Albert Hansen v. Ryan Aper

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 21, 2018
Docket17-2220
StatusUnpublished

This text of Albert Hansen v. Ryan Aper (Albert Hansen v. Ryan Aper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Albert Hansen v. Ryan Aper, (6th Cir. 2018).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 18a0428n.06

No. 17-2220

UNITED STATES COURTS OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT FILED Aug 21, 2018 ALBERT HANSEN ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk ) Plaintiff-Appellee, ) ) ON APPEAL FROM THE v. ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT ) COURT FOR THE WESTERN RYAN APER ) DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN ) Defendant-Appellant. ) )

BEFORE: SUHRHEINRICH, CLAY, and GIBBONS, Circuit Judges.

JULIA SMITH GIBBONS, Circuit Judge. Defendant Ryan Aper challenges the district

court’s denial of his motion for summary judgment in this interlocutory appeal from plaintiff

Albert Hansen’s Fourth Amendment lawsuit based on excessive force in applying handcuffs. Aper

argues that the doctrine of qualified immunity protects him from liability for his actions. Because

the facts of this case are materially indistinguishable from those of Morrison v. Board of Trustees

of Green Township, where we upheld the district court’s denial of qualified immunity, we affirm

the district court’s judgment.

I.

On September 28, 2013, Aper observed Hansen driving almost twenty miles per hour over

the speed limit on U.S. Highway 2 in Michigan and initiated a traffic stop. Hansen was

accompanied by another passenger. As he was talking with Hansen and his passenger, Aper

smelled marijuana. Aper asked Hansen to get out of the car and Hansen complied. Aper then No. 17-2220, Hansen v. Aper

handcuffed Hansen. Hansen stood outside the patrol vehicle for about five minutes while his car

was searched, revealing two metal baking trays, marijuana, a silver Taurus handgun, and a

marijuana roach.1 Aper then handcuffed the other passenger and put both men in the patrol vehicle.

Aper testified that he was instructed on the Michigan Police Department’s handcuffing policies

and that he received training on the proper use of handcuffs. He further testified that handcuffs

are generally tested for tightness by placing a finger between the cuff and the arrestee’s wrist.

Once Hansen was in the car, he told Aper that he had “extremely high blood pressure,” that

“the cuffs are tight,” and that they hurt. DE 22-3, Hansen Dep., Page ID 104. Aper admitted that

Hansen “made reference to the handcuffs bothering him” and “complained of discomfort.” DE

28-9, Aper Dep., Page ID 387. According to Hansen, Aper responded that handcuffs “are supposed

to hurt” and did not check the cuffs to see if they were too tight. DE 22-3, Hansen Dep., Page ID

104, 113. Aper, however, stated that he did check the cuffs to see if they were too tight, concluded

that they were on properly, and attributed Hansen’s discomfort to the fact that he was leaning back

and putting more pressure on his wrists.

Hansen estimated that he remained in handcuffs for about thirty minutes, possibly up to

forty minutes. He complained to Aper once more but did not say anything else “because, you

know, it wasn’t to my benefit to say anything.” DE 22-3, Hansen Dep., Page ID 104. However,

he testified that he was “squirming” and “in visible pain.” Id. at 113. After the cuffs were removed,

Hansen stated that he had indentations on his wrists. He did not take any photographs and could

not remember whether he showed his passenger his wrists. He did not show Aper his wrists.

Hansen and his passenger had been traveling to Hansen’s seasonal home in Kearsarge,

Michigan at the time of the traffic stop. After the arrest, Hansen continued to Kearsarge and spent

1 Hansen’s passenger later submitted an affidavit stating that the marijuana belonged to him and Hansen had no knowledge of it.

-2- No. 17-2220, Hansen v. Aper

two or three days there. Once Hansen returned from Kearsarge, he immediately saw his primary

care provider, Dr. R. Rao Yalamanchi, whom he generally saw every two months for ongoing

health problems that include arthritis, diabetes, gout, high blood pressure, and high cholesterol.

Dr. Yalamanchi’s office notes indicate that Hansen’s post-arrest visit took place on October 4,

2013, six days after the incident. The notes state:

Complaints of pa[i]n and numbness right dorsal hand, right thumb. Symptoms started when he was handcuffed for half an hour by police for speeding one week ago, symptoms are persistent. Patient claims handcuffs were too tight and to[o] painful and patient told the Police officer, however, patient was told by the Officer handcuffs are supposed to be tight.

DE 22-4, Yalamanchi Medical Records, Page ID 144. Dr. Yalamanchi further found “[m]inimum

tenderness over the dorsal surface of right hand” and “[n]o motor weakness.” Id. at 145. He

“[a]dvised symptomatic treatment” and imaging studies if the pain did not improve. Id.

At Hansen’s next visit on November 6, 2013, Dr. Yalamanchi’s notes indicate that Hansen

complained of a cold, numb feeling in his right hand that began after he was handcuffed. Dr.

Yalamanchi advised an electromyography (“EMG”) study of the hand. On December 17, 2013,

Hansen underwent an EMG study of his right hand. The study was deemed “abnormal” and

“show[ed] a lack of response of stimulation of the right radial nerve.” DE 22-5, Cardiology

Results, Page ID 238. The report concluded that “when considered in conjunction with the clinical

history it appears that this is more likely due to crush injury to the radial nerve at the wrist level.”

Id.

Hansen continued to complain of numbness in his right hand at his visits to Dr.

Yalamanchi, and he was prescribed pain medication. At Hansen’s February 2014 visit, Dr.

Yalamanchi advised Hansen to consult with a neurologist. Hansen subsequently visited Dr. Girish

Mangalick on December 9, 2014 for a nerve test. Dr. Mangalick found “mild tenderness in the

-3- No. 17-2220, Hansen v. Aper

inner aspect of the right forearm” and, citing the December 2013 EMG study results, “advised

[Hansen] to take outpatient course of physical therapy.” DE 22-6, Mangalick Records, Page ID

247. Hansen testified that he went to physical therapy twice a week for about a month but stopped

after he had to get a knee operation and spend time recovering in a nursing home. Hansen still

experiences some tingling and numbness in his hand. He incurred medical costs in excess of

$2,500 for his hand injury, and Medicare and Health Alliance Plan filed liens for the unpaid bills.

Aper submitted into evidence an independent examination conducted by Dr. Steven

Kushner, a doctor of osteopathic medicine. Dr. Kushner concluded that “there is no objective

finding that Mr. Hansen suffered an injury traceable to the handcuffing that occurred on September

28, 2013. Mr. Hansen’s subjective statements of pain are not supported by the examination.” DE

22-7, Letters & Aff., Page ID 258. Dr. Kushner found that aside from age-related osteoarthritis,

Hansen did not have any abnormalities in his right hand. He also opined that the medical records

from Dr. Mangalick “do[] not show the raw data . . . [just] an opinion, with the doctor feeling that

there was no response in the superficial branch of the radial nerve.” Id. at 255.

On September 9, 2016, Hansen filed a lawsuit against Aper under 42 U.S.C. § 1983,

alleging that Aper violated Hansen’s Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable seizure

by handcuffing Hansen too tightly. Aper moved for summary judgment based on qualified

immunity, arguing that Hansen’s “subjective complaints” could not support the conclusion that

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