Anselm Caddell, et al. v. Joyce A. Campbell, et al.

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedDecember 12, 2025
Docket1:19-cv-00091
StatusUnknown

This text of Anselm Caddell, et al. v. Joyce A. Campbell, et al. (Anselm Caddell, et al. v. Joyce A. Campbell, et al.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anselm Caddell, et al. v. Joyce A. Campbell, et al., (S.D. Ohio 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO WESTERN DIVISION

ANSELM CADDELL, et al.,

Plaintiffs, Case No. 1:19-cv-91

v. JUDGE DOUGLAS R. COLE Magistrate Judge Bowman JOYCE A. CAMPBELL, et al.,

Defendants. OPINION AND ORDER This § 1983 class action lawsuit stems from claims that Defendants violated Plaintiffs’ and other individuals’ constitutional rights by arresting them without a warrant and detaining them for over forty-eight hours before bringing them before a judge for a probable cause determination. Plaintiffs, on behalf of themselves and all others similarly situated, now seek to settle their claims with Defendants. To that end, the parties jointly moved for preliminary approval of the settlement, attaching the proposed settlement agreement. (Doc. 84). But they have since filed an Amended Class Action Settlement Agreement (Doc. 85), which the Court will treat as the operative agreement. For the reasons discussed below, the Court GRANTS the Joint Motion for Preliminary Approval of Settlement Agreement (Doc. 84). BACKGROUND1 A. Factual and Procedural Background Law enforcement officers from Defendant City of Fairfield’s Police Department arrested Named Plaintiffs Anselm Caddell and Caleb Lawson, on separate occasions,

without a warrant. (2d Am. Compl., Doc. 45, #325–27). Each of them was detained in the Butler County Jail, which Defendant Sheriff Richard Jones oversees, (id. at #320), for more than forty-eight hours while they awaited an initial appearance before a judicial officer, (id. at #325–27). For example, police arrested Caddell on Thursday, February 23, 2017, but he did not appear before Defendant Judge Campbell at the Fairfield Municipal Court until five days later, on Tuesday, February 28, 2017. (Id. at #325). Similarly, law enforcement arrested Lawson on Friday, January 25, 2019,

and four days passed before he appeared before Judge Campbell. (Id. at #326–27). Caddell originally brought this § 1983 putative class action on February 1, 2019, claiming that his prolonged detention before an initial appearance violated his constitutional rights under the Fourth, Sixth, Eighth, and Fourteenth Amendments. (Compl., Doc. 1, #5). Caddell later filed a Second Amended Complaint, adding Lawson as an additional Named Plaintiff. (Doc. 45, #320). Together, they claim that the

Constitution requires state officials to ensure that persons arrested without a warrant, and who are not otherwise subject to lawful detention for reasons unrelated to that warrantless arrest, receive an initial appearance before a judicial officer

1 The Court cites the allegations in the Second Amended Complaint (Doc. 45) in relaying the relevant background. But it notes that Defendants, in the proposed class action settlement, deny any wrongdoing. (Doc. 85, #588–89 (“The Parties disagree as to the issues of liability.”)). within forty-eight hours. (Id. at #323 (citing County of Riverside v. McLaughlin, 500 U.S. 44 (1991))). They further allege that each of the named Defendants played a role in

depriving them of this right. Defendant Judge Campbell, for example, presides over the Fairfield Municipal Court and thus acts as its policymaker. (Id. at #322–23). They claim that, in that capacity, she adopted a policy or custom of “fail[ing] to convene court on days when she knows” that this failure will lead to individuals being held for over forty-eight hours before arraignment.2 (Id. at #323). Likewise, Plaintiffs claim that Defendant Sheriff Jones and the City of Fairfield, on behalf of the Fairfield Police Department, have a policy or custom of conducting warrantless arrests and then

detaining those individuals beyond the allowable forty-eight-hour period. (Id. at #323–24). Caddell and Lawson did not sue merely to vindicate their own constitutional rights. They also brought this lawsuit as a putative class action. (Id. at #319). On May 30, 2023, the Court certified a class as defined in the parties’ Amended Stipulation. (Doc. 73). Specifically, the class includes:

Plaintiffs and those individuals subject to a warrantless arrest by City of Fairfield Police Officers from February 1, 2017 until February 28, 2019, and who were held by the Butler County Sheriff’s office for more than 48 hours on charges pending in the Fairfield Municipal Court, if held without a post-arrest probable cause determination by a judicial officer and not otherwise subject to lawful detention for reasons unrelated to the warrantless arrest.

2 For example, if the court does not convene on Mondays, then anyone arrested on a Friday evening after court closed that day necessarily would be held for more than forty-eight hours by the time court opened on Tuesday. (Id. at #502 (citing Doc. 72, #497)). Defendants’ records show this class includes approximately 500 individuals. (Id. at #503). Along with class certification, the Court also appointed Named Plaintiffs Caddell and Lawson as the class representatives and

Paul M. Laufman and Gregory A. Napolitano as class counsel. (Id. at #508–09). Since it certified the class under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23(b)(3), the Court also ordered the parties to submit a plan within fourteen days for class-wide notice that would provide class members an opportunity to opt out. (Id. at #510; Notice, Doc. 75- 1). While the parties initially submitted a Proposed Agreed Class Notice (Doc. 75), they later agreed that notifying the class at that point in time was unnecessary. (7/6/23 Min. Entry).

After mediation and subsequent negotiation, the parties now seek to bring this dispute to a close by settling the claims at issue. The parties filed an initial Joint Motion for Preliminary Approval of Settlement Agreement with the proposed settlement agreement attached. (Doc. 84). But at a telephonic conference on that proposed settlement agreement, the Court noted that the high proposed incentive awards for the Named Plaintiffs may pose a problem for approval. (7/29/25 Min.

Entry). The parties responded by submitting an Amended Settlement Agreement, addressing those payments. (Doc. 85). In this Order, the Court will rely on the terms as stated in the Amended Settlement Agreement unless otherwise noted. B. Terms of the Proposed Settlement Agreement The settlement agreement proposes that Defendants collectively pay $1,215,000 into a Settlement Fund. (Id. at #594). The claims administrator will pay out the Settlement Fund as follows. First, it will pay the notice and settlement administration costs, the class representatives’ service awards, and the attorneys’ fee award. (Id. at #594). Taking those in order, the claims administrator currently

estimates its costs as approximately $19,101, but the proposed agreement authorizes administrative costs up to $25,000. (Id. at #590). As for service awards, the agreement contemplates that Anselm Caddell shall receive a sum not to exceed $20,000, while Caleb Lawson will receive an award not to exceed $10,000, with the exact amounts, subject to those limits, left to the Court. (Id. at #594). Finally, attorneys’ fees will not exceed $405,000, approximately one-third of the Settlement Fund, plus costs and expenses. (Id.). Again, though, the Court will determine the exact amounts of each

component of the fee award. (Id. at #594–95). If the Court awards the maximum amounts in these three categories, approximately $755,000 will remain available in the Settlement Fund for distribution to valid claimants. Before diving into the details of what each claimant will receive, though, the settlement agreement first addresses how the claims administrator will go about determining who is a valid class member. Upon the Court’s preliminary approval,

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