Criminal Justice Rule of Law Case Study

Read the following cases:

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  • Case Example 5-1: Ordonez v. Gillespie (Page 141)
  • Case Example 5-2: Shadburn v. Whitlow. (Page 144)
  • Case Example 6-12: Eisnaugle v McDonald’s (Page 230)
  • Case Example 6-15: Taboada v. Daly Seven, Inc (Pages 251-252)
  • For each case, identify the following:

  • Case name (1-point)
  • Parties involved (1-point)
  • The facts—circumstances that gave rise to the lawsuit (3-points)
  • The issue—legal question that the parties want resolved (2-points)
  • The judge’s decision—judge’s response to the issue (1-point)
  • The reasoning supporting the decision—basis and rationale for the decision (2-points)
  • CASE EXAMPLE 5-1
    Ordonez v. Gillespie
    2001 WL 294553 (Tex. 2001)
    …Ordonez alleged that on or about March 9, 1996
    she was working as a housekeeper at a Dallas
    hotel. The Gillespies had rented adjoining rooms
    1224 and 1225. While cleaning room 1224,
    Ordonez alleged she was sexually assaulted by
    17 year old Jason Gillespie, who is mentally
    challenged. Ordonez alleged the Gillespies acted
    negligently “by violating the duty which they owed
    her to exercise ordinary care in the care of their
    mentally challenged son, a minor.” More
    specifically, Ordonez asserted the Gillespies
    failed to properly supervise their son, which
    included failing to ensure Jason would not be left
    alone with unfamiliar people…. The Gillespies
    asserted that Jason’s alleged conduct was not
    foreseeable to his parents… The trial court
    granted summary judgment for the Gillespies….
    Ordonez contends a duty existed because
    Jason’s alleged sexual assault [was] a foreseeable
    result of the Gillespies’ negligently leaving him
    alone in a hotel room.
    Negligence consists of three essential elements:
    (1) a legal duty owed by one person to another;
    (2) a breach of that duty; and (3) damages
    proximately resulting from the breach. Duty is the
    threshold inquiry. It is the function of several
    interrelated factors, the foremost and dominant
    consideration being foreseeability of the risk. A
    parent’s duty to protect third parties from acts of
    the parent’s minor child depends on whether the
    injury to the third party is reasonably foreseeable.
    Foreseeability means the [defendant], as a person
    of ordinary intelligence, should have anticipated
    the dangers his negligent act created for others….
    Ordonez relies on a copy of the Gillespies’ hotel
    reservation for room 1225, which includes the
    notation that the Gillespies needed to be
    connected to their mentally handicapped son.
    [Evidence also indicates that] at school Jason
    “disrupted the class” and “got into a lot of trouble”.
    The Gillespies put Jason in a boarding school in
    Massachusetts “for kids with psychological or
    school problems.” After six or eight months he
    was asked to leave the facility because he had
    run away a couple of times and smoked in the
    high school. He got his GED when he was 16.
    …Jason had never been detained for any type
    of criminal activity. It was Ordonez’ burden to
    present some evidence that Jason’s conduct was
    foreseeable to his parents. We conclude she
    failed to do so. Evidence that Jason did not like
    school and disrupted class is no evidence that his
    parents should have foreseen the possibility that
    he was capable of assaultive conduct. Likewise,
    evidence that Jason’s parents considered him to
    be mentally handicapped is no evidence that it
    was foreseeable he might be a danger to others.
    The trial court properly granted the Gillespies’
    motion for summary judgment.
    CASE EXAMPLE 5-2
    Shadburn v. Whitlow
    533 S.E.2d 765 (Ga. 2000)
    …IT]he record shows that Shadburn, Whitlow,
    and Jewel Palmer were on their way to Ormond
    Beach, Florida. En route, they stopped at New
    Perry Hotel to eat lunch. The three proceeded up
    a flight of stairs to the hotel restaurant. Palmer
    proceeded first, followed by Shadburn. Whitlow,
    an elderly woman who had impaired vision due to
    cataracts, followed last. Palmer was waiting in line
    at the restaurant when she heard a noise.
    Turning, she saw Whitlow, who had reached the
    top of the stairs, fall into Shadburn who was
    standing in the lobby area. Shadburn was injured.
    Palmer and Shadburn believed Whitlow’s fall
    was caused by loose carpeting, which they
    noticed at the top of the stairwell the evening after
    the fall; however, all three ladies testified that they
    were not actually certain what caused Whitlow to
    fall. Palmer also averred in her affidavit that
    Whitlow may have tripped because she may have
    been inebriated after sipping an unknown
    beverage from a cup during the trip to Perry.
    failed to present any evidence that a condition on
    the stairs, the loose carpeting, caused Whitlow to
    fall. The speculation that Whitlow may have tripped
    on loose carpeting does not sufficiently establish
    causation.
    On the issue of causation, as on other issues
    essential to a cause of action for negligence, the
    plaintiff, in general, has the burden of proof. The
    plaintiff must introduce evidence which affords a
    reasonable basis for the conclusion that it is more
    likely than not that the conduct of the defendant
    was a cause in fact of the result. A mere possibility
    of such causation is not enough; and when the
    matter remains one of pure speculation or con-
    jecture, or the probabilities are at least evenly
    balanced, it becomes the duty of the court to
    grant summary judgment for the defendant.
    Similarly, the trial court also properly granted
    summary judgment to Whitlow because there is
    no evidence that Shadburn’s injuries were caused
    by an act or omission of Whitlow. There is no
    evidence in the record of the cause of Whitlow’s
    fall. Shadburn can point only to speculation that
    Whitlow may have tripped and fallen because she
    was inebriated.
    The trial court properly granted summary
    judgment to New Perry Hotel because Shadburn
    230 0
    CASE EXAMPLE 6-12
    At trial the testimony revealed that defendant
    Eisnaugle v. McDonald’s
    2000 WL 33226184 (Ohio 2000)
    … On a rainy morning Jill Eisnaugle, then 15, and
    her father stopped at the McDonald’s restaurant
    in Jackson for breakfast. Jill walked across the
    parking lot and stepped up onto the tile sidewalk
    in front of the side entrance. Upon stepping onto
    the tile, Jill immediately fell. Jill twisted and broke
    the neck of her femur. Resetting the bone
    required surgery and the implantation of surgical
    screws…. Her doctor did not release her to full
    activity until nearly 19 months after the accident.
    The Eisnaugles filed a lawsuit against the
    restaurant alleging that the McDonald’s negligently
    permitted an unsafe condition to exist. They sought
    damages for Jill’s medical expenses, her pain and
    suffering, and her parents’ loss of Jill’s company
    and services.
    franchisee leases the land and the building, and
    is responsible for its upkeep and remodeling. In
    1990 defendant opted to change the type of
    sidewalk outside the restaurant from exposed
    aggregate (a type of sidewalk material) to tile
    The franchise owner testified that he selected the
    tile sidewalk because it is easier and cheaper to
    maintain than aggregate. The Eisnaugles’ expert
    witness tested the tile and determined that it did
    not comply with the Ohio Building Code, the Life
    Safety Code, or Americans with Disabilities Act
    standards for safe, slip-resistant outdoor
    walkways….
    The jury deliberated and determined that
    defendant was negligent and that defendant’s
    negligence proximately caused Jill’s accident and
    the resulting injuries….
    On appeal the judgment affirmed.
    CASE EXAMPLE 6-15
    Taboada v. Daly Seven, Inc.
    626 S.E.2d 428 (Va. 2006)
    …Daly Seven, Inc. owns and operates hotels in
    Virginia, including a Holiday Inn Express located
    in downtown Roanoke. At approximately 2 a.m.
    Ryan Taboada and his family arrived at the
    Holiday Inn Express seeking lodging for the night.
    Taboada had selected the hotel relying, in part,
    upon the hotel’s representation that the hotel was
    a “safe, secure and reliable place to lodge.”
    a room. Taboada then returned to his vehicle in the
    Taboada registered as a guest and was assigned
    hotel’s parking lot where his wife and two children
    were waiting and began to unload the family’s
    Derrick W. Smith, who was not a guest at
    luggage.
    the hotel, approached Taboada and demanded
    money from him. Smith then, immediately and
    without provocation, began to fire a weapon at
    Taboada. Taboada was wounded eight times,
    suffering severe bodily injuries. Smith took a
    wristwatch from Taboada’s seven-year-old son
    and stole the family vehicle; Taboada’s infant
    daughter was still in her seat in the vehicle at the
    time. Police apprehended Smith, recovered the
    vehicle, and rescued the infant, who was not
    physically harmed…
    Taboada sued the hotel for negligence
    premised upon the innkeeper’s breach of a duty
    of care owed to Taboada as a guest. Taboada
    alleged that Daly Seven had misrepresented that
    the Holiday Inn Express was located in a “safe”
    area when, in fact, Daly Seven “knew the business
    assaultive acts. Taboada alleged that these facts
    placed Daly Seven on notice that uninvited
    persons regularly came upon the property and
    created a risk of imminent harm to guests and
    employees…. Taboada alleged that Daly Seven
    had at one time employed uniformed security
    guards to patrol the hotel and its parking lot
    during the overnight hours, but that it had
    discontinued this practice in favor of saving
    expenses. Taboada alleged that had Daly Seven
    continued to employ uniformed security guards,
    they would have been able to see the assailant
    prior to the attack and would have been able to
    stop the assailant before the assault….
    The hotel asserted that Taboada failed to allege
    that Daly Seven knew that criminal assaults
    against persons were occurring or about to occur
    on the premises which would have indicated an
    imminent probability of harm…
    There is no liability when the defendant neither
    knows of the danger of an injury to a plaintiff from
    the criminal conduct of a third party, nor has
    reason to foresee that danger… The guest of an
    innkeeper entrusts his safety to the innkeeper and
    has little ability to control his environment. The
    guest relies upon the innkeeper to make the
    property safe and the innkeeper’s knowledge of
    the neighborhood in taking the reasonably
    necessary precautions to do so. In this regard, it
    is reasonable for the law to impose upon the
    innkeeper a duty to take reasonable precautions
    to protect his guests against injury caused by the
    criminal conduct on the part of other guests or
    strangers, if the danger or injury by such conduct
    is known to the innkeeper or reasonably
    foreseeable…
    We hold that Taboada’s allegations, if proven,
    would be sufficient to permit a trier of fact to find
    that Daly Seven had breached its duty of care.
    Taboada alleged that, over a three-year period
    immediately prior to the attack upon Taboada, Daly
    Seven’s employees had regularly contacted police
    96 times to report criminal conduct including
    robberies, malicious woundings, shootings and
    was a known target for repeat criminal activity
    including assaultive crimes on employees and
    guests.” Taboada alleged that for the three months
    prior to his arrival the hotel called the Roanoke
    City Police Department on at least 96 occasions to
    report the presence of trespassers who refused to
    the leave the premises, the presence of
    suspicious persons on the premises, larcenies,
    disorderly persons, suspicious circumstances and
    suspected drug offenses, robberies, malicious
    woundings, shootings, and other criminally
    (continued)
    252 UNIT II: Negligence
    other criminally assaultive acts… As a result of
    these repeated incidents, Daly Seven had been
    advised by police that its guests were at an
    imminent risk of harm from uninvited persons
    coming into or upon its property. These allegations
    are sufficient to support a reasonable conclusion
    that Daly Seven knew its property was located in a
    high-crime area, and that Daly Seven was on
    notice that its guests were in danger of injury
    caused by criminal acts of third parties. These
    allegations sufficiently support the further
    conclusion that the injury to Taboada from the
    criminal act of the third party was reasonably
    For these reasons we decline to grant summary
    foreseeable.
    judgment to Daly Seven.

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