Court Opinion

ID: 4524554
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-04-10 21:00:14.632526+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:09:39.874560
License: Public Domain

United States Court of Appeals
                        For the First Circuit

No. 19-1754

  JEFFREY BOUDREAU, as Personal Representative of the Estate of
                         Wendy Boudreau,

                         Plaintiff, Appellant,

                                  v.

                      SHAW'S SUPERMARKETS, INC.,

                         Defendant, Appellee.

          APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
                    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MAINE

              [Hon. D. Brock Hornby, U.S. District Judge]

                                Before

                          Howard, Chief Judge,
                  Lynch and Thompson, Circuit Judges.

     Laura H. White and Bergen & Parkinson, LLC on brief for
appellant.
     Heidi J. Eddy, Elizabeth G. Stouder, and Richardson, Whitman,
Large & Badger on brief for appellee.

                            April 10, 2020
           LYNCH,    Circuit   Judge.       On   August     19,   2015,    Connor

MacCalister attacked and killed Wendy Boudreau with a knife in the

ice cream aisle of the Saco, Maine Shaw's Supermarket.              Both Wendy

Boudreau and MacCalister were regular customers of the Saco Shaw's.

MacCalister later confessed that she went to Shaw's intending to

kill someone and chose Wendy Boudreau because she was elderly and

would be unable to fight back.

           Two years later, Jeffrey Boudreau, Wendy Boudreau's

husband and the executor of her estate, sued Shaw's in federal

court asserting wrongful death and conscious pain and suffering

under Maine law.      Boudreau asserted that Shaw's owed a duty to

protect its patrons from foreseeable harm and that MacCalister's

attack was foreseeable.        He further argued that Shaw's breached

this duty by failing adequately to monitor the store and that this

breach was the proximate cause of Wendy Boudreau's death.                   In a

separate   count,    he   alleged   that    Shaw's'    breach     caused   Wendy

Boudreau conscious pain and suffering.           The district court entered

summary judgment for Shaw's, concluding that Shaw's did not owe a

duty under Maine wrongful death law to protect Wendy Boudreau from

this   attack   by   MacCalister    because      it   was   not   foreseeable.

Boudreau v. Shaw's Supermarkets, Inc., No. 2:17-cv-259, 2019 WL

3242051, at *1, *14 (D. Me. July 18, 2019).            We affirm.

                                    - 2 -
                                  I.

A.   Facts

             We recount the facts in the light most favorable to

Boudreau and draw all reasonable inferences in his favor.    Roy v.

Correct Care Sols., LLC, 914 F.3d 52, 57 (1st Cir. 2019).1

     1.      The Saco Shaw's

             The Saco Shaw's is a grocery store located in downtown

Saco, Maine that serves around 15,000 customers per week.2    It is

one of the biggest Shaw's in Maine.      The Saco Shaw's served "a

very, very diverse clientele with a lot of walkers with backpacks."

             The store has two front entrances, one on each side of

the store.    When a customer enters the store, the produce section

is on the far left and the floral department is on the far right

of the store.     The ice cream aisle is closer to the side of the

store with the floral department.

             The management personnel of the Saco Shaw's changed

several times between 2009 and 2015.     John DeRoche was the store

manager from 2009 to 2014.     An interim manager served for a few

months in mid-2014 until Bryan Goodrich took over as the manager

     1    We describe the testimony and incidents involving
MacCalister primarily relied upon by Boudreau.     For additional
detail, we refer the reader to the district court's decision.
     2    Shaw's conceded at the district court that the knowledge
of its employees may be treated as its own knowledge.

                                - 3 -
around November 1, 2014.         Goodrich was the Saco Shaw's manager at

the time of Wendy Boudreau's murder.

        2.     MacCalister's Interactions with Shaw's Employees and
               Customers Before the August 2015 Attack

               Connor MacCalister frequently visited the Saco Shaw's in

the years before the murder of Wendy Boudreau.               DeRoche recalled

first seeing MacCalister in the Saco Shaw's in 2010 or 2011.                 He

stated that the first time he saw her he was "a little shocked"

because of her "really baggy clothes" with a "chain down on her

side" and her "shaved head."           During his time at Shaw's, DeRoche

never    saw    MacCalister   behave    violently,   raise    her   voice,   or

carrying a weapon at any time inside the Saco Shaw's.               He had no

knowledge of her acting strangely in the Saco community.

               On May 24, 2011, more than four years before the murder

of   Wendy     Boudreau,   two   customers   complained   to    DeRoche   that

MacCalister had scared them outside as they entered the store.

MacCalister had been standing outside of Shaw's by the entrance,

smoking discarded cigarettes out of an ashtray and blowing smoke

rings from underneath a hood that partially covered her face.

DeRoche promptly went outside to investigate the complaints, saw

MacCalister, and recalled that "it looked like something out of a

scary movie." DeRoche stated that usually MacCalister "just looked

weird" but on that day "she looked scary" and "frozen."

               DeRoche acted on the complaints by calling the police.

                                     - 4 -
He told the police, "can you tell this person I don't want her

here anymore."    The police conveyed to MacCalister that she was

banned from the Saco Shaw's.      The police also told DeRoche that

they had interacted with MacCalister before, that she lived nearby

with her mother, and that "her mother is crazier than she is."

For a year following this incident, MacCalister was not permitted

to shop at the Saco Shaw's.3

          A year later in mid-2012, MacCalister called DeRoche and

asked if she could return to Shaw's.       DeRoche did not realize

MacCalister was the caller until he later saw her in Shaw's and

asked what she was doing there.    MacCalister told DeRoche that she

had called to ask if she could come back.     DeRoche told her that

she could return if she did not "cause any problems."

          After the May 2011 incident, DeRoche requested that the

Shaw's Loss Prevention Department watch MacCalister because she

"look[ed] suspicious," but he had never heard any complaint that

she shoplifted.   In response to the request, Loss Prevention told

DeRoche that they had watched her before and she had "never taken

     3    Boudreau also relies on several phone calls referenced
in the affidavit of a Saco police dispatcher.     The dispatcher
stated that "[a]fter MacCalister was banned, [he] took dispatch
calls from employees of Shaw's who noted that MacCalister had
returned to the premises and they were concerned." We understand
these calls to be evidence of Shaw's employees enforcing the ban
against MacCalister. As to the several other calls referenced in
the record, we agree with the district court's decision to
disregard them because they do not specifically reference
MacCalister.

                               - 5 -
anything."     Loss Prevention continued to watch her "a couple more

times" but never observed her shoplifting.           Nor did they observe

any other concerning behavior by her.         Warren McCourt, a Shaw's

Asset Protection Specialist, also observed MacCalister about four

or five times between 2012 and 2014.        He stated that her behavior

never seemed unusual.     McCourt observed MacCalister come into the

store, purchase product, and leave.

             After the 2011 smoking incident, there were no further

customer     complaints   to    DeRoche   about   MacCalister     and    no

observations by Shaw's employees of MacCalister engaging in scary

or concerning behavior.        DeRoche specifically stated that "[n]o

one ever said a word to [him] about feeling uncomfortable with her

in the store or being afraid of her" and that he "didn't have any

fear of [his] safety or any of [his] employees' safety when she

was in the store."

             Goodrich stated that after becoming manager in 2014, "no

one ever reported anything to [him] about MacCalister" and he never

saw her behaving strangely.        Adam Veno, Shaw's assistant store

director who started six weeks before the murder, stated that he

never saw MacCalister in the store.

             Joan Doyle worked as a cashier at the Saco Shaw's from

1997   through   2015.    She   typically   worked    midday   shifts   and

estimated that she had seen MacCalister "probably four times" in

the Saco Shaw's before 2015.        When asked what stood out to her

                                  - 6 -
about MacCalister, Doyle stated "[w]hat she was wearing," which

Doyle described as usually a "camouflage outfit."                   Doyle stated

that MacCalister was "very quiet, never said anything" in response

to Doyle's greetings, and that this was "pretty unusual for

customers."         She never heard that MacCalister had bothered a

customer.      Doyle had heard rumors that MacCalister shoplifted but

never observed this herself.        She also never observed MacCalister

act violently or even speak, nor had she ever seen MacCalister

outside of the Saco Shaw's.

              Michelle   Schaffer   worked      for   Shaw's   as    a    customer

service representative beginning in 2011.             She estimated that she

had seen MacCalister "multiple" times between 2011 and 2015 and

stated that MacCalister came into the store "quite often."                    She

described MacCalister as dressing in baggy clothes that were "all

black, [with] big jackets, [a] hood . . . [and] dark, black

makeup."      Schaffer stated that MacCalister's eyes were "big from

time to time" and she would "just look at you" in a way that made

Schaffer think that she was "on something."            Sometimes MacCalister

came into the store "shaking."          Schaffer stated that "if somebody

saw the same thing that [Schaffer] saw," they would think that

"something is up with [MacCalister]" but that this was not "out of

the   norm"    in    downtown   Saco.     She    stated   that      she   thought

MacCalister's appearance and demeanor may have made "some people

probably [feel] threatened" and be "a little bit more on guard"

                                    - 7 -
but that she had never witnessed any threatening behavior by

MacCalister.       She explained that there were "moments" where she

"felt probably uncomfortable" or "awkward" around MacCalister but

that MacCalister "never did anything directly towards [her]."

              Schaffer had heard rumors that MacCalister shoplifted

but   never      observed     MacCalister      shoplifting.       She    had   seen

MacCalister "a couple times" outside of the Saco Shaw's but never

saw her behaving strangely.            She also never saw MacCalister with

a   knife   inside      the   Saco   Shaw's,    nor   had   she   ever   witnessed

MacCalister act violently or raise her voice.

              Brittani Wood worked as a Shaw's cashier beginning in

2013.    In 2015, she worked shifts during the "late evening[] into

the     night"    and     she   recalled       seeing   MacCalister       "[q]uite

frequently" at Shaw's and sometimes "more than once in a day."

Wood observed MacCalister wearing baggy pants, military clothing,

and a backpack and with a shaved head, which Wood described as

"strange."       She never observed MacCalister carry a weapon, appear

angry, or "yell or lunge at another customer."                Wood had not heard

any rumors that MacCalister shoplifted and stated that MacCalister

always bought something when she entered the Saco Shaw's.                  In her

interactions with MacCalister, Wood stated that MacCalister "would

acknowledge you were talking to her; but she wouldn't really, like,

speak."     Wood stated that MacCalister was "quiet" and "shy."                Wood

had heard customers make comments such as "what's with her or she

                                       - 8 -
seems weird" when referring to MacCalister but no customer ever

made a report about MacCalister to Wood.

           In the weeks before Wendy Boudreau's murder, MacCalister

had several interactions with customers at the Saco Shaw's.    These

interactions were not reported to Shaw's except as we explicitly

note, and even then, they were not reports made to supervisors but

verbal comments made to a cashier.     The rest of the statements we

describe were only made at depositions after this suit started.

           First, Debra Surran stated she went to Shaw's in June or

July 2015 and estimated she was in the store for about forty-five

minutes.   While shopping, Surran saw MacCalister at the end of the

aisles she was shopping in three separate times, as if MacCalister

were following her.   MacCalister was not going down the aisles and

did not have a cart, which Surran thought was "a little strange."

When Surran went to check out, she noticed that MacCalister had

gotten in line directly behind her.       Surran stated that "Connor

was glaring at me, like she really wanted to hurt me" and she

looked angry and her jaw was tight.        Surran was scared so she

grabbed a nearby cart and placed it between herself and MacCalister

until MacCalister checked out and left the store.

           Before leaving, Surran told Michelle Lavoie, the cashier

with whom both MacCalister and Surran checked out, that "there's

something wrong with that girl."       Lavoie stated "no, no, Connor

comes in here all the time.    She's fine."     Surran repeated that

                               - 9 -
"there's something wrong with her" and whispered to Lavoie that

MacCalister scared her.4    Surran did not talk to any other Shaw's

employee about the incident.

          Lavoie stated that she was familiar with MacCalister and

recalled that she had seen her "occasionally from time to time" in

the years before 2015.     Lavoie was also familiar with Surran and

stated that she often waited on Surran at Shaw's. When asked about

the incident, Lavoie could only recall that Surran was "not

thrilled with Connor" based on her "interpretation of [Surran's]

body language."   Lavoie explained that with her regular customers,

she "can tell sometimes if they're having a good day."     She stated

that "with my years of experience, [I think I would have] picked

up if [Surran] was uncomfortable.       I didn't pick up on body

language that she was on defensive."     Lavoie stated that she did

not report the incident to a manager because "it would need

something more than just [her] own gut instinct that there was

something more going on."    She explained that:

          [i]f I'm not seeing anything out of the norm
          and I'm not getting anything from the customer
          . . . that there was a problem, I'm not going

     4    Surran stated in her affidavit that she "whispered to
the cashier . . . that [she] was scared of MacCalister." But later
at her deposition, she did not include this fact when recounting
what happened. Counsel for Shaw's asked her if she said anything
else to Lavoie and Surran stated, "No. That was it." Counsel for
Shaw's confronted Surran with her affidavit and Surran stated,
"[i]t's basically the same thing, yeah." Like the district court,
we assume favorably to Boudreau that Surran did whisper to Lavoie
that MacCalister scared her.

                               - 10 -
          to go any further than what I normally would,
          other than to wait on her, check her out, and
          thank her for shopping with us.

          In early August 2015, Katherine Corriveau rode her bike

to the Saco Shaw's.      She saw MacCalister sitting under a tree at

the back entrance to the Shaw's plaza.        As Corriveau passed, she

made eye contact with MacCalister, who was wearing sunglasses.

She stated that she "got the willies" and her "alarm bells went

off" because MacCalister looked "angry," had a "set jaw," and stood

up as Corriveau passed.     As Corriveau locked up her bike, she saw

MacCalister    walking   with   a   "determined   gait"   toward   Shaw's.

Corriveau entered the store and about five minutes later, she saw

MacCalister about ten feet away from her in the ice cream aisle.

Corriveau felt as though MacCalister was following her and "feared

for [her] safety" so she went to another aisle.           Within a short

time, MacCalister appeared in the same aisle.       Corriveau then went

to the produce section and again saw MacCalister.         Corriveau lost

track of MacCalister while she finished shopping.            She went to

check out after spending about thirty minutes at the most in the

store and saw MacCalister ahead of her at a different register.

MacCalister purchased a Coke and left the store.           Corriveau did

not tell any Shaw's employee about the incident.

              About a week before the murder, Cindy Belanger, another

Shaw's customer, noticed MacCalister while waiting in the Shaw's

checkout line.     MacCalister was "laughing and talking" in a group

                                    - 11 -
of people on the other side of the store.           Belanger stated that

when MacCalister noticed Belanger looking at her, MacCalister

turned her body, put her arms back, and "lunged" at Belanger

without moving her feet while yelling "rah."          Belanger could not

hear MacCalister well because she was "too far away."             The act

scared Belanger and she "took it as a threat."           She stated that

other customers saw the gesture, but that no Shaw's employee seemed

to see it.     Belanger checked out, left the store, and did not

report the incident to a Shaw's employee.

     3.   MacCalister's Behavior on the Day of the Attack

          On   August   19,   2015,   MacCalister    visited   Shaw's   two

separate times.   Her first visit was around 12:00 p.m. and did not

provide cause for concern to Shaw's.         She wore army fatigues,

sunglasses, and a backpack, and she did not use a shopping cart.

She checked out with Doyle and purchased a gallon of milk and a

couple of other items.        Doyle stated that MacCalister "kind of

gave [her] a little smirk when [she] was handing her the receipt"

but that she "didn't think too much of it at the time." MacCalister

left the store and sat on the ground, almost on the automatic door

sensor, for about five minutes.       There is no evidence any Shaw's

employee observed this behavior.

          Around 3:00 p.m., Wendy Boudreau entered Shaw's, as did

MacCalister for the second time that day.           Two Saco EMTs, Jerry

and Armand Beaulieu, were shopping in the store at this time.

                                 - 12 -
Armand stated that he and MacCalister "passed each other in the

same       area    a   couple   of   times."     He   did    not    "think   anything

different" about her behavior and stated that she appeared to be

shopping.          Jerry described MacCalister's behavior as "walking the

back row, like she was looking for something . . . she kept going

back and forth."          He stated that she did not look angry, just that

"she was in a hurry, looking for something."5

                  About   ten    minutes    after     3:00    p.m.,     MacCalister

approached Wendy Boudreau, who was alone in the ice cream aisle.

She walked up behind Wendy Boudreau and stabbed her multiple times.

Wendy Boudreau screamed and that caught the attention of another

customer, who pinned MacCalister to the ground.                    A Shaw's employee

who had also gone to investigate the screams attempted to help

Wendy Boudreau.           Wendy Boudreau was transported to a hospital but

did not survive.

                  MacCalister was arrested by the Saco Police and taken to

the Saco Police Department.                The police interviewed her around

5:20 p.m.         She confessed that she went to Shaw's intending to kill

someone.          She chose Wendy Boudreau because she was "in the open

with no one around [and] couldn't fight back."                 MacCalister stated

       5  Boudreau asserts that two individuals in the security
footage of the minutes leading up to the attack are Shaw's
employees. Like the district court, we assume in the plaintiff's
favor that these two individuals were Shaw's employees and so could
have observed what the two EMTs observed.

                                        - 13 -
that she always carried two knives in her pockets.         There is no

evidence that the knives were visible to a Shaw's employee before

the attack.6

B.    Procedural History of the Litigation

            Jeffrey Boudreau filed this lawsuit against Shaw's as

the personal representative of Wendy Boudreau's estate in federal

court on July 10, 2017, alleging causes of action for wrongful

death and conscious pain and suffering under Maine law. He alleged

that Shaw's "owed a duty of care to protect its patrons from

foreseeable risks of harm on its premises," that Shaw's breached

this duty by failing to "adequate[ly] monitor its premises or use

existing security measures to protect Shaw's patrons," and that

this breach was the proximate cause of Wendy Boudreau's death as

well as her pain and suffering.

            Shaw's moved for summary judgment, arguing that Wendy

Boudreau's murder was not foreseeable because Shaw's had no reason

to   foresee   that   MacCalister   would   violently   attack   another

customer.   Shaw's also argued that there was no evidence that even

if Shaw's had watched MacCalister or tried to interact with her,

as Boudreau asserted that it should have, that this would have

      6   Boudreau also relies on MacCalister's medical records,
her history with the police, and observations of her behavior
outside of the Saco Shaw's to support his argument.         As the
district court correctly stated, there is no evidence in the record
that Shaw's knew about these facts, or that Shaw's should have
known any of this information.

                                - 14 -
prevented the attack.

           The   district    court,    in   a   detailed   analysis   of   the

undisputed facts, entered summary judgment for Shaw's, holding

that Shaw's did not owe a duty to Wendy Boudreau under Maine law

because it was not reasonably foreseeable that MacCalister was a

danger to other customers.      See Boudreau, 2019 WL 3242051, at *1.

The district court explained that despite MacCalister's various

interactions with Shaw's employees and customers, she had never

been violent at Shaw's and had never displayed her knives at

Shaw's.    Id. at *12.      Further, Shaw's had no knowledge, nor any

ability to learn, of MacCalister's behavior outside of Shaw's.

Id.   Concluding there was no duty under Maine law, the district

court did not reach the issue of proximate cause.            Id. at *14-15.

Boudreau timely appealed.

                                      II.

           We review the district court's grant of summary judgment

de novo.   River Farm Realty Tr. v. Farm Family Cas. Ins. Co., 943

F.3d 27, 36 (1st Cir. 2019).          Summary judgment should be granted

when "the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any

material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter

of law."    Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a).          As a federal court sitting in

diversity, we apply Maine substantive law.           See River Farm Realty

Tr., 943 F.3d at 36.

                                  - 15 -
A.   Shaw's Did Not Owe a Duty to Protect Wendy Boudreau from
     MacCalister

          Boudreau argues that the district court erred in holding

that Shaw's did not owe a duty to protect Wendy Boudreau from harm

from MacCalister.   He asserts that he is entitled to a jury trial

on this issue, arguing that it is a question of fact.   He further

contends that it was foreseeable that MacCalister would harm

another customer, "if only Shaw's had been paying attention."

Finally, he relies on Shaw's' purported violation of its own loss

prevention policies to argue that Shaw's owed, and breached, a

duty to Wendy Boudreau.     We address each argument in turn and

conclude that each fails.

          First, Boudreau's argument that he is entitled to a jury

trial on the issue of duty fails.   "Even though the issue is fact

driven, the question of duty is a legal question decided by the

court, not the jury."   Brown v. Delta Tau Delta, 118 A.3d 789, 791

(Me. 2015).   Boudreau confuses the issue of whether Shaw's owed

Wendy Boudreau the duty alleged with whether, assuming such a duty

existed, Shaw's breached that duty.     The issue of breach is a

question of fact, Lewis v. Knowlton, 688 A.2d 912, 914 (Me. 1997),

but whether a duty exists in the first place is a question of law

that we may resolve at summary judgment, see Denman v. Peoples

Heritage Bank, Inc., 704 A.2d 411, 413 (Me. 1998) (affirming no

duty holding on summary judgment in premises liability case).

                              - 16 -
          We turn to Boudreau's primary argument on appeal: that

Shaw's owed Wendy Boudreau a duty because MacCalister's attack was

foreseeable.     Under Maine law, for "[a] proprietor of an inn,

hotel, motel, restaurant, or similar establishment [to be] liable

for an assault upon a guest or patron by another guest, patron, or

third person," the proprietor must "[have] reason to anticipate

such assault."    Kaechele v. Kenyon Oil Co., 747 A.2d 167, 170 (Me.

2000) (quoting Brewer v. Roosevelt Motor Lodge, 295 A.2d 647, 651

(Me. 1972)).     "A proprietor must guard its patrons against not

only known dangers but also those which it 'should reasonably

anticipate.'"    Id. at 171 (quoting Brewer, 295 A.2d at 651).           The

defendant need not be able to foresee "the exact nature of the

injury which in fact occurred . . . if some harm was reasonably

foreseeable under the circumstances."          Schultz v. Gould Acad., 332

A.2d 368, 370 (Me. 1975).       So, the question here is whether Shaw's

"[knew], or should . . . have anticipated, that [MacCalister]

would assault a patron on the evening in question."           Kaechele, 747

A.2d at 171.

          We    agree    with   the    district   court's   conclusion   that

Maine's law of premises liability is clear that the harm must have

been foreseeable.       Because we conclude that MacCalister's attack

was not foreseeable, we need not address the policy element of

Maine's duty analysis.      See Brown, 118 A.3d at 792 (stating that

                                      - 17 -
the duty analysis "is a multi-factored analysis that necessarily

evokes policy-based considerations").

            Kaechele       does      not    support    Boudreau's      argument        that

MacCalister's       attack      on    Wendy    Boudreau       was   foreseeable.         In

Kaechele, the plaintiff presented evidence to show that his assault

by another customer of the same convenience store was foreseeable.

Kaechele, 747 A.2d at 169.                 Before the assault, store employees

observed the attacker yell obscenities for fifteen minutes, slam

the store door, and pound on the store window.                            Id.     Another

individual in the store suggested the police be called but no call

was made.     Id.        The Maine Supreme Judicial Court concluded that

these     facts     sufficiently           established     that     the    attack       was

foreseeable.       Id. at 173.

            There is no such evidence here.                    Shaw's first observed

MacCalister in early 2010 or 2011, more than four years before the

murder.     In May 2011, two customers complained about MacCalister

because she was standing outside of the Saco Shaw's smoking

discarded cigarettes.           Shaw's promptly called the police and had

MacCalister removed from the store premises.                        The police barred

MacCalister       from    the     Shaw's      and   told   Shaw's     that      they    had

interacted with her before but provided no further details.

            During MacCalister's ban, Shaw's employees called the

Saco police to enforce the ban against her.                         After MacCalister

returned    from    the     ban      in    2012,    DeRoche    requested        that   Loss

                                           - 18 -
Prevention     watch   MacCalister     to     ensure   that    she   was    not

shoplifting.      McCourt observed MacCalister four or five times

between 2012 and 2014 and never observed her acting strangely or

shoplifting.     Other employees had also heard rumors MacCalister

shoplifted but they never saw her shoplifting either.

             Between   2010   and    2015,    Shaw's   employees     observed

MacCalister in the Saco Shaw's wearing baggy, black or camouflage

clothing and with a shaved head.             She rarely spoke to them and

they described her as "weird," "strange," "quiet," and "shy."

Schaffer recalled that MacCalister sometimes exhibited "big" eyes.

She thought that MacCalister's appearance and demeanor might make

some people feel "threatened" but she had only felt "uncomfortable"

or "awkward."      In 2015, Wood had heard customers make comments

such as "what's with her" and "she seems weird."              In June or July

2015,   Surran     told   Lavoie      that     "something's      wrong     with

[MacCalister]" and that she was scared of MacCalister.

             On the day of the murder, August 19, 2015, MacCalister

entered Shaw's twice. The first time, she purchased several items,

gave Doyle a "smirk" while checking out, and then sat for five

minutes nearly on the automatic door sensor.           She then returned to

Shaw's three hours later and walked back and forth in the aisles.

             These facts did not make it foreseeable that MacCalister

posed a danger to other customers.            As to the smoking incident,

Shaw's acted promptly in seeking police help to deal with the

                                    - 19 -
situation.    Further, this incident occurred four years before the

murder and there was no intervening concerning behavior from

MacCalister between that incident and the summer of 2015.

             The only other information provided to Shaw's about

MacCalister by a customer was Surran's statement to Lavoie, a

cashier,   in    June    or    July   2015.      Surran   told    Lavoie   that

"something's wrong" with MacCalister and that MacCalister scared

her.   But      Surran   did   not    report   MacCalister's     actions   to   a

supervisor, she did not request that the store do anything about

the incident, and she did not provide Lavoie with any particulars

about what MacCalister had done.          People are scared of many things

short of violent physical attacks.             Further, Lavoie was familiar

with both Surran and MacCalister and explained that based on her

experience as a cashier, she would have picked up on the fact that

a customer was uncomfortable or defensive.            But here she did not.

These facts did not make MacCalister's attack foreseeable.

             Indeed, no Shaw's employee ever saw MacCalister act

violently, raise her voice, or threaten someone in the Saco Shaw's.

Nor was Shaw's aware of MacCalister's behavior outside of Shaw's.

The fact that MacCalister's appearance was perceived as "strange,"

that Schaffer felt "awkward" or "uncomfortable" around her, and

that MacCalister rarely responded when spoken to did not make her

violent attack on another customer foreseeable.                Weird clothing

and affect were not uncommon among the store's many customers.

                                      - 20 -
             As to shoplifting, Shaw's investigated and saw none, so

shoplifting provides no basis for any theory that violent behavior

is associated with shoplifting.       And since there was no evidence

of shoplifting, that provides no basis for any theory of an

obligation to do continuous surveillance.

             MacCalister's actions on the day of the murder also do

not establish that it was foreseeable that she was a danger to

other customers.      The fact that she gave a "smirk" to the cashier

and sat in a strange place for five minutes before leaving does

not forecast a violent attack.      Further, walking back and forth is

not out of the ordinary in a grocery store.

             Even   assuming   favorably   to   Boudreau    that   a   Shaw's

employee should have observed the incidents involving Corriveau

and Belanger, neither made it foreseeable that MacCalister was a

danger to other customers.        As to the incident with Corriveau,

MacCalister did not threaten, or even speak, to Corriveau.              To a

reasonable    observer,    MacCalister     would   have    appeared    to   be

shopping the Saco Shaw's by walking across the store from the ice

cream aisle to the produce section.             As to the incident with

Belanger, even if Belanger considered the "lunge" to be a threat,

MacCalister was across the entire store and did not get any closer

to Belanger.        These facts do not make the violent assault of

                                  - 21 -
another customer foreseeable.7

          Boudreau seems to argue further that Shaw's' internal

policies and procedures for deterring shoplifting gave rise to a

legal duty to abide by those policies, and that the store's alleged

failure to do so constituted a breach of duty.   He highlights the

fact that the store's Loss Prevention Specialist Manual instructs

associates to watch individuals wearing baggy clothing or clothing

that is inappropriate for the weather, individuals who carry

backpacks, those who do not have hand baskets or carriages, and

those who linger in the store, even if the suspected shoplifter is

never seen shoplifting.   The policy advises associates to "[g]reet

customers" and "[o]ffer assistance to customers" in order to deter

shoplifting.   Boudreau emphasizes that the manual states that

     7    Boudreau analogizes his case to Mu v. Omni Hotels
Management Corp., 882 F.3d 1 (1st Cir. 2018). But not only does
that case apply Rhode Island law, it does not support his theory.
Id. at 5. In Mu, the court reversed a grant of summary judgment
to the defendant-hotel, concluding that a jury could find that the
plaintiff's harm, which was caused by an angry mob on the hotel's
premises, was foreseeable. Id. at 9-12. The court pointed out
that prior to the attack, the mob had been thrown out of the hotel
for causing a disturbance, returned to the hotel the same night,
fought among themselves, and then attempted to fight a passerby by
yelling racial slurs, all of which was observed by hotel employees.
Id. at 9-10. Here, MacCalister was never seen acting violently or
attempting to start a fight and was banned from the Saco Shaw's
four years earlier, in contrast to Mu where the attackers were
banned the night of the attack. Id. at 4. Gould v. Taco Bell,
722 P.2d 511 (Kan. 1986), is similarly distinguishable because the
attacker, a patron of Taco Bell who attacked another customer, had
been involved in a similar altercation two weeks earlier. Id. at
514.

                               - 22 -
shoplifters       can       "create        a    serious    risk      for    customers      and

associates" and "[s]hoplifters may be armed, under the influence

of drugs, violent or pose other risks."

               Boudreau's reliance on Shaw's' purported violation of

its own loss prevention policies is misplaced.                        He has provided no

authority       for        the     proposition          that   the     store's     internal

shoplifting policies created a duty under Maine law that the store

must watch every customer suspected of shoplifting to ensure that

they do not violently attack other customers.                         Maine law is clear

that for a duty to be imposed, the harm must be foreseeable, and

here it was not.            Further, Shaw's did watch MacCalister and there

is   no   basis       to    think     that       any    deviations     from    the     policy

foreseeably would cause harm to customers.8

B.    The District Court Did Not Err in How It Viewed the Facts

               Boudreau      separately          argues    that      the    district    court

failed    to    resolve          genuine       disputes   of   fact    in    his   favor   by

disregarding the following facts: that "police specifically told

. . . DeRoche they had a history with" MacCalister, that "employees

of Shaw's called the Saco PD to report they were concerned about

[MacCalister] being in the store," that DeRoche's "scary movie"

comment could mean that he believed MacCalister had a propensity

      8   As the district court stated, Shaw's' loss prevention
policies may be relevant to causation. But as Shaw's did not owe
a duty here, we need not reach this issue.

                                               - 23 -
for violence, that Schaffer stated some customers felt threatened

by MacCalister's demeanor, and that Surran may have told a Shaw's

cashier that she was "stalked" by MacCalister.

          This argument fails.   The district court was required to

take the record in the light most favorable to Boudreau but that

does not mean that it was required to draw inferences that lacked

factual support.   Each fact that Boudreau has singled out as being

inappropriately resolved in the defendant's favor was accurately

recounted by the district court and based on the record.

          First, as to what the police told DeRoche, the district

court correctly recounted that DeRoche stated that the police did

not say "anything specific at all" to him about MacCalister.     As

to the phone calls involving the Saco police, the district court

appropriately disregarded the calls that were too broad to be tied

to MacCalister and did consider the police dispatcher's statements

about the two calls made by Shaw's.      Next, in making the "scary

movie" comment, DeRoche made no reference to violence.     So, the

district court did not err by stating that no one at Shaw's stated

that they believed MacCalister was violent.   Further, the district

court did not "overlook" Schaffer's comment but rather accurately

described how she thought some people "probably felt threatened"

by MacCalister's demeanor and appearance.     Finally, the district

court correctly stated that there was no evidence that Surran told

Lavoie that MacCalister "stalked" her.

                              - 24 -
C.     Evidentiary Issues

       1.       The Plaintiff's Expert Witness

                Boudreau argues that "it was reversible error for the

district court to overlook the expert witness opinion of Stephen

Melia on summary judgment."              He asserts that the district court

erroneously "drew its own conclusions about [Shaw's'] obligations

in the field of loss prevention and retail security."9

                Boudreau mischaracterizes the district court's treatment

of Melia's expert opinion.              The district court did not draw its

own conclusions about the field of retail security but rather

explained that Melia's opinion about Shaw's' purported breach of

retail security protocols was not relevant to the duty analysis

under      Maine      law.     As   said,   there   is   no     authority   for    the

proposition that a store's own loss prevention policies give rise

to a duty absent foreseeability.

                Boudreau also asserts that "Melia testified that Shaw's

owed       a   duty    to    prevent   [MacCalister]     from    causing    harm   to

customers" and that the district court should have accepted this

conclusion.           It is not clear that Melia's opinion makes such a

claim, as its primary focus seems to be that Shaw's violated

standard retail security procedures, not that such procedures

       9  We assume that the evidence considered at summary
judgment was admissible as it does not change our conclusion that
Shaw's did not owe Wendy Boudreau a duty.

                                         - 25 -
created a legal duty under Maine law.                But even if Melia's opinion

makes such a claim, Boudreau's argument would fail because the

presence of duty is a legal question to be resolved by the court,

not an expert.          Nieves-Villanueva v. Soto-Rivera, 133 F.3d 92, 99

(1st Cir. 1997).

        2.      Spoliation

                At the district court, Boudreau moved for sanctions

against       Shaw's     for   spoliation    of    evidence   consisting    of   the

security camera footage from the store for the weeks leading up to

the murder.10          He sought "a permissive negative inference, both on

summary judgment and before the jury" about the contents of the

footage.       The district court applied Rule 37(e), which states that

"upon        finding    prejudice    to    another    party   from   loss   of    the

information,       [the     court]   may    order    measures   no   greater     than

necessary to cure the prejudice."              Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(e)(1).         The

district court was "doubtful there [was] any prejudice" because

"[a]t most, the missing video might [have] provide[d] images of

what certain customers say they observed about MacCalister at

Shaw's before the day of the murder."                The court then stated that

it would "assume that MacCalister was in the store virtually every

day, and that she always dressed the same way and exhibited the

        10
          The parties learned of the footage's existence after the
2018 deposition of McCourt. When McCourt was asked to retrieve
the footage, it could not be located.

                                          - 26 -
same mien . . . [and] that she had encounters with customers as

they describe[d] the encounters" and that this would "cure[] any

prejudice."

                We review the district court's denial of sanctions for

abuse of discretion.                 See Sharp v. Hylas Yachts, LLC, 872 F.3d 31,

41-42 (1st Cir. 2017).                 We see none.      The district court followed

the    guidance           in   the    advisory    committee       notes    for   assessing

prejudice and evaluated the missing video's importance to the

litigation by concluding that at most, it "might provide images of

what     certain          customers     say   they     observed    about   MacCalister."

Further, as the district court stated, even if the video showed

what Boudreau argues it could have shown, summary judgment still

would        have    been      appropriate      because    the     incidents     involving

Corriveau           and     Belanger      did    not    make      MacCalister's     attack

foreseeable, even if they had been observed by Shaw's employees.11

                Affirmed.

        11Boudreau asserts that the video would show "who was
telling the truth" in the interaction between Surran and Lavoie.
This argument is meritless because the statements of Surran and
Lavoie are not contradictory.

                                              - 27 -