Barnes v. Madison

79 F. App'x 691
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedNovember 4, 2003
Docket02-50937
StatusUnpublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 79 F. App'x 691 (Barnes v. Madison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barnes v. Madison, 79 F. App'x 691 (5th Cir. 2003).

Opinion

PER CURIAM. *

The plaintiff sued several local governments and their employees for violations of *694 federal and state law arising out of an allegedly illegal arrest. The district court granted the defendants’ motions for summary judgment and entered an order of sanctions against the plaintiff. The plaintiff now appeals. For the following reasons, we AFFIRM.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

This case began with a speeding ticket that plaintiff Carolyn Barnes received in Cedar Park, Texas. The speeding ticket, along with an accompanying citation for driving without proof of insurance, required Barnes to appear in Cedar Park’s municipal court on or before April 5, 2000. Barnes claims that she entered a legally sufficient appearance in March 2000 by sending the court a request form for a defensive driving course. She also came to the court in person on April 5, but Cedar Park court employees informed her on that date that she must present her driving record in order to qualify for the defensive driving course. The employees suggested that Barnes return on April 7, and Barnes did return on that date with her driving record in hand. The court personnel then informed her, however, that she was ineligible to take the defensive driving course, because her driving record showed that she had already taken such a course within the previous year. Barnes was told that she could return on a later date to talk to a judge about resolving the matter, but she declined. Barnes instead wrote a letter to the municipal court explaining the situation and asking for help in resolving it.

Barbara Thompson, a clerk of the Cedar Park municipal court, sent Barnes a letter on April 10 directing Barnes to make an appearance within ten days. According to Barnes, the letter was returned to the court on April 13 because it was sent to an old address. In any case, the ticket remained outstanding, and on April 25 a warrant for Barnes’s arrest was issued, with Officer Alan Thompson of the Cedar Park police acting as complaining witness. The failure-to-appear warrant was not executed at that time.

Clerk Thompson sent Barnes another letter on May 15 that mentioned the warrant and directed Barnes to speak with one of the municipal court judges immediately. Barnes says that she received the letter upon returning from vacation on May 29; until then, she had not been aware of the arrest warrant. Upon reading the letter from the court, Barnes immediately wrote a letter to Clerk Thompson contending that she had in fact made a valid appearance in court and insisting that the arrest warrant was therefore improper. Barnes’s letter to the court, however, went well beyond expressing mere irritation at a perceived bureaucratic slip-up. The letter concluded with the following passage:

I WILL FIGHT TO THE DEATH WITH ANYONE WHO TRIES TO PULL ME FROM MY HOME, MY CAR, OR MY WORKPLACE!!! I WILL NOT BE ARRESTED AND THROWN IN JAIL! WHOEVER DIES, THE BLOOD WILL BE ON YOUR HANDS!
I WILL NOT GO PEACEFULLY TO ANY JAIL, I WOULD RATHER DIE FIRST AND I WILL DIE FIGHTING FOR MY FREEDOM BECAUSE I HAVE NOT DONE ANYTHING FOR WHICH I DESERVE TO BE THROWN IN JAIL!
*695 THIS MALICIOUS GOVERNMENTAL ACTIVITY AND ABUSE OF OUR TAX DOLLARS IS THE CAUSE OF THE INCREASE IN VIOLENCE IN OUR SOCIETY! THIS IS WHY PEOPLE BOMB GOVERNMENTAL OFFICES, KILL COPS, AND KILL JUDGES BECAUSE OF ALL THE LIES AND ABUSES!
IF I DO NOT HEAR FROM YOU WITHIN TEN DAYS THAT THIS FALSE AND MALICIOUS ARREST WARRANT HAS BEEN RECALLED AND IF I DO NOT RECEIVE THE PERSONAL WRITTEN ASSURANCE OF ALL YOUR JUDGES THAT I WILL NOT BE HARASSED, MOLESTED, DISTURBED, ARRESTED, OR JAILED WHEN I COME IN TO RESOLVE THIS MATTER, THEN I WILL ASSSUME [sic] THAT WE REALLY ARE AT WAR AND WILL ACT ACCORDINGLY.... I AM WILLING TO DIE IN DEFENSE OF THIS OUTRAGEOUS INJUSTICE, ARE YOU WILLING [to] DIE TO PROMOTE IT? IF I SEE ANY UNIFORMED PEOPLE COME NEAR MY FAMILY, I WILL NOT WAIT TO ASK QUESTIONS! I WILL DEFINITELY RESIST ARREST ANYTIME THERE IS A FALSE AND MALICIOUS ABUSE OF PROCESS!

Clerk Thompson perceived the letter as a threat against her, the court staff, and the municipal judges. She therefore turned the letter over to the Cedar Park Police Department, where a Sgt. Rackley determined that the letter constituted a “terroristic threat” under § 22.07 of the Texas Penal Code. 1 Officer Alan Thompson signed a statement of facts for probable cause and presented it to Judge Joseph Oswalt of the Cedar Park municipal court. Sitting as a magistrate, Judge Oswalt issued an arrest warrant on June 1.

Cedar Park police officers informed the City of Round Rock’s police department of the situation, and Cedar Park Officer Deborah Dugger appears to have faxed them documents related to the warrant. On June 12, Officer Alan Thompson of Cedar Park, accompanied by Round Rock police officers, went to Barnes’s office in Round Rock to serve the warrant, but Barnes was apparently not present. The next day, Round Rock police officers, including Officer Willie Richards, arrested Barnes at her Round Rock office. Richards allegedly searched Barnes’s purse and belongings; Richards admits that he searched Barnes’s purse for weapons and keys with which to lock the office.

Barnes was taken to the Williamson County jail for booking. She complains that she was denied food, water, and telephone calls during her approximately ten-hour stay, seven hours of which came after she had posted bail. She claims as well that jail employees misled two individuals who had come to give Barnes a ride home by telling the individuals that Barnes would not be released that night. She was *696 eventually released around midnight and then began to walk home; during the walk she was allegedly further harassed and threatened by Williamson County officials. When she returned home, she says that her home, office, and vehicles had been ransacked; she blames Williamson County officials, since they held her keys during her incarceration. Barnes also claims that Williamson County employees harassed her son at school and sprayed his belongings with a chemical that would attract drug-sniffing dogs. This mistreatment, according to Barnes, is motivated in part by the county’s desire to retaliate against her for a lawsuit she brought against it in state court several years earlier. Williamson County admits the basic facts surrounding Barnes’s stay at the jail but denies her various claims of mistreatment.

On June 7, 2001, Barnes filed suit in state court against the following individuals and governmental entities: Cedar Park municipal judges Joseph Oswalt and Kevin Madison, Barbara Thompson of the Cedar Park municipal court clerk’s office, Alan Thompson and Deborah Dugger of the Cedar Park Police Department, and the City of Cedar Park (collectively, “Cedar Park defendants”); the City of Round Rock and Willie Richards of the Round Rock Police Department (collectively, “Round Rock defendants”); and Williamson County. Barnes’s suit included § 1983 claims predicated on violations of several constitutional provisions, 2

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Bluebook (online)
79 F. App'x 691, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barnes-v-madison-ca5-2003.