Levy v. Lique et al
Filing
41
///ORDER granting 21 Motion for Summary Judgment; denying 24 Motion for Summary Judgment; denying 28 Motion for Summary Judgment. So Ordered by Judge Paul J. Barbadoro.(jna) Modified on 5/7/2012 to add:/// (mm).
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
Sheila Levy
v.
Case No. 10-cv-374-PB
Opinion No. 2012 DNH 080
Todd Lique et al.
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
Sheila Levy filed suit in the Grafton County Superior Court
against Todd Lique, an officer of the Lebanon Police Department
(“LPD”), M. James Alexander, the Chief of Police for the LPD,
the City of Lebanon, and unknown LPD officers.
four claims for relief:
She asserted
(1) a Fourth Amendment excessive force
claim against Lique and unknown LPD officers; (2) a state law
claim of assault and battery against Lique and unknown LPD
officers; (3) a Section 1983 failure to train and supervise
claim against Chief Alexander; and (4) a state law negligent
training and supervision claim against Chief Alexander and the
City of Lebanon.
Defendants removed the case to this court.
The parties have filed cross-motions for summary judgment.
For
the reasons provided below, I deny both Levy and Lique’s motions
and grant Chief Alexander and the City’s motion.
1
I.
BACKGROUND
Levy and defendants present two dramatically different
versions of the events that transpired in front of the Colonial
Deli Mart in Lebanon, New Hampshire on August 5, 2007.
I
describe each version in turn.
A.
Levy’s Version
On the morning of August 5, 2007, Levy drove her thirteen-
year-old daughter, Skye, and their cats and dogs to a riverbank
in Lebanon to give the pets a bath.
At some point, one of her
dogs got loose and ran off into the woods.
Believing that he
would come back and would not bother anyone, Levy decided to go
to the Colonial Deli Mart to get lunch for herself and her
daughter before returning to retrieve the dog.
Approximately five minutes after she arrived at the front
of the store, Officer Lique approached her in the parking lot.
His first comment to her was “take your daughter and go back to
where your dog got loose.”
Levy’s Dep. at 40, Doc. No. 24-2.
When she responded that she would first get lunch and then go
find her dog, Lique said to another officer who arrived on the
scene shortly after Lique, “Perkins, grab her.
in.”
Id. at 42.
I’m taking her
The two officers then grabbed Levy, picked her
2
up by her arms, and took her to the police cruiser.
Skye ran
over to the other side of the cruiser.
Once in front of the cruiser, Lique told Perkins to clear
the area.
cruiser.
He then opened the door and shoved Levy into the
While holding her left arm, Lique began punching Levy
in the stomach with a full fist.
She begged him to stop but he
continued to punch her, landing eight punches total.
He then
reached for what Levy believed was a taser and tasered her left
arm approximately thirty times and her lower back twice.
tasering lasted approximately six minutes.
The
At one point during
the assault, Levy shouted to Skye to run away and call her
grandfather, but Lique told Skye that she had to stay next to
the cruiser.
After he finished tasering Levy, Lique exited the car and
went to speak with Skye.
Levy remained in the cruiser.
after that an ambulance arrived.
not even talk.
Soon
Levy felt paralyzed and could
She was strapped onto a gurney without
resistance and taken to the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center
(“DHMC”).
She was then transferred to the New Hampshire State
Hospital, where she remained for eighteen days.
During her stay at the state hospital, Levy showed the
3
bruises that resulted from Lique’s beating and tasering to
numerous staff members.
She asked them to take pictures of the
bruises but they refused.
She also showed her bruises to the
attorney who represented her in connection with the involuntary
hospital admission, as well as to her father and daughter.
B.
The Police Officers’ Version
On August 4, 2007 – the day before the incident – a person
approached Lique to report that Levy was sleeping in her van at
a nearby auto repair shop.
Lique spoke to Levy and noted that
her mental capacity seemed diminished.
When she denied needing
assistance, he left.
Around 4:00 a.m. the next day, someone called the police
regarding Levy.
Levy reportedly told the caller that the police
were looking for her, that they were setting up road blocks to
catch her, and that she was bleeding.
The caller noted that
Levy was not actually bleeding.
Later that day, around noontime, an employee at the
Colonial Deli Mart called the police to report that Levy was
confronting and bothering customers outside the store.
She also
reported that Levy had told her that she was wanted by the
police.
Lique responded to the scene and approached Levy.
4
He
found her in her van with her daughter and several animals.
She
seemed angered by his presence and appeared to be “far worse”
than the day before.
Levy could not remember her name, the
date, where she was or had been, or things said to her just
seconds before.
She kept talking in circles and asking Lique
who he was even after he identified himself as an officer of the
LPD.
Several minutes into the conversation, Levy told Lique that
she did not have to talk to him, rolled up the window of her
car, and left the parking lot.
She drove into the parking lot
of a store next door to the Deli Mart.
While she was there,
Lique spoke with the Deli Mart employee who had placed the call.
The employee stated that she had known Levy for a long time and
that Levy was acting “irrationally.”
She also told Lique that
Levy’s mental state had always been “a little off” but that her
condition had worsened that day to such an extent that the
employee was concerned for Levy and her daughter’s welfare.
Based on his observations of Levy on that day and the day
before, as well as the Deli Mart employee’s comments, Lique
believed that Levy was a danger to herself and her child.
He
informed Officer Perkins that he believed this was a protective
5
custody issue.
The two proceeded to the nearby parking lot
where Levy had parked her van.
As they approached the van, Levy
tried to slam shut the driver’s side door, but Lique prevented
her from doing so.
He opened the door to full extension and
began speaking with her again.
Levy “began to act irrationally once again and began
screaming.”
Lique’s Police Report at 2, Doc. No. 28-13.
Lique
informed her that he was placing her in protective custody and
asked her to step outside the vehicle.
Levy then “began
screaming even louder and launched herself into the passenger’s
side seat” where her daughter was seated.
Id.
The officers
attempted to grab Levy from the driver’s side but she prevented
them by kicking her legs.
Perkins then went to the passenger’s
side and began attempting to remove her from the vehicle.
joined him.
Lique
“Levy was then forcibly removed from the van by the
upper torso, as she refused to comply with the orders given to
her.”
Id.
Once she was outside the van, Levy continued to physically
struggle against the officers and ignored their orders to stop.
After a “brief struggle,” the officers “forcibly handcuffed her”
and attempted to place her into the police cruiser.
6
Id.
She
was “kicking and struggling wildly” to prevent being placed into
the vehicle until Perkins “picked [her] up . . . and placed
[her] into his cruiser.”
Id.
Levy responded by kicking at the
windows of the vehicle.
At some point during their attempt to detain Levy, Lique
contacted the local fire department for assistance.
ambulance arrived on the scene.
An
Levy was strapped into a
gurney, placed into the ambulance, and transported to the DHMC.
After examining her, the doctors at the DHMC noted that
Levy was exhibiting auditory hallucinations and paranoia
associated with a psychotic mental state.
They concluded that
she required involuntary admission to the state hospital for her
own protection.
eighteen days.
Levy was treated at the state hospital for
Her medical records show that she suffered from
schizophrenia.
Dr. Albert Druktenis, the defense medical expert who
reviewed Levy’s medical records, opined that “[s]he has only
been marginally stabilized on antipsychotic medication, never
completely losing paranoid symptoms; and with periods of
decompensation becoming acutely psychotic, delusional, and
hallucinating.”
Doc. No. 24-3 at 6.
7
He further opined that on
the day of the incident, Levy
was exhibiting acute psychotic symptoms including
paranoia, delusional thinking, hallucinations, and
misperception of reality. People who knew her that
day saw this as a worsening of her well-known
condition; and records from the Lebanon Police
Department, DHMC, and NHH [the state hospital] confirm
that she was acutely psychotic.
Id.
Dr. Druktenis concluded that “there is very strong
evidence that [Levy’s] claims against the Lebanon Police
Department spring from unreliable psychotic thinking.”
Id.
at 7.
None of the medical records from the DHMC or the state
hospital note any bruises or marks on Levy’s arms or torso.
Neither Lique nor Perkins carried or used a taser on Levy.
In
fact, in 2007, the LPD did not issue tasers to its officers, and
no officer was authorized to carry a taser until 2010.
II.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
Summary judgment is appropriate when the record reveals “no
genuine dispute as to any material fact and that the movant is
entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”
56(a).
Fed. R. Civ. P.
The evidence submitted in support of the motion must be
considered in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party,
8
drawing all reasonable inferences in its favor.
See Navarro v.
Pfizer Corp., 261 F.3d 90, 94 (1st Cir. 2001).
A party seeking summary judgment must first identify the
absence of any genuine issue of material fact.
Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 323 (1986).
Celotex Corp. v.
The burden then shifts to
the nonmoving party to “produce evidence on which a reasonable
finder of fact, under the appropriate proof burden, could base a
verdict for it; if that party cannot produce such evidence, the
motion must be granted.”
Ayala-Gerena v. Bristol Myers-Squibb
Co., 95 F.3d 86, 94 (1st Cir. 1996); see Celotex, 477 U.S. at
323.
On cross motions for summary judgment, the standard of
review is applied to each motion separately.
See Am. Home
Assurance Co. v. AGM Marine Contractors, Inc., 467 F.3d 810, 812
(1st Cir. 2006) (applying the standard to each motion where
cross motions were filed); see also Mandel v. Boston Phoenix,
Inc., 456 F.3d 198, 205 (1st Cir. 2006) (“The presence of crossmotions for summary judgment neither dilutes nor distorts this
standard of review.”).
Hence, I must determine “whether either
of the parties deserves judgment as a matter of law on facts
that are not disputed.”
Adria Int’l Group, Inc. v. Ferré Dev.,
9
Inc., 241 F.3d 103, 107 (1st Cir. 2001).
III. ANALYSIS
Levy moves for summary judgment on the ground that the
defendants’ version of the events demonstrates that she is
entitled to relief on all claims as a matter of law.
Lique
cross-moves for summary judgment and argues that Levy’s evidence
should be disregarded as unreliable and the motion decided based
on his evidence, which shows that his actions were authorized
and did not violate Levy’s rights.
Lastly, Chief Alexander and
the City of Lebanon contend that they are entitled to summary
judgment because Levy has presented no evidence that they failed
to train or supervise Lique on the use of force in the course of
an arrest.
A.
I examine each motion in turn.
Levy’s Motion
Levy argues that she is entitled to summary judgment on all
claims even if they are considered in light of the version of
the events most favorable to defendants.
1.
I disagree.
Excessive Force Claim
With respect to her excessive force claim against Lique,
Levy argues that “there is no genuine issue of material fact as
10
to whether Defendant Lique used objectively unreasonable force
in seizing her because the detention itself was per se
unreasonable.”
Doc. No. 28-2 at 7.
She does not assert a
separate Fourth Amendment claim for unlawful arrest.
After speaking with both Levy and the person who called to
complain about Levy confronting Deli Mart customers, Lique
informed Levy that he was placing her in protective custody.
To
place a person in protective custody, an officer must have a
“reasonable suspicion to believe that the person may be
suffering from a mental illness and probable cause to believe
that unless the person is placed in protective custody the
person poses an immediate danger of bodily injury to [herself]
or others.”
N.H. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 135-C:28.
Levy concedes
that Lique had reasonable suspicion that she was suffering from
a mental illness but argues that he had no probable cause to
believe that she posed a threat of harm to herself or others.
Even assuming that she was detained without probable cause,
Levy cannot prevail on her excessive force claim on that ground
alone.
When an officer arrests a person without probable cause
“but use[s] no more force than would have been reasonably
necessary if the arrest or the detention were warranted, the
11
plaintiff has a claim for unlawful arrest or detention but not
an additional claim for excessive force.”
Cortez v. McCauley,
478 F.3d 1108, 1126 (10th Cir. 2007); see Freeman v. Gore, 483
F.3d 404, 417 (5th Cir. 2007) (“That the deputies’ arrest of
[the plaintiff] was unlawful on the facts alleged does not,
however, mean that any force used by the deputies to effectuate
the arrest was necessarily excessive.
Rather, [the plaintiff’s]
excessive force claim is separate and distinct from her unlawful
arrest claim, and we must therefore analyze the excessive force
claim without regard to whether the arrest itself was
justified.”); Bashir v. Rockdale Cnty., Ga., 445 F.3d 1323, 1332
(11th Cir. 2006) (“[W]here an excessive force claim is
predicated solely on allegations the arresting officer lacked
the power to make an arrest, the excessive force claim is
entirely derivative of, and is subsumed within, the unlawful
arrest claim.”).
Hence, Levy’s excessive force claim does not
turn on the lawfulness of her arrest.
Regardless of whether
Lique had probable cause to place Levy in protective custody,
she can succeed on her excessive force claim only if the amount
of force that Lique used was more than would have been justified
if the arrest had been lawful.
12
“Whether the force used to effect a particular seizure is
reasonable ‘must be judged from the perspective of a reasonable
officer on the scene, rather than with the 20/20 vision of
hindsight.’”
Jennings v. Jones, 499 F.3d 2, 11 (1st Cir. 2007)
(quoting Graham v. Connor, 490 U.S. 386, 396 (1989)).
The court
must also take into account “the fact that police officers are
often forced to make split-second judgments — in circumstances
that are tense, uncertain, and rapidly evolving — about the
amount of force that is necessary in a particular situation.”
Graham, 490 U.S. at 396-97.
Because the reasonableness test is
an objective one, the officer’s subjective motivation that
prompted the use of force is inconsequential.
Id. at 397.
One
factor that the courts consider in determining whether a given
use of force was objectively reasonable is whether a person was
actively resisting arrest.
Id.
Levy has assented to the defendants’ version of the events
for the purpose of her motion.
Viewing those facts from the
perspective of a reasonable officer, a jury could find that
Lique’s use of force to arrest Levy was objectively reasonable.
When he informed Levy that he was placing her in protective
custody, she had a “duty to submit to arrest and refrain from
13
using force or any weapon in resisting it, regardless of whether
there [was] a legal basis for the arrest.”
§ 594:5.
N.H. Rev. Stat. Ann.
Instead, Levy refused to step outside her vehicle,
moved into the passenger seat, and began kicking her legs at the
officers to prevent them from extracting her from the vehicle.
Levy thereby resisted arrest, which could constitute a criminal
offense under New Hampshire law even if the arrest was unlawful.
Id. § 642:2; see State v. Beauchesne, 151 N.H. 803, 818 (2005)
(“The purpose behind the law that resisting even an illegal
arrest or detention constitutes a crime is to foster the
effective administration of justice, to discourage self-help and
to provide for the safety of police officers.”).
Lique and
Perkins responded to Levy’s resistance by “forcibly remov[ing]
[her] from the van by the upper torso.”
When she continued to
physically struggle against the officers once outside the
vehicle, they “forcibly handcuffed her,” “picked [her] up . . .
and placed [her] into [the] cruiser.”
Because Levy persisted in her combative behavior and
refused to comply with verbal commands from the officers to
submit to the arrest, a jury could conclude that it was
reasonable for Lique to use progressively greater force to
14
subdue her.
See Statchen v. Palmer, 2009 D.N.H. 137 at *20-21
(2009) (officers are entitled to use physical force sufficient
to subdue an individual who refuses to submit to arrest).
And
although the police report is vague as to the exact nature of
the force the officers used to subdue Levy, a jury could
conclude that the force used was no more than necessary to
overcome her resistance.
Therefore, I deny Levy’s motion with
respect to the excessive force claim.
2.
Assault and Battery
Levy makes the same untenable argument with respect to her
assault and battery claim.
She contends that any force he used
to effect her unlawful arrest renders him liable for assault and
battery.
In New Hampshire, justification is a complete defense to
any civil action, and “[a] law enforcement officer is justified
in using non-deadly force upon another person when and to the
extent that he reasonably believes it necessary to effect an
arrest or detention . . . unless he knows that the arrest or
detention is illegal.”
N.H. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 627:5.
Under
this statute, reasonableness is determined by an objective
standard.
State v. Cunningham, 159 N.H. 103, 107 (2009).
15
Levy
does not argue that Lique knew that her arrest was illegal, nor
does the defendants’ version of the incident support that
proposition.
Therefore, Levy cannot prevail on summary judgment
on the assault and battery claim.
3.
Supervisory Liability Claims
Lastly, Levy argues that she is entitled to summary
judgment on her supervisory liability claims against Chief
Alexander and the City of Lebanon.
In her complaint, Levy
alleges that they failed to adequately train and supervise Lique
regarding the proper use of force.
She presents no evidence to
that effect, however, as her arguments in the motion papers rest
entirely on defendants’ alleged failure to adequately train
Lique on the protective custody standards and procedures.
Even
assuming that his supervisors were negligent in regard to
protective custody training, Levy has not alleged this as a
basis for relief in her complaint.
I therefore deny the motion.1
I note that even if Levy had asserted a claim for failure to
train and supervise with respect to protective custody issues,
she would not prevail on that claim on summary judgment.
Although Lique and Perkins admit that they received only twohour training on the protective custody standards and
procedures, a jury could conclude that the training was
sufficient.
16
1
B.
Lique’s Motion
Lique moves for summary judgment on all claims against him.
He argues that he was authorized to take Levy into protective
custody and that he did not use excessive force in the course of
the arrest.
Alternatively, he contends that he is entitled to
qualified immunity on Levy’s Fourth Amendment claim and official
immunity on her assault and battery claim.
Lique does not argue that that he is entitled to summary
judgment if I accept as true the evidence Levy has submitted in
opposition of the motion ─ namely her deposition detailing how
Lique beat and tasered her in the back of his cruiser without a
provocation.
Instead, Lique bases his motion on the premise
that Levy’s evidence should be disregarded as unreliable and the
motion decided based on his evidence.
Specifically, he argues
that Levy’s mental illness rendered her unable to accurately
perceive and remember her encounter with Lique on the day in
question.
He attributes her claim of an unprovoked beating and
tasering to an “acute delusional and hallucinatory episode of
schizophrenia at the time of the incident.”
Doc. No. 24-1.
He
supports his contention with the testimony of an expert witness
who reviewed Levy’s medical records and the reports of the
17
incident and concluded that “there is very strong evidence that
[Levy’s] claims against the Lebanon Police Department spring
from unreliable psychotic thinking.”
Doc. No. 24-3 at 7.
Consequently, Lique argues, I should disregard Levy’s evidence
as unreliable and decide the motion based on his version of the
events.2
The credibility of Levy’s evidence is an issue of fact for
the jury and cannot be determined at the summary judgment stage.
I am not free to reject her evidence simply because she suffered
from a mental illness that may have altered her perception of
the reality at the time of the incident.
Rather, for the
purpose of Lique’s motion, I must accept as true Levy’s evidence
and draw all reasonable inferences in her favor.
See Navarro,
Lique also relies upon the absence of any notation in Levy’s
medical records from the DHMC or the state hospital that she had
been beaten or tasered as proof that her claim is based on a
paranoid belief she developed during the alleged psychotic
episode. Levy responds with an affidavit of Earl Carrel, an
attorney who represented her in connection with her involuntary
hospital admission after the incident with Lique. Carrel states
that when he interviewed Levy shortly after her admission, she
showed him bruises on the left side of her torso. Doc. No. 2011. Levy’s father and daughter also state in sworn affidavits
that they noticed bruising on Levy’s body when they visited her
in the hospital. See Doc. No. 28-6; Doc. No. 28-10. Her
evidence, therefore, is easily sufficient to demonstrate the
existence of a genuine dispute as to a material fact on the
issue.
18
2
261 F.3d at 94.
Because Lique does not argue that he is
entitled to summary judgment if I accept Levy’s evidence, I deny
his motion.
C.
Supervisors’ Motion
In her complaint, Levy claims that Chief Alexander and the
City of Lebanon are liable for failing to adequately train and
supervise Lique on the proper use of force.
She asserts a
Section 1983 claim against Chief Alexander and a common law
claim for negligent training and supervision against Chief
Alexander and the City.
Both defendants move for summary
judgment.
1.
Section 1983 Claim against Chief Alexander
“Supervisory liability under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 cannot be
predicated on a respondeat superior theory, but only on the
basis of the supervisor’s own acts or omissions.”
Seekamp v.
Michaud, 109 F.3d 802, 808 (1st Cir. 1997) (internal citations,
alterations, and quotation marks omitted); see Ashcroft v.
Iqbal, 129 S. Ct. 1937, 1948 (2009).
A supervisor is liable for
the subordinates’ actions if:
(1) the behavior of his subordinates results in a
constitutional violation, and (2) the supervisor’s action
or inaction was affirmatively linked to that behavior in
that it could be characterized as supervisory
19
encouragement, condonation or acquiescence or gross
negligence amounting to deliberate indifference.
Seekamp, 109 F.3d at 808 (internal quotation marks and
alterations omitted).
“[T]he ‘affirmative link’ required
between the action or inaction of a supervisor and the behavior
of subordinates contemplates proof that the supervisor’s conduct
led inexorably to the constitutional violation.”
Id. (internal
quotation marks omitted).
Even if Lique violated Levy’s constitutional rights by
using excessive force in effecting her arrest, her Section 1983
claim against Chief Alexander fails because she has presented no
evidence that the Chief was deliberately indifferent to proper
police training on the use of force, the claim she asserts in
her complaint.
She does not dispute that Lique was trained in
the use of force at the New Hampshire Police Academy or that he
subsequently received annual training on the use of force
continuum.
In fact, in objecting to Chief Alexander’s motion, Levy
does not even argue that he failed to train Lique on the proper
use of force.
Instead, she contends that the Chief is liable
because he failed to adequately train Lique with regard to
protective custody, which made Lique ill-equipped to identify
20
mentally ill individuals who pose a threat to themselves or
others.
As I explained above, Levy did not assert a cause of
action for unlawful arrest against Lique nor has she claimed
that Chief Alexander is liable because he failed to adequately
train him regarding the protective custody standards and
procedures.
Therefore, in the absence of competent evidence
that Chief Alexander inadequately trained Lique regarding the
use of force, the Chief is entitled to summary judgment on
Levy’s Section 1983 claim against him.
2.
Negligent Training and Supervision Claim
Levy also asserts a negligent training and supervision
claim against Chief Alexander and the City of Lebanon.
The
record is bare of any competent evidence that would substantiate
this claim.
New Hampshire recognizes “a cause of action against an
employer for negligently hiring or retaining an employee that
the employer knew or should have known was unfit for the job so
as to create a danger of harm to third persons.”
Eno, 139 N.H. 708, 718 (1995).
Marquay v.
To prevail on the claim, Levy
would have to show that Lique was “incompetent, inexperienced or
unskilled in a way that caused [her] injury, the risk of which
21
was within the scope of [his] employment and was known to the
employer-municipality.”
Cutter v. Town of Farmington, 126 N.H.
836, 841 (1985) (first alteration added).
She has presented no
evidence that either Chief Alexander or the City knew or should
have known of a risk of Lique’s incompetence in the use of
force.
Rather, the uncontested evidence shows that Lique
received annual training on the broadly utilized continuum of
force.
I therefore grant the motion for summary judgment on the
negligent training and supervision claim.3
IV.
CONCLUSION
For the aforementioned reasons, I deny Levy’s motion for
summary judgment (Doc. No. 28), deny Lique’s motion for summary
judgment (Doc. No. 24) and grant Chief Alexander and the City’s
Because Levy has not asserted any claim of negligent training
or supervision on the basis of a failure to provide officers
with adequate knowledge of the protective custody standards and
procedures, I need not examine whether the evidence submitted
would support such a claim. I further note, that even if Levy
had asserted such a claim, I would grant the City’s motion
because a municipality is immune from liability arising out of
its performance of discretionary functions such as decisions
regarding the training and supervision of municipal employees.
See Austin v. Town of Brookline, No. 00-284-JD, 2001 WL 1117103,
at *7 (D.N.H. Sept. 21, 2001); Hacking v. Town of Belmont, 143
N.H. 546, 550 (1999).
22
3
motion for summary judgment (Doc. No. 21).
SO ORDERED.
/s/Paul Barbadoro
Paul Barbadoro
United States District Judge
May 7, 2012
cc:
Stephen T. Martin, Esq.
Brian J. S. Cullen, Esq.
Daniel J. Mullen, Esq.
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