White v. Whiddon
This text of 670 So. 2d 131 (White v. Whiddon) 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.
Opinion
William L. WHITE, as personal representative of the estate of William S. White, a deceased minor, Appellant,
v.
Loren Glenn WHIDDON, as trustee of Callahan Body & Paint, Inc., a dissolved Florida corporation, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, First District.
*132 Gerald S. Bettman and Lisa Call, Jacksonville, for Appellant.
Robert E. O'Quinn, Jr. of Webb, O'Quinn & Murphree P.A., Jacksonville, for Appellee.
ON MOTION FOR REHEARING AND CLARIFICATION
PER CURIAM.
We grant appellee's motion for clarification, withdraw our opinion of October 5, 1995, and substitute the following revised opinion in its place. The motion for rehearing is denied.
In March, 1991, the plaintiff's 15-year-old son, who had been having serious emotional problems, was acting out in a violent, irrational, and dangerous manner, so his father and grandparents called the sheriff's department to transport the boy to the mental health facility where he had been treated previously. After the young man was handcuffed and placed in the back seat of a patrol car, the sheriff's deputy briefly walked back to the house to talk with the adults. Less than a minute after he did so, they heard a shot. The boy had slipped his handcuffed arms to the front of his body, reached through a two to four-and-a-half inch gap in the protective cage that separated the front and back seats of the patrol car, taken the deputy's shotgun from its unlocked position on the gun rack, and shot himself. He died shortly after.
Appellant sued the designer/manufacturer of the screen, the sheriff, and the appellee, in whose auto repair shop the screen was installed. Appellee is the only defendant involved in this appeal. Appellant alleged appellee was negligent in that it breached a duty to install the screen in a safe and suitable manner so it would function as intended, and that it failed to warn that the screen could not be installed in such a way that it would provide the intended protection.
The screen was installed at the appellee, Whiddon's, auto repair shop. The person who actually installed it was an off-duty sheriff's deputy, Hall. The sheriff's office paid Whiddon for the work, and for the striping and lettering also done at the repair shop, and Whiddon paid Hall, who installed the screens and also installed light bars on new patrol cars. Whiddon stated in deposition that he did not put the screens in, but paid Hall and then sent the invoice to the sheriff's office. He first said he had plenty of work and did not want to install the screens; Hall said if Whiddon would do the striping and lettering, he would install the screens and light bars, and that he needed the work. Whiddon also said he did not feel like it was his place to look over the work Hall performed.
Former sheriff Ellis said in deposition that the sheriff's office did not have the equipment to install the screens, and that Hall had worked for Whiddon on other cars in addition to the county cars. He said he never noticed the gaps before March 1991 and did not know a person could reach through; he trusted that the screens had been installed properly; they paid Whiddon for the job; and they were not informed the screens could not be installed properly. He also said the screens are intended to protect both the officer and the detainee, and that they had been called upon to transport the mentally ill in the past. He said given a mentally unstable person to be transported, it was likely that the sheriff's office would be called on as opposed to an ambulance.
John Bradley, a 22-year law enforcement veteran and former investigator, said in deposition that it was not uncommon for some *133 people to be able to slip their handcuffed hands to the front of their body, especially young, flexible people, and that the screen was not properly installed. In his opinion, if the screen had been installed properly, the shotgun would not have been accessible. He said most screens fit so that there is a gap of only about one-half inch so that an individual cannot reach around the screen.
In his affidavit, Bradley stated that it was reasonable and foreseeable for a person in law enforcement to be required to transport someone who requires immediate psychological assistance; that a secured detainee would want to obtain the weapon for many reasons; and it was reasonable for the officer to depend on the screen to prevent a detainee from reaching through. He also opined that the screen is for the welfare of the officer as well as the detainee. In his opinion, the screen was not installed properly, and did not serve its intended purpose as installed. Another expert, Gueterman, also said that it was foreseeable that some people would be able to slip their handcuffed hands to the front of their bodies, although he opined the screen is for the protection of the officer only. Gueterman also said if there is a gap large enough to fit an arm through, the screen would not serve its intended purpose.
In the motion for summary judgment, appellee relied on the following theories: (1) no duty because the screen is not intended to protect detainees from themselves and it was not foreseeable that the detainee would slip the handcuffs, reach around the screen, and obtain a weapon; (2) no proximate cause because the intervening events were not foreseeable, due to their highly unusual, extraordinary, bizarre nature; (3) the alleged defect was open and obvious when the screen was installed and the work accepted by the sheriff's department some six months before the incident occurred.
In granting final summary judgment for appellee, the court determined Whiddon had no duty and that there was no proximate cause. The court found that: "The installation of the cage was supervised by a representative of the Sheriff's Department, Johnny Hall, the work was done pursuant to the Sheriff's Department's instructions and the installation was approved and accepted by the Sheriff's Department."
Appellant contends the lower court erred in determining the installation was supervised by a representative of the sheriff's office, because Whiddon, not the sheriff's department, paid Hall for installing the cages, thus he was not acting as an employee of the sheriff's department. Further, appellant contends appellee's conduct created a broader foreseeable zone of risk and thus a duty existed.
Summary judgment is only appropriate when the movant has shown conclusively that no genuine issues of material fact remain; every inference is drawn in favor of the party against whom summary judgment is sought. See Washington v. Fleet Mortgage Corp., 631 So.2d 364 (Fla. 1st DCA 1994), citing Holl v. Talcott, 191 So.2d 40 (Fla.1966). "Particular caution should be employed when granting summary judgment in negligence actions." Lindsey v. Bill Arflin Bonding Agency, 645 So.2d 565 (Fla. 1st DCA 1994), citing Moore v. Morris, 475 So.2d 666 (Fla.1985). We reverse the summary judgment because we conclude that improper installation of the cage would create a broader foreseeable zone of risk, and that genuine issues of material fact remain with regard to the factual matters upon which the trial court based its decision.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
670 So. 2d 131, 1996 WL 117541, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-whiddon-fladistctapp-1996.