Cynthia B. Adams v. Anthony S. Hughes, Jr. , 191 So. 3d 1236 ( 2016 )


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  •                     IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI
    NO. 2015-IA-00167-SCT
    CYNTHIA B. ADAMS
    v.
    ANTHONY S. HUGHES, JR.
    DATE OF JUDGMENT:                          01/12/2015
    TRIAL JUDGE:                               HON. TOMIE T. GREEN
    COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED:                 HINDS COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT:                   JAMES DENNIS BOONE
    EDWARD J. CURRIE, JR.
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE:                    MARK ANTHONY LAMBERT
    JOHN CURTIS HALL, II
    NATURE OF THE CASE:                        CIVIL - PERSONAL INJURY
    DISPOSITION:                               REVERSED AND RENDERED - 05/19/2016
    MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
    MANDATE ISSUED:
    BEFORE DICKINSON, P.J., COLEMAN AND BEAM, JJ.
    BEAM, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:
    ¶1.    This is an interlocutory appeal from the Hinds County Circuit Court involving a
    premises-liability case. Cynthia Adams, one of the defendants in the case, filed a motion for
    summary judgment, which the trial court denied. Adams thereafter petitioned this Court for
    interlocutory appeal. A panel of this Court issued an order granting the petition and staying
    the trial court proceedings. See Adams v. Hughes, No. 2015-M-00167-SCT (Miss. March
    5, 2015). Finding that Adams was entitled to summary judgment as a matter of law, we
    reverse the trial court’s denial of summary judgment and render judgment in favor of Adams.
    BACKGROUND
    ¶2.    Plaintiff Anthony Hughes brought a negligence claim against multiple parties: BKB,
    LLC d/b/a the Electric Cowboy;1 Jonathan Self, manager of the Electric Cowboy (hereinafter
    Electric Cowboy); and Adams, the owner of the property on which Electric Cowboy operates.
    Hughes alleges in his complaint that he was “attacked and assaulted by a third party
    assailant” at the Electric Cowboy on July 15, 2011.2 Hughes claims that all the defendants
    “had either actual or constructive knowledge of the third party’s violent nature or actual or
    constructive knowledge that an atmosphere of violence existed on the premises of the
    Electric Cowboy.”
    ¶3.    At the time in question, Adams leased the premises to the Electric Cowboy pursuant
    to a written lease agreement. Following Adams’s deposition during discovery, Adams filed
    a motion for summary judgment, arguing the following: Adams was an absentee landlord,
    who did not physically occupy, possess, or exercise control over the Electric Cowboy and/or
    the leased premises prior to or at the time of the incident in question; Adams did not frequent
    or visit the Electric Cowboy; Adams had no control or involvement in the operations or
    management of the Electric Cowboy; she was never employed by the Electric Cowboy; she
    did not supervise the Electric Cowboy, and she did not have the right to supervise the Electric
    Cowboy.
    1
    A night-club establishment located in Jackson, Mississippi.
    2
    According to an incident/investigation report attached as an exhibit in Adams’s
    motion for summary judgment, the incident occurred in the Electric Cowboy’s parking lot,
    when Hughes and a friend were walking to their car. Hughes saw an individual whom he
    knew, and Hughes told the individual, “there would not be a fight tonight.” When Hughes
    turned to walk away, the individual pushed Hughes, then picked up Hughes and “slammed”
    him onto the ground, dislocating Hughes’s elbow.
    2
    ¶4.    Hughes responded to Adams’s summary judgment motion, arguing that Adams’s
    contractual involvement with the Electric Cowboy, under the terms of the lease agreement,
    far exceeded the scope of an absentee landlord and essentially made her a joint venturer with
    the Electric Cowboy. Hughes based his argument primarily on a clause contained in
    paragraph 38 of the written lease agreement. This clause gives Adams the right to receive
    additional rent (above the base rent) based on six percent of the Electric Cowboy’s gross
    sales and the right to inspect Electric Cowboy’s books and records in order to determine
    whether additional rent might be applicable. Hughes argued that, based on the percentage
    rent clause, Adams is more like a joint venturer than an absentee landlord, and she thereby
    contractually possessed an element of control over the premises of the Electric Cowboy.
    ¶5.    The trial court denied Adams’s summary judgment motion, summarily finding that
    genuine issues of material fact remained. Adams petitioned for interlocutory appeal, which
    this Court granted.
    ANALYSIS
    Whether the trial court erred in denying Adams’s motion for summary
    judgment.
    ¶6.    A trial court’s grant or denial of summary judgment is reviewed de novo. Monsanto
    Co. v. Hall, 
    912 So. 2d 134
    , 136 (Miss. 2005). Summary judgment is proper if “the
    pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories and admissions on file, together with the
    affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the
    moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Miss. R. Civ. P. 56(c). “If any
    triable facts exist, the lower court’s grant of a summary judgment will be reversed; otherwise
    3
    the decision will be affirmed.” Miller v. Meeks, 
    762 So. 2d 302
    , 304 (Miss. 2000). The
    evidence must be viewed in the light most favorable to the party opposing the motion. Davis
    v. Hoss, 
    869 So. 2d 397
    , 401 (Miss. 2004). Only when the moving party has met its burden
    by demonstrating that no genuine issues of material fact exist should summary judgment be
    granted. Tucker v. Hinds County, 
    558 So. 2d 869
    , 872 (Miss. 1990). “[W]here the party
    opposing the motion for summary judgment on a claim or defense upon which it bears the
    burden of proof at trial, and the moving party can show a complete failure of proof on an
    essential element of the claim or defense, other issues become immaterial and the moving
    party is entitled to summary judgment as a matter of law.” Crain v. Cleveland Lodge 1532,
    Order of Moose, Inc., 
    641 So. 2d 1186
    , 1188 (Miss. 1994).
    ¶7.    Generally, Mississippi law requires three determinations in premises-liability cases:
    (1) legal status of the injured person, (2) relevant duty of care, and (3) defendant’s
    compliance with that duty. Massey v. Tingle, 
    867 So. 2d 235
    , 239 (Miss. 2004). There is
    no dispute that Hughes was an invitee. On the relevant duty of care, Mississippi’s premises-
    liability caselaw dealing with third-party assault allegations applies. Kroger Co. v. Knox, 
    98 So. 3d 441
    , 443 (Miss. 2012), provides the following:
    The law of torts is well understood. To recover on a negligence claim,
    a plaintiff must show that the defendant breached a particular duty owed to the
    plaintiff, and that the breach of duty proximately caused damages. And while
    it is true that those in control of real property have a duty, if reasonably
    possible, to remedy most dangerous conditions on their property and to warn
    of those they cannot eliminate, that duty presupposes the defendant knows, or
    should know, of the dangerous condition.
    Where the alleged dangerous condition is the threat of an assault, the
    requisite cause to anticipate the assault may arise from (1) actual or
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    constructive knowledge of the assailant’s violent nature, or (2) actual or
    constructive knowledge that an atmosphere of violence exists on the premises.
    ¶8.    Here, there is nothing in the record from which to analyze whether Adams had actual
    or constructive knowledge of (1) the assailant’s violent nature; or (2) whether an atmosphere
    of violence exists on the premises of the Electric Cowboy. Nevertheless, the issue presented
    to the trial court in Adams’s summary judgment motion is based solely on the question of
    whether Adams constitutes an absentee landlord, who did not exercise sufficient control of
    the premises so as to owe a duty to exercise reasonable care to protect Hughes from
    reasonable foreseeable injury at the hands of another.
    ¶9.    As reiterated in Titus v. Williams, 
    844 So. 2d 459
    , 466 (Miss. 2003), under
    Mississippi law, a landlord/lessor has no responsibility in keeping leased premises in safe
    condition in the absence of a contract to do so. 
    Id.
     (citing Wilson v. Allday, 
    487 So. 2d 793
    ,
    796 (Miss. 1986), overruled on other grounds). “Mississippi common law places that duty
    squarely on the party who possesses or controls the property.” Titus, 844 So. 2d at 466.
    ¶10.   In Titus, the family of a shooting victim brought a wrongful-death action against a
    convenience store, the store’s landlord/property owner, and the city of Sardis, Mississippi,
    after Milton Titus was shot by a third party on the store’s property. Id. at 462. Each
    defendant filed a motion for summary judgment. The landlord/property owner filed on the
    basis that he was an absentee landlord and owed no duty to the victim, and he had committed
    no form of negligence. The store filed on the basis that the victim was a trespasser, or at best
    a licensee on its premises, and the store therefore owed only a duty to refrain from willfully
    or wantonly injuring the victim. And the city filed on the basis that it was exempt from
    5
    liability for the performance of police duties unless its employees acted recklessly. Id. at
    462. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of all defendants. Id.
    ¶11.   On appeal, this Court affirmed the trial court’s decision in toto. The Titus Court
    found that the victim’s status as an invitee, a licensee, or a trespasser was irrelevant based
    on the facts of the case. Id. at 467. This is because the victim knew the third party was
    armed based on a prior incident between the two earlier that evening on the store’s premises,
    and thus the victim knew the possible danger of confronting the third party. Id. On these
    facts, the Titus Court held that “the highest standard of care that would be owed to anyone
    who comes onto someone else’s land in Mississippi is to keep the premises reasonably safe
    and when not reasonably safe to warn only where there is hidden danger or peril that is not
    plain and in open view.” Id. In Mississippi, the general rule of law is “that the duty to warn
    disappears entirely when it is shown that the injured person did, in fact, observe and fully
    appreciate the peril.” Id. (citing Ill. Cent. R.R. v. Crawford, 
    244 Miss. 300
    , 315, 
    143 So. 2d 427
    , 431 (1962)). Accordingly, the store owed no duty to the victim to warn him of a
    situation which the victim “created himself and the danger of which he was well aware.” Id.
    at 467-68.
    ¶12.   In speaking to the landlord/property owner’s duty, the Titus Court found as follows:
    First, the record is devoid of any evidence that Williams[, the
    landlord/property owner,] engaged in affirmative or active negligence in the
    operation or control of the business. There is no proof that Williams, the
    absentee landlord, was aware of Titus’s presence upon the premises. Williams
    had no contractual duty to make repairs to the property. He did not occupy,
    exercise control over, or frequent the premises in question. When parties fail
    to allocate responsibility for keeping a leased premises in a safe condition
    through contract, Mississippi common law places that duty squarely on the
    6
    party who possesses or controls the property. Wilson v. Allday, 
    487 So. 2d 793
    , 796 (Miss. 1986). The Flash Store, not Williams, operated and controlled
    the convenience store. Therefore, liability, if any, attaches to the Flash Store
    rather than Williams. See Wilson, 487 So. 2d at 796 (“[L]iability runs with
    possession and control of the property.”).
    Id. at 466.
    ¶13.   Hughes argues that Titus is distinguishable both factually and legally because the
    plaintiff in Titus created the danger himself, and there was no question in Titus that the
    lessor was an absentee landlord who had no right of control of the premises and “no
    contractual duties to make repairs to the property.” Id. at 465. Hughes argues that the lease
    agreement here, unlike in Titus, reserves for Adams–apart from the rental-percentage
    provision–the right for her and “h[er] authorized agents” not only to show the property to
    potential buyers, but also a general “right of entry for repairs and maintenance,” among other
    things. Hughes contends that the operative fact in this case is Adams’s right to control, not
    Adams’s choice of whether or not actually to exercise that right. And Hughes maintains that,
    based on the percentage rent clause contained in the lease agreement, Adams and Electric
    Cowboy are essentially joint venturers. We disagree.
    ¶14.   First, the right of entry that the lease agreement reserved in Adams does not ascribe
    the possession and control necessary to impute to Adams the duty to protect Electric
    Cowboy’s invitees from injury at the hands of others. Had Hughes been injured due to some
    structural defect on the premises that Adams had covenanted with the lessee to keep in repair,
    the case might be different. That, though, is not the case here.
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    ¶15.   Second, the fact that the lease agreement contains a percentage-rent clause is of no
    moment in this instance. In Lawler v. Skelton, 
    241 Miss. 274
    , 289-90, 
    130 So. 2d 565
    , 570
    (1961), this Court addressed a personal-injury action in which the plaintiff contended that a
    lessor and lessee were joint venturers because the lease agreement between them provided
    the lessor a twenty-five percent interest in the lessee’s cotton crop. The Lawler Court found
    that, regardless of the percentage-rent clause, the lessor and lessee were not joint venturers
    or partners, but rather were landlord and tenant. 
    Id. at 289-90
    . Thus, no liability could be
    placed upon the lessor for injuries allegedly sustained by the plaintiff resulting from aerial
    crop spraying of insecticides on the lessee’s cotton fields. 
    Id. at 290
    . The Lawler Court
    found that although the lessor retained certain residual rights of control over the farming
    operation, loaned the lessee money when the lessee needed it for the farming operation, and
    paid one-fourth the cost of insecticides to be applied on the cotton crop, the lessee was the
    one responsible for running and managing the farming operation. 
    Id. at 289-90
    . The lessee
    hired the farmhands, selected the crop poisons, and employed the pilot. The lease expressly
    provided that the parties were landlord and tenant, not partners, and the tenant had no
    authority to bind the landlord. 
    Id.
     The Lawler Court concluded that the lessor simply leased
    the farm to the lessee under traditional methods for such operations. 
    Id. at 290
    .
    ¶16.   Similarly, we find no joint venture or partnership between Adams and Electric
    Cowboy. A joint venture is “an association of persons to carry out a single business
    enterprise for profit, for which purpose they combine their property, money, effects, skill and
    knowledge.” Freeland v. Henderson, 
    252 So. 2d 899
    , 906 (Miss. 1971). To form a joint
    8
    venture, “there must be a joint proprietary interest and right of mutual control.” Id. at 907.
    No evidence was presented showing that Adams and Electric Cowboy entered into such an
    agreement. Adams did not contribute her property or money to promote Electric Cowboy.
    Adams simply leased the property to Electric Cowboy under traditional commercial realty
    methods, which often entail percentage rent covenants. Fletcher v. U.S. Rest. Props., Inc.,
    
    881 So. 2d 333
     (Miss. Ct. App. 2004); Facilities, Inc. v. Rogers-Usry Chevrolet, Inc., 
    908 So. 2d 107
     (Miss. 2005); Polk v. Gibson Prods. Co. of Hattiesburg, 
    257 So. 2d 225
     (Miss.
    1972). Adams does not frequent or visit the Electric Cowboy; she has no control or
    involvement in the operations or management of the Electric Cowboy; and she does not
    supervise the Electric Cowboy.
    ¶17.   Accordingly, we find that Adams owed no duty to protect Hughes from reasonable
    foreseeable injury at the hands of another. And the trial court erred in denying Adams’s
    motion for summary judgment.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶18.   We reverse the trial court’s denial of Adams’s motion for summary judgment, and
    render judgment in favor of Adams. The stay entered by this Court as to this case on March
    5, 2015, is hereby vacated.
    ¶19.   REVERSED AND RENDERED.
    WALLER, C.J., DICKINSON AND RANDOLPH, P.JJ., LAMAR, KITCHENS,
    KING, COLEMAN AND MAXWELL, JJ., CONCUR.
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Document Info

Docket Number: 2015-IA-00167-SCT

Citation Numbers: 191 So. 3d 1236

Filed Date: 5/19/2016

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023