school football jamboree in Bossier Parish. After the game, Green drove to the shopping center parking lot, where he went to the Taco Bell restaurant. Strogen and an adult companion, Lee Jeter, followed Green to the restaurant. Officer Atkins drove his patrol car through the Taco Bell parking lot and had driven around the restaurant to the exit side of the small lot when he suddenly heard shooting. In his deposition, he described the chaotic scene this way:

And there was a group of kids, a bunch of kids on the lot. And all of a sudden shooting, they just started shooting. And kids started running everywhere. They was hiding under my car, around it, they was jumping over the hood. I couldn't tell where the shooting was coming from. So with me trying to find some cover and find out where the shooting, it was just so many kids, I couldn't tell where it was coming from at the time.
* * *
[F]irst we had tried to find out who the shooter was, but all the kids was running and we couldn't tell exactly who the shooter was until we talked to some witnesses.
But I do know the shooter did walk by. He passed by me, he passed by another police officer that was working the wreck, and committed — and did this shooting because I was right on the lot when he did it.

It was later determined that Strogen was the shooter. He evidently got his gun — a Hi-Point 9mm pistol — from Jeter's car and concealed the weapon under his clothing as he walked across the shopping center parking lot. Strogen stood in the shopping center parking lot and fired across the divider into the crowd standing on the Taco Bell parking lot.[1] Police found spent shell casings on both the shopping center parking lot and on the Taco Bell parking *1286 lot. Although Marcus was the intended victim, Shamocus was struck by one of the bullets and tragically killed.

The night of the shooting was evidently the last night that the Station One club was open. Strogen was later convicted of second degree murder.[2] In this civil litigation, Patton sued a number of defendants, including Linden.

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Bluebook (online)
908 So. 2d 1282, 2005 WL 1959516, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patton-v-strogen-lactapp-2005.