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Affirmed and Opinion filed November 15,
2005. In
The Fourteenth
Court of Appeals _______________ NO. 14-04-00015-CV _______________ CHEOL MO JEA,
Appellant V. d/b/a SAM=S FOOD STORE, Appellees _____________________________________________________________ On Appeal from 280th
District Court Harris County,
Texas Trial Court Cause No. 02-30416 _____________________________________________________________ O P I N I O
N In this personal injury case,
Cheol Mo Jea appeals from a judgment notwithstanding the verdict
(AJNOV@) on the grounds that: (1)
appellees had a duty to provide a safe work place as a matter of law; (2)
there was more than a scintilla of evidence showing appellees= negligent acts were a cause in
fact of Jea=s injuries; and (3) there was
more than a scintilla of evidence supporting the requisite conduct of a
convenience store owner of ordinary prudence in the same or similar
circumstances. We
affirm. After being shot during a
robbery while working at Sam=s Food Store, Jea filed suit
against its owners, Sam J. Cho and Mi Rea Cho d/b/a Sam=s Food Store (collectively, the
Astore@), asserting a negligence
claim.[1] The jury returned a verdict
favorable to Jea, but the trial court granted the store=s motion for JNOV based, in
part, on the ground that there was no evidence of proximate cause, and
entered a take-nothing judgment. As relevant to this appeal, a
JNOV should be entered when the evidence offered to prove a vital fact is
no more than a scintilla.
City of Keller v. Wilson, 168 S.W.3d 802, 810, 823 (Tex. 2005). We thus review a JNOV under a
legal sufficiency standard, viewing the evidence in the light favorable to
the verdict, crediting favorable evidence if reasonable jurors could, and
disregarding contrary evidence unless reasonable jurors could not. Id. at
807. Jea=s second, third, and fourth
issues contend that he presented more than a scintilla of evidence to show
that the following negligent acts by the store, in failing to provide a
safe workplace, were the cause in fact of his injuries: (1) failing to
provide Jea a key to lock the front door from inside the store; (2)
failing to provide adequate exterior lighting; and (3) failing to provide
a second employee to assist during closing. Because the issue of causation is
dispositive of the appeal, we address it
first. A negligence cause of action[2]
requires proof of proximate cause, one element of which is cause in fact.
W. Invs., Inc. v. Urena, 162 S.W.3d 547, 550-51 (Tex. 2005). An act or omission is a cause in
fact of an injury, if without it, the harm would not have occurred. Id. at 551. Conversely, an act of negligence
is not a cause in fact if it does no more than furnish a condition that
makes the injury possible.
Id. Cause in
fact cannot be established by conjecture, guess, or speculation. Id. Here, Jea testified that, at or
immediately before closing time on the night of the robbery,[3]
a man and one or two others entered the store. Jea thought they were customers,
but one of the men pulled a gun, and they robbed the store, and one of the
men shot Jea in the arm. Jea contends that if he had had
a key to lock the door to the store from the inside, then he would have
been able to lock the door, count the cash, and close the store without
suffering the injury. He
similarly argues that with proper exterior lighting, he would have
Abeen more cognizant of the
surroundings . . . and would have gained vital seconds of notice if he
discerned a person was bent on committing criminal activity within the
store and potentially injuring [him].@ Likewise, Jea asserts that the
presence of a second employee would have provided both a deterrent to
criminals and another set of watchful eyes to warn of potential
danger. However, there is no
evidence in our record that any of these measures, individually or in
combination, would have prevented either the robbery or the shooting that
caused Jea=s injury. Although common sense would
suggest that employing these measures might have theoretically made the
store somewhat more difficult to rob, and possibly even prevented the
robbery from occurring in the manner that it did, there is no
empirical data, expert opinion, or other evidence that such measures have
actually had any effect on preventing or reducing such crimes where
they have been implemented, let alone a reasonable probability that this
particular robbery or shooting would have been deterred or thwarted by
using them. Because
Jea=s issues thus fail to
demonstrate that his injury would not have occurred but for the alleged
omissions by the store, they are overruled, and the judgment of the trial
court is affirmed. /s/
Richard H. Edelman Justice Judgment rendered and Opinion
filed November 15, 2005. Panel consists of Justices Edelman, Seymore, and
Guzman. (Seymore, J., concurs
in result only.) [1]
Because the store was a non-subscriber to worker=s compensation insurance, Jea=s recovery against it required a showing of
negligence. See Werner v.
Colwell, 909 S.W.2d 866, 868 (Tex. 1995). [2]
A complaint that an owner failed to provide adequate security
against criminal conduct is ordinarily a premises liability claim. Timberwalk Apartments,
Partners, Inc. v. Cain, 972 S.W.2d 749, 753 (Tex. 1998). However, no error is assigned to
the submission of this case on solely a negligent activity
theory. [3]
On direct examination, Jea testified that the men came into the
store while he was in the process of closing the store. However, on cross-examination, Jea
acknowledged that the men entered the store while the store was still open
for business. Additionally,
Jea testified that one of the men had been in the store about 15 minutes
before the robbery to buy beer, but had to leave to get his
identification. Therefore,
when he returned, Jea assumed he was a
customer. | |