Barnes v. United States , 707 F. App'x 512 ( 2017 )


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  •                                                                   FILED
    United States Court of Appeals
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS         Tenth Circuit
    FOR THE TENTH CIRCUIT                           August 28, 2017
    _________________________________
    Elisabeth A. Shumaker
    Clerk of Court
    LARITA A. BARNES,
    Plaintiff - Appellant,
    No. 16-5166
    v.                                                 (D.C. No. 4:12-CV-00282-JED-PJC)
    (N.D. Okla.)
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Defendant - Appellee.
    _________________________________
    ORDER AND JUDGMENT*
    _________________________________
    Before LUCERO, McKAY, and HARTZ, Circuit Judges.
    _________________________________
    Brandon McFadden was a disgrace to law enforcement. He joined other corrupt
    officers in fabricating evidence, stealing drugs and money from suspects, and selling
    drugs. Plaintiff Larita Barnes is one of his victims. Perjured testimony by McFadden
    and others convicted her of selling drugs. She was imprisoned until the officers’
    corruption was revealed. Because McFadden was a special agent of the federal Bureau of
    Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF), Ms. Barnes sued the United States
    under the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA), 
    28 U.S.C. §§ 1346
    (b), 2671‒2680, for
    various negligent and intentional torts. The district court granted the government’s
    *
    This order and judgment is not binding precedent, except under the doctrines of law of
    the case, res judicata, and collateral estoppel. It may be cited, however, for its persuasive
    value consistent with Fed. R. App. P. 32.1 and 10th Cir. R. 32.1.
    motion for summary judgment and she now appeals. Exercising jurisdiction under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
    , we affirm in part and reverse in part.
    We affirm the dismissal of Ms. Barnes’s claims of negligent training and
    supervision of McFadden because she did not raise them in the administrative claim
    required by the FTCA. But we reverse the dismissal of her claims of intentional
    misconduct by McFadden. As we understand Oklahoma respondeat superior law,
    McFadden’s torts against Ms. Barnes may have been within the scope of his employment.
    A factfinder could reasonably decide that his perjury and other misconduct constituted an
    abuse of power lawfully vested in him rather than an “unlawful usurpation of power the
    officer did not rightfully possess,” DeCorte v. Robinson, 
    969 P.2d 358
    , 362 (Okla. 1998),
    and that his motives included serving a government purpose.
    I.      BACKGROUND
    Brandon McFadden was an ATF special agent assigned to the Tulsa, Oklahoma
    field office. He worked as a liaison with the local-gang unit within the Special
    Investigations Division of the Tulsa Police Department (TPD). His role was to help
    conduct investigations, prepare cases for prosecution, and coordinate with local law-
    enforcement agencies. His work included assisting TPD officers to establish probable
    cause for search warrants through confidential informants, surveillance, and controlled
    drug buys. And he conferred with prosecutors in preparation of trial testimony.
    McFadden often worked out of the TPD gang unit’s office. In 2006 he joined a
    criminal conspiracy with several gang-unit officers. In 2007 and 2008 the officers stole
    drugs and cash they found during searches of suspected drug dealers and their homes.
    2
    They profited from the stolen drugs by selling them to local dealers. On at least one
    occasion, the officers planted evidence in a man’s home, executed a search warrant on the
    home, and then pressured the man to participate in their drug trafficking.
    Of particular importance to this case are the officers’ dealings with Ryan Logsdon.
    In January 2007 McFadden, TPD officer Jeff Henderson, and another TPD officer
    executed a search warrant on the home of Logsdon, a suspected drug dealer. The officers
    handcuffed and questioned Logsdon in his living room in the presence of his girlfriend
    and three-year-old son. Henderson threatened to send Logsdon to jail and to place his
    son in custody if he refused to cooperate. In response, Logsdon led the officers to
    $13,000 cash and about two pounds of methamphetamine. Henderson and McFadden
    each pocketed $1,500 and retained a half pound of the methamphetamine, which they
    later sold back to Logsdon for $7,000. The remainder of the cash and drugs was turned
    over to the police department, and Logsdon’s car was processed for forfeiture. From then
    on, Logsdon continued to deal methamphetamine while serving as a confidential
    informant for the officers. He occasionally met with McFadden and Henderson, paying
    them a total of $250,000 to $300,000 for methamphetamine over the course of the
    conspiracy.
    In May 2007, Logsdon informed McFadden that he had bought methamphetamine
    from Ms. Barnes on two occasions. McFadden and Henderson began making
    preparations for a controlled buy between Logsdon and Ms. Barnes. McFadden followed
    ATF procedures to obtain $3,000 from Bureau funds and gave the money to Henderson
    for the purchase. But the buy never occurred. A few days later, Logsdon told the officers
    3
    that Ms. Barnes had “advised him not to come around anymore and that she did not want
    to deal with him.” 
    Id. at 143
    . According to Logsdon, Ms. Barnes had learned that
    Logsdon’s car had been forfeited by the police and became suspicious that he was a
    police informant. Henderson never returned the $3,000.
    Shortly thereafter, McFadden discovered that Henderson had written a report
    stating that the controlled buy with Ms. Barnes had occurred; and when charges were
    filed against Ms. Barnes, he learned that he was included in the report. Henderson urged
    McFadden to “[s]tick to what’s on the report” because “[e]verybody hates the Barneses
    anyway” and “[n]o one’s going to ask any questions.” 
    Id. at 145
    . Although McFadden
    knew the report was false, he agreed to cooperate, “believ[ing] what people had said
    about the Barneses all this time.” 
    Id.
    On August 10, 2007, Ms. Barnes and her father were indicted. As was common
    practice, McFadden, Henderson, and Logsdon met several times to prepare for the jury
    trial by getting the details of their stories straight. A few days before trial, they also met
    with the prosecutor at the U.S. Attorney’s office. McFadden served as the case agent for
    the trial, during which he, Henderson, and Logsdon falsely testified that Ms. Barnes and
    her father had sold Logsdon 87 grams of methamphetamine. On April 23, 2008, Ms.
    Barnes and her father were each found guilty on two charges. She was sentenced to 120
    months’ imprisonment; he to 66 months.
    The conspiracy soon began to unravel. In 2009 federal authorities opened an
    investigation of TPD corruption and learned that Ms. Barnes’s conviction was based on
    perjured testimony. Upon the government’s motion, Ms. Barnes’s felony convictions
    4
    were overturned and she was released on July 2, 2009. McFadden was indicted on
    several charges and pleaded guilty to conspiracy to distribute methamphetamine. At his
    plea colloquy he confessed:
    I used the position as a special agent with ATF to further the drug
    conspiracy and abused my position as a special agent. During this time,
    myself and Henderson seized drugs and money which were kept for our
    own personal benefit, falsified investigative reports, and failed to document
    events, and obstruct justice through falsely [sic] testimony under oath and
    persuading other individuals to do the same.
    Aplt. App. at 73. And he later asserted in an affidavit:
    10. The reason I did this was to help the United States of America, as an
    acting agent of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives,
    Jeff Henderson and the City of Tulsa to successfully prosecute the Barnes
    so they would subsequently be convicted of a criminal offense and
    therefore be imprisoned.
    11. I did not do these acts for personal gain and I did not receive any
    personal gain or benefit from these acts. . . .
    
    Id. at 178
    .
    Ms. Barnes filed this suit in the United States District Court for the Northern
    District of Oklahoma. The district court granted the government’s motion for summary
    judgment and Ms. Barnes appeals.
    II.        DISCUSSION
    The FTCA provides a limited waiver of the federal government’s sovereign
    immunity, allowing civil claims against the United States for “the negligent or wrongful
    act or omission” of a federal employee “acting within the scope of his office or
    employment.” 
    28 U.S.C. § 1346
    (b)(1). Under the FTCA the United States is liable on
    tort claims “under circumstances where the United States, if a private person, would be
    5
    liable to the claimant in accordance with the law of the place where the act or omission
    occurred.” Id.; cf. 
    id.
     § 2674 (“The United States shall be liable . . . in the same manner
    and to the same extent as a private individual under like circumstances”).
    Ms. Barnes asserts claims under the FTCA for negligent supervision and training,
    false arrest, wrongful imprisonment, abuse of process, malicious prosecution, and
    intentional infliction of emotional distress. She alleges that McFadden falsely testified at
    her trial and instructed another person to do the same, resulting in her illegal arrest,
    prosecution, and imprisonment. She also alleges that the ATF negligently “failed to
    properly train, supervise, and oversee McFadden.” Compl. at 5 ¶ 23, Barnes v. United
    States, No. 4:12-cv-00282 (N.D. Okla. May 15, 2012). The district court granted the
    government’s summary-judgment motion, ruling (1) that Ms. Barnes failed to exhaust
    administrative remedies with respect to her claims of negligent supervision and training
    and (2) that McFadden was not acting within the scope of his employment.
    We review de novo the grant of a motion for summary judgment. See Obermeyer
    Hydro Accessories v. CSI Calendering, 
    852 F.3d 1008
    , 1014 (10th Cir. 2017). Summary
    judgment is appropriate if “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). “We view the
    evidence, and draw all reasonable inferences therefrom, in the light most favorable to the
    nonmoving party.” Obermeyer, 852 F.3d at 1014.
    A. Failure to Exhaust Administrative Remedies
    A claimant under the FTCA must “first present[] the claim to the appropriate
    Federal agency.” 
    28 U.S.C. § 2675
    (a); see McNeil v. United States, 
    508 U.S. 106
    , 113
    6
    (1993) (“The FTCA bars claimants from bringing suit in federal court until they have
    exhausted their administrative remedies.”). A claim is properly presented to an agency
    only if the language of the claim “serves due notice that the agency should investigate the
    possibility of particular (potentially tortious) conduct.” Staggs v. United States, 
    425 F.3d 881
    , 884 (10th Cir. 2005) (internal quotation marks omitted). Because Ms. Barnes’s
    administrative claim “included no mention of any possibility that her injuries were caused
    by negligent training and supervision,” the district court held that her negligence claims
    were unexhausted. Barnes v. United States, 
    104 F.Supp.3d 1285
    , 1297 (N.D.Okla. 2015).
    Ms. Barnes does not dispute the district court’s characterization of her
    administrative claim. She argues only that “the FTCA notice requirements . . . should not
    be interpreted inflexibly” and that “a tort claim is sufficient if it provides notice of the
    facts and circumstances underlying a claim rather than the exact grounds upon which the
    plaintiff seeks to hold the government liable.” Aplt. Br. at 29‒30 (internal quotation
    marks omitted). But she fails to explain why her administrative claim lacks even a
    cursory mention of ATF training or supervision. The claim provides no notice of any
    wrongdoing by any federal officer other than McFadden. The district court did not err in
    dismissing Ms. Barnes’s negligence claims.
    B. Scope of Employment
    To determine whether the United States would be liable for the acts of a federal
    employee, we look to the respondeat superior law of the state where the wrongful act
    occurred. See Fowler v. United States, 
    647 F.3d 1232
    , 1237 (10th Cir. 2011) (examining
    7
    Colorado respondeat superior law to determine whether federal employee was acting
    within his scope of employment).
    Under Oklahoma law an employer may be liable for an employee’s intentional
    torts if the employee was “acting within the scope of the employment in furtherance of
    assigned duties.” Bosh v. Cherokee Cty. Bldg. Auth., 
    305 P.3d 994
    , 998 (Okla. 2013).
    “[O]ne acts within the scope of employment if [1] engaged in work assigned, or [2] if
    doing what is proper, necessary and usual to accomplish the work assigned, or [3] doing
    that which is customary within the particular trade or business.” Id.; accord Tuffy’s, Inc.
    v. City of Oklahoma City, 
    212 P.3d 1158
    , 1163 (Okla. 2009) (officers allegedly attacked
    nightclub patrons). “[A]n employer can be held liable even if the employee acts beyond
    the given authority” so long as the act was “incident to some service being performed for
    the employer.” Rodebush v. Okla. Nursing Homes, Ltd., 
    867 P.2d 1241
    , 1245 (Okla.
    1993).
    To apply the scope-of-employment analysis in the context of law enforcement, the
    Oklahoma Supreme Court has embraced a test formulated by the Florida Supreme Court.
    See DeCorte, 969 P.2d at 361 (claim of false arrest and assault of prisoner by officer).
    Under the test, “‘liability exists for acts of officers that can be described as abuses of
    lawful power,’” but not for “‘an unlawful usurpation of power the officer did not
    rightfully possess.’” Id. at 361‒62 (quoting McGhee v. Volusia Cty., 
    679 So.2d 729
    , 733
    (Fla. 1996)). The line between abuse and usurpation is not the line between legal and
    illegal acts. An “‘officer’s misconduct, though illegal,’” may be “‘accomplished through
    8
    a[n] abuse of power lawfully vested in the officer.’” Id. at 362 (quoting McGhee, 679
    So.2d at 732).
    Because the Oklahoma Supreme Court adopted the Florida Supreme Court’s
    abuse/usurpation test, we can look to Florida cases for guidance in applying it. In the
    opinion quoted by DeCorte, the plaintiff was handcuffed and being booked when he told
    the deputy sheriffs that they were no longer welcome in his father’s saw shop. See
    McGhee, 679 So.2d at 730. One of the deputies lunged at the plaintiff, grabbed him by
    the throat, and began kicking him with force. See id. In ruling for the plaintiff the court
    wrote, “The fact that [the deputy] may have intentionally abused his office does not in
    itself shield the sheriff from liability.” Id. at 733. It pointed out that the deputy “clearly
    had the lawful authority to restrain arrestees, detain them, or even respond with force in
    appropriate situations,” and it held that “he therefore cannot be described as a usurper.”
    Id. Although the court said that the issues of bad faith and malicious purpose still had to
    be determined on remand, see id., those issues were not relevant to scope of authority but
    to additional statutory requirements, see id. at 731 (quoting statute providing that state is
    not liable for torts committed “while acting outside the course and scope of [employee’s]
    employment or committed in bad faith or with malicious purpose.”).
    McGhee provided further guidance in discussing two earlier decisions. In
    Hennagan v. Dep’t of Highway Safety & Motor Vehicles, 
    467 So.2d 748
    , 749 (Fla. Dist.
    Ct. App. 1985)), an officer “allegedly had ‘arrested’ a minor child pretexually so that he
    later could sexually molest her.” McGhee, 679 So.2d at 731. McGhee agreed with
    Hennagan that “‘[c]onduct is within the scope of employment if it occurs substantially
    9
    within authorized time and space limits, and it is activated at least in part by a purpose to
    serve the master.’” McGhee, 679 So.2d at 732 (quoting Hennagan, 467 So.2d at 751);
    see also Hennagan, 467 So.2d at 750 (“[C]onduct may be within the scope of
    employment, even if it is unauthorized, if it is of the same general nature as that
    authorized or is incidental to the conduct authorized.”). As McGhee explained in support
    of the result in Hennagan, “The officer’s misconduct, though illegal, clearly was
    accomplished through an abuse of power lawfully vested in the officer, not an unlawful
    usurpation of power the officer did not rightfully possess.” 679 So.2d at 732.
    McGhee also endorsed a decision involving a police officer who used excessive
    force in committing a false arrest. See 679 So.2d at 732 (citing Richardson v. City of
    Pompano Beach, 
    511 So.2d 1121
     (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1987), review denied, 
    519 So.2d 986
     (Fla. 1988)). As McGhee explained, “[T]he Richardson court concluded that acts did
    not fall beyond the scope of the officer’s employment merely because they were
    intentional.” 679 So.2d at 732. Thus, “[o]nce again this showed a case of lawful power
    abused, not of an unlawful usurpation of authority.” 
    Id.
    With the understanding of the abuse/usurpation dichotomy provided by McGhee,
    we conclude that summary judgment was improper. The heinous acts of McFadden that
    harmed Ms. Barnes were performed in the normal course of his duties—preparing for
    trial and testifying. The government’s arguments to the contrary are not persuasive.
    The government first argues that McFadden was acting outside the scope of his
    authority because “a federal law enforcement officer is never authorized to frame a
    person known to be innocent.” Aplee. Br. at 28. But an officer is also not authorized to
    10
    use excessive force or commit sexual assault. Although McFadden, like the officers in
    the above cases, employed his power “contrary to the law of its use” and “use[d] it
    improperly and to excess,” McGhee, 679 So.2d at 731, he did not assume a function that
    had not been assigned to him. Cf. Baker v. Saint Francis Hosp., 
    126 P.3d 602
    , 605
    (Okla. 2005) (employer may be liable where employee has authority “to do the particular
    thing rightfully that was subsequently done in a wrongful manner”); Shrier v. Morrison,
    
    357 P.2d 196
    , 202 (Okla. 1960) (“[C]are must be exercised to distinguish between
    authority to commit a fraudulent act and authority to transact business in the course of
    which the fraudulent act is committed.” (internal quotation marks and emphases
    omitted)). McFadden could not have performed his authorized duties more despicably,
    but he was acting within the customary scope of his duties.
    The government also argues that it is not liable under general respondeat superior
    law because McFadden was acting for his own purposes (pursuing the conspiracy that
    had greatly enriched him), not the interests of the United States. The underlying
    proposition finds support in Oklahoma law. In Baker, 126 P.3d at 603‒04, a hospital was
    sued under the theory of respondeat superior because its employee, a caregiver,
    intentionally struck the head of a two-month-old girl against the corner of a shelf. The
    court explained the relevance of the employee’s motives:
    “The liability of a master for the use of force by a servant is not prevented
    by the fact that the servant acts in part because of a personal motive, such
    as revenge. The master, however, is relieved from liability . . . if the
    servant has no intent to act on his master’s behalf[.]”
    11
    Id. at 607 (quoting Restatement (Second) of Agency § 245 cmt. f (1958)); see also
    Restatement (Third) of Agency § 7.07(2) (“An employee’s act is not within the scope of
    employment when it occurs within an independent course of conduct not intended by the
    employee to serve any purpose of the employer.”). The court thus remanded for a fact-
    finder to determine the motive behind the caretaker’s acts. It said, “[A] jury . . . must
    decide if [the employee’s] acts were so far removed from any work-related endeavor and
    geared, instead, toward a personal course of conduct unrelated to her work so that it
    would no longer be appropriate to hold her employer responsible for her act(s).” Baker,
    126 P.3d at 607.
    In the law-enforcement context, however, the courts have generously construed
    the breadth of an officer’s purpose, perhaps because public-policy concerns generally
    make it “appropriate to hold [the law-enforcement agency] responsible for [an officer’s]
    acts.” Id. With great power comes great responsibility, and the powers of law-
    enforcement officers are unique in our society. Police agencies are expected to strictly
    control misbehavior by their own officers. Thus, the courts of Oklahoma and Florida
    have said that an officer may have in mind a governmental purpose when he abuses a
    prisoner, see McGhee, 
    679 So.2d 729
    ; uses excessive force in a false arrest, see DeCorte,
    
    969 P.2d 358
    ; Richardson, 
    511 So.2d 1121
    ; assaults nightclub patrons, see Tuffy’s, 
    212 P.3d 1158
    ; or even arrests a child for the purpose of sexually abusing her, see Hennagan,
    
    467 So.2d 748
    . McFadden declared in an affidavit that he “did not do these acts for
    personal gain,” that he “did not receive any personal gain or benefit from these acts,” and
    that “[t]he reason [he] did this was to help the United States of America . . . successfully
    12
    prosecute the Barnes.” Aplt. App. at 178 ¶ 10‒11. Contrary to the government’s brief,
    this was sufficient evidence of an intent to serve the government.
    The government contends that Ms. Barnes forfeited the argument that McFadden
    intended to aid the United States because she did not raise this theory below. We
    disagree. In her response to the government’s motion to dismiss, she argued that
    “[v]arious law enforcement entities and/or officers were upset at not being able to get
    evidence to prosecute the Barnes so someone devised a plan to fabricate witnesses and
    evidence of a drug crime to indict her and prosecute her in federal court.” Resp. to Mot.
    to Dismiss at 1, Barnes v. United States, No. 4:12-cv-00282. She further stated that:
    SA McFadden, and others, thought Larita Barnes and other members of her
    family were deeply involved in drug activity. When SA McFadden went
    after Ms. Barnes, he did so only to further the interests of the federal
    government in investigating, ferreting out and helping to prosecute criminal
    activity.
    
    Id. at 11
    . And in her Rule 59(e) motion to reconsider, Ms. Barnes argued:
    It is undisputed that McFadden submitted an affidavit that none of his
    actions as to Ms. Barnes were for personal gain. His acts were intended to
    benefit his employer, the United States of America, to successfully
    prosecute the Barneses.
    Mot. to Recons. at 17, Barnes v. United States, No. 4:12-cv-00282 (citations omitted).
    In our view, the record does not support summary judgment in favor of the
    government on the respondeat superior issue.
    13
    III.   CONCLUSION
    We AFFIRM the district court’s dismissal of Mr. Barnes’s negligence claims.
    We REVERSE the dismissal of the remainder of Mr. Barnes’s claims and REMAND for
    further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    Entered for the Court
    Harris L Hartz
    Circuit Judge
    14