Bayer v. Township of Union

997 A.2d 1118, 414 N.J. Super. 238
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedJuly 7, 2010
DocketDOCKET NO. A-1482-07T2
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 997 A.2d 1118 (Bayer v. Township of Union) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bayer v. Township of Union, 997 A.2d 1118, 414 N.J. Super. 238 (N.J. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

997 A.2d 1118 (2010)
414 N.J. Super. 238

Donald C. BAYER, Jr., Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
TOWNSHIP OF UNION, New Jersey, Officer Christopher Donnelly, Officer Robert Donnelly, III, Officer Edward Koster[1], Officer Thomas Ollemar, Officer Carlos Turner, Sergeant Marc A. Bruno, Sergeant J. Dilginis[2], Sergeant Shawn Herrighty, Detective William Fuentes, Detective Thomas Ronan[3], Detective Gregory Rossi, Detective Lieutenant Ronald Berry, and Captain Edward Shapiro[4], Defendants-Respondents.

DOCKET NO. A-1482-07T2.

Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division.

Submitted May 11, 2009.
Decided July 7, 2010.

*1122 Wilson, Elser, Moskowitz, Edelman & Dicker, LLP, Newark, for appellant (John J. Shotter, of counsel and on the brief).

Weiner Lesniak, LLP, Parsippany, for respondent Township of Union (Alan J. Baratz, of counsel and on the brief).

Hoagland, Longo, Moran, Dunst & Doukas, LLP, New Brunswick, for respondents Officer Christopher Donnelly, Officer Robert Donnelly III, Officer Edward *1123 Koster, Officer Thomas Ollemar, Officer Carlos Turner, Sergeant Marc A. Bruno, Sergeant J. Dilginis, Sergeant Shawn Herrighty, Detective William Fuentes, Detective Thomas Ronan, Detective Gregory Rossi, Detective Lieutenant Ronald Berry and Captain Edward Shapiro (Christopher J. Killmurray, of counsel; Matthew G. Rosenfeld, on the brief).

Before Judges CARCHMAN, R.B. COLEMAN and SABATINO.

The opinion of the court was delivered by

R.B. COLEMAN, J.A.D.

Plaintiff Donald C. Bayer, Jr. was arrested for a bank robbery he did not commit, based on a bank teller's misidentification of him at a showup conducted by the Union Township Police Department (the Department) shortly after the crime. Plaintiff sued Union Township (the Township) and the individual police officers involved for false arrest and false imprisonment under the New Jersey Tort Claims Act, N.J.S.A. 59:1-1 to 12-3(TCA), and for violation of his constitutional rights pursuant to 42 U.S.C.A. § 1983. His TCA claims were dismissed after his motion to file a late notice of claim was denied, and his section 1983 claims were dismissed on summary judgment after the court found that there was probable cause for the arrest and that, alternatively, the police officers enjoyed qualified immunity. We affirm.

I.

On the morning of December 19, 2003, Odete Luis was working as head teller at the NorCrown Bank on Colonial Avenue in Union Township. A man walked up to her window and gave her a bag with a note that read: "PLACE ALL THE MONEY IN THE BAG. NO DYE, TEAR GAS OR BAIT MONEY. YOU HAVE 10 SECONDS." According to the statement that Luis subsequently gave to Detective Gregory Rossi at headquarters, the robber was a short white male, approximately five feet five inches tall, and between nineteen and twenty-three years of age. He was wearing a blue windbreaker jacket and a blue baseball cap pulled down over his eyes. When he raised his head, Luis saw that he had "mean eyes." He was clean-shaven, and Luis did not recall having seen him in the bank before. After Luis put the money from both her drawers into the man's bag and gave it to him, he quickly left the bank. Luis then yelled to her manager that she had been robbed and pushed the security button.

Kimberly Cornacchia was working at the drive-up window that day. Prior to the robbery, she had observed the robber walking down the street toward the bank. She noticed him because he looked like a "thug"; however, she did not notice anything out of the ordinary while he was in the bank. After Luis said she was robbed, Cornacchia called 9-1-1.

The Union Township Police Department received the call at 9:23 a.m. and broadcast it over the radio to its officers. Officer Edward Koster was the first to arrive at the scene of the crime. He spoke to Luis and Cornacchia and to the bank manager, Lu Vallejo. Detective Lieutenant Ronald Berry also responded to the scene and was the ranking supervisor in charge of the investigation. He was present when Luis gave her description of the robber, which was largely consistent with the description she later gave in her statement at headquarters. Both Koster and Rossi questioned Luis.

At about 9:30 a.m., Officer Christopher Donnelly was in a patrol car when he was "high-beamed" by a driver, who identified himself as Willie Coley, an off-duty police detective from Orange, and asked if a bank robbery had just occurred. Coley related *1124 to C. Donnelly[5] that he had just been at NorCrown Bank to use its ATM and had noticed a white male wearing a baseball hat with money stuffed in his pockets. Coley told C. Donnelly that the man fled in an older model midsize gray or black vehicle.

According to the formal statement that Coley later gave to Sergeant Joseph Dilginis, he had observed money coming out of the top of a bag that the man was holding. The man turned his head away from Coley, walked past him and then got into a dark-colored vehicle approximately one hundred yards away on Colonial Avenue.

C. Donnelly broadcast the information that he received from Coley to other units on the road. About thirty minutes later, Hillside Township police detained a suspect at a location approximately four to five minutes from the bank by car. Union Township Officers Thomas Ollemar and Peter Simon were dispatched to that location in Hillside and stayed until Sergeant Shawn Herrighty arrived. The Hillside officers who were with plaintiff told Herrighty that they had been on patrol when they saw a car matching the description given over the broadcast. When they pulled up behind it, the driver, later determined to be plaintiff, took off one hat and put on a different type of hat. They ultimately detained him.

According to plaintiff, he left his house at approximately 9:25 a.m. that morning, driving a 1989 gray Chevy Caprice. He was wearing gray sweatpants, a red sweatshirt, sneakers, a dark blue winter coat, and a blue winter cap. As he observed a Hillside police car coming up behind him, he removed his cap, merely as a nervous reaction. Although there was a green baseball cap with a Sierra Mist logo on the front seat of his car, plaintiff had not worn it that day.

According to Berry, he, Rossi, and Captain Edward Shapiro, made the decision to have the three witnesses—Luis, Cornacchia, and Coley—transported to the Hillside location where plaintiff was detained to see if they could identify him as the robber. According to Shapiro, who was the most senior officer at the scene but not the officer in charge of the investigation, it was "standard operating procedure" to take a witness to view a suspect if the suspect has been stopped "right after a crime." Although Shapiro was not sure if that standard procedure was written down anywhere, he claimed that he had been trained that way and that the case law supported it.

Shapiro maintained that a "fresh crime" required the prompt display of a suspect to a witness. He defined a fresh crime as one where the crime had just occurred, the suspect had fled and then someone was apprehended "within tens of minutes."

Three separate Union Township police officers transported each of the three witnesses to Hillside to view plaintiff. Plaintiff was wearing handcuffs during the entire showup procedure. He stood next to Herrighty in front of a patrol unit. Although Herrighty did not recall if plaintiff was required to wear a baseball cap, plaintiff claimed that he was required to wear the cap that was found in the front seat of his car.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
997 A.2d 1118, 414 N.J. Super. 238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bayer-v-township-of-union-njsuperctappdiv-2010.