Rochelle Ameer v. Lyft, Inc., and Christopher D. Morgan, and Ajane Barnes

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 4, 2025
DocketED112455
StatusPublished

This text of Rochelle Ameer v. Lyft, Inc., and Christopher D. Morgan, and Ajane Barnes (Rochelle Ameer v. Lyft, Inc., and Christopher D. Morgan, and Ajane Barnes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rochelle Ameer v. Lyft, Inc., and Christopher D. Morgan, and Ajane Barnes, (Mo. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

In the Missouri Court of Appeals Eastern District DIVISION FOUR

ROCHELLE AMEER, ) No. ED112455 ) Appellant, ) ) vs. ) Appeal from the Circuit Court ) of the City of St. Louis LYFT, INC., ) 2222-CC00417 ) Respondent, ) ) and ) ) Honorable Joseph P. Whyte CHRISTOPHER D. MORGAN, and ) AJANE BARNES, ) ) Defendants. ) Filed: March 4, 2025

Rochelle Ameer (“Plaintiff”) appeals the judgment dismissing her product liability and

negligence claims against Lyft, Inc. (“Defendant Lyft” or “Lyft”) for failure to state a claim upon

which relief can be granted.1 Taking as true the allegations in Plaintiff’s petition2 and viewing

1 Plaintiff filed product liability claims and negligence claims against Defendant Lyft (Counts I-V). Additionally, Plaintiff filed assault and battery claims against underlying defendant Christopher D. Morgan (“Morgan”) (Counts VI-VII), and a civil conspiracy claim against Morgan and underlying defendant Ajane Barnes (Count VIII). The trial court subsequently entered a judgment dismissing Counts I-V against Defendant Lyft, certifying the judgment for appeal as to all claims against Lyft pursuant to Missouri Supreme Court Rule 74.01(b) (2024), and finding there was no just reason for delay of an appeal. 2 All references to Plaintiff’s petition are to her first amended petition. all reasonable inferences therefrom in her favor, 3 Plaintiff’s claims against Defendant Lyft arose

out of a September 2020 incident where her son was driving for Lyft and was killed during a

carjacking after he responded to a ride fraudulently and anonymously requested through Lyft’s

mobile ridesharing application (“Lyft App” or “App”).

Plaintiff’s petition asserts three product liability claims against Defendant Lyft for strict

liability defective design (Count I), negligent design (Count II), and negligent failure to warn

(Count III). Plaintiff’s petition also asserts two negligence claims against Lyft for negligent

training (Count IV) and general negligence (Count V).

For the reasons discussed in detail below, we reverse the trial court’s judgment

dismissing Plaintiff’s product liability claims in Counts I-III and Plaintiff’s negligence claims in

Counts IV-V for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted, and we remand for

further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I. BACKGROUND

Because this appeal involves a dismissal by the trial court for failure to state a claim upon

which relief may be granted, we begin by setting out the general allegations of Plaintiff’s

petition.

Plaintiff is the natural mother of Andrew D. Ameer (“Son”). Plaintiff’s Son was killed

during a carjacking while he was driving for Defendant Lyft in the City of St. Louis.

Defendant Lyft is a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business in

California. Since 2012, Lyft has operated a transportation service to the public for profit by: (1)

developing the Lyft App, which the petition refers to as a “mobile application” or “ridesharing

3 See Amalaco, LLC v. Butero, 593 S.W.3d 647, 650-51 (Mo. App. E.D. 2019) (in reviewing a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief may be granted, we assume all of the plaintiff’s allegations in the petition are true and view all reasonable inferences therefrom in favor of the plaintiff).

2 platform[;]” and (2) placing the App into the stream of commerce. The Lyft App permits Lyft’s

drivers to connect with unknown individuals who are requesting automobile rides, and Lyft

requires its drivers to accept all ride requests when logged into its App or be subject to potential

discipline. Additionally, an individual requesting a ride through the Lyft App is provided, via

the App, information about the driver, including his or her vehicle type. Lyft operates its App in

every state in the United States, including Missouri.

Plaintiff’s petition alleges that on the evening of September 28, 2020, underlying

defendants Christopher D. Morgan (“Morgan”) and Ajane Barnes (“Barnes”), who were at the

time minors and supposed to be ineligible to order rides through the Lyft App, met and conspired

together to use the App to carjack a Lyft driver. In order to hide their identity, Morgan and

Barnes purportedly set up an account in the Lyft App utilizing a false name, a false email

address, and an anonymous form of payment. Morgan and Barnes then used their account in the

App to fraudulently and anonymously request a ride from a neighborhood in the City of St. Louis

to a destination miles away.

The Lyft App then directed the ride request to Plaintiff’s Son, who accepted the request

and arrived at the pick-up location at approximately 11:00 p.m. Moments later, Morgan and

another minor, V.W., announced a robbery and pulled guns on Son, attempting to force him to

get out of his car. Morgan subsequently shot and killed Son.

Plaintiff then filed the petition at issue in the instant case, alleging, inter alia, three

product liability claims and two negligence claims against Defendant Lyft. See footnote 1 of this

opinion. Plaintiff’s petition generally alleges that Defendant Lyft “failed to employ basic

identity[]verification, age verification, GPS coordinate verification technology, and data pattern

analysis to screen out [fraudulent passengers such as Plaintiff’s Son’s perpetrators],” and thereby

3 allowed Son’s perpetrators to request a ride “even though [a] Lyft account was not in their [real]

names, [the ride] had not been ordered from their location, and [they were] using an unverified

form of payment.”

The petition also generally alleges that the assault and killing of Plaintiff’s Son were

foreseeable to Defendant Lyft and were the result of Lyft’s “failure to use its knowledge,

superior resources, and technological capabilities to protect [Son]” because: (1) the carjacking

scheme perpetrated upon Son was previously carried out multiple times by his perpetrators; and

(2) Lyft knew or should have known that multiple rideshare drivers had been assaulted, attacked,

and carjacked as a result of the same fraudulent scheme.

Counts I-III of Plaintiff’s petition specifically assert three product liability claims against

Defendant Lyft (for strict liability defective design, negligent design, and negligent failure to

warn, respectively) based on alleged defects in the Lyft App. Counts IV-V of the petition assert

two negligence claims against Defendant Lyft (for negligent training and general negligence,

respectively) based on: (1) Lyft’s alleged failure to exercise reasonable care to train Plaintiff’s

Son to adequately perform his job as a Lyft driver with reasonable safety; and (2) Lyft’s alleged

failure to exercise reasonable care to prevent Plaintiff’s Son from being assaulted, killed, or

otherwise harmed by Lyft App users. 4

After Plaintiff filed her petition, Defendant Lyft filed a motion to dismiss Counts I-V for

failure to state a claim upon which relief may be granted. Lyft’s motion asserts Plaintiff’s

product liability claims in Counts I-III, which are all based on alleged defects in the Lyft App,

should be dismissed because the factual allegations in Plaintiff’s petition fail to establish the Lyft

App is a product, which is a prerequisite for any product liability claim. See Sections II.B.2.a.-c.

4 To avoid unnecessary repetition, additional allegations in Plaintiff’s petition with respect to Counts I-V will be set forth in relevant part in Sections II.B. and II.C. of this opinion.

4 of this opinion.

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Rochelle Ameer v. Lyft, Inc., and Christopher D. Morgan, and Ajane Barnes, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rochelle-ameer-v-lyft-inc-and-christopher-d-morgan-and-ajane-barnes-moctapp-2025.