Estate of Jones v. Quinn
Estate of Jones v. Quinn
Opinion of the Court
¶ 1. On August 20, 1993, Esther Jones Quinn and Alonzo Jones (Plaintiffs) filed their complaint in the Circuit Court of Hinds County against the defendants in this case, alleging that their son's death was a result of the intentional and malicious, or grossly negligent, behavior of the defendants in the deficient upkeep of the Simpson County Jail and the treatment of prisoners at the jail. Their son, Andre Jones, was found dead, hanging by a shoestring in a shower stall at the jail, while being held on charges of possession of a stolen tag, altering a vehicle identification number, violating a city beer ordinance, and carrying a concealed weapon. Andre had been arrested at a road block set up by the Brandon Police Department, and was transported to the Simpson County Jail due to overcrowding in the Brandon City Jail. Dr. Steven Hayne, who performed the autopsy, found that the manner of death was suicide. However, Plaintiffs maintained that their son was murdered. Plaintiffs named as defendants: Lloyd Jones, Sheriff of Simpson County; John Abernathy, Deputy Sheriff of Simpson County; Simpson County; Walter Tucker, Chief of the Brandon Police Department; John Henley, Sergeant at the Brandon Police Department; the City of Brandon; Willie Brown, Inspector for the Department of Institutional Sanitation of the Health Department for the State of Mississippi; Ed Thompson, State Health Officer; Jerry Oakes, Acting Director/Assistant Director/Chief Architect for the Bureau of Buildings, Grounds and Real Property; Millard Mackey, State Chief Deputy Fire Marshal; and Eddie Lucas, Commissioner of the Department of Corrections for the State of Mississippi. Plaintiffs later amended their complaint to include Commissioner of Public Safety James Ingram as a defendant. Upon the death of Lloyd Jones, Plaintiffs filed a motion to substitute the new Sheriff of Simpson County, Doyle King, and the administratrix of Lloyd Jones's estate, Lucy Jones, in Lloyd Jones's official and individual capacities, respectively. They also amended their complaint to include a count for simple negligence and one for wrongful death. Plaintiffs accomplished their amendments to the complaint both by motion to amend and by filing a new complaint which was later consolidated into the original complaint.
¶ 2. In addition to their tort lawsuit filed in state court, Plaintiffs filed a complaint in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Mississippi on August 24, 1993. The complaint in federal court was *Page 626 based upon the same set of facts and circumstances surrounding the death of Andre Jones, and named the same defendants as the complaint filed in circuit court with the exception of Defendants Brown, Thompson, Oakes, Mackey, Lucas, and Ingram (State Defendants). Plaintiffs alleged constitutional and federal statutory violations amounting to deliberate indifference, wrongful death, and conspiracy.
¶ 3. In an order dated January 11, 1996, the federal court granted summary judgment for Chief Tucker, Sergeant Henley, the City of Brandon, and Deputy Sheriff John Abernathy. However, the court denied summary judgment for Lloyd Jones and Simpson County. On June 12, 1996, the federal court entered summary judgment for the remaining defendants. The court entered a final judgment dismissing the case with prejudice on the same day.
¶ 4. On October 31, 1995, Hinds County Circuit Court Judge James E. Graves, Jr. granted the defendants' motion to hold discovery in abeyance until the issue of immunity was decided. On November 28, 1995, Judge Graves issued a detailed opinion ruling on all of the defendants' motions to dismiss and for summary judgment. He found that the motions to dismiss filed by the State Defendants should be granted. The judge also granted the motions to dismiss filed by Deputy Sheriff Abernathy and Sergeant Henley. However, Judge Graves denied the motions to dismiss and for summary judgment filed by Simpson County and Sheriff Jones (Simpson County Defendants), and the City of Brandon and Chief Tucker (Brandon Defendants).
¶ 5. On January 3, 1996, the Simpson County Defendants and Brandon Defendants filed a joint motion, requesting that the claims against them be dismissed due to improper venue or, in the alternative, severed and venue transferred to their respective home counties. Judge Graves denied this motion in an order dated March 21, 1996, and reaffirmed the March 21 order on April 10, 1996. On April 24, 1996, the Simpson County Defendants and Brandon Defendants filed their Motion for Certification of Interlocutory Appeal, requesting that the circuit court enter an order granting them certification to appeal to this Court on the issue of venue. Judge Graves entered an order denying the motion on May 30, 1996. However, by an order dated August 5, 1996, this Court granted the remaining defendants' petition for interlocutory appeal and ordered that the trial court proceedings be stayed pending review of this appeal. Although the Brandon Defendants and Simpson County Defendants have raised the issue of res judicata regarding the dismissal of the federal lawsuit in their answers to the amended complaint and in separate motions for summary judgment, the circuit court had not yet reached any decision on the issue of res judicata when this Court granted interlocutory appeal and stayed the lower court proceedings.
WHETHER THE CIRCUIT COURT OF HINDS COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI ERRED IN DENYING THE JOINT MOTION OF THE BRANDON DEFENDANTS AND THE SIMPSON COUNTY DEFENDANTS FOR A SEVERANCE OF THE CLAIMS AGAINST THEM AND FOR CHANGE OF VENUE FROM HINDS COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI TO RANKIN COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI AND SIMPSON COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI, RESPECTIVELY.
¶ 7. The Brandon Defendants and Simpson County Defendants argue that their joint *Page 627 motion to sever the claims and change venue to Rankin and Simpson Counties should have been granted for several reasons. First they contend that under Miss. Code Ann. §§¶ 8. The Brandon Defendants and Simpson County Defendants also assert the right of individual citizens in this State to be sued in their counties of residence. Mississippi's general venue statute, Miss. Code Ann. §
¶ 9. Plaintiffs, however, assert that venue is proper in Hinds County, based upon the inclusion of the State Defendants in the action, who are all residents of Hinds County. See Miss. Code Ann. §
In suits involving multiple defendants, where venue is good as to one defendant, it is good as to all defendants. This is true where the defendant upon whom venue is based is subsequently dismissed from the suit. In such situations, venue as to the remaining defendants continues despite the fact that venue would have been improper, if the original action had named them only.Blackledge v. Scott,
New Biloxi Hospital, Inc. v. Frazier,Where an action is properly brought in a county in which one of the defendants resides, it may be retained notwithstanding there is a dismissal of the resident defendant, provided the following exists — the action was begun in good faith in the bona fide belief that plaintiff had a cause of action against the resident defendant; the joinder of the local defendant was not fraudulent or frivolous, with the intention of depriving the non-resident defendant of his right to be sued in his own county; and there was a reasonable claim of liability asserted against the resident defendant.
¶ 10. The remaining defendants maintain that Plaintiffs only included the State Defendants for the purpose of forum shopping, so that they could file suit in Hinds County. Under the three-part test in New Biloxi Hosp., therefore, they argue that the case could not be retained in Hinds County after the State Defendants were dismissed. New Biloxi Hosp., 245 Miss. at 192, 146 So.2d at *Page 628
885. See also Long v. Patterson,
¶ 11. This Court has held that the proper question is not whether the plaintiff's attorney intended to fraudulently establish venue, but whether the facts support inclusion of the defendant upon whom venue is based. Jefferson v. Magee,
¶ 12. Since the State Defendants were properly included in the suit, Section
The venue for any suit filed under the provisions of this chapter against the state or its employees shall be in the county in which the act, omission or event on which the liability phase of the action is based, occurred or took place. The venue for all other suits filed under the provisions of this chapter shall be in the county or judicial district thereof in which the principal offices of the governing body of the political subdivision are located. The venue specified in this subsection shall control in all actions filed against governmental entities, notwithstanding that other defendants which are not governmental entities may be joined in the suit, and notwithstanding the provisions of any other venue statute that otherwise would apply.
Miss. Code Ann. §
¶ 13. Since the remaining defendants' only basis for requesting severance was their position that venue was only proper for each of them in their respective counties, we find that the circuit court properly denied severance in this case. Plaintiffs also contend that severance is not appropriate here, because there is no obvious conflict in the defenses of the defendants, and justice would best be served by a joint trial. "When there is more than one possible proximate cause of an injury, brought about by the negligence of more than one party, the purposes of the applicable rules best would be served by a single trial."Kiddy, 628 So.2d at 1358. Severing the cases against the parties would allow them to "play a game of `divide and conquer.'" Id. Judge Graves did not abuse his discretion by determining that severance was not proper in this case.
WHETHER THE CIRCUIT COURT OF HINDS COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI ERRED IN REJECTING DEFENDANTS' FORUM NON CONVENIENS MOTION TO TRANSFER THE CASE FROM HINDS COUNTY.
¶ 14. Alternatively, the Brandon Defendants and Simpson County Defendants argue that the circuit court should have transferred venue on the theory of forum non conveniens. Because we find that Judge Graves's decision must be reversed based upon improper venue, we decline to address the issue of forum non conveniens in this case.¶ 16. REVERSED AND REMANDED.
PRATHER, C.J., and BANKS and JAMES L. ROBERTS, Jr., JJ., concur.
McRAE, J., concurs in result only.
WALLER, J., dissents with separate written opinion joined by PITTMAN, P.J., and SMITH and MILLS, JJ.
Dissenting Opinion
¶ 17. While I agree with the conclusion of the majority that venue is not proper in Hinds County, I dissent because, based on the facts before this Court, there was no reasonable basis for the inclusion of the State Defendants in this action. Had the inclusion of the State Defendants been proper in this action, I would agree with the majority that Miss. Code Ann. §
¶ 18. Mississippi's venue statutes and this Court's decisions concerning proper venue have been summarized as follows:
New Biloxi Hosp., Inc. v. Frazier,Where an action is properly brought in a county in which one of the defendants resides, it may be retained notwithstanding there is a dismissal of the resident defendant, provided the following exists — the action was begun in good faith in the bona fide belief that plaintiff had a cause of action against the resident defendant; the joinder of the local defendant was not fraudulent or frivolous, with the intention of depriving the non-resident defendant of his right to be sued in his own county; and there was a reasonable claim of liability asserted against the resident defendant.
¶ 19. In the case sub judice, Quinn failed to assert a reasonable claim of liability against the resident defendants, the State Defendants. The third prong of the test set forth *Page 630
above has not been satisfied. As such, venue in Hinds County was never proper. The proper inquiry before this Court is whether the facts support inclusion of the defendant upon whom venue is based. Jefferson v. Magee,
¶ 20. Although the death of Andre Jones is a tragedy, the State Defendants did not owe him a duty. He was not apprehended by a state law enforcement agency; he was not housed in a state correctional facility; nor was there any other action by the state that was even arguably related to the circumstances surrounding this tragic incident. Andre Jones was apprehended by a local law enforcement agency (Brandon Police Department), incarcerated in a county jail (Simpson County Jail) due to overcrowding at the Brandon City Jail, and was a pre-trial detainee, not a state prisoner. Under these facts, it is clear that the plaintiffs failed to satisfy the third requirement of the New Biloxi test. This conclusion is further supported by the fact that the trial judge granted the State Defendants' motion to dismiss under M.R.C.P. 12(b)(6).
¶ 21. A motion to dismiss pursuant to M.R.C.P. 12(b)(6) raises an issue of law. When considering a motion to dismiss, the allegations made in the complaint must be taken as true and the motion should not be granted unless it appears beyond doubt that the plaintiff will be unable to prove any set of facts in support of his claim. T.M. v. Noblitt,
¶ 22. Based on the facts before us, it is clear that the plaintiffs have failed to assert a reasonable claim of liability against the State Defendants. Therefore, venue in Hinds County was never proper as to the resident defendants (State Defendants), and Miss. Code Ann. §
PITTMAN, P.J., and SMITH and MILLS, JJ., join this opinion.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- The Estate of Lloyd Jones, Deceased Doyle King, Successor in Office to Sheriff Lloyd Jones, Deceased Simpson County, Mississippi Walter Tucker, Individually, and in His Official Capacity as Chief of Brandon, Mississippi, Police Department and City of Brandon, Mississippi v. Esther Jones Quinn, and Alonso Jones, Sole Heirs-At-Law of Andre Jones and on Behalf of All Other Wrongful Death Beneficiaries.
- Cited By
- 44 cases
- Status
- Published