Taylor v. Dixon

456 N.E.2d 558, 8 Ohio App. 3d 161, 8 Ohio B. 219, 1982 Ohio App. LEXIS 11235
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 30, 1982
Docket82AP-188
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 456 N.E.2d 558 (Taylor v. Dixon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor v. Dixon, 456 N.E.2d 558, 8 Ohio App. 3d 161, 8 Ohio B. 219, 1982 Ohio App. LEXIS 11235 (Ohio Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

Moyer, J.

This matter is before us on plaintiffs-appellants’ appeal from a judgment of the Court of Common Pleas of Franklin County sustaining a motion for summary judgment filed by defendant-appellee Lawson Milk Company, Inc.

Plaintiff Gerald F. Taylor was injured when he walked into a Lawson’s store on Parsons Avenue during a robbery and was shot by defendant-appellee Robert A. Dixon (“Dixon”). Plaintiff and his wife, Deloris, sued the Lawson Milk Company (“defendant”) and Dixon claiming defendant negligently failed to maintain a safe premises for its business invitees by failing to warn plaintiff that a robbery was in progress and claiming that defendant’s negligence was the proximate cause of plaintiff’s injuries. Defendant argued in support of its motion for summary judgment that it had no duty to warn plaintiff of a robbery in progress, that no duty owed to plaintiff had been breached by defendant, and that any breach of duty by defendant was not the proximate cause of plaintiff’s injuries.

The trial court sustained defendant’s motion for summary judgment, finding that there were no genuine issues of material fact and that defendant did not owe a duty to plaintiffs under the facts presented. The trial court granted a default judgment on the issue of liability against defendant Dixon who had been convicted of the robbery on a guilty plea. The judgment against Dixon is not an issue in this appeal.

Plaintiffs amended their complaint once by right and requested leave to amend once before the trial court entered judgment against them. After the trial court sustained defendant’s motion for summary judgment, plaintiffs filed several motions asking for leave to amend *162 their complaint, for the trial court to reconsider its decision, for clarification of the judgment, for a continuance, and for the trial court to take judicial notice of several cases cited by the parties in their briefs and memoranda. The trial court agreed to take judicial notice of the cases but overruled plaintiffs’ other motions.

Plaintiffs assert the following five assignments of error in support of their appeal:

1. “The trial court committed error in sustaining appellee’s motion for summary judgment and thus taking from the appellants their day in court and presentation of their case to an impartial trier of fact.”

2. “The trial court committed re-versable [sic] error in failing to consider the facts alleged in appellants’ amended complaint filed on January 8, 1982, the court refusing to consider the amended complaint based on its decision granting appellee summary judgment.”

3. ‘ ‘The trial court erred in failing to reconsider its decision granting appellee a motion for summary judgment based on the memorandum and affidavits filed by appellants.”

4. “The trial court erred in failing to allow appellants’ amended complaint filed subsequent to the judgment entry of February 10, 1982.”

5. “The trial court committed prejudicial error in failing to rule on appellants’ motion to amend the complaint filed on February 24, 1982 prior to losing jurisdiction to the court of appeals on March 8, 1982.”

Under Civ. R. 56(C), a trial court may enter a summary judgment if the pleadings and supporting documents “* * * show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law” and that reasonable minds can only conclude that the party filing the motion for summary judgment is entitled to a judgment. The plaintiffs argue that, since they denied each of defendant’s statements, each material fact was at issue and summary judgment was, therefore, improperly entered. Yet, even construing all of the facts most strongly against defendant, summary judgment for defendant was properly entered if the applicable law does not support plaintiffs’ cause of action.

In order to recover on a negligence claim, plaintiffs must demonstrate that defendant owed them a duty, that the duty was breached, and that defendant’s breach was the proximate cause of plaintiff’s injuries. Bennison v. Stillpass Transit Co. (1966), 5 Ohio St. 2d 122 [34 O.O.2d 254], paragraph one of the syllabus. Defendant has argued that plaintiffs have not met their burden of proving even one of the three elements. Because the trial court’s judgment was based on the first of the three elements and plaintiffs must prove all three elements in order to recover, we will focus on the first and most difficult element — whether defendant owed a duty to plaintiffs.

Plaintiffs and defendant have cited several cases to support their arguments that a duty either does or does not exist under the facts of this case. Four of the cases cited by the parties are particularly instructive on the question of whether defendant owed plaintiffs a duty. The first is Howard v. Rogers (1969), 19 Ohio St. 2d 42 [48 O.O.2d 52], In Howard, plaintiff was injured when a fight broke out at a teenage dance sponsored by defendants. The Ohio Supreme Court held that, although the occupier of premises may be liable to a business invitee for harm caused by third persons, the occupier is not liable for damages which it “does not, and could not in the exercise of ordinary care, know of.” Howard, supra, at 47. The Hamilton County Court of Appeals, in Townsley v. Cincinnati Gardens, Inc. (1974), 39 Ohio App. 2d 5 [68 O.O.2d 72], also held that an occupier of premises is not liable to a business invitee for dangers which the occupier did not know *163 of and could not reasonably have anticipated.

In the case at bar, plaintiffs argue that since defendant’s Parsons Avenue store had been robbed seven times in four years, defendant should have known that the store was reasonably likely to be robbed again, and that defendant should have taken such precautionary measures as providing an unobstructed view of the inside of the store through the front windows, constructing electronic devices such as horns, neon lights or other noise makers to advise potential patrons to stay away from the premises when a robbery was in progress and other preventive measures.

Defendant argues that, even if it could have anticipated an eighth robbery, since no one was injured in the previous robberies, it had no reason to foresee that the eighth robber might shoot a customer without provocation. Defendant relies upon Howard, supra, and Townsley, supra, to support its argument that it has no duty to protect business invitees such as plaintiff from the unforeseeable danger of being shot by a robber upon walking into defendant’s store.

Defendant’s argument is further supported by the cases of Emm v. Sheskey (Feb. 14 1980), Franklin App. No. 79AP-632, unreported, and Ross v. Nutt (1964), 177 Ohio St. 113 [29 O.O.2d 313]. Although these two cases were concerned more with the element of proximate cause, in neither case was a duty imposed upon the defendant which would have required the defendant to exercise the power of double foreseeability.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
456 N.E.2d 558, 8 Ohio App. 3d 161, 8 Ohio B. 219, 1982 Ohio App. LEXIS 11235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-dixon-ohioctapp-1982.