MARTIN L. C. FELDMAN, U.S. DISTRICT JUDGE.
Before the Court is Southwest Airlines Co.'s motion for summary judgment on all claims. For the reasons that follow, the motion is GRANTED.
The plaintiffs in this litigation are suing, both literally and metaphorically, over peanuts. On February 14, 2014, Andrew Gressett,
Upon embarking, Andrew Gressett began searching for a row of seats that would accommodate his recent back injury while allowing him to sit with his family. He found three suitable seats in the second row only to allegedly discover a flight attendant identified only as "Kelly" sitting in the center seat, eating and reading a magazine. According to the plaintiffs, Kelly "stormed off" in a huff as they approached the row. Kelly purportedly told another flight attendant, "I guess I need to move before he [Mr. Gressett] runs me over." As Mr. Gressett placed his family's carry-on luggage in an overhead bin, the plaintiffs assert, Kelly again "stormed" to the front of the aircraft and told the passenger behind the plaintiffs, "You can come in if this person [Mr. Gressett] moves out of the aisle." Mr. Gressett retorted that he and his family would already have been seated had Kelly not been sitting in their chosen row. The plaintiffs thereafter settled into their seats, with Mr. Gressett taking the aisle, Mrs. Gressett sitting in the middle, and A.G. opting for the window seat.
Once in the air, Kelly began distributing bags of peanuts to passengers. The plaintiffs allege that when Kelly reached their row, she "forcefully pushed" bags of peanuts into Mr. Gressett's hands before throwing "four to six" bags at his face and torso. Mr. Gressett then complained to his wife of Kelly's "Southwest White Trash Professional Behavior."
When she heard this remark, Kelly warned the plaintiffs, "If you don't watch your language, security will be waiting for you when you land." Although the plaintiffs' original complaint characterizes Kelly's warning as a loud proclamation, they later admitted that she leaned in and spoke to them quietly, as if to prevent other passengers from eavesdropping. Neither of the plaintiffs could confirm that anyone else heard Kelly's comment.
The plaintiffs assert that, on at least two other occasions during the flight, Kelly bumped Mr. Gressett with her hip. During their depositions, however, neither Mr. nor Mrs. Gressett could testify with certainty that Kelly intended the contact.
Although the rest of the flight proceeded without incident, the plaintiffs claim that the fear of arrest and detention engendered by Kelly's threat beset them until they landed and disembarked in Los Angeles. The vacation unfolded as planned, but residual distress from the incident on the flight apparently prevented Mr. and Mrs. Gressett from enjoying themselves. They claim to have been upset for as many as 10 days after the flight. But neither Mr. Gressett nor Mrs. Gressett sought medical treatment for their alleged emotional anguish. A.G. suffered no discernible effects of the flight that so tormented his parents.
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56 instructs that summary judgment is proper if the record discloses no genuine dispute as to any material fact such that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. No genuine dispute of fact exists if the record taken as a whole could not lead a rational trier of fact to find for the non-moving party.
Summary judgment is also proper if the party opposing the motion fails to establish an essential element of a claim.
In deciding whether a fact issue exists, courts must view the facts and draw reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.
Southwest first seeks summary judgment on the plaintiffs' intentional infliction of emotional distress claim. The plaintiffs insist that Kelly's "threatening and bullying" behavior sullied the Gressetts' long-awaited family vacation and resulted in severe mental anguish, rendering Southwest
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According to the Statement of Uncontested Facts, Kelly allegedly complained about Mr. Gressett "run[ning] over" her; ridiculed Mr. Gressett taking too long to load his family's luggage into the overhead bin; opted for an uncourteously hostile method of peanut delivery; and quietly warned Mr. Gressett, after he referred to her as "White Trash," that security would be waiting at the Houston gate if he failed to clean up his language. No rational trier of fact could conclude that this behavior qualified as anything more than regrettably rude and off-putting. Even accounting for the "unique and sensitive conditions" of commercial air travel, as the plaintiffs insist this Court must, Kelly's crass alleged behavior amounts to the kinds of affront that would at best annoy reasonable people. Kelly's alleged actions, in fact, epitomize the "mere insults" the
The Court's analysis of the "extreme and outrageous" element suffices to dismiss the plaintiffs' emotional distress claim on a motion for summary judgment. However, because the degree of the plaintiffs' alleged emotional harm bears on each of their remaining claims, the Court addresses that issue here.
Recovery on an IIED claim under Louisiana law requires a level of distress beyond a reasonable person's endurance.
Despite asserting that residual anxiety and distress from their encounters with Kelly "ruined" their vacation, the plaintiffs admittedly participated in all of their planned activities. The Court notes that the plaintiffs never sought medical attention or treatment for their alleged distress. The plaintiffs' endurance of the California vacation and forgoing of medical treatment, they explain, stems from their decision to "live their lives, instead of setting aside responsibilities in order to maximize their claims by `living their case.'" And so, the plaintiffs undermine the merits of their own case. That the plaintiffs even could enjoy a lavish 10-day vacation and "live their lives" illustrates that their emotional suffering fell well within the range of reasonable human endurance.
Southwest also asks this Court to dismiss the plaintiffs' claim that Kelly assaulted them by threatening to call security in response to Mr. Gressett's "White Trash" comment. This claim must also be dismissed as a matter of law.
An assault occurs when an intentional threat of battery, or harmful or offensive contact, places one in reasonable apprehension of receiving an injury.
No evidence suggests that, in responding to Mr. Gressett's crass language, Kelly manifested an intent to threaten him or his family with harmful or offensive contact. Nor do the plaintiffs allege that Kelly's warning that she would enlist security's help placed them in fear of physical injury. Instead, they suggest that the power Kelly wielded as a result of the "deference" afforded airline employees in the name of security and safety augmented the Gressetts' panic over being arrested and separated from A.G. They further offer the risible assertion that they "would have preferred a threat of a knife or shotgun" to the possibility of being detained by security in Houston, a statement as breathtaking in its absurdity as in its disingenuousness.
The plaintiffs additionally contend, in cursory fashion, that Kelly assaulted and battered Mr. Gressett by 1) pelting him with peanuts and 2) bumping into him with her hip at least twice. Both claims are without merit.
Even assuming Kelly forcefully shoved peanuts onto Mr. Gressett, he suffered no physical injury. Furthermore, the summary judgment record (including the Statement of Uncontested Facts, deposition testimony and the plaintiffs' own pleadings) signify that the plaintiffs' alleged fear of arrest and detention from Kelly's warning, rather than the trauma from Kelly's peanut attacks, led to the plaintiffs' emotional distress. The source of the anguish notwithstanding, its lack of severity also defeats the plaintiffs' assault and battery claims in the absence of physical injury. Therefore, as a matter of law, Kelly neither assaulted nor battered Mr. Gressett with her allegedly aggressive form of delivery of the peanut packages.
The same is true of Kelly's alleged hip-bumping.
In their original complaint, the plaintiffs also assert claims for defamation, negligent training and supervision, and mental injury to A.G., the Gressetts' minor son. Because the plaintiffs renounced or largely ignored these claims in their opposition, the Court will summarily explain their dismissal here.
After initially accusing Kelly of defamation, the plaintiffs acknowledge in their opposition papers that their defamation claim "may lack the full complement of elements necessary to prevail." Indeed, defamation in Louisiana consists of a false or defamatory statement, publication to a third party, negligence on the part of a publisher, and actual injury, none of which occurred in this case.
The original complaint also charges Southwest with "failing to properly train, screen, monitor, supervise or otherwise prevent the hiring of ... their obviously unstable and improperly trained and/or unprepared employee." In their opposition papers, the plaintiffs strip their direct negligence back to a few fleeting mentions of Southwest's failure to "train and control" Kelly. The plaintiffs point to nothing regarding Southwest's training methods or Kelly's alleged instability. They further conceded in their sworn deposition testimony that Kelly uttered her warning of security's involvement quietly and that they could not confirm that other Southwest employees witnessed enough of her conduct to intervene. Because the plaintiffs cannot prove essential elements of their claim, the direct negligence claims against Southwest are therefore dismissed.
The plaintiffs also sought damages for the "actual mental injury and upset" to A.G. in their original complaint. The opposition papers refer only to Mr. and Mrs. Gressett's fear of A.G. sustaining mental injury and upset. As the Statement of Uncontested Facts indicates, the plaintiffs present nothing regarding their child's suffering or even becoming aware of his parents' confrontation with Kelly. The only mental anguish alluded to is that of the parents, which this Court has already determined falls well below the threshold of "serious" under Louisiana law. Accordingly, the defendant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law dismissing any claim for mental anguish damages brought on behalf of A.G.
Finally, in their opposition papers, the plaintiffs introduce for the first time in this case claims for breach of contract, third-party witnessing of injury to a spouse, and "Lost Vacation Enjoyment." Insofar as the plaintiffs have attempted to amend their original pleadings well past the pleading deadlines without good cause, the Court does not consider them.
Even assuming that the plaintiffs had properly pleaded these claims, none would have merit. In asserting that Southwest committed "the tort of breach of contract," the plaintiffs neglect to reference any contract between the parties or explain how Southwest breached any terms of such contract. They merely rehash their emotional
The plaintiffs' new claim for third-party witness damages under Article 2315.6 of the Louisiana Civil Code betrays ignorance of that Code provision's applicability. Article 2315.6 permits recovery to claimants who suffer severe emotional distress as a result of witnessing their spouse incurring a serious, visible physical injury.
Although they style it as a claim "Lost Vacation Enjoyment," the plaintiffs' final argument in their opposition papers is really one for nonpecuniary damages of a breach of contract under Louisiana Civil Code Article 1998. Such damages are only recoverable when the contract breached was, by its nature, designed to gratify a nonpecuniary interest. La. Civ. Code art. 1998. Again, the plaintiffs neither reference any contract nor explain how Southwest has breached that contract. In
For the foregoing reasons, summary judgment dismissing all of the plaintiffs' claims against Southwest is appropriate. Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs, even assuming Kelly engaged in the alleged poor conduct, the plaintiffs' frivolous and seemingly vindictive claims have no legal remedy as a matter of law. Accordingly, the defendant's motion for summary judgment is hereby GRANTED. The plaintiffs' case is dismissed with prejudice.