FILED
SEPT. 3, 2015
In the Office of the Clerk of Court
WA State Court of Appeals, Division III
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
DIVISION THREE
STAR CRILL, )
) No. 31912-1-Ill
Appellant, )
)
\T. )
)
WRBF, Inc. d/b/a DENNY'S ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION
RESTAURANT, DEBRA FOUTS and )
JACK FOUTS, indi\Tidually and as a )
marital community; JERRY FOUTS, and )
JANE DOE FOUTS, indi\Tidually and as a )
marital community; DENNY'S INC., a )
California Corporation; JACKIE D. )
LEGERE, Jr.; AUSTIN GARNER, )
)
Respondents. )
FEARING, J.
On a clear day, we can foresee forever. Paraphrase of Thing v. La Chusa, 48 Cal.
3d 644,668, 771 P.2d 814, 257 Cal. Rptr. 865 (1989).
We address a recurring issue: when is a business liable for injuries caused by one
customer assaulting another customer? Star Crill sues a Denny's Restaurant after another
diner, Austin Gamer, assaulted her in the restaurant. The trial court dismissed Crill's
No. 31912-1-III
Crill v. WRBF
claim on summary judgment, while ruling that a lack of similar prior incidents rendered
the assault unforeseeable as a matter of law and thus the restaurant possessed no duty to
prevent the attack. We affirm. In affirming, we review the Washington Supreme Court's
recent decision of McKown v. Simon Property Group, Inc., 182 Wn.2d 752, 344 PJd 661
(2015).
FACTS
Because Star Crill appeals the trial court's grant of summary judgment in favor of
the Denny's restaurant, we write the facts in a light most favorable to her. At 2:08 a.m.
on Saturday morning, January 3, 2009, an intoxicated Austin Gamer struck Star Crill
inside a Denny's Restaurant, owned by WRBF, Inc., on Argonne Road, in Spokane
Valley. Crill sued WRBF, Denny's, Inc., Austin Gamer, and Gamer's companion Jackie
Legere. Denny's, Inc., is the franchisor of ubiquitous Denny's restaurants. WRBF is the
owner of the Argonne Road Denny's restaurant and other Denny's in the Spokane area.
The only defendant on appeal is WRBF and we will refer to it as the Argonne Denny's or
Denny's. Crill sues the Argonne Denny's for negligence in failing to prevent the
misbehavior of Gamer.
We begin with the practices of the Argonne Denny's restaurant. The Argonne
restaurant is open twenty-four hours a day. Denny's home office typically requires that
its franchisees remain open twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week.
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j
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No.31912-1-III
Crill v. WRBF
II
On weekends, after nearby bars cease serving alcohol at 2 :00 a.m., the Argonne
!
Denny's serves a gaggle of drunk customers. Denny's server Mary Winter testified:
I
"Where a bar closes, they close down for the night and everybody leaves, either they go
home or usually a lot of people when they're drinking, they need food. Either they go
II
home and eat or they come to the restaurant and eat. So they call it the bar crowd
II
because it's after the bar closes." Clerk's Papers (CP) at 329. The Argonne Denny's
i·
does not sell alcohol.
Fred Del Marva, a security expert for Star Crill, declared that "[i]t is well known
throughout the Denny's 4 system' that argumentative and assaultive conduct is a common
occurrence and highly foreseeable when soliciting an after-bar clientele between the
hours of 11 :00 p.m. and 4:00 a.m." CP at 215. Denny's manager Larry Lovins testified
to the obvious that "a person that's more intoxicated probably is more likely to cause
problems than a person that's not." CP at 405. Denny's server Debbie Fuentes described
the bar rush as 44[ a] lot of drunk, obnoxious people" who might "tum on you in a
heartbeat." CP at 160. According to Fuentes, the majority of patrons during these early
morning hours are intoxicated.
The Argonne Denny's General Manager Don Wold testified: "While we are open
24 hours, we seldom have experienced any issues of criminal conduct by patrons.
Disruptive guests are usually limited to people that are either unhappy with service, or do
not pay their bill." CP at 62. Manager Larry Lovins, who has worked at the Argonne
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Denny's for eleven years, testified: "We generally at Denny's didn't have any issues.
The location that we're at is a pretty calm restaurant. I've never had any situations where
I had, you know, somebody beat up or anything like that." CP at 398. Lovins noted a
shoving incident that occurred in a Sharrs parking lot, and commented that the bar rush
for the Denny's on North Division "was kind of tough at times." CP at 401. Argonne
Denny's manager Jason Liberg saw the occasional argument, but never had "one on one
of [his] shifts that resulted in actual physical violence." CP at 348. Server Debbie
Fuentes mentioned a "fight" that occurred in the Argonne Denny's parking lot.
The Argonne Denny's maintains no written procedure regarding managing
troublesome patrons. The restaurant, however, trains its staff on handling disruptive
guests, which "generally include any patron that is being loud, unmanageable, aggressive
with any of his own party, aggressive with anybody else in the restaurant, including other
patrons or staff, complaining loudly, or any variety of circumstances that would generally
disrupt other patrons' enjoyment." CP at 61. The restaurant instructs its staff to exercise
three steps: first, ask the troublesome guest to calm down and cease the disorderly
activity; second, if the disruption persists, ask the patron to leave; and last, if the
disorderly guest refuses to leave, phone police. This same approach applies to drunk
customers. The Argonne Denny's instructs its staff not to intervene physically with a
difficult guest.
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The Argonne Denny's maintains a log of significant events in order to foster
institutional knowledge. Argonne Denny's General Manager Don Wold declared that he
reviewed the log covering September 2008 to January 2009 and discovered no incidents
of assaults or fights at the restaurant during this window of time.
Service coordinators do not have access to the Argonne Denny's significant events
logbook. Nevertheless, service coordinators sometimes substitute as managers. The
restaurant cross trains its service coordinators in every job, including cook, hostess, and
server to better understand the restaurant's operation.
During a weekend bar rush, the Argonne Denny's typically serves thirty to forty
customers between 1:30 and 3:30 a.m. On Friday night, January 2, 2009, two to three
servers, a dishwasher who doubled as a host, and a cook that doubled as a security guard
worked at the restaurant. No manager served only as manager. Security expert Fred Del
Marva testified that, with the size of the premises, five or six servers, one cook, one
busboy, one dishwasher, a host/cashier, and a manager that does nothing but manage
should have been present.
On Friday, January 2, 2009, the scheduled manager's house flooded, and she could
not work that night. After working a day shift, server Mary Winter returned that evening
to work as acting manager. Winter worked for various Denny's restaurants for sixteen to
seventeen years as a server, bar tender, and assistant manager. Winter was trained to
handle disruptive guests using the three-step approach described above.
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We have established the context in which Austin Gamer assaulted Star Crill. We
now describe the events leading to the attack.
On Friday~ January 2,2009, Austin Gamer drank alcohol at Good Tymes Bar and
Grill with friends. During his deposition, Gamer could not remember the number of
drinks he consumed at Good Tymes, but speculated he imbibed one to six drinks. From
Good Tymes, Austin Gamer, Jackie Legere, and two friends moved, during the early
morning hours of January 3, to the Argonne Denny's. Gamer and Legere were drunk.
No Denny's employee asked Austin Gamer and his friends whether they had been
drinking.
A server at the Argonne Denny's sat Gamer, Legere, and friends in a booth and
promised to bring menus. Star Crill and friend Mario Diaz dined in the booth adjacent
and behind the group. As they ate, Crill and Diaz discussed Diaz's family, his career
choices, and politics. Jackie Legere turned toward the adjacent booth and told Crill and
Diaz to shut up. Crill noticed Legere to be drunk, because the latter slurred his speech
and his arm frequently fell from its resting ledge. Crill and Diaz heard Legere's comment
but did not know if Legere addressed them.
A server, Charlotte Stemple, informed acting manager Mary Winter that: "there
may be a problem with some patrons seated in booths along the windows." CP at 65.
I
Winter declared:
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Because those booths were located behind a server island, I could
not see the patrons, so I immediately grabbed some water and coffee and
went to observe the situation. There were no issues or problems occurring
at that time, and I asked a woman seated at one table with one other
gentleman (who I later learned was named Star Crill, the plaintiff in this
suit) if she wanted some water, and asked her if everything was OK, and
she said "yes"-she did not report any problems to me.
CP at 65. Winter took water and coffee to the tables because she did not wish the
customers at Austin Gamer's table to believe she targeted them. According to Mary
Winter, she spoke with Star Crill and then approached Garner's table. Crill denies that
any Denny's employee spoke to her. Winter then went to the entrance of the restaurant to
seat some customers.
Jackie Legere soon repeated louder his request to Star Crill and Mario Diaz to shut
up. Diaz responded: '" Tum around and mind your own business.'" CP at 30. Three to
four minutes later, Legere replied in an even louder tone, '" Hey, I said shut the fuck
up.'" CP at 30.
Mary Winter heard loud voices at the two tables. Winter approached Jackie
Legere and Austin Garner's table and asked ifthere was a problem. The three to four
men said there was no problem. Winter directed the covey of men to hush or leave.
They quieted. According to Winter, she asked Star Crill again if she was okay, and Crill
stated there was no problem. Crill denies Winter speaking to her. Someone took food
orders for those at Garner's table.
After Mary Winter left the area of the two tables, the situation escalated. Star Crill
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No. 31912-1-II1
Crill v. WRBF
stood but instructed Mario Diaz to remain seated. Crill told Diaz: "It's not worth it.
Don't get in a fight. Don't waste your time on these guys. They are just drunk." CP at
36. Austin Gamer stood. Crill looked around in hope and expectation that a Denny's
employee would intervene. Charlotte Stemple, a server, stood at the service station
across the aisle from the tables. Stemple gazed at Crill and walked to the kitchen to
retrieve Mary Winter. With no Denny's employee in sight, Austin Gamer hit Star Crill in
the back of her head or her neck.
According to Austin Gamer, he never struck Star Crill. Gamer testified that Crill
stood and fell into him because of her drunken state. He then brushed her pony tail with
his hand, because the tail grazed his face. In her complaint, Star Crill alleges that Gamer
"unintentionally made bodily contact" with her. Crill sues Gamer for negligence and
recklessness, but not for assault.
Mary Winter returned to the tables after the assault. Winter testified:
Q. And that night you were the manager; is that right?
A. Yes.
Q: And so, when Charlotte Stemple-am I right in assuming that
when Charlotte thought there was a disruptive guest she came and notified
you?
A. She never said there was a disruptive guest.
Q. SO who was the person that determined that they were a
disruptive guest?
A. It was myself after I made-it was a third time I went through
and then they was being disruptive. The second time when I walked over
there they quieted down. They did exactly what I asked them to do. And
they were okay.
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Crill v. WRBF
Q. On the third time is when you determined they were disruptive
guests?
A. And I asked them to leave and I was calling the cops.
CP at 331.
When Mary Winter returned to the booths, she saw and heard one man standing
and talking loudly to the couple sitting at the adjoining booth. Austin Gamer, Jackie
Legere, and their two friends surrounded Winter and yelled at her. Winter squeezed
through them, demanded the four leave, and went to call the police. While phoning
police, Winter learned of the assault on Crill.
The responding law enforcement officer felt a knot forming on the back of Star
Crill's head. According to the officer's report, multiple bystanders witnessed Austin
Gamer strike Star Crill. The officer smelled alcohol on Austin Gamer and observed
Gamer acting intoxicated. Gamer bragged about knowing attorneys who would
successfully procure the dismissal of any criminal charges.
PROCEDURE
After Star Crill sued and on completion of discovery, Argonne Denny's moved for
summary judgment. It argued that it had no duty to protect against Austin Gamer's
criminal conduct because no incidents of that exact nature previously occurred so as to
render Gamer's conduct foreseeable. Denny's also argued that its staffs response to
Gamer's conduct was reasonable as a matter oflaw. In response to the summary
judgment motion, Star Crill argued that the incident and her resultant injuries occurred
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No. 31912-1-III
Crill v. WRBF
due to Denny's failure to maintain safety and security procedures for its customers. She
contended that Austin Gamer's attack was foreseeable.
In response to the summary judgment motion, Star Crill relied, in part, on a
December 3, 2007, Nation's Restaurant News article titled Restaurants open themselves
up to greater risks with later hours. Crill's counsel attached the article to his declaration.
The article recounts recent shootings and domestic violence incidents that occurred at
restaurants nationwide. The article laments:
While criminals prey on industry operations in the daytime, too,
security experts note that the foodservice industry's high-turnover rate,
which can result in poor employee training, and security systems focused
more on preventing vandalism than robbery or assaults, are contributing to
the spate of late-night crimes.
CP at235.
The Nation's Restaurant News article mentions injuries and deaths to guests, but
focuses on employee injuries and deaths. The article declares that injuries and deaths
come most often from robberies or angry ex-spouses and jilted lovers. The article relates
the tragic death of an Orlando Denny's restaurant employee who was stabbed to death at
work by her estranged husband. The article quotes Mike Jank, vice president of risk
management for Denny's customer stores:
I just hope operators realize they are going to have problems if they
don't keep in mind that the security issues you have in the daytime are far
different at night.
CP at 232. Based in part on this article, Star Crill's expert witness Fred Del Marva
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opined that "Denny's nationwide is known for late hour criminal activity such as
shootings, stabbings, murders and assaults," and the Argonne Denny's failed to respond
to this national trend. CP at 444.
The Nation's Restaurant News article does not mention alcohol or the bar rush
phenomenon. The article does not warn of customers assaulting other customers.
Argonne Denny's moved to strike the Nation's Restaurant News article as
irrelevant and hearsay. The trial court struck the article as hearsay.
Star Crill's expert witness Fred Del Marva submitted a declaration opposing
Denny's summary judgment motion. In the declaration, Del Marva testified to his
opinions regarding the standard of care for security in business premises based on his
expertise and review of the circumstances of the assault on Crill. According to Del
Marva, operators of Denny's restaurants know that argumentative and assaultive conduct
is a common occurrence and highly foreseeable when soliciting an after-bar clientele
between the hours of 11 :00 p.m. and 4:00 a.m. In asserting this fact, Del Marva relied on
a presentation given to the Denny's Board of Directors on this subject in 2007 and the
December 3, 2007, restaurant industry journal Nation's Restaurant News.
Fred Del Marva also testified that Denny's restaurants target the after-bar
clientele. In turn, these patrons have a high propensity for argumentative and disruptive
behavior. This behavior can turn quickly into assaultive behavior or behavior that can
lead to injuries.
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The daytime clientele at Denny's is a completely different crowd and will portray
different behaviors from nighttime clientele, according to Fred Del Marva. The daytime
atmosphere at Denny's is a completely different scene than the atmosphere between the
hours of II :00 p.m. and 4:00 a.m. For this reason, a Denny's restaurant needs specific
policies and procedures for a host or hostess to identify intoxicated customers at the time
of entry. Training, policies, and procedures which prevent intoxicated individuals from
entering the premises substantially reduce the likelihood of disruptive events, which may
lead to assaults or injuries of other patrons. Del Marva posits that a Denny's must,
without exception, have a specially trained manager who is experienced in dealing with
the II :00 p.m. to 4:00 a.m. clientele on shift between those hours.
Fred Del Marva faults the Argonne Denny's for allowing a server to perform the
dual task of restaurant manager during the grave yard shift on January 2 to 3, 2009. Del
Marva also blames the restaurant for allowing Mary Winters to work as the manager
when she had no training to manage the restaurant during the night and early morning.
Winters' inexperience and divided duties increased the risks from intoxicated patrons. A
properly trained manager and one whose attention was not diverted by also serving would
have smelled alcohol on Austin Gamer as he entered the restaurant. The manager would
have either refused to seat Gamer or removed him at the first sign of boisterousness. The
Argonne restaurant had the least experienced manager during a time that the best
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Crill v. WRBF
manager should have been on duty. During the early morning hours of January 3, the
Argonne Denny's improperly allowed any employee to seat customers.
Fred Del Marva concluded in his declaration:
A restaurant which is open twenty four hours cannot operate on
blind disregard of the need for extra security procedures and policies during
late-night/early-morning hours. Based upon the depositions, there has been
no active intent to discover what kinds of risks should be guarded against
and what kinds of risks are being found in the industry. This creates a
problem where management is not even evaluating the need for appropriate
and reasonable security measures. This type of approach keeps
management from evaluating and reasonably responding to changing
security concerns. This is essentially, ignoring the problem and hoping
customers don't get hurt. This is not accepted in the restaurant or
hospitality industry as a responsible course of conduct.
Denny's on Argonne could have taken several measures prior to the
incident of January 3, 2009 to prevent injuries to its customers. These
measures include working digital or video recordings, which allow the
management to review interactions of employees with potentially disruptive
customers, so that management can follow up with better training. There
should be mandatory reporting of disruptive events, to allow for follow-up
and training of employees, specifically the host/hostess. Having a security
expert do an evaluation and security plan for the premises, to better inform
the management of what procedures and or policies should be in place for
the safety of the customers and staff. And specifically, at a minimum, a
policy requiring that an experienced and well trained manager be onsite
during the hours between 11 :00 p.m. and 4:00 a.m. along with a
hostlhostess who is properly trained in identifying intoxicated persons and
understands hislher role in preventing the seating of those customers.
CP at 219-20.
The trial court granted the Argonne Denny's summary judgment. In a written
decision, the trial court observed that restaurants have a duty to use reasonable care to
prevent harm to patrons by foreseeable criminal conduct. Nevertheless, according to the
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Crill v. WRBF
trial court, Washington decisions hold that past criminal behavior on a premises renders
future crimes reasonably foreseeable only if such future crimes are of the exact nature as
the past criminal behavior. The trial court noted that no assaults previously occurred
inside the Argonne Denny's. The trial court reasoned that Star Crill's offer of industry-
wide standards did not create an issue of material fact.
Star Crill moved the trial court to reconsider. Crill argued that foreseeability does
not require previous incidents of the "exact nature." CP at 286. Crill also argued that the
Argonne Denny's foresaw the assault as imminent, intervened, but did so negligently.
Finally, Crill maintained that Denny's flawed policy created a question of fact as to the
reasonableness of the restaurant staff's response to the behavior of Jackie Legere and
Austin Garner. The trial court denied reconsideration.
LAW AND ANALYSIS
On appeal, Star Crill contends that: (1) the trial court erred when it struck the
Nation's Restaurant News article, (2) a genuine issue of material fact exists as to whether
Austin Garner's assault of Crill was foreseeable and as to whether the Argonne Denny's
breached its duty to her, and (3) the Argonne Denny's assumed a duty to protect Crill,
which it then performed negligently. We address these assignments of error in order.
Issue 1: Did the trial court err when striking as evidence the Nation's Restaurant
News article?
Answer 1: We need not and do not address this question.
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Star Crill contends the trial court erred for two reasons when it struck the Nation's
Restaurant News article. First, the article is not hearsay because it was offered to show
knowledge of the Argonne Denny's oflate night attacks. Second, even ifhearsay, Fred
Del Marva could rely on the article as an expert witness.
The Nation's Restaurant News article is cumulative of the testimony of Crill's
expert witness, Fred Del Marva. Thus, the article adds nothing of significance to our
analysis. We decline to resolve this assignment of error since its resolution does not
impact our decision on the merits. Principles ofjudicial restraint dictate that if resolution
of another issue effectively disposes of a case, we should resolve the case on that basis
without reaching the first issue presented. Wash. State Farm Bureau Fed'n v. Gregoire,
162 Wn.2d 284,307, 174 PJd 1142 (2007); Hayden v. Mut. ofEnumclaw Ins. Co., 141
Wn.2d 55,68, 1 P.3d 1167 (2000).
Issue 2: Did the Argonne Denny's hold a duty to protect Star Crillfrom an attack
by Austin Garner? Stated differently, was the attack on Crill foreseeable under
negligence law?
Answer 2: No.
We note an anomaly in the pleadings of Star Crill. Crill contends in her complaint
that Austin Gamer unintentionally harmed her. She alleges negligent conduct, not an
assault, by Gamer. Despite her complaint's allegation of negligence, Crill asked the trial
court and asks this court to impose a duty on Argonne Denny's to protect her from an
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assault or intentional conduct by another patron. The law generally imposes the same
duty on a business in protecting a customer from acts of another customer regardless of
whether the acts are careless or intentional. Nivens v. 7-11 Hoagy's Corner, 133 Wn.2d
192,207,943 P.2d 286 (1997); RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF TORTS § 344 (1965).
Therefore, we consider this anomaly irrelevant. Since the parties assume that Austin
Garner assaulted Star Crill and rely on assault decisions, we do too.
We must repeat the familiar rules of summary judgment jurisprudence. This court
reviews a summary judgment order de novo, engaging in the same inquiry as the trial
court. Highline Sch. Dist. No. 401 v. Port ofSeattle, 87 Wn.2d 6, 15,548 P.2d 1085
(1976); Mahoneyv. Shinpoch, 107 Wn.2d 679,683,732 P.2d 510 (1987). Summary
judgment is proper if the records on file with the trial court show "there is no genuine
issue as to any material fact" and "the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter
of law." CR 56(c). This court, like the trial court, construes all evidence and reasonable
inferences in the light most favorable to Star Crill, as the nonmoving party. Barber v.
Bankers Life & Cas. Co., 81 Wn.2d 140, 142,500 P.2d 88 (1972); Wilson v. Steinbach,
98 Wn.2d 434,437,656 P.2d 1030 (1982). A court may grant summary judgment if the
pleadings, affidavits, and depositions establish that there is no genuine issue as to any
material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Lybbert v.
Grant County, 141 Wn.2d 29,34, 1 P.3d 1124 (2000).
We later write that the dispositive question on appeal is whether the Argonne
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Denny's held a legal duty to protect Star Crill from the blow to her head. In tum, the
question of duty depends on the reasonable foreseeability of the attack. Foreseeability as
a question of whether a duty is owed is ultimately for the court to decide. McKown v.
Simon Prop. Grp., Inc., 182 Wn.2d at 762-64 (2015). The existence of a legal duty is a
question of law and depends on mixed considerations of logic, common sense, justice,
policy, and precedent. Christensen v. Royal Sch. Dist. No. 160, 156 Wn.2d 62,67, 124
P.3d 283 (2005); Snyder v. Med. Servo Corp., 145 Wn.2d 233,243,35 P.3d 1158 (2001);
Schooley V. Pinch's Deli Market, Inc., 134 Wn.2d 468, 474-75,951 P.2d 749 (1998);
Tincani v. Inland Empire Zoological Soc'y, 124 Wn.2d 121,128,875 P.2d 621 (1994).
Isolating the key facts assists in our analysis. Crill underscores Austin Gamer's
crowd being boisterous and Mary Winter's previous request to the table to quieten.
Austin Gamer's companion, Jackie Legere, demanded that Crill and her companion "shut
the fuck up." CP at 30. No evidence suggests that Austin Gamer spoke any words to
Star Crill or her companion before the assault.
Star Crill highlights the nature of Denny's restaurants business, which includes
serving intoxicated patrons who exit taverns late at night or in the early morning to eat at
Denny's. According to Crill, an experienced manager trained to deal with drunk
customers should have been present at the Argonne Denny's during the morning of
January 3. Mary Winter was an assistant manager who also worked as a server that
morning. Also according to Crill, the manager should have smelled alcohol on Gamer
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and known him to be intoxicated. The manager should have never seated Gamer or
escorted him from the premises before his striking of Crill. At the same time, Crill must
concede that neither Austin Gamer nor any of his companions threatened to hurt anyone.
Gamer had no record of assaults or any known history at the Argonne Denny's.
The Argonne Denny's restaurant had never earlier encountered an assault inside
the premises. An altercation occurred in the parking lot of the restaurant, but we know
nothing about the details of the confrontation.
Star Crill challenges the credibility of Argonne Denny's witnesses who claim the
business suffered no earlier assaults by a patron on an employee or another customer.
Star Crill also suggests that other Denny's restaurants owned by WBRF, Inc., in the
Spokane area, may have encountered assaults therein. Nevertheless, Crill provides no
affirmative evidence of any earlier attacks at the Argonne location, let alone any other
Spokane location.
Even though Austin Gamer's conduct may have been intentional, Crill sues the
Argonne Denny's in negligence. The essential elements of an action for negligence are:
(1) the existence ofa duty owed to the complaining party, (2) a breach of that duty, (3) a
resulting injury, and (4) a proximate cause between the breach and the injury. Christen v.
Lee, 113 Wn.2d 479, 488, 780 P.2d 1307 (1989). Not every negligent act leads to legal
consequences. A defendant is not held at fault for hazards not expected to result from his
or her behavior or inaction. When determining if a defendant owed any duty to the
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No. 31912-1-111
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plaintiff, courts consider whether the risk that caused plaintiff's injury or the harm was
reasonably foreseeable to the defendant. "Reasonable foreseeability" is the dispositive
locution for this appeal.
"Foreseeability" is a factor attached to negligence's first element of duty.
McKown v. Simon Prop. Grp., Inc., 182 Wn.2d at 762-64 (2015); Maltman v. Sauer, 84
Wn.2d 975,980, 530 P.2d 254 (1975). The hazard that caused or assisted in bringing
about the injury to plaintiff must be among the hazards to be perceived reasonably and
with respect to which defendant's conduct was negligent. Maltman v. Sauer, 84 Wn.2d at
980; Rikstadv. Holmberg, 76 Wn.2d 265,268,456 P.2d 355 (1969).
A defendant has no duty to prevent a criminal attack by a third person on another,
even if the defendant reasonably anticipates the attack, unless a special relationship exists
between the victim and the defendant. Generally, no person has a duty to come to the aid
of a stranger or protect others from the criminal acts of third persons. Folsom v. Burger
King, 135 Wn.2d 658,674,958 P.2d 301 (1998); Craig v. Washington Trust Bank, 94
Wn. App. 820, 826,976 P.2d 126 (1999).
The parties agree that Star Crill was a business invitee at the Argonne Denny's. A
business owner has a special relationship with its business invitees, creating a duty to
protect those invitees from criminal conduct by third parties. Nivens v. 7-11 Hoagy's
Corner, 133 Wn.2d at 205 (1997). A business invitee is owed a duty of reasonable care
for reasonably foreseeable criminal conduct by third persons. Nivens, 133 Wn.2d at 205;
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Fuentes v. Port o/Seattle, 119 Wn. App. 864, 869-70, 82 P.3d 1175 (2003). No duty
arises unless the hann to the invitee is foreseeable. Nivens, 133 Wn.2d at 205; Wilbert v.
Metro. Park Dist., 90 Wn. App. 304, 308, 950 P.2d 522 (1998).
The use of the word "foreseeability" in the context of imposing a duty is confusing
because Washington courts also employ the term after a duty is established to determine
the scope of the duty owed. Schooley v. Pinch's Deli Market, 134 Wn.2d at 477 (1998).
Courts also utilize the concept of "foreseeability" when detennining whether any fault on
the part of the defendant was a proximate cause of the plaintiffs injuries. Washburn v.
City o/Federal Way, 178 Wn.2d 732, 761, 310 P.3d 1275 (2013).
Despite applying a foreseeability test in a premises liability case, our Supreme
Court in its recent decision, McKown v. Simon Property Group, Inc., 182 Wn.2d 752
(2015), questioned the fairness of such a test. Subjecting a merchant to liability solely on
the basis of a foreseeability analysis is misbegotten, wrote the court. McKown, 182
Wn.2d at 771. Criminal activity is arbitrary, irrational, and unpredictable. Crime is
invariably foreseeable everywhere, yet unforeseeable in any specific time and place.
Even police, specially trained and equipped to anticipate and prevent crime, cannot
universally foil it. Given these realities, it is unjustifiable to make merchants, who have
much less experience than the police in dealing with criminal activity and who lack a
community deputation to do so, vicariously liable for the criminal acts of third parties.
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No. 31912·1-III
Crill v. WRBF
Courts, rather than juries, assessing foreseeability should also be criticized.
Judges have no special training in determining when to expect the commission of a
crime. Using foreseeability in a flexible, case·by-case analysis creates uncertainty by
giving courts the power and method to decide cases without external restraint. McKown,
182 Wn.2d at 772 n.8.
Despite any unfairness, we remain tasked with answering whether, during the
early morning of January 3, Argonne Denny's should have reasonably anticipated that
Austin Garner would strike Star Crill in time to stop the assault. This question begs other
questions. Is it probable that a quiet, drunk man, accompanied by a boisterous friend, at a
Denny's restaurant in the early morning hours will hit another customer? Do we limit the
question to Austin Garner being the attacker or should we ask if Argonne Denny's should
have reasonably foreseen anyone at the Garner table might hit Star Crill? Does the
absence of any earlier assaults inside the restaurant preclude the Argonne Denny's from
anticipating a physical attack? Is the character of Denny's restaurants a relevant factor in
assessing the risk of an assault?
The test of reasonable foreseeability begs more elementary questions. The law
quantifies reasonable probability as more than a fifty percent chance, or a 50.1 percent
chance, of being correct. Is reasonable foreseeability a fifty percent chance that an event
will occur? Should foreseeability be measured in time rather than in possibility? Is
reasonable foreseeability the probability that some event will occur within one day, one
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No. 31912-1-III
Crill v. WRBF
week, or one year? The law provides no answers to these questions and affords no
mathematical formulation for determining reasonable foreseeability.
Washington decisions contain many statements and restatements of the
foreseeability rule relevant to when a tort duty arises to protect another. Some of these
pronouncements use vacuous phrases that sound good on paper but provide little
assistance when reviewing concrete situations. Under many of these pronouncements,
"reasonable foreseeability" lies in the subjective eyes of the individual foreseer.
A criminal act is "unforeseeable" as a matter of law if the criminal "occurrence is
so highly extraordinary or improbable as to be wholly beyond the range of expectability."
Fuentes v. Port ofSeattle, 119 Wn. App. at 868 (2004); Johnson v. State, 77 Wn. App.
934, 942, 894 P .2d 1366 (1995). So from "reasonably unforeseeable" we move to the
equally murky phrase "highly extraordinary."
The pertinent inquiry is not whether the actual harm was of a particular kind which
was expected. Wilbert v. Metro. Park Dist., 90 Wn. App. at 308. Rather, the question is
whether the actual harm fell within a general field of danger which should have been
anticipated. McLeod v. Grant County Sch. Dist. No. 128, 42 Wn.2d 316, 321, 255 P.2d
360 (1953). If the damage complained of falls entirely outside the general threat of harm
that the plaintiff claims makes a party's conduct negligent, there is no liability. McLeod
v. Grant County Sch. Dist., 42 Wn.2d at 321-22; Fuentes v. Port ofSeattle, 119 Wn. App.
at 870. Thus, foreseeability involves a general field of danger, but we may still wonder
22
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No. 31912-1-111
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what constitutes a general field of danger. This principle might lead to liability on the
Argonne Denny's, if foreseeability were otherwise found, for an assault by Austin Gamer
even though Jackie Legere was the boisterous and harassing one, since there existed a
general field of danger of an assault by someone at the adjoining table.
Two principles defining "foreseeability" may conflict. On the one hand, the
unusualness of the act that resulted in inj ury to plaintiff is not the test of foreseeability,
but whether the result of the act is within the ambit of the hazards covered by the duty
imposed on a defendant. Rikstad v. Holmberg, 76 Wn.2d at 269 (1969). Thus, a bop on
the head, rather than the typical punch in the face, may not shield one from liability, even
though the location of the strike on the victim's body was unforeseeable. On the other
hand, the specific act in question, rather than a broad array of possible criminal behavior,
must be foreseeable to the business owner from past information. McKown v. Simon
Prop. Grp., Inc., 182 Wn.2d at 769-70 (2015).
More precise rules facilitate resolving this appeal. A business has no per se duty
to employ security personnel to protect business invitees. Nivens v. 7-11 Hoagy's
Corner, 133 Wn.2d at 205-06 (1997); Raider v. Greyhound Lines, Inc., 94 Wn. App. 816,
819,975 P.2d 518 (1999). A rule of particular importance in this appeal is that evidence
of antisocial, unruly, or even hostile behavior is generally insufficient to establish that a
defendant with a supervisory duty should reasonably anticipate a more serious misdeed.
Moore v. Mayfair Tavern, Inc., 75 Wn.2d 401,405-06,451 P.2d 669 (1969); J.N. v.
23
No.31912-1-III
Crill v. WRBF
Bellingham Sch. Dist. No. 501,74 Wn. App. 49, 60,871 P.2d 1106 (1994).
Certain factors may playa critical role in determining reasonable foreseeability of
a criminal deed. These factors include: (1) the imminence of the attack, (2) the known
criminal propensities of the attacker, (3) the neighborhood of the business, (4) the
character of the defendant's business, and (5) the history of the business. McKown v.
Simon Prop. Grp., Inc., 182 Wn.2d at 769-70 (2015). Analyzing each case with these
factors in mind assists in an organized and intelligent resolution of cases.
Imminence of Attack
Under one version of the foreseeability test, a "business owes a duty to its invitees
to protect them from imminent criminal harm and reasonably foreseeable criminal
conduct by third persons." Nivens, 133 Wn.2d at 205 (1997), This rule suggests that the
injury need not be the result of reasonably foreseeable criminal conduct if the criminal
harm is imminent. In the recent Supreme Court decision, McKown v. Simon Property
Group, Inc., 182 Wn.2d at 769-70, the court noted that comment f, of Restatement of
Torts § 344, recognizes a duty to protect when the landowner knows or has reason to
know of immediate or imminent harm. But no Washington decision discusses liability
based on "imminent criminal harm." Perhaps the imminence of the attack should render
it reasonably foreseeable.
Star Crill may include the purported imminence of Austin Gamer's assault as a
factor in her calculus of foreseeability. She does not rely exclusively on this factor,
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No. 31912-1-111
Crill v. WRBF
however. We are unable to find the assault as imminent, however. A companion's
rudeness and obscene words does not quality one's sudden and irrational assault, even if
one is intoxicated, as predictable. Under the law, Jackie Legere's comments did not
portend an assault by Austin Gamer.
A parallel persuasive decision is Veytsman v. New York Palace, Inc., 170 Md.
App. 104, 906 A.2d 1028 (2006). Edward and Tatyana Veytsman ate dinner late one
night at Baltimore's New York Palace. The restaurant also hosted a Ukrainian wedding
reception that night, during which reception Ukrainian vodka flowed for more than six
hours. When leaving the restaurant, several men in the wedding party assaulted the
couple. The Veytsmans sued the restaurant and alleged that intoxication of the wedding
party guests put the restaurant on notice that violence might occur. The Maryland
appellate court affirmed summary judgment dismissal of the suit. Although the attackers
engaged in an angry discussion, the restaurant was not on notice that the men endangered
others or that others required "protection" from them.
In Boone v. Martinez, 567 N.W.2d 508 (Minn. 1997), a case involving a bar fight,
the assailant hit the plaintiff over the head with a beer mug. Witnesses testified that the
assailant looked obviously intoxicated and angry. One witness saw the attacker slam his
beer on the table. The Minnesota Supreme Court dismissed the suit as a matter of law
because the evidence was not sufficient to present the jury with a fact question of whether
the bar was aware of an impending attack.
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No. 31912-1-111
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A case with the opposite outcome is Mayflower Restaurant Co. v. Griego, 741
P.2d 1106 (Wyo. 1987). The Wyoming Supreme Court upheld a jury verdict entered for
the plaintiff who was assaulted in a bar after the aggressor approached him several times
threatening him in a loud and vulgar manner. On one occasion the assailant grabbed the
plaintiffs shirt. The court allowed the verdict to stand on the ground that the bar was on
notice that the plaintiff was in imminent danger because the assailant was loud and vulgar
so as to attract the attention of those in the bar and because people in the bar saw him
grab the plaintiffs shirt. Neither of those factors are present in our appeal.
Mayflower illustrates the type of evidence needed to show the foreseeability of an
imminent attack. Our appeal lacks this evidence. Neither Austin Garner nor Jackie
Legere threatened Star Crill. Garner had not touched Crill before the blow.
Attacker's Criminal History
The facts on this appeal include no criminal history for Austin Garner, let alone
the Argonne Denny's possessing knowledge of any felonious history.
Argonne Denny's History
The Argonne Denny's restaurant had no history of criminal acts therein.
Testimony referred, however, to an altercation in the parking lot. Star Crill highlights
this altercation.
Our Supreme Court, in McKown v. Simon Property Group, Inc., 182 Wn.2d at 757
(2015), recently addressed how similar in nature a previous attack must be to establish
26
No. 31912-1-II1
Crill v. WRBF
reasonable foreseeability of a later assault. Dominick Maldonado shot and injured
Brendan McKown and six others in the Tacoma Mall, which Simon Property Group
owned. McKown produced evidence of multiple prior shootings and other incidents
involving guns occurring at the Tacoma Mall. All of these incidents occurred in the
Tacoma Mall's parking lot except one, which occurred in the lobby of the Tacoma Mall's
movie theater. The federal district court dismissed McKown's negligence claim against
Simon Property Group for failure to submit competent evidence of similar random acts of
indiscriminate shootings on Simon's premises. On appeal to the Ninth Circuit Court of
Appeals, the circuit court certified questions for the Washington Supreme Court to
answer concerning state law.
According to the McKown court, in order to establish a genuine issue of material
fact concerning a landowner's obligation to protect business invitees from third party
criminal conduct under the prior similar incidents test, a plaintiff must generally show a
history of prior similar incidents on the business premises within the prior experience of
the possessor of the land. The prior acts of violence on the business premises must have
been sufficiently similar in nature and location to the criminal act that injured the
plaintiff, sufficiently close in time to the act in question, and sufficiently numerous to
have put the business on notice that such an act was likely to occur. McKown v. Simon
Prop. Grp., Inc., 182 Wn.2d at 757.
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No. 31912-1-III
Crill v. WRBF
The McKown court did not address whether the prior acts asserted by Brendan
McKown met the "similar incidents" test. Since the case came before the court on
certified questions from a federal court, the Supreme Court did not need to resolve the
merits of the suit.
Server Debbie Fuentes mentioned a "fight" that occurred in the Argonne Denny's
parking lot. CP at 166. Even if the "tight" Debbie Fuentes referred to was physical, the
record contains nothing to indicate the altercation began inside the restaurant or involved
the bar rush crowd. We lack the details to determine if this prior incident was similar.
Thus, we conclude that Star Crill did not produce evidence of prior acts of violence
sufficiently similar in nature and location, sufficiently close in time, or sufficiently
numerous to put Denny's on notice.
In Wilbert v. Metropolitan Park District, 90 Wn. App. at 308 (1998), the
Metropolitan Park District (Metro) rented space to Ghetto Down Productions to perform
a private dance. During the dance, two assailants shot and killed Derrick Wilbert. This
court noted that Washington cases analyzing foreseeability focus on the history of
violence known to the defendant. Evidence of multiple fights earlier that night and the
congregation of "unruly, aggressive, vulgar young people at the dance" was insufficient
to create a jury question, and the court thus ruled Wilbert's murder unforeseeable as a
matter of law on summary judgment. Wilbert, 90 Wn. App. at 309.
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No. 31912-I-III
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Derrick Wilbert's family relied on Daniel Kennedy, an expert in security and
crime prevention practices, who testified that the deadly event in question was
foreseeable. Kennedy based this conclusion on the allegedly well-established theory of
criminal victimization called the Lifestyle-Exposure Theory. This theory states that
certain circumstances increase the risk of an assault by three to four times. The
circumstances listed by Kennedy were groups of people 15 to 24 years of age in public
places with strangers and with alcohol or drugs present and with inadequate supervision.
Kennedy also opined that the risk of deadly violence was foreseeable to Metro because it
provided a rental monitor and retained the authority to terminate the event for violations
of the alcohol policy. This retention of authority, according to Kennedy, was a
recognition on the part of Metro that there is the possibility of a loss of control at such
events. This court rejected Kennedy's testimony since it conflicted with Washington law
of foreseeability. We similarly reject the testimony of Fred Del Marva, Star Crill's
expert, that the Argonne Denny's should have anticipated Austin Garner's behavior.
Neighborhood of Business
The neighborhood of the Argonne Denny's lacks any reputation or history as a
high crime area. Also, as a policy matter, our Supreme Court rejected the idea that
location of the premises in an urban area with a high incidence of crime favors imposing
a duty. Hutchins v. 1001 Fourth Ave. Assocs., 116 Wn.2d 217,236,802 P.2d 1360
(1991). If the premises are located in an area where criminal assaults often occur,
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No. 31912-1-111
Crill v. WRBF
imposition of a duty could result in the departure of businesses from urban core areas, an
undesirable result. Hutchins, 116 Wn.2d at 236. Perhaps another undesirable result
would be to impose liability on a business open late at night to provide intoxicated people
a safe haven to regain sobriety. Assuming the restaurant shunned Austin Gamer and
Gamer drove from the premises intoxicated, Gamer could have caused greater injury
while driving drunk.
Character of Business
In the case of the character of the business, if the owner should reasonably
anticipate careless or criminal conduct on the part of third persons, either generally or at
some particular time, he may be under a duty to take precautions against it and to provide
a reasonably sufficient number of servants to afford a reasonable protection. McKown v.
Simon Prop. Grp., Inc., 182 Wn.2d at 769-70 (2015); RESTATEMENT OF TORTS § 344,
comment f. In McKown, our high court noted that, although it rejected the location of a
business within a high-crime urban area as imposing a duty to protect from third party
criminal conduct, the court has not yet considered whether the character of a business or
another location of a business, standing alone, could invoke such a duty. McKown v.
Simon Prop. Grp., Inc., 182 Wn.2d at 769-70.
The McKown court did not decide the circumstances under which a duty would
arise when the duty is based solely on the business's place or character. 182 Wn.2d at
757. The court left for an appropriate future case any inquiry concerning the
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No. 31912-1-III
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circumstances under which the "place or character" of a business can give rise to a duty
to protect invitees against third party criminal conduct. McKown, 182 Wn.2d at 762.
While Brendan McKown argued that consideration of the "place or character" of a
business is a distinct, alternative method of establishing reasonable foreseeability of
harm, he offered the court no test, criteria, or parameters regarding how "character" was
to be established or assessed. He described the Tacoma Mall as a "soft target" whose
place or character made the harm reasonably foreseeable. But aside from this bald
assertion, he offered no explanation as to how or why the "character" of the mall
necessarily made the mass shooting in the case "reasonably foreseeable."
Star Crill presents no decision that supports a ruling that an all-night restaurant or
a restaurant that caters to drunk patrons, without a history of attacks, must anticipate
criminal behavior and assume special precautions to protect its customers. In
Errico v. Southland Corp., 509 N.W.2d 585 (Minn. App. 1993), Juanita Errico made a
purchase at an all-night convenience store after midnight. As she returned to her car,
three men assaulted her. She sued Southland, alleging that the company owed a duty to
provide for the safety and security of its patrons. The appellate court affirmed dismissal
of the complaint, despite Errico's contention that such convenience stores are
characteristically dangerous places with high risks of violent crime to employees and
customers.
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No. 31912-1-III
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Star Crill may contend that assaults at any Denny's restaurant in the world could
be relevant to placing the Argonne Denny's on notice of the foreseeability of assaults on
its premises. Nevertheless, Crill only provides evidence of the death of an Orlando
Denny's restaurant employee who was stabbed to death at work by her estranged
husband. The nature of Denny's restaurants business likely had no bearing on this death.
Star Crill's expert witness, Fred Del Marva, notes that Mike Jank, vice president
of risk management for Denny's customer stores, declared that restaurants must consider
that security issues present during the daytime are different from issues at night. Del
Marva also opines that "Denny's nationwide is known for late hour criminal activity such
as shootings, stabbings, murders and assaults." CP at 444. Del Marva provides no
statistics or anecdotal evidence to support this assertion. He details no incident.
Our review of appellate decisions discovered only one reported case involving an
attack at a Denny's restaurant. In Basicker v. Denny's, Inc., 704 N .E.2d 1077 (Ind. ct.
App. 1999), restaurant patrons brought a personal injury action against the restaurant for
injuries sustained when they were shot and taken hostage during a robbery attempt at the
restaurant. The appellate court held that the robbers' attack on the patrons was not
foreseeable. We find no similarity between the Basicker facts and our case on appeal. A
1999 robbery of an Indianapolis Denny's restaurant does not make predictable a 2009
assault by a patron on another patron at a Spokane Valley Denny's restaurant.
Star Crill emphasizes the fact that the Argonne Denny's had a policy of handling
32
No. 31912-1-III
Crill v. WRBF
disruptive patrons and thus the restaurant must have had notice that one patron might
assault another patron. We have already concluded that disruptive customers do not
portend an assault. Moore v. Mayfair Tavern, Inc., 75 Wn.2d at 405-06 (1969); J.N. v.
Bellingham Sch. Dist. No. 501,74 Wn. App. at 60 (1994); Veytsman v. New York Palace,
Inc., 170 Md. App. 104 (2006).
We conclude that, as a matter oflaw, the Argonne Denny's should not have
reasonably foreseen the attack on Star Crill for several legal reasons. First, evidence of
the antisocial, unruly, or even hostile behavior of Jackie Legere is insufficient to establish
that the Argonne Denny's should have reasonably anticipated a more serious misdeed.
Second, no case has held that drunkenness alone creates a duty to remove one from
business premises. Third, the only history of any fights at Argonne Denny's was an
altercation in the parking lot, about which we have no details. Fourth, Crill's argument
that a manager experienced in handling drunk customers is similar in nature to the
contention that a business must hire a security guard, an argument already rejected by
Washington courts. Nivens v. 7-11 Hoagy's Corner, 133 Wn.2d at 205-06 (1997); Raider
v. Greyhound Lines, Inc., 94 Wn. App. at 819 (1999). Fifth, for public policy reasons,
the law should reluctantly impose on a business the duty of police protection for its
patrons.
On appeal, as she did below, Star Crill cites N.K v. Corporation ofPresiding
Bishop ofthe Church ofJesus Christ ofLatter-Day Saints, 175 Wn. App. 517, 307 P.3d
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No. 31912-1-III
Crill v. WRBF
730, review denied, 179 Wn.2d 1005 (2013), for the proposition that general trends may
give rise to specific foreseeability. This may be true for a duty arising from a special
protective relationship, such as the relationship between a child and a church sponsoring
a club. In N.K., a former scout who, as a child, had been molested by a volunteer scout
leader with a church-sponsored Boy Scout troop brought a negligence action against the
church for failing to protect him. Under Washington's current case law, the relationship
between a business and its invitee is a special relationship, but not a special protective
relationship.
Issue 3: Should this court entertain Star Crill's argument that Argonne Denny's
assumed a higher duty when Mary Winter earlier spoke to Jackie Legere, Austin Garner,
andfriends?
Answer 3: Yes.
Star Crill also contends that the Argonne Denny's assumed a duty to protect her,
which it then performed negligently. The trial court rejected this contention, in response
to a motion for reconsideration, as untimely. Crill claims she made this argument at the
original summary judgment hearing.
We do not resolve whether Star Crill asserted this additional argument during her
initial summary judgment response. By bringing a motion for reconsideration under CR
59, a party may preserve an issue for appeal that is closely related to a position previously
asserted and does not depend on new facts. River House Dev. Inc. v. Integrus
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No. 31912-1-III
Crill v. WRBF
Architecture, PS, 167 Wn. App. 221, 231, 272 P.3d 289 (2012). The law provides no
guidelines for determining whether a new position is "closely related" to a previous
position, but all of Star Crill's contentions bear on the alleged negligence of the Argonne
Denny's and the conduct of Mary Winter. The legal argument forwards no new facts.
Entertaining this second argument does not prejudice the Argonne Denny's. We address
the contention.
Issue 4: Did Argonne Denny's assume a higher duty when Mary Winter earlier
spoke to Jackie Legere, Austin Garner, andfriends?
Answer 4: No.
Star Crill cites Folsom v. Burger King, 135 Wn.2d at 676 (1998), to support the
contention that the Argonne Denny's assumed a duty to protect her when Mary Winter
came to the Austin Garner table in order to end the disruption. Crill argues that one of
the bases for imposing a duty of care on one who has begun to help a plaintiff in peril is
the situation when the defendant misleads the plaintiff into believing that the danger was
being addressed.
Star Crill misstates the standard. The Folsom court noted:
Typically, liability for attempting a voluntary rescue has been found
when the defendant makes the plaintiff's situation worse by: (1) increasing
the danger; (2) misleading the plaintiffinto believing the danger had been
removed; or (3) depriving the plaintiff of the possibility of help from other
sources.
135 Wn.2d at 676 (emphasis added). Even if Crill could show Winter's conduct misled
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No. 31912-1-111
Crill v. WRBF
her, she presents no facts that Winter's intervention created the harm, made the situation
worse, or induced reliance.
CONCLUSION
We affirm the trial court's dismissal of Star Crill's lawsuit on summary judgment.
A majority of the panel has determined this opinion will not be printed in the
Washington Appellate Reports, but it will be filed for public record pursuant to RCW
2.06.040.
WE CONCUR:
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36