Publix Super Markets, Inc. v. Jeffery

650 So. 2d 122, 1995 WL 36118
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedFebruary 1, 1995
Docket93-2354
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 650 So. 2d 122 (Publix Super Markets, Inc. v. Jeffery) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Publix Super Markets, Inc. v. Jeffery, 650 So. 2d 122, 1995 WL 36118 (Fla. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

650 So.2d 122 (1995)

PUBLIX SUPER MARKETS, INC., Appellant,
v.
Timothy JEFFERY and Diana Jeffery, Appellees.

No. 93-2354.

District Court of Appeal of Florida, Third District.

February 1, 1995.

*123 Pyszka, Kessler, Massey, Weldon, Catri, Holton & Douberley and William M. Douberley, Miami, for appellant.

Leesfield, Leighton, Rubio & Hillencamp, Miami and Robert S. Glazier, Coconut Grove, for appellees.

Before SCHWARTZ, C.J., and HUBBART, and COPE, JJ.

HUBBART, Judge.

This is an appeal by the defendant Publix Super Markets, Inc. from a final judgment entered upon an adverse jury verdict in a premises liability action for negligent failure to protect against a criminal assault by a third party. The defendant contends that the trial court erred in denying its motion for directed verdict at trial based on our controlling decision in Federated Department Stores, Inc. v. Doe, 454 So.2d 10 (Fla. 3d DCA 1984). We entirely agree and reverse.

I

The relevant facts of this case are as follows. On April 30, 1991, Frances Kaye, an 87-year-old woman, was walking across a parking lot which adjoins the Publix Super Market in the Aventura Neighborhood Shopping Center in north Dade County, Florida, when she was attacked by a criminal assailant who snatched her purse. The plaintiff Timothy Jeffery was working nearby on the parking lot's sprinkler system; he heard Mrs. Kaye's cries for help and, along with a coworker, ran after the thief who fled into a waiting pickup truck which had tinted windows. The plaintiff Jeffery pounded on the window of the driver's side of the vehicle and was thereupon shot in the chest by an occupant of the vehicle and suffered substantial injuries.

The plaintiff Jeffery and his wife Diana brought a premises liability negligence action against (1) the defendant Taire Corporation, which owns the Aventura Neighborhood Shopping Center; (2) the defendants Plaza Realty and Kasler Realty and Investment Corporation, which operate this shopping center; and (3) the defendant Publix Super Markets, Inc. [Publix], which leases a store in the shopping center. The gravamen of this action was that the defendants breached a duty of due care owed to the plaintiff as the rescuer of a criminally attacked patron of the shopping center, in that the defendants failed to provide security guards in the parking lot to protect against criminal assaults by third parties. Evidence was adduced below indicating that the instant criminal attack was entirely foreseeable; in the four years prior to this incident there had been nineteen strong-arm robberies at the Aventura Neighborhood Shopping Center parking lot, twelve of which occurred in the parking lot adjoining Publix. Ned Kasler, the real estate broker who managed the shopping center, was apprised of some of these incidents, but concluded that the incidents were not frequent enough for the shopping center to hire security guards.

The case went to trial solely against the defendant Publix; the other three defendants settled with the plaintiffs prior to trial. The central defense raised by Publix at trial was that it owed no duty to the plaintiff Timothy Jeffery to hire security guards to protect shopping center patrons and their rescuers from criminal attacks in the parking lot where the subject incident took place, that this duty was owed exclusively by the owner-landlord and the manager of the shopping center because the attack occurred in a common area of the shopping center which was not leased to Publix. In support of this position, Publix pointed to a provision in its *124 lease with the Taire Corporation which states that the common areas of the shopping center, including the parking lot where this incident took place, were to be maintained by the Taire Corporation and that Publix was obligated to pay Taire for the costs of this maintenance.[1] Such maintenance includes, it is urged, the duty to provide security guards in the common areas when, as here, it is reasonably foreseeable that shopping center patrons and their rescuers may be attacked therein.

The plaintiffs countered that although Publix did not lease the subject parking lot and Taire Corporation was obligated to provide security guards in said lot, Publix nonetheless had a concurrent duty to do the same. In support of this position, the plaintiffs argued that (a) Publix controlled the parking lot where the instant attack took place; and (b) the subject lot adjoined the Publix store and was used by Publix business invitees.

At trial, Publix moved for a directed verdict based, inter alia, on the ground that, as a matter of law, it owed no duty to hire security guards in the parking lot where the plaintiff was injured. The trial court denied the motion; Publix appeals.

II

A

We conclude that Federated Department Stores, Inc. v. Doe, 454 So.2d 10 (Fla. 3d DCA 1984), directly controls the instant case. It establishes the legal proposition that where, as here, the owner of a commercial shopping center leases parts of the center to several commercial tenants, but retains the sole responsibility under the lease of maintaining the common areas [including the parking lot used by business invitees of the various tenants] — the obligation of keeping the parking lot safe for such invitees against criminal attacks by third parties is generally imposed on the owner and not the tenant. In the Federated case, this court concluded that the owner of a shopping center which exclusively maintained the shopping center parking lot under the lease was solely responsible for an otherwise reasonably foreseeable criminal attack by a third party in the lot upon a patron of the shopping center; the tenant, however, was not responsible for such an attack, even though the subject parking lot adjoined the tenant's business premises and the patron was otherwise a business invitee of the tenant. Accordingly, we upheld a judgment based on a jury verdict for the plaintiff patron against the shopping center owner, but reversed a similar judgment entered against the shopping center tenant. We stated:

"We do agree with and adopt the law and reasoning of the court in Morgan v. Bucks Associates, 428 F. Supp. 546 (E.D.Penn. 1977), regarding a lessee's liability for third party criminal attacks on invitees occurring in an area exclusively controlled by the lessor. The plaintiff in Morgan was an employee of a store located in a shopping center and was assaulted by a third party as she was walking to her car in the shopping center parking lot. The trial court granted the motion for directed verdict made by the plaintiff's employer, a lessee in the shopping center. The court denied the shopping center's motion for a new trial following an adverse jury verdict and stated that
`where the owner of real estate leases parts thereof to several tenants, but retains control of the common areas which are to be used by the business invitees of the various tenants, the obligation of keeping the common areas safe for such business invitees is imposed upon the landlord and not upon the tenants, in the absence of a contrary provision in the leases [citation omitted].'"

Federated, 454 So.2d at 12.

Moreover, we specifically rejected the argument that the shopping center tenant *125 had a duty to warn its business invitees about potential criminal attacks in the parking lot exclusively maintained by the shopping center owner. In particular, we rejected the applicability of Combs v. Aetna Insurance Co., 410 So.2d 1377 (Fla.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
650 So. 2d 122, 1995 WL 36118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/publix-super-markets-inc-v-jeffery-fladistctapp-1995.