Quartarone v. Kohl's Department Stores, Inc.

983 A.2d 949, 2009 WL 406788, 2009 Del. Super. LEXIS 24
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedFebruary 2, 2009
DocketCiv.A. 06C-01-366-JOH
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 983 A.2d 949 (Quartarone v. Kohl's Department Stores, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Quartarone v. Kohl's Department Stores, Inc., 983 A.2d 949, 2009 WL 406788, 2009 Del. Super. LEXIS 24 (Del. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION

HERLIHY, Judge.

Anthony Quartarone, individually and on behalf of his minor son Mario, has sued Kohl’s Department Store, Inc. for malicious prosecution and violation of his civil rights. The latter action involved a federal civil rights claim causing Kohl’s to remove the entire case to District Court. That court dismissed Quartarone’s civil rights claim and the matter returned to this Court for resolution of the malicious prosecution claim.

Kohl’s has moved for summary judgment on that claim. The claim arises out of an arrest and prosecution of Quartarone for shoplifting. He was ultimately found not guilty of that charge. There are six elements to a malicious prosecution claim. One, which is most important for the purposes of this opinion, is that Quartarone must prove that Kohl’s lacked probable cause to have him arrested for shoplifting.

The material facts surrounding the issue of the presence or absence of probable cause are not in dispute. However, what was unclear, under prior case law, was who in a malicious prosecution action makes the ultimate decision of probable cause, the jury or a judge. Because the material facts surrounding the issue of probable cause are not in dispute, this Court holds (1) it, not a jury, makes the ultimate determination of whether there was probable cause and (2) in this case, there was probable cause.

Because Quartarone will not be able to show one of the essential elements of malicious prosecution, want of probable cause, Kohl’s motion for summary judgment is GRANTED.

Factual Background

On March 9, 2002, Patrick Twisler was working for Kohl’s as a loss prevention supervisor. As of that date, he had been in loss prevention for about two years. On that same date, Michael Markson was working for Kohl’s loss prevention department. He had approximately five years experience in loss prevention between two department stores.

They were on duty when Quartarone, his nine year old son, Mario, and a family friend came into the Kohl’s store on Concord Pike. Quartarone and his son had already been to several other stores already looking for a specific pair of sneakers. They went into the shoe department. Twisler saw Quartarone wearing a jacket with “KISS 101.7 FM” on it. Twisler recalled a pervious occasion in which he had suspected a shoplifter who wore the same jacket and that Quartarone looked familiar. Twisler’s suspicions were aroused. *952 As a result, Twisler communicated with Markson to use the store’s camera system to surveil Quartarone. Twisler then went to the office where the monitors are located and, along with Markson, observed Quartarone, Mario and the family friend.

Quartarone and the friend looked through various boxes to find the desired shoes. There were no Kohl’s employees on duty to assist the Quartarone party. Eventually, Quartarone picked out a box with Nike sneakers in it, placed the shoes on his son’s feet and put the empty box back on the shelf. He put the shoes his son had been wearing in their cart and placed his jacket on top of them. He tried on several pairs of dress shoes as well.

After doing this, Quartarone removed the old sneakers from the cart. He went to or was in the children’s area of the store and left that area without doing anything with the old shoes. Twisler and Markson saw Quartarone with his son’s “old” sneakers in his hand. He walked around the shoe department, opening boxes, looking inside them but at that point did nothing with the “old” shoes. Eventually, he put them on top of a shoe box behind some other merchandise.

Quartarone, his son, and the friend went to another area of the store where they tried on some clothes. They returned to the shoe department where one of them took a Nike shoe box out of the cart and placed the box on a shelf. These shoes and box were not the same as the shoes on Mario’s feet or the box which had held them.

Quartarone, Mario and the friend went to one of the cashiers. Twisler called the cashier seeking to know if Quartarone had made any effort to purchase shoes. She said he had not. Quartarone paid for items giving Kohl’s a check for $171. The Nike shoes on Mario’s feet were not included in the total amount of the check. Nor was any box or price tag presented to the cashier for payment for the Nike sneakers.

After waiting for the friend to go to the bathroom, all three left the store where Markson stopped them just outside the main exit door. Markson testified all three went willingly to the loss prevention office.

A conversation ensued about the unpaid shoes. Quartarone said he simply forgot. At this point, he was cooperative. He explained the store was hot, they had been running around trying things on and had gotten sweaty. Quartarone explained, therefore, he just wanted to get out of the store. He offered to pay for the shoes. Twisler presented him with a “trespass admonition” form which would have acted as (1) an admission to shoplifting and (2) a bar to returning to any Kohl’s store. Quartarone refused to sign the form. Around this time, he said it was all a mistake, he worked for a radio station, he was a federal officer and was going to contact a lawyer. He wanted to return the merchandise and get his $171 check back. Kohl’s refused his offers.

At one point while Quartarone was in the office, Twisler stepped out of the room to call his supervisor to apprise him of what was happening. Then, or at another point, he stepped out of the office to call the State Police. When he returned to the office, Quartarone was being less cooperative. The conversation became tense. Twisler asked the friend to take Mario out of the office, and he left the office again to re-contact the State Police to insure troopers were on the way. The friend did not leave at first and helped calm Quartarone when it seemed the controversy between Twisler and Quartarone was intensifying.

After two State Police officers arrived, Twisler explained the “incident” to them. *953 They arrested Quartarone for shoplifting. Quartarone had been held about forty minutes.

His trial occurred in two parts on separate days. Twisler testified in the first part, Markson and Quartarone in the second. During Markson’s testimony the surveillance tape was presented to the trial judge. At the end of the State’s case, Quartarone moved for judgment of acquittal. The Court, in considering the motion, narrowed its focus to one of the various subsections applicable to shoplifting to 11 Del. C. § 840(a)(1):

(a) A person is guilty of shoplifting if, while in a mercantile establishment in which goods, wares or merchandise are displayed for sale, the person:
(1) Removes any such goods, wares or merchandise from the immediate use of display or from any other place within the establishment, with intent to appropriate the same to the use of the person so taking, of to deprive the owner of the use, the value or possession thereof without paying to the owner the value thereof.

Based on the testimony of Twisler, Markson and the video surveillance, the court below denied the motion using the proper standard: “...

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
983 A.2d 949, 2009 WL 406788, 2009 Del. Super. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quartarone-v-kohls-department-stores-inc-delsuperct-2009.