Fredyma v. Hurley
Filing
18
///ORDER granting 11 Motion for Summary Judgment. The Clerk of Court shall enter judgment in accordance with this order and close the case. So Ordered by Judge Steven J. McAuliffe. (lml)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
Dia Fredyma,
Plaintiff
v.
Case No. 17-cv-311-SM
Opinion No. 2019 DNH 043
Daniel J. Hurley,
Defendant
O R D E R
Plaintiff, Dia Fredyma, brings this action against Daniel
Hurley, a former officer in the Keene, New Hampshire Police
Department. 1
By prior order, the court dismissed Fredyma’s First
Amendment retaliation claim.
(document no. 8).
See Order dated February 16, 2018
And, more recently, Fredyma has notified the
court that “she does not object to the entry of judgment on the
pendent state law claims.”
(document no. 14) at 1.
Plaintiff’s Opposition Memorandum
So, at this point, Fredyma advances a
single claim: that Officer Hurley violated her constitutionally
protected right to be free from unreasonable seizures when
Hurley deemed her to be “intoxicated” and took her into
“protective custody” under the provisions of state law, N.H.
Rev. Stat. Ann. (“RSA”) ch. 172-B.
1
Hurley is currently an officer with the Seabrook, New
Hampshire Police Department.
Pending before the court is Hurley’s motion for summary
judgment.
Fredyma objects.
For the reasons discussed, that
motion is granted.
Standard of Review
When ruling on a motion for summary judgment, the court is
“obliged to review the record in the light most favorable to the
nonmoving party, and to draw all reasonable inferences in the
nonmoving party’s favor.”
Block Island Fishing, Inc. v. Rogers,
844 F.3d 358, 360 (1st Cir. 2016) (citation omitted).
Summary
judgment is appropriate when the record reveals “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).
In this
context, a factual dispute “is ‘genuine’ if the evidence of
record permits a rational factfinder to resolve it in favor of
either party, and ‘material’ if its existence or nonexistence
has the potential to change the outcome of the suit.”
Rando v.
Leonard, 826 F.3d 553, 556 (1st Cir. 2016) (citation omitted).
Consequently, “[a]s to issues on which the party opposing
summary judgment would bear the burden of proof at trial, that
party may not simply rely on the absence of evidence but,
rather, must point to definite and competent evidence showing
the existence of a genuine issue of material fact.”
Lorraine Enters., 769 F.3d 23, 29–30 (1st Cir. 2014).
Perez v.
2
In other
words, “a laundry list of possibilities and hypotheticals” and
“[s]peculation about mere possibilities, without more, is not
enough to stave off summary judgment.”
Tobin v. Fed. Express
Corp., 775 F.3d 448, 451–52 (1st Cir. 2014).
See generally
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 249 (1986).
Background
On Saturday afternoon, July 19, 2014, Ms. Fredyma and her
husband attended a wedding at the Keene Country Club, in Keene,
New Hampshire.
After the ceremony, they joined the wedding
party and a number of guests at a reception at the same
facility.
While there, Fredyma says she ate dinner and drank
“maybe two” Samuel Adams beers.
no. 11-6) at 23.
Fredyma Deposition (document
She estimates the reception ended around 6 pm,
id. at 25, at which point she, her husband, and several other
guests drove to Waxy O’Connor’s, a bar immediately adjacent to
(but apparently unaffiliated with) the Best Western Hotel.
They
remained there for roughly seven and one-half hours, until the
bar closed, at approximately 1:30 am.
Id. at 28.
Fredyma did
not eat anything at the bar, but acknowledges that she did
consume more beer - “I probably had another two or three more
drinks.”
Id.
3
After the bar closed, Fredyma and her husband decided that,
because they had been drinking, neither should drive home.
See
Id. at 29 (“Q: Do you think you could have operated a motor
vehicle safely?
A: No. That’s why I was not driving.”).
also Id. at 66 (“We chose not to drive.
See
It’s not - it would be
illegal for us to drive. . . . It would have been illegal.
So I
should not have driven, and that’s why I was where I was at.”).
Accordingly, they walked to the Best Western, where Fredyma
spoke to the clerk at the front desk and asked whether there
were any rooms available for the night.
that there were none.
The clerk informed her
And, he told her that he had already
contacted all the other local hotels, inquiring on behalf of
other people, to see if any rooms were available.
not.
There were
See Fredyma Deposition at 43 (“He told me that he spoke to
every hotel nearby, including all the way over to Brattleboro,
and there was no vacancies anywhere that could be found.
And he
already knew this because he called earlier.”).
Fredyma described the front desk area as “hectic” and noted
that the clerk was busy fielding calls from guests (there were,
apparently, several complaints about noisy guests in another
area of the hotel).
The clerk was also dealing with another
person who had come to the front desk.
at 41.
See Fredyma deposition
The clerk told Fredyma that because he had already
4
checked with the area hotels about vacancies he was unwilling to
do so again.
He did, however, print out a list of those local
hotels, with their phone numbers, and handed it to her.
42.
Id. at
Fredyma testified that she was “angry” and “frustrated” at
that point, and “snatched” the paper from the clerk’s hand.
at 44, 46, and 48.
Id.
She doubted that he had actually called all
of those hotels, id. at 43, and, because the battery in her cell
phone was dead, she asked to use the front desk phone so she
could personally verify the information he had shared with her.
Id. at 45.
The clerk told her that he was not permitted to
allow guests to use the front desk phone, per company policy.
According to the clerk, Fredyma “was being vulgar and
started calling [him] names,” and told him “she was going to
come across that counter and beat [him] down.”
Trial Transcript
of State v. Joshua Fredyma (document no. 11-7) at 7. 2
denies threatening the clerk.
Fredyma
Nevertheless, given Fredyma’s
agitated state, the clerk warned her that he was going to call
2
As a result of his own conduct during this early-morning
encounter, Joshua Fredyma was arrested. Following a bench
trial, he was found guilty of resisting arrest. See Trial
Transcript (document no. 11-7) at 45. He appealed that
conviction and, immediately prior to a de novo jury trial in the
New Hampshire Superior Court, the parties negotiated a
settlement: in exchange for his agreement not to pursue civil
claims against the officers involved, the charge against him was
dismissed. See Complaint at 3, n.1.
5
the police.
Id. at 50.
Around that time, Fredyma’s husband,
Joshua, arrived at the front counter.
The desk clerk described
his interaction with the couple as follows:
But she then mentioned something about not having a
phone, and could she use a phone. And I said, “Well,
we don’t have any public phone here.” And that time
the hotel was in renovation, and while normally we
would have had several phones, one of which I guess I
could have let her use, at this particular time we had
only one phone, the hotel console. Which I’m not able
- I cannot make available for public use.
And I said this to her, and she wasn’t satisfied with
that. It was apparent to me that this was just a
guest who wasn’t going to take no for an answer. And
she - I felt at the time she was probably intoxicated,
so I was patient with her. Then she told me, “I want
you to call every, you know, hotel around the town,
and find out,” and so on. And I said, “Look, I know
there aren’t any rooms available and I’m not going to
do that. And I have, you know, quite enough to do
here. I’m sorry, I can’t help you. I just can’t help
you.” And then she started - she was being vulgar and
started calling me names, and so on. And I guess at
some point she said - she referred to some military
training, and how she was going to come across that
counter and beat me down. Anyway, it was about this
time when Mr. Fredyma came into the lobby. And I
realized then that they were in fact together, though
I had suspected that with her having come in so soon
after he had been in.
And then it began. He walked up to the office at the
end of the counter. So one - they were at opposite
ends of the counter where I was working. And he
started asking the same questions that she had just
asked. And then, “Well, why can’t she use the phone?”
And you know, I had to - again, I explained to them
that there are no rooms, and I don’t have any phone
6
available, and that I can’t help them.
sorry.
You know, I’m
The situation went from hounding to just harassment,
to out and out threatening. And I was very concerned.
I was all alone. You know, a large hotel full of
guests, many of whom were complaining, calling me on
the phone as I was trying to have this conversation
with these two people. And it was simply - I was
putting myself in danger. (Tr. 8).
Trial Transcript at 6-8.
At that point, Fredyma admits she was getting “more and
more frustrated” and concedes that it was “very possible” that
she was swearing at the clerk.
Although she denies “yelling,”
she admits she was “very animated” and “speaking in a raised
voice.”
59.
She also began to cry.
Fredyma Deposition at 55-57 and
She also admits that she smelled of beer, and agrees that
it was “possible” that she had red, bloodshot, glassy eyes.
at 58.
Id.
At 1:52 am, the front desk clerk called the Keene Police
Department to report a disturbance at the hotel.
The first officer to arrive at the scene was the defendant,
Officer Hurley.
him.
Fredyma says she explained the situation to
During that interaction, she admits that she continued to
be “excited,” was “still animated,” spoke in a “raised voice,”
was crying, and may have been swearing.
Id. at 63.
Her
husband, Joshua, joined the conversation and both addressed
7
Hurley in what Fredyma describes as an “animated” manner.
at 64.
Id.
See also Exhibit C to Defendant’s Memorandum (document
no. 11-1), Video from Hotel Lobby.
Officer Hurley testified
that Joshua told him that “this fucking place over-served me”
and now won’t give me a room.
Trial Transcript at 21. 3
Police Narrative (document no. 11-3) at 1.
See also
Ms. Fredyma was
plainly agitated and described herself as “bawling” and being
“just beside myself.”
Fredyma Deposition at 65.
Officer Hurley
testified that both Mr. and Ms. Fredyma were “very aggravated
with what was going on” and the couple repeatedly talked over
him as he was trying to converse with them.
Trial Transcript,
at 22.
Officer Hurley testified that he told Joshua several times
to calm down, but he kept “escalating and escalating.”
Id.
Hurley testified that he informed Joshua that if he didn’t calm
down, he was going to be arrested.
said, ‘Fuck You.’
“And, at that point, he
Clinched his fists, and that’s when I told
him he was under arrest.
protective custody.”
Id.
I was going to place him into
As Officer Hurley attempted to
3
Ms. Fredyma denies hearing that statement but another of
the responding officers, Officer Lamoureux, testified that Mr.
Fredyma complained that the bar had “over-served” him. Trial
Transcript at 41. The hotel clerk also testified that Mr.
Fredyma complained to the police that “we were over-served” at
the bar. Id. at 10-11.
8
handcuff Joshua, he resisted and a struggle ensued.
Ms. Fredyma
turned to the clerk and called him an “asshole” - apparently
because she blamed him, at least in part, for the couple’s
current predicament.
Fredyma Deposition at 67.
As Officer Hurley and the other responding officers
attempted to take Joshua into custody, they took him to the
ground in the hotel lobby.
Ms. Fredyma stood over the
struggling group, calling out to her husband.
Id. at 68.
Once
the officers secured Joshua, Officer Hurley approached Ms.
Fredyma, “who was still yelling,” Police Narrative (document no.
11-3) at 2.
He told her that he was taking her into protective
custody and instructed her to put her hands behind her back.
She complied.
Officer Hurley secured her in handcuffs, and she
was transported to the Cheshire County House of Corrections
without incident.
She was processed, detained, and released
about four hours later, at 6 am.
Discussion
In the sole remaining count of her complaint, Ms. Fredyma
asserts that Officer Hurley, while acting under color of state
law, violated her constitutionally protected right to be free
from unreasonable seizures.
See generally 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
Specifically, she claims Hurley took her into protective custody
9
pursuant to RSA 172-B without probable cause to believe that she
was “intoxicated,” as that term is defined in the statute.
Consequently, the questions presented by Officer Hurley’s motion
for summary judgment are: (1) whether the undisputed material
facts of record establish that, as a matter of law, Hurley’s
conduct did not violate Fredyma’s constitutional rights; or, if
it did, (2) whether Hurley is nonetheless entitled to qualified
immunity.
Chapter 172-B of New Hampshire’s Revised Statutes
Annotated, the statute pursuant to which Officer Hurley seized
Ms. Fredyma, provides that:
When a peace officer encounters a person who, in the
judgment of the officer, is intoxicated as defined in
RSA 172-B:1, X, the officer may take such person into
protective custody and shall take whichever of the
following actions is, in the judgment of the officer,
the most appropriate to ensure the safety and welfare
of the public, the individual, or both:
(a) Assist the person, if he consents, to his
home, an approved alcohol treatment program, or
some other appropriate location; or
(b) Release the person to some other person
assuming responsibility for the intoxicated
person; or
(c) Lodge the person in a local jail or county
correctional facility for said person’s
protection, for up to 24 hours or until the
keeper of said jail or facility judges the person
to be no longer intoxicated.
10
RSA 172-B:3, I.
That statute defines the term “intoxicated” to
mean “a condition in which the mental or physical functioning of
an individual is substantially impaired as a result of the
presence of alcohol in his system.”
I.
RSA 172-B:1, X. 4
The Fourth Amendment and Probable Cause.
The Fourth Amendment (made applicable to the states and
state actors through the Fourteenth Amendment) provides that
citizens shall not be subjected to “unreasonable” seizures.
And, it is well established that “the Fourth Amendment requires
officers acting under a civil protection statute to have
probable cause before taking an individual into custody of a
kind that resembles an arrest.”
77 (1st Cir. 2017).
Alfano v. Lynch, 847 F.3d 71,
Based upon the evidence of record, it is
plain that Officer Hurley had probable cause to believe that
Fredyma was “intoxicated,” as that term is defined by state law,
when he took her into protective custody.
4
Although not relevant to Fredyma’s federal claim, that
statute provides both civil and criminal immunity to officers
acting under its authority, except for “gross negligence or
willful or wanton injury.” RSA 172-B:3, VIII.
11
As this court has noted, “probable cause” to arrest an
individual (or to detain her under the protective custody
statute) exists when:
the facts and circumstances within an officer’s
knowledge and of which he or she had reasonably
trustworthy information were sufficient to warrant a
prudent person in believing that the suspect had
committed or was committing an offense. Probable
cause does not require evidence to prove guilt beyond
a reasonable doubt. Probability is the touchstone.
The probable cause standard does not require the
officers’ conclusion to be ironclad, or even highly
probable. Their conclusion that probable cause exists
need only be reasonable.
Belsito Commc’ns, Inc. v. Decker, 2016 DNH 009, 2016 WL 141664,
at *6 (D.N.H. Jan. 12, 2016) (citations and internal punctuation
omitted).
Here, the facts and circumstances of which Officer
Hurley was aware included the following:
1.
Shortly before 2 o’clock in the morning, he was
dispatched to the Best Western Hotel to respond to a
disturbance in the hotel lobby.
2.
When he arrived, Hurley “immediately observed a male
and a female who appeared extremely agitated.” Police
Narrative (document no. 11-3) at 1.
3.
While Fredyma denies that she was “intoxicated,” as
that term is defined in RSA 172-B, she admits that she
was under the influence of alcohol and her blood
alcohol level was above the legal limit for operating
a motor vehicle.
4.
Fredyma was “excited and animated,” “angry,” and
“frustrated;” she was alternating between “speaking in
a raised voice” and “bawling;” and she was swearing at
both the hotel clerk and Officer Hurley.
12
5.
Fredyma had been drinking since earlier the prior
afternoon, she admits she smelled of beer, and does
not dispute Officer Hurley’s report that she had red,
bloodshot, glassy eyes.
Given those undisputed facts of record, a reasonable and prudent
officer in Hurley’s position, could have reasonably concluded
that not only was Fredyma under the influence of alcohol (as she
admits), but she was also “intoxicated,” as defined in RSA 172B. 5
Consequently, Officer Hurley had probable cause to take
Fredyma into protective custody.
The Fourth Amendment demands
nothing more.
But, says Fredyma, Officer Hurley failed to give sufficient
consideration to less intrusive, non-custodial options that were
available to him under state law.
10 and 12.
See Plaintiff’s Memorandum at
Specifically, Fredyma asserts that Officer Hurley
failed to adequately consider whether, in his judgment, it would
5
Indeed, based upon his observations of Fredyma, the desk
clerk believed she was “probably intoxicated.” Trial Transcript
at 7. See also Deposition of Dale Delino (document no. 14-2) at
52 (“I have to make assumptions about people I’m dealing with at
night when there’s a problem like this, and my assumption was
this is pretty irrational, and I’m wondering if she isn’t maybe
in a blackout or intoxicated. There’s something - you know something is not right with this woman and I may be in trouble
here.”).
13
have been more appropriate to assist Fredyma to her home by
calling her a cab.
See generally RSA 172-B:3, I(a). 6
Fredyma has, however, pointed to no authority for the
proposition that the Fourth Amendment requires an officer - once
he or she has probable cause to seize a person - to consider
whether, under the circumstances, options less intrusive than an
arrest are available and/or viable.
At most, one might
plausibly argue that once Officer Hurley had probable cause to
take Fredyma into protective custody, the Fourth Amendment
imposed some sort of temporal restriction on the duration of her
custody.
See Ringuette v. City of Fall River, 146 F.3d 1, 5
(1st Cir. 1998) (holding that detention beyond the 12 hours
permitted by Massachusetts’ protective custody statute “likely”
would have violated the Fourth Amendment).
But, Fredyma does
not challenge the comparatively short period of her detention.
Instead, she asserts that the failure to adequately consider
non-custodial options specified in the New Hampshire statute
violated the Fourth Amendment.
It did not.
6
Officer Hurley testified that he did consider the noncustodial options set forth in RSA 172-B:3, but determined that
taking Fredyma to the house of corrections was, under the
circumstances, the most appropriate course of action. See
Affidavit of Officer Daniel J. Hurley (document no. 11-2) at
para. 10.
14
The Fourth Amendment demands that “seizures” be supported
by probable cause.
If probable cause to arrest exists, the
Fourth Amendment is satisfied.
It does not compel officers to
explore or even consider whether there are options less
intrusive than a seizure available to them.
This is true even
if state law does require such an inquiry.
See generally Lucia
v. City of Peabody, 971 F. Supp. 2d 153, 164–65 (D. Mass. 2013)
(concluding that Massachusetts’ statutory requirement that
officers detaining someone under the protective custody statute
contact a treatment facility did not amount to a constitutional
prerequisite to protective custody detention).
See generally,
Virginia v. Moore, 553 U.S. 164, 174 (2008) (“A State is free to
prefer one search-and-seizure policy among the range of
constitutionally permissible options, but its choice of a more
restrictive option does not render the less restrictive ones
unreasonable, and hence unconstitutional.”); Bd. of Educ. v.
Earls, 536 U.S. 822, 837 (2002) (“[T]his Court has repeatedly
stated that reasonableness under the Fourth Amendment does not
require employing the least intrusive means, because the logic
of such elaborate less-restrictive-alternative arguments could
raise insuperable barriers to the exercise of virtually all
search-and-seizure powers.”) (citation and internal punctuation
omitted).
See also Holder v. Town of Sandown, 585 F.3d 500,
507-08 and n.6 (1st Cir. 2009) (discussing this concept in
15
detail and noting that, “linking Fourth Amendment protections to
state law would cause them to vary from place to place and from
time to time”) (quoting Virginia v. Moore, 553 U.S. at 176)).
To be sure, Fredyma may have stated a claim that Officer
Hurley violated the provisions of New Hampshire’s protective
custody statute (whether that alleged statutory violation would
have given rise to a viable private cause of action particularly given the statutory immunity afforded to officers
under RSA 172-B - is unclear).
But, she has voluntarily
relinquished all of her state law claims.
her Fourth Amendment claim.
All that remains is
And, on the record before the
court, that Fourth Amendment claim fails as a matter of law.
II.
Qualified Immunity.
Even if the court had concluded that Officer Hurley
violated Fredyma’s Fourth Amendment right to be free from
unreasonable seizures, he would still be entitled to the
protections afforded by qualified immunity.
“Qualified immunity
shields government officials from liability for civil damages
insofar as their conduct does not violate clearly established
statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person
would have known.
The doctrine’s prophylactic sweep is broad:
it leaves unprotected only those officials who, from an
16
objective standpoint, should have known that their conduct was
unlawful.”
Alfano v. Lynch, 847 F.3d 71, 75 (1st Cir. 2017)
(citations and internal punctuation omitted).
Consequently, as
the Supreme Court has observed, qualified immunity protects “all
but the plainly incompetent or those who knowingly violate the
law.”
Malley v. Briggs, 475 U.S. 335, 341 (1986).
And, as this
court has noted:
When, as here, a seizure is challenged on grounds that
the officers lacked reasonable suspicion (or probable
cause), the qualified immunity inquiry does not
require the court to decide whether probable cause
actually existed, but rather, whether a reasonable
officer could have believed that it did. Put another
way, defendants are protected by qualified immunity so
long as the presence of probable cause is at least
arguable. Accordingly, for purposes of the qualified
immunity inquiry in this case, the dispositive
question is whether it was at least arguable that
probable cause existed to believe Manders engaged in
disorderly conduct within the meaning of RSA 644:2,
II(b).
Byrnes v. City of Manchester, 848 F. Supp. 2d 146, 156 (D.N.H.
2012) (citation and internal punctuation omitted) (emphasis
supplied).
See also Cox v. Hainey, 391 F.3d 25, 31 (1st Cir.
2004) (“[I]n the case of a warrantless arrest, if the presence
of probable cause is arguable or subject to legitimate question,
qualified immunity will attach.”).
17
So, in the context of this case, the relevant inquiry is
whether it was “at least arguable” that probable cause existed
to believe that Fredyma was “intoxicated” under RSA 172-B.
was.
It
Consequently, even if Officer Hurley had violated
Fredyma’s constitutionally protected right to be free from
unreasonable seizures (he did not), he would, nonetheless, be
entitled to the protections afforded by qualified immunity.
See, e.g., McCue v. City of Bangor, No. 1:14-CV-00098-GZS, 2015
WL 6848539, at *11 (D. Me. Sept. 22, 2015) (discussing officer’s
probable cause to detain plaintiff under Maine’s protective
custody statute and noting that, given the presence of probable
cause, officer was shielded by qualified immunity).
See also
Wheeler v. Gidley, 2005 DNH 122, 2005 WL 2090697, at *6 (D.N.H.
Aug. 29, 2005) (concluding that while plaintiff’s arrest “was
likely not supported by probable cause,” arresting officer was,
nonetheless, entitled to qualified immunity because a reasonable
officer could have believed that probable cause to arrest
existed).
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the defendant, Officer Daniel J.
Hurley, is entitled to judgment as a matter of law with regard
to Ms. Fredyma’s sole remaining claim against him: that he
violated her Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable
18
seizures when he concluded that she was “intoxicated” and took
her into protective custody under RSA 172-B.
And, because
Fredyma “does not object to the entry of judgment on [her]
pendent state law claims,” Plaintiff’s Memorandum at 1, judgment
shall be entered in favor of Officer Hurley with regard to those
claims as well.
Defendant’s motion for summary judgment (document no. 11)
is granted.
The Clerk of Court shall enter judgment in
accordance with this order and close the case.
SO ORDERED.
____________________________
Steven J. McAuliffe
United States District Judge
March 13, 2019
cc:
Brian R. Marsicovetere, Esq.
Samantha D. Elliott, Esq.
19
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