Tressa Sherrod v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedNovember 23, 2022
Docket21-3428
StatusUnpublished

This text of Tressa Sherrod v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. (Tressa Sherrod v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tressa Sherrod v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., (6th Cir. 2022).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 22a0477n.06

No. 21-3428

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

FILED Nov 23, 2022 TRESSA SHERROD; JOHN CRAWFORD, JR.; ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk JHC, IV and JC, Minors, John Crawford Jr. as ) ) guardian and next friend of JCH, IV and JC, ) Plaintiffs-Appellants, ON APPEAL FROM THE ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT ) v. COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN ) DISTRICT OF OHIO ) WAL-MART STORES, INC; WAL-MART ) STORES EAST, LP; WAL-MART STORE #2124, OPINION ) Defendants-Appellees. ) )

Before: BATCHELDER, WHITE, and BUSH, Circuit Judges.

WHITE, J., delivered the opinion of the court in which BUSH, J., joined. BATCHELDER, J. (pp. 14–21), delivered a separate dissenting opinion.

HELENE N. WHITE, Circuit Judge. In this diversity case, Plaintiffs-Appellants

(Sherrod) appeal the dismissal of their wrongful-death claim at summary judgment based on an

Ohio statute that restricts wrongful-death claims against property owners. Because a genuine

dispute remains regarding whether Sherrod has satisfied the conditions for liability under the

statute—whether an alleged failure by Defendants-Appellees (Walmart) to prevent John H.

Crawford, III, from carrying a replica assault rifle through a Walmart store provoked a police

officer responding to an active-shooter call to shoot and kill Crawford—we REVERSE and

REMAND. Case No. 21-3428, Sherrod v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.

I.

A.

On August 5, 2014, Crawford was a customer in Walmart’s Beavercreek, Ohio store. He

entered the sporting goods department, walked down an aisle where unsecured pellet guns were

displayed, and picked up a Crosman MK-177 pellet gun that was unboxed.1 The MK-177 is a

replica of an AR-15 assault rifle.

Crawford then headed to the pet department with the MK-177. Corey Brooks, a paint-

department employee working near the sporting goods department, saw Crawford walk by with

the MK-177. Brooks called a supervisor, Michaela Menz, to report that Crawford was walking

around with “what appeared to be a gun,” unboxed and without an orange tip to indicate that it

was not real, “so somebody might get freaked out.”2 R. 219 PID 13451–53; R. 226-1 PID 15834.

Menz contacted a manager, Denise Wolford, who went looking for Crawford together with another

manager, Jessica Thomas. Wolford and Thomas went to the sporting goods department and, after

not finding Crawford there, casually walked to the grocery department.

Around the same time, Ronald Ritchie, another customer, called 911 after seeing Crawford

with the MK-177. Ritchie reported that Crawford was carrying a rifle, waving it around, and

pointing it at customers, including two children. The 911 dispatcher reported to responding police

that Crawford had loaded the gun.3

1 Video footage shows an individual unpackaging the pellet gun earlier that day, two individuals handling the gun before Crawford did, and additional individuals who appear to handle the same gun in the same aisle two days earlier. 2 In at least one instance, an unsecured pellet gun in a Walmart store had caused consternation. Two months earlier, a customer emailed Walmart to alert it to the fact that two young boys had loaded a pellet gun and pointed it in his direction. The customer asked Walmart to secure pellet guns just like firearms, and the stores in his area seem to have complied. 3 None of what Ritchie told the dispatcher or what the dispatcher told police was correct.

-2- Case No. 21-3428, Sherrod v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.

A few minutes later, two Beavercreek police officers, Sean Williams and David Darkow,

arrived at the store. Darkow instructed the Walmart greeter to seek cover, and the two officers

went in search of Crawford. Darkow and Williams “believed that [they] were headed into an active

threat, a potential active shooter situation” because they “believed that [Crawford] was loading an

assault rifle, pointing it at people and had every intention of shooting up Walmart.” R. 134 PID

2991; R. 121 PID 2470–71. Once at the pet department, they found Crawford alone in an aisle,

holding what they believed to be a “genuine” AR-15 .223-caliber assault rifle. R. 121 PID 2439;

R. 134 PID 2957, 2992. Darkow commanded Crawford to drop the gun and get on the ground.

Darkow testified that Crawford then made a motion to duck behind the endcap of the aisle

or dart away. Williams, on the other hand, testified that Crawford was about to point the gun at

them and could have quickly shot them. One-and-a-half seconds after Darkow issued his

command, Williams shot Crawford. Williams struck Crawford with a second bullet 320

milliseconds later. Crawford died at the hospital shortly after.

Williams testified that he pulled the trigger based on his belief that Crawford was about to

point what appeared to be an assault weapon in his direction. Darkow and Williams testified that

if Crawford had been holding a boxed pellet gun or a Walmart employee had been assisting him

with it, he would not have been shot.

Had it been boxed, the MK-177 would have carried the following warning: “DO NOT

BRANDISH OR DISPLAY THIS AIRGUN IN PUBLIC—IT MAY CONFUSE PEOPLE AND

MAY BE A CRIME. POLICE AND OTHERS MAY THINK IT IS A FIREARM.” R. 186-3 PID

12346. Walmart knew of this warning and that the MK-177 looked like an AR-15 .223-caliber

assault rifle. But unlike its policies concerning firearms, Walmart did not require pellet guns to be

displayed in a secure manner or to be handled only when assisted by an employee; nor did it train

-3- Case No. 21-3428, Sherrod v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.

employees in their sale or display.4 Walmart considered the MK-177 to be “no different than any

other product . . . in sporting goods.” R. 260 PID 18702.

B.

On December 16, 2014, Sherrod filed this action against Williams, Darkow, the

Beavercreek Police Chief, the City of Beavercreek, and Walmart. The claims against the non-

Walmart defendants were resolved. Sherrod alleged six negligence-based claims—both primary

(negligence and premises liability) and derivative (survivorship and loss of consortium)—and a

wrongful-death claim against Walmart. Walmart moved for summary judgment on the primary

negligence-based claims and the wrongful-death claim.

The district court denied the motion as to the negligence-based claims but granted it as to

the wrongful-death claim, concluding that because Sherrod failed to show that Crawford’s death

“was provoked by [Walmart’s] act or omission,” the latter claim fails under Ohio law. R. 273 PID

20014–15, 20018–19 (quoting Monnin v. Fifth Third Bank of Miami Valley, N.A., 658 N.E.2d

1140, 1150 (Ohio Ct. App. 1995)). The district court held that although “Walmart’s alleged

negligence may have created the situation that led to Crawford’s death, Wal-Mart’s alleged

‘provocation’ is simply too attenuated to support a wrongful death claim.” R. 273 PID 20018.

Sherrod moved for reconsideration—which the district court denied—and, alternatively, to

enter final judgment on the wrongful-death claim pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure

54(b). The district court entered final judgment to allow immediate appeal on the wrongful-death

claim. Sherrod timely appealed.

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