Arnold v. Wilder

657 F.3d 353, 2011 WL 4056664
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 14, 2011
Docket08-6124, 09-6178, 09-6179
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 657 F.3d 353 (Arnold v. Wilder) 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
Arnold v. Wilder, 657 F.3d 353, 2011 WL 4056664 (6th Cir. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

HELENE N. WHITE, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff Maria Arnold (Arnold) appeals the district court’s grant of defendantsappellees James Wilder’s (Wilder) and the City of Strathmoor Village’s (Strathmoor) (collectively, defendants) motion for remittitur of the jury’s punitive-damages award. Arnold’s daughter, Caroline Arnold (Caroline), appeals the district court’s grant of judgment as a matter of law dismissing her intentional infliction of emotional distress (IIED) claim. Wilder and Strathmoor cross-appeal, arguing that the district court, erred in denying their motion for alternative or cumulative post-trial relief with respect to Arnold’s claims of false arrest and malicious prosecution and certain evidentiary rulings. We AFFIRM in part, MODIFY the district court’s reduction of the punitive-damages award and REMAND for entry of judgment consistent with this opinion.

I.

A.

This case arose out of an incident that took place on October 25, 2003, in Kingsley, Kentucky (Kingsley). Arnold, who was recently divorced, lived with her three children, Jacob, Elizabeth, and Caroline, in her childhood home in Kingsley. At approximately 5:00 p.m., Jacob, who was thirteen years old at the time, was playing outside with his friends. Arnold was in the house helping Caroline, who was seven *358 years old at the time, get ready for a Halloween costume party.

According to Arnold, she walked outside to tell Jacob and his friends to come back inside. Because she was only planning to walk out onto the driveway, she did not put shoes on prior to leaving the house. Once outside, Arnold saw Officer Wilder parking his police car across the street in the driveway of Phyllis Ann Breuer (Breuer), the mayor of Kingsley. As Wilder went to the front porch to speak with Breuer, Jacob and his friends, who had split up into separate groups, walked toward Arnold from two different directions. Three of the boys met up with Arnold in the driveway. Wilder crossed the street and stopped two of the boys in front of Arnold’s house.

It appears that Arnold knew the purpose of Wilder’s visit even before she spoke with him, as Breuer had called the police several times in the past to complain that neighborhood children, including Jacob, were “running through the yards, jumping over fences, [and] running through flower beds.” D.J. Reynolds (Reynolds), the Chief of Police of Strathmoor, 1 had gone to Arnold’s house twice prior to October 25, 2003, to explain Breuer’s complaints to her “and [to] let her know that the boys were going to have to stop doing that.” On October 25, Breuer again contacted the police — by calling Reynolds and leaving a message — and complained that “children [were] running through yards and flower beds and hopping over fences [and] needed to be brought under control.” Reynolds was off-duty when he received the message, so he called Wilder — the on-duty officer — and told Wilder to “respond to the call and stop the boys from running through the yards.”

Arnold testified that after she saw Wilder stop two of the boys, she walked across the front yard and asked Wilder, “Can I help you?” Wilder asked, “Are you the parent?” Arnold responded that she was the parent of one of the boys, but that she was responsible for all of them. Wilder stated “Well, I’ll talk to you first,” and Arnold then told the boys “go in and get ready, call your moms.” As the boys turned to go inside, Wilder said “I’m not finished with them.” Arnold responded by saying, “I understand. I was just going to have them call their moms. D.J. Reynolds has talked to me.” At this point, according to Arnold, Wilder began to get very angry with her for no apparent reason. Getting “angrier and angrier,” Wilder came toward Arnold and started “to turn around and get between [Arnold] and the house,” blocking her from getting inside the house. Arnold again told the boys to go inside and get a telephone, instructing Jacob to “call papa” because she wanted her father “to come and be with the kids and help [her].” Wilder then told her, ‘Your daddy can’t help you now.” The next thing Arnold remembered was Wilder knocking her to the ground. Once she was on the ground, the children ran out of the house and, as Arnold attempted to tell them “to back off [and] ... go back to the house,” Wilder put Arnold into a chokehold and began to drag her across the street to his police car. Caroline followed Wilder and Arnold, shouting “I don’t have a daddy. I don’t have a daddy.” The other children also followed Wilder and Arnold across the street. At no point did Wilder tell Arnold that she was under arrest or that he was going to arrest her.

Once they were at Wilder’s police car, Arnold asked Wilder to “please wait until *359 somebody gets here for the kids.” Instead, Wilder shoved her in the back of the car and, when she was inside the car, sprayed her with pepper spray. Arnold had no memory of struggling with Wilder or kicking him during this time. Wilder closed the car door, locking Arnold inside. As Wilder walked around to the front of the car, one of Jacob’s friends ran up to the car and opened the door, letting Arnold out. Arnold ran to the house with the boys and Caroline. When everyone was inside the house, the boys proceeded to call 911, Arnold’s father, and their mothers. Caroline had gotten pepper spray on herself, likely from hugging Arnold after she was sprayed, and Arnold took Caroline to the bathroom to attempt to wash off the pepper spray.

Tyler Purcell (Purcell), one of Jacob’s friends, testified consistently with Arnold’s account. He stated that Arnold and Wilder first spoke while standing in Arnold’s front yard. Arnold told the boys to go inside, so they observed the situation from inside Arnold’s house by looking through a window. Purcell never saw Arnold become visibly angry, not did he hear her raise her voice or yell at Wilder. He observed Wilder pull out handcuffs, Arnold back up, and Wilder tackle Arnold to the ground. At this point, all the children ran outside and stood within approximately five feet of Wilder and Arnold. Purcell then saw Wilder put Arnold in a chokehold while they were both on the ground. As Wilder pulled Arnold up and began dragging her across the street, with her bare feet hitting the ground, Purcell saw Arnold’s face turning purple. Purcell testified that as Wilder forced Arnold into the police car, she hit her head on the roof of the car, and while Arnold lay across the back seat of the car, with her feet facing toward the door, Wilder sprayed her with pepper spray.

Sean Lutes (Lutes), another of Jacob’s friends, Caroline, and Jacob also testified consistently with Arnold and Purcell. Jacob additionally testified that after Wilder dragged Arnold to the police car, “[h]e opened up the door and started to pull her in, and she grabbed on to the sides.... [H]e grabbed her head and slammed it into the ... glass panel in between the back seat and the front----And then he started trying to push her back in and she hadn’t let go of the sides.”

Officers from the Louisville Metro Police Department (LMPD) arrived at Arnold’s house shortly after the incident took place. LMPD Sergeant Amy Brown (Brown), the highest-ranking police officer on the scene, observed Wilder standing by his police car. She asked Wilder what had occurred and he informed her that “a

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
657 F.3d 353, 2011 WL 4056664, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arnold-v-wilder-ca6-2011.