Jernigan v. City of Royal Oak , 202 F. App'x 892 ( 2006 )


Menu:
  •                NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
    File Name: 06a0806n.06
    Filed: November 2, 2006
    No. 05-2245
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    RONALD JERNIGAN, JR.; TIMOTHY                   )
    ROBERT SMITH; CHARLES BERNARD                   )
    PERRYMAN,                                       )
    )
    Plaintiffs-Appellees,                    )
    )
    v.                                              )   ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED
    )   STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE
    CITY OF ROYAL OAK; ROYAL OAK                    )   EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN
    POLICE DEPARTMENT; J. BALLINGER;                )
    R. MILLARD; M. MURRAY; J. STEHLIN;              )
    K. SPENCER; S. TEICHOW; R.                      )
    SPELLMAN,                                       )
    )
    Defendants-Appellants,                   )
    )
    WOODY’S BAR AND GRILL, ET AL.,                  )
    )
    Defendants.
    Before: CLAY and SUTTON, Circuit Judges; and SHARP, District Judge.*
    SUTTON, Circuit Judge. Several material issues of fact preclude us from granting summary
    judgment on qualified immunity grounds to the government defendants in this case. We affirm.
    I.
    *
    The Honorable Allen Sharp, United States District Judge for the Northern District of
    Indiana, sitting by designation.
    No. 05-2245
    Jernigan v. Royal Oak
    While spending an evening at Woody’s Bar and Grill on July 5, 2002, Bobby Joe Phillips
    realized that he could not find ninety dollars that he had brought with him to the bar. Fearing
    repercussions from his wife, he entered the first-floor bathroom of the bar, tore his shirt and emerged
    with the fiction that he had just been robbed. When employees of the bar learned of the alleged
    robbery, they called 911 and began monitoring three suspects—Ronald Jernigan, Timothy Smith and
    Charles Perryman. The Royal Oak Police Department (of Royal Oak, Michigan) dispatched several
    officers to the bar. Upon their arrival, the officers were led to the second-floor bar where Jernigan,
    Smith and Perryman were located. The officers placed the three men in handcuffs, led them
    downstairs and outside of the bar, where each man was placed in the backseat of a separate police
    car. About an hour after detaining the three men, the officers released them.
    This broad-brush description of the events of the evening papers over three topics that
    became central features of the lawsuit that the three detainees eventually filed over their false arrest:
    (1) Phillips’ interaction with the bar’s employees before the officers’ arrival; (2) the officers’ actions
    before detaining Jernigan, Smith and Perryman and (3) the plaintiffs’ detention. Each topic deserves
    more attention before turning to the issues raised on appeal.
    Phillips’ interaction with the bar’s employees before the officers’ arrival. In his deposition,
    Phillips acknowledged that he had consumed five or six “Captain and Cokes” on the night in
    question (perhaps a partial explanation for the “disappearance” of his money) and that he was drunk
    when he concocted the robbery story. JA 186–87. After roughing himself up in the first-floor
    -2-
    No. 05-2245
    Jernigan v. Royal Oak
    bathroom at around 12:30 a.m., he approached Joseph Ivy (the manager on duty) and told him, “I was
    in the bathroom and a gentleman came and hit me from the back and I fell to the ground. I felt him
    go in my pocket and then [he] exited the rest room.” JA 189. Phillips disclaimed ever seeing his
    assailant’s face but described him as having “khaki shorts on, white socks, and . . . tennis shoes” and
    “darker legs.” JA 187. Ivy and Jim Gibbons (a bouncer) led Phillips upstairs to the second-floor bar.
    Gibbons pointed to the plaintiffs and asked, “[A]re those the gentlemen that did this?” JA 188.
    Phillips never responded, and the police arrived shortly thereafter. Although Phillips acknowledged
    later in his deposition that he may have told Ivy that two men, rather than one man, attacked him and
    that he may have identified the race of his assailant(s) as black, he insists that he never identified the
    plaintiffs as his attackers and that he did not want the police to be called.
    Ivy and Gibbons tell a different story. Ivy claims that he learned of the robbery when
    Phillips’ wife accused him of letting three men attack her husband in the men’s restroom. In
    response, Ivy found Phillips, noticed he had been drinking and asked him what had happened.
    Phillips said that three men had robbed him in the restroom and that he could identify them by their
    clothing and footwear. At this point, the stories diverge slightly. Ivy says that he, Gibbons and
    Phillips looked around the bar for the assailants and that when Phillips saw the plaintiffs, he pointed
    at them and insisted they had attacked him. Gibbons says that he and Ivy located the plaintiffs based
    on Phillips’ description, then asked Phillips to confirm their identification. It “was definitely them,”
    Phillips insisted, noting that even though he had not seen their faces he could tell it was them based
    -3-
    No. 05-2245
    Jernigan v. Royal Oak
    on what they were wearing. JA 229–30. Ivy or Gibbons then called 911 (neither man can remember
    who) to report the robbery.
    The officers’ actions before detaining Jernigan, Smith and Perryman. Officer Spellman
    claims that the officers were dispatched to the bar to investigate a robbery. The dispatcher informed
    the officers that two black male suspects had been located and remained on the premises. Upon their
    arrival at about 1:30 a.m., Gibbons met the officers and related to them what had happened (as
    described by Ivy’s and Gibbons’ version of events). Gibbons led the officers to the second floor
    where they met Phillips and several other employees in the stairwell. Officer Spellman observed that
    Phillips’ shirt was ripped and that he was somewhat red in the face. Phillips related what had
    happened in the bathroom and informed the officers that the bar’s security had detained the men who
    attacked him. Another bouncer, Tito Wallee, led Officers Spellman, Stehlin and Ballinger to the bar
    and identified Jernigan, Smith and Perryman as the perpetrators.
    Ivy and Gibbons again tell a different story. Ivy says that he and Gibbons met the officers,
    that he explained that “apparently [Phillips] got attacked” and that he told the officers he did not “see
    why [Phillips] would lie to me about something like this.” JA 177. Ivy says that he and Gibbons
    led the officers upstairs and identified Jernigan, Smith and Perryman. Gibbons says that Phillips
    identified the suspects.
    Phillips, for his part, claims that he did not interact with the police until after they had
    detained the plaintiffs and that he never identified the plaintiffs to the police as the people who had
    -4-
    No. 05-2245
    Jernigan v. Royal Oak
    attacked him. Further complicating matters, the officers argued to the district court that “they had
    no opportunity to initially question Mr. Phillips before investigating Plaintiffs” because “they were
    not given any information as to the identity of the alleged victim . . . upon [their] arrival at the bar.”
    2d D. Ct. Order at 2.
    The plaintiffs’ detention. Jernigan, Smith and Perryman were sitting at the second-floor bar
    when the police arrived, blissfully ignorant of everything that had happened so far—under any of the
    above chronicles of events. Ivy doubted the men had done “anything wrong because they didn’t
    seem nervous or anything.” JA 178.
    According to Officer Spellman, the officers approached the three men as they were sitting
    at the bar and asked them to come outside to answer some questions. Before leaving the bar, the
    officers handcuffed each suspect. Jernigan initially refused to be led outside, and he continued to
    challenge the officers verbally as they led him and his friends downstairs. Once outside, the officers
    placed the men in separate police cars; Jernigan again initially refused but again ultimately
    acquiesced. After placing the men in the police cars, Officers Ballinger and Spencer interviewed
    Phillips while Officer Stehlin interviewed each plaintiff. After interviewing Phillips and about an
    hour after arriving at the bar, the officers realized that none of the men matched his description of
    the assailant(s), and the officers released the men.
    Jernigan, Smith and Perryman remember the evening quite differently. They insist that Smith
    was apprehended first. Smith claims that the police approached him and immediately asked him to
    -5-
    No. 05-2245
    Jernigan v. Royal Oak
    turn around for handcuffing without explanation. He was too shocked to respond and complied with
    the officers’ request. Perryman and Jernigan approached an officer to ask why he had handcuffed
    Smith. The officer did not answer Perryman when he asked the question; instead he inquired,
    “You’re with him?” and placed him in handcuffs. App’ee Br. App’x § 11 at 8. Jernigan was then
    handcuffed without any conversation. Smith and Perryman were largely quiet as the police led them
    downstairs and into the police cars, but Jernigan repeatedly questioned why he was being detained.
    He only remembers being told that the handcuffing was “for his safety” and to “shut the f*** up.”
    App’ee Br. App’x § 10 at 29, 35. Perryman estimates they were in handcuffs for at least an hour.
    On November 19, 2002, Jernigan, Smith and Perryman filed a lawsuit against the City of
    Royal Oak, the Royal Oak Police Department, several police officers, the bar and several employees
    of the bar, alleging that their federal constitutional and state-law rights had been violated. The
    district court dismissed several of the claims and dismissed the complaint against the City of Royal
    Oak, the Royal Oak Police Department, the bar and the bar’s employees in its entirety. The court,
    however, denied the individual officers’ motion for summary judgment with respect to the § 1983
    claims premised on the officers’ illegal search and seizure and with respect to a state-law false-arrest
    claim, holding that qualified immunity did not shield the officers from liability.
    II.
    In reviewing the officers’ interlocutory appeal of the district court’s qualified-immunity
    ruling, we consider “whether, on the facts alleged, a constitutional violation could be found.”
    -6-
    No. 05-2245
    Jernigan v. Royal Oak
    Saucier v. Katz, 
    533 U.S. 194
    , 207 (2001). If so, we then ask “whether the law clearly established
    that the officer’s conduct was unlawful in the circumstances of the case.” 
    Id. at 201.
    On this record
    we agree with the district court that the “Plaintiffs have shown sufficient facts to create a genuine
    issue of material fact as to whether Defendant Officers are entitled to qualified immunity” on the
    federal search-and-seizure claims and the state-law false-arrest claim. 1st D. Ct. Order at 12. We
    see no reason to go beyond the thorough opinions of the district court explaining why the officers
    are not entitled to qualified immunity at this stage in the case, save to emphasize three points.
    First, giving Jernigan, Smith and Perryman the benefit of the doubt on all inferences from
    the facts and resolving all disputes of fact in their favor, Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. Zenith Radio
    Corp., 
    475 U.S. 574
    , 587 (1986), they have shown that their detention lasted longer than a reasonable
    investigatory stop and therefore must be supported by probable cause, not reasonable suspicion. An
    investigatory stop, we have said, must be “reasonably related to the basis for the original intrusion.”
    Smoak v. Hall, 
    460 F.3d 768
    , 781 (6th Cir. 2006) (internal quotation marks omitted); see also Terry
    v. Ohio, 
    392 U.S. 1
    , 20 (1968) (An investigatory stop must be “reasonably related in scope to the
    circumstances which justified the interference in the first place.”). “[T]he length of the detention,
    the manner in which it is conducted, and the degree of force used” all go into the reasonableness
    calculation. 
    Smoak, 460 F.3d at 781
    .
    The plaintiffs’ version of the facts, together with several of Phillips’ statements, would
    permit a reasonable jury to conclude that the stop was unreasonable in all three respects. The
    -7-
    No. 05-2245
    Jernigan v. Royal Oak
    officers purported to detain the plaintiffs to determine whether they had robbed Phillips. Yet it took
    the officers an hour to determine the startlingly obvious fact that the men had done nothing wrong.
    Phillips was at the scene, and yet for reasons that remain unclear the officers did not ask Phillips to
    identify the men before seizing them or even immediately after seizing them. Instead of taking
    control of the three men and simply asking Phillips which one of the men (if any of them) robbed
    him, they handcuffed them and placed them in the police cars. No reasonable explanation is given
    for the handcuffing, as no one at the bar and none of the officers says that the men appeared in any
    way to be armed, otherwise threatening or at risk of flight. And no reasonable explanation is given
    for declining to ask Phillips to identify his attackers at the outset, even though Phillips was there and
    himself wondered aloud what had prompted the officers to apprehend these three men.
    Second, a jury not only could conclude that the detention was unreasonable in its length,
    manner and degree of force, but that probable cause also did not justify a full-blown arrest. Probable
    cause requires officers to possess “reasonably trustworthy information . . . sufficient to warrant a
    prudent man in believing that the [plaintiffs] had committed or [were] committing an offense,” Beck
    v. Ohio, 
    379 U.S. 89
    , 91 (1964), a requirement that we review under the totality of the circumstances,
    Illinois v. Gates, 
    462 U.S. 213
    , 238 (1983).
    As the officers see things, they not only had reasonable suspicion to stop the plaintiffs but
    also had probable cause to arrest them. When they arrived at the bar that evening, they spoke to
    Gibbons or Ivy (they do not know whom). One of these two employees said that they had spoken
    -8-
    No. 05-2245
    Jernigan v. Royal Oak
    to the victim, and he had identified the plaintiffs as his assailants. On that basis alone, the officers
    arrested the three men.
    There are two problems with this theory of probable cause. For one, there is good reason to
    doubt whether these conversations took place. Phillips testified that he never identified the plaintiffs
    as his assailants—whether to Gibbons, to Ivy, to the officers or to anyone else. Phillips testified that
    he always told Gibbons, Ivy and others that there were only one or two assailants, not three. And
    according to the plaintiffs’ version of the arrest, the officers did not approach all three of them and
    arrest them, which is presumably what the officers would have done if they had been told that the
    victim said all three of the men had robbed him. Instead, the officers approached Smith and
    handcuffed him, then arrested Perryman and Jernigan only after they asked the officers why they had
    arrested their friend. Rather than answer this straightforward question, one of the officers said to
    Perryman, “You’re with him?” and placed him in handcuffs, and soon after that did the same to
    Jernigan. Plaintiffs are entitled to ask a jury to resolve these inconsistencies, to determine who is
    telling the truth.
    For another, even if Gibbons or Ivy did tell the officers that the victim had identified the
    plaintiffs as his attackers, the officers offer no reasonable explanation for stopping there. They did
    not ask the employee to recount his conversation with the victim. They did not ask the employee
    who the victim was or how the victim knew these were the robbers: Did he see them face to face?
    Did he see all three of them or just one or two of them? Nor of course did the officers—any of
    -9-
    No. 05-2245
    Jernigan v. Royal Oak
    them—speak to the victim before handcuffing the three men. And most conspicuously, the officers
    fail to explain why they did not simply detain the three suspects through a Terry stop, then ask the
    victim to determine whether these three men had robbed him. All of this occurred to three men
    whose behavior that evening, several employees commented, offered no indication that they had
    done anything wrong.
    Police officers, no doubt, have a difficult job to do. And for that reason, we do well to give
    them the benefit of the doubt in qualified-immunity cases and to appreciate that the probable cause
    necessary to arrest a suspect does not require beyond-a-reasonable-doubt guilt, just “reasonably
    trustworthy information . . . sufficient to warrant a prudent man in believing that the [plaintiffs] had
    committed or [were] committing an offense.” 
    Beck, 379 U.S. at 91
    . But whether it is a difficult job
    or not, it remains a job, which consists at least of doing more than merely arriving at a bar and
    arresting whomever an employee fingers as the villains, without inquiring into why and what that
    person claims to know about the crime. A jury, in short, could reasonably conclude that while the
    officers may have had reasonable suspicion to stop the plaintiffs, the stop exceeded the bounds of
    a reasonable Terry stop and the officers did not have probable cause to arrest them.
    Third, because it is clearly established that officers need probable cause before arresting an
    individual and searching him, we cannot grant qualified immunity based on the second Saucier
    inquiry. See St. John v. Hickey, 
    411 F.3d 762
    , 770 (6th Cir. 2005) (holding that disputed issue of
    - 10 -
    No. 05-2245
    Jernigan v. Royal Oak
    material fact regarding probable cause precluded the court from granting the officers qualified
    immunity).
    III.
    For these reasons, we affirm.
    - 11 -