Price v. Family Dollar Stores of Alabama LLC

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Alabama
DecidedMay 3, 2021
Docket2:21-cv-00155
StatusUnknown

This text of Price v. Family Dollar Stores of Alabama LLC (Price v. Family Dollar Stores of Alabama LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Price v. Family Dollar Stores of Alabama LLC, (N.D. Ala. 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ALABAMA SOUTHERN DIVISION

FRANK J. PRICE; and LISA ) PRICE, ) )

Plaintiffs, )

) Case No.: 2:21-cv-155-AMM v. ) ) FAMILY DOLLAR STORES ) OF ALABAMA, LLC; and ) SHENITA G. TURNER, ) ) Defendants. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION

This case is before the court on Plaintiffs’ Motion To Remand, which includes a request for costs and fees. Doc. 4. For the reasons stated below, the motion to remand is GRANTED, and the request for costs and fees is DENIED. I. BACKGROUND In their complaint, which was filed in the Circuit Court of Jefferson County, Alabama, Plaintiffs Frank J. Price and Lisa Price (“the Prices”) allege that they were shot and wounded in the parking lot of a Family Dollar store in Bessemer. Doc. 1-1 at 5 ¶¶ 15-16. The Prices allege that the assailant was the boyfriend of a Family Dollar employee (Defendant Shenita G. Turner), that the Prices witnessed the assailant “engage in a verbal altercation” with Ms. Turner at the Family Dollar shortly before the shooting, and that the negligence and wantonness of Defendant Family Dollar Stores of Alabama, LLC (“Family Dollar”) and of Ms. Turner caused the Prices’ injuries. Id. at 5. The Prices allege, inter alia, that “based upon prior

violent acts, assaults and/or shootings” at the store, “it was foreseeable or should have been foreseeable” to both defendants that “this tragedy would likely occur.” Id. at 6 ¶ 23. The Prices and Ms. Turner are alleged to be domiciled in Alabama; Family

Dollar is a foreign company. Id. at 4. Family Dollar removed the case to this court on the basis of diversity jurisdiction, asserting that the citizenship of Ms. Turner could be ignored for jurisdictional purposes because she was “fraudulently joined in an attempt to defeat

diversity jurisdiction.” Doc. 1 at 9. Family Dollar asserted that Ms. Turner “owed no legal duty to the [Prices] and cannot be held liable for the intentional criminal acts of a third party.” Id. To support its contention that Ms. Turner did not owe a legal

duty to the Prices, Family Dollar asserted that “[i]t is well-settled under Alabama law that there is no duty on a premises owner” (let alone an employee, Family Dollar argues) “to protect another from the criminal acts of a third party absent special circumstances or a special relationship.” Id. at 7 (citing New Addition Club, Inc. v.

Vaughn, 903 So. 2d 68, 76 (Ala. 2004); Moye v. A.G. Gaston Motels, Inc., 499 So. 2d 1368, 1370 (Ala. 1986)) (emphasis omitted). The Prices filed a motion to remand, Doc. 4, asserting that under

Whataburger, Inc. v. Rockwell, 706 So. 2d 1220 (Ala. Civ. App. 1997), their allegations could state a claim against Ms. Turner. The Prices also asked for an award of costs and fees under 28 U.S.C. § 1447(c). Doc. 4 at 12.

Family Dollar opposed the motion and filed several exhibits, including what Family Dollar asserts is footage from security cameras at the store “show[ing] the relevant span of time between [the Prices’] arrival at the Family Dollar store through

the incident made the basis of this litigation.” Doc. 6-1 at 3 ¶ 8. “Based on the surveillance video footage,” Family Dollar asserts, the Prices “cannot candidly claim that [the Prices] and the assailant were ever inside the store at the same time, that he threatened [them] inside the store, or that he followed [them] out of the store.” Doc. 6

at 7; see also id. at 5 (asserting that the footage contradicts the “alleg[ations] by [the Prices] in their Complaint and Motion to Remand”). The Prices filed a reply brief attaching several exhibits, including affidavits by the Prices and by a police officer

who responded to the scene after the shooting. Doc. 10. II. LEGAL STANDARDS “In order for an action to be properly removed from a state court, the district court must have been able to exercise original jurisdiction over the original claims.”

Cabalceta v. Standard Fruit Co., 883 F.2d 1553, 1556 (11th Cir. 1989). “An additional caveat in diversity actions is that no properly joined and served defendant can be a citizen of the State in which such action is brought.” Id. (internal quotation

marks omitted). To remove a suit that involves a resident defendant, “the removing party has the burden of proving that either: (1) there is no possibility the plaintiff can establish

a cause of action against the resident defendant; or (2) the plaintiff has fraudulently pled jurisdictional facts to bring the resident defendant into state court.” Crowe v. Coleman, 113 F.3d 1536, 1538 (11th Cir. 1997) (citing Cabalceta, 883 F.2d at 1561).

Family Dollar has not asserted that the Prices fraudulently pleaded jurisdictional facts, so the question is generally “whether the facts alleged in [the] [p]laintiffs’ complaint state even an arguable cause of action under [state] law.” Id. at 1539 (emphasis in original); Cabalceta, 883 F.2d at 1562 (holding that when a removing

defendant attempts to establish that joinder is fraudulent because the plaintiffs have “no possible cause of action” against the nondiverse defendant, the court analyzes the plaintiffs’ potential claim “under the allegations of the [p]laintiffs’ pleadings

at the time of removal”) (emphasis in original). “[D]oubtful issues of law due to [an] absence of definite pronouncements by the state supreme court” are resolved in favor of remand. Crowe, 113 F.3d at 1540 (internal quotation marks omitted). If a defendant presents evidence contesting the substantive allegations in the

complaint, the court’s “authority to look into the ultimate merit of the plaintiff’s claims [is] limited to checking for obviously fraudulent or frivolous claims” against the nondiverse defendant. Id. at 1542. “[T]he plaintiff need not show that he could

survive in the district court a motion for summary judgment filed by th[e] in-state defendant, . . . there need only be a reasonable basis for predicting that the state law might impose liability on the facts involved.” Id. at 1541-42 (emphasis in original)

(internal quotation marks omitted). In performing this analysis, “extraordinary care” must be used “to avoid jumbling up motions for remand and motions for summary judgment,” because “the jurisdictional inquiry must not subsume substantive

determination.” Id. at 1538, 1542 (internal quotation marks omitted). Ordinarily, the rule is that the facts alleged by the plaintiff control whether a potential cause of action exists. Id. at 1539; Cabalceta, 883 F.2d at 1562. Put differently, the removing defendant may not through its own evidence “[m]erely . . .

traverse the allegations upon which the liability of the resident defendant is rested.” Chesapeake & O. R. Co. v. Cockrell, 232 U.S. 146, 150, 152 (1914). But there is an exception under Legg v. Wyeth, 428 F.3d 1317 (11th Cir. 2005), to that rule. In Legg,

the plaintiffs brought “one of thousands of cases brought by plaintiffs across the country who claim[ed] they suffer[ed] from valvular heart disease because they took one of Wyeth’s diet drugs.” Id. at 1320. The Eleventh Circuit recognized “[a] common strategy employed by the plaintiffs in th[o]se cases . . . to name local

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Related

Crowe v. Coleman
113 F.3d 1536 (Eleventh Circuit, 1997)
Carl Legg v. Wyeth
428 F.3d 1317 (Eleventh Circuit, 2005)
Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co. v. Cockrell
232 U.S. 146 (Supreme Court, 1914)
Martin v. Franklin Capital Corp.
546 U.S. 132 (Supreme Court, 2005)
Taylor v. Smith
892 So. 2d 887 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 2004)
New Addition Club, Inc. v. Vaughn
903 So. 2d 68 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 2004)
Whataburger, Inc. v. Rockwell
706 So. 2d 1220 (Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama, 1997)
Moye v. A.G. Gaston Motels, Inc.
499 So. 2d 1368 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1986)
Southeastern Greyhound Lines v. Callahan
13 So. 2d 660 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1943)
Cabalceta v. Standard Fruit Co.
883 F.2d 1553 (Eleventh Circuit, 1989)

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Price v. Family Dollar Stores of Alabama LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/price-v-family-dollar-stores-of-alabama-llc-alnd-2021.