Witcher v. 1104 Madison St. Restaurant

2019 IL App (1st) 181641
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 7, 2019
Docket1-18-1641
StatusUnpublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2019 IL App (1st) 181641 (Witcher v. 1104 Madison St. Restaurant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Witcher v. 1104 Madison St. Restaurant, 2019 IL App (1st) 181641 (Ill. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

2019 IL App (1st) 181641 No. 1-18-1641

FIRST DIVISION October 7, 2019

NATALIE WITCHER, as Special Administrator ) Appeal from the Circuit Court of for the Estate of Toney Adewoye, ) Cook County ) Plaintiff-Appellant, ) ) v. ) No. 16 L 2919 ) 1104 MADISON ST. RESTAURANT d/b/a ) Plush Chicago, ) ) Honorable Patricia O’Brien Sheahan Defendant-Appellee. ) Judge Presiding

PRESIDING JUSTICE GRIFFIN delivered the judgment of the court with opinion. Justices Hyman and Pierce concurred in the judgment and opinion.

OPINION

¶1 Toney Adewoye was patronizing Plush, a restaurant and lounge in Chicago, when he was

stabbed in the neck and killed. The special administrator of Adewoye’s estate, plaintiff Natalie

Witcher, brought this case for wrongful death against defendant 1104 Madison St. Restaurant,

the company that operated Plush. Witcher contends that 1104 Madison failed to provide proper

security at the restaurant in order to prevent Adewoye’s death.

¶2 The trial court entered summary judgment in favor of 1104 Madison. The trial court

found that the murder was not reasonably foreseeable so that 1104 Madison could not be held to

have had a legal duty to prevent the murder. Witcher appeals, and we affirm.

¶3 BACKGROUND No. 1-18-1641

¶4 On October 12, 2011, a Wednesday, Toney Adewoye visited Plush restaurant and lounge

located at 1104 W. Madison Street in Chicago. Adewoye was at the establishment with someone

he referred to as his wife. When Adewoye was getting ready to leave the establishment, he began

to speak with a man who was unknown to Plush’s owner and the restaurant’s other patrons. The

encounter seemed cordial until, suddenly, the unknown man appeared to slap Adewoye’s face.

The witnesses did not see any weapon. The unknown man quickly left the restaurant and

Adewoye exited too. Witnesses found Adewoye outside of Plush soon afterwards and he was

bleeding heavily from his neck. The whole incident happened in a matter of seconds.

¶5 The unknown man entered a vehicle that was standing across the street from Plush and

quickly left. Plush’s owner called 911, and a doctor that was patronizing the restaurant attended

to Adewoye. Adewoye bled heavily from the neck and died from his injuries. The man who

stabbed Adewoye was never identified and never apprehended.

¶6 Plush had experienced some disturbances in the years preceding the stabbing. There had

been public complaints made about Plush by members of the community between 2009 and

2011. William Kleronomos, Plush’s owner, began to employ security on Friday and Saturday

nights. Kleronomos testified in a deposition that he employed security on weekends but not on

weeknights because of the increased volume of customers on weekends. He testified that

approximately 30 people were present on the night of Adewoye’s murder whereas about 80 to

100 people would be present on weekend nights.

¶7 In support of her theory of liability in this case, plaintiff produced a Chicago Police

Department Incident Check Report which documented the incidents at 1104 W. Madison St.

from January 2006 to October 2011. In the five and a half years preceding Adewoye’s murder,

there had been calls to the police to report 11 battery incidents, one assault, five thefts, and three

2 No. 1-18-1641

motor vehicle thefts that corresponded to the address where Plush was located. Of those 20

incidents that occurred at 1104 W. Madison in the five years before the murder, one was on a

Wednesday (the day of the week that the murder occurred), 13 were on other weeknights, and six

were on a Friday or Saturday.

¶8 Plaintiff filed this case on the basis that Plush is liable for Adewoye’s death because it

failed to provide adequate security to prevent his death. The parties conducted discovery,

including taking the depositions of Plush’s owner Kleronomos and another eyewitness, Jeffrey

Timms, both of whom were present at Plush on October 12, 2011 and witnessed the murder.

Plaintiff disclosed two expert witnesses, but the trial court found the expert witness disclosures

to be deficient. The trial court gave plaintiff leave to amend the expert witness disclosures, but

she never did so.

¶9 Defendant filed a motion for summary judgment arguing that it did not have a legal duty

to prevent Adewoye from being murdered in its establishment under the circumstances. The

motion for summary judgment was fully briefed and the trial court conducted a hearing on the

motion. The trial court’s ruling, memorialized in a bystander’s report agreed upon by the parties,

was that defendant is not liable because “there was no testimony or other evidence that the

altercation was even remotely foreseeable.” The trial court found that the reports of other

disturbances were insufficient to give rise to a duty on defendant’s part to protect Adewoye from

the assailant. The trial court also reiterated its finding that plaintiff’s expert disclosures were

deficient, but stated that even if the court did consider the experts’ affidavits, defendant would

still not have owed a duty of care to Adewoye in this case.

¶ 10 ANALYSIS

¶ 11 On appeal, plaintiff argues that the trial court erred when it entered summary judgment in

3 No. 1-18-1641

defendant’s favor. Summary judgment is appropriate when the pleadings, depositions,

admissions and affidavits, viewed in a light most favorable to the nonmovant, fail to establish

that a genuine issue of material fact exists, thereby entitling the moving party to judgment as a

matter of law. 735 ILCS 5/2-1005 (West 2012); Fox v. Seiden, 2016 IL App (1st) 141984, ¶ 12.

If disputes as to material facts exist or if reasonable minds may differ with respect to the

inferences drawn from the evidence, summary judgment may not be granted. Fox, 2016 IL App

(1st) 141984, ¶ 12. We review a trial court’s decision to grant summary judgment de novo.

Illinois Tool Works Inc. v. Travelers Casualty & Surety Co., 2015 IL App (1st) 132350, ¶ 8.

¶ 12 The issue in this case concerns a restaurant owner’s duty to protect its patrons from

criminal acts committed by third parties. As a general rule, there is no duty imposed on

landowners to protect others from criminal attacks by third persons on their property. Popp v.

Cash Station, Inc., 244 Ill. App. 3d 87, 92 (1992). However, the owner of a restaurant or bar

might have a duty to protect its patrons against criminal attacks on the property if circumstances

such as prior incidents give the owner knowledge of the danger facing the patrons. Cooke v.

Maxum Sports Bar & Grill, Ltd., 2018 IL App (2d) 170249, ¶ 55; Ignarski v. Norbut, 271 Ill.

App. 3d 522, 526 (1995). In determining whether such a duty exists in a given case, the question

is whether the criminal activity was reasonably foreseeable such that the business should be held

to have a duty to protect its patrons from such activity. Hills v. Bridgeview Little League Ass'n,

195 Ill. 2d 210, 243 (2000).

¶ 13 Illinois courts have looked to the Restatement of Torts for guidance in determining the

circumstances in which a business has a duty to protect its patrons from a third party’s criminal

acts. Id. at 243-44. The Restatement explains that business owners might have a duty to protect

customers when the owners have knowledge of the dangers posed to their patrons.

4 No. 1-18-1641

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