Bisetti v. City Of Austin

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Texas
DecidedSeptember 30, 2022
Docket1:19-cv-00616
StatusUnknown

This text of Bisetti v. City Of Austin (Bisetti v. City Of Austin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bisetti v. City Of Austin, (W.D. Tex. 2022).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT WESTERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS AUSTIN DIVISION

FABRIZIO BISETTI, § Plaintiff § § v. § § No. A-19-CV-00616-DH CITY OF AUSTIN, TEXAS; AND § OFFICER BRENDAN § MCMORROW, AUSTIN POLICE § DEPARTMENT; § Defendants §

ORDER

Before the Court are the motions for summary judgment filed by Defendant City of Austin, Dkt. 85, and Defendant Brendan McMorrow, Dkts. 86, 96, and the motion to strike filed by McMorrow, Dkt. 99; and all related briefing. Having considered the parties’ arguments, the evidence, and the relevant law, the Court will deny Officer McMorrow’s motion for summary judgment and grant the City’s. I. BACKGROUND Plaintiff Fabrizio Bisetti initiated this lawsuit following his arrest by Defendant Brendan McMorrow, an officer with the Austin Police Department, for assault with injury-family violence. Dkts. 68; 85-3. Bisetti claims that the arrest violated his constitutional rights because it was made without probable cause based on APD’s alleged policy of requiring officers to arrest anyone accused of domestic violence, even where there is no probable cause for an arrest. Dkt. 68, at 7-8. Bisetti brought two causes of action against Defendants McMorrow and the City of Austin under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for false arrest and wrongful institution of legal process in violation of the Fourth Amendment. Id. Bisetti originally contacted the police on the morning of his arrest when his

wife, Begum Guvenc, did not return home after attending synagogue and failed to pick up their children from day care. Dkts. 85-1, at 64-69; 85-3, at 3. After locating the family’s car at an apartment complex, Bisetti called the police to help him locate his wife. Dkts. 95-1, at 74-75; 85-3, at 3. Officer McMorrow responded to Bisetti’s call and helped him find the apartment where Guvenc was located. Dkts. 85-2, at 70-72; 85-3, at 3. Guvenc was asleep in the apartment, and when awakened, appeared to be “extremely intoxicated.” Dkts. 85-2, at 72-74; 85-3, at 3 (reporting that Guvenc

“appeared to be extremely intoxicated with red, bloodshot, watery eyes, slurred speech, and an odor of a metabolized alcoholic beverage emitting from her breath, and appearing to be very unsteady on her feet.”); 90-4, at 19 (“In my police- investigative opinion, I believe she was intoxicated.”). Guvenc’s friend indicated that she had drunk too much alcohol and had “passed out” at his apartment in the complex, though Guvenc claimed she had food poisoning.

Dkts. 85-1, at 84; 85-2, at 67; 85-3, at 3. McMorrow testified that he did not find Guvenc’s claim that she had food poisoning from a hot dog to be credible because she smelled of alcohol, and her friend had already told him she had drunk too much alcohol. Dkts. 85-2, at 67; 90-4, at 17-19 (“[i]t’s not possible that what I observed was not due to alcohol”). Bisetti appeared relieved that his wife was safe, and took her home, while Guvenc seemed “very frustrated that he would have called 911 for this.” Dkts. 85-2, at 77; 85-3, at 3. Later that same morning, Guvenc contacted the police after the couple got into

an argument over the prior call to the police. Dkts. 83-3, at 3; 95-2, at 81. When police arrived at the couple’s home, Bisetti was sitting on the front porch of the house and Guvenc was inside. Dkt. 90-6, at 8. Bisetti told the officer that the couple had been fighting over the earlier interaction with police, and Guvenc had threatened to call her mother. Dkt. 90-6, at 8-9. Bisetti then took the phone from Guvenc’s hands and held it out of her reach. Dkt. 90-6, at 8-9. When he “realized that this was getting out of hand,” he put the phone down, and left the house to take a walk and get some air

Dkt. 90-6, at 8-9. When he returned from the walk, the doors of his home were locked, and he could hear his wife calling the police. Dkt. 90-6, at 8-9. Bisetti waited outside the house until the police arrived. Dkt. 90-6, at 8-9. When police spoke with Guvenc, she similarly told them the couple had been fighting about the previous 911 call and how it might affect her custody over the children. Dkts. 90-4, at 10-11; 90-6, at 8-9. However, Guvenc told the police that as

Bisetti was holding the phone out of her reach, he hit her on the right cheek with the back of his closed fist, which she said caused her pain. Dkts. 90-4, at 11; 90-6, at 9. Guvenc also told McMorrow that Bisetti had strangled her a couple of months earlier on New Year’s Eve. Dkt. 32, at 7. McMorrow wrote in his police report that while “there was some very slight redness to the right cheek area,” Guvenc had been “pressing on it rather firmly” to show him the injury though “this did not seem to cause her further pain and could have also contributed to the slight redness I observed.” Dkts. 90-4, at 12 (“I believe [her cheek] got a little red after the bag of frozen peas were on it”); 90-6, at 9. Guvenc also expressed concern that the earlier

call to the police could impact her ability to gain custody over her children in the future. Dkts. 90-6, at 9; 90-8, at 17-18 (“I felt more as though … this was a calculated response to his 911 call earlier, almost like a tit for tat to build up a case for later”). Based on Guvenc’s allegation that Bisetti struck her in the face, McMorrow placed Bisetti under arrest. Dkt. 90-6, at 9. McMorrow stated in the affidavit in support of Bisetti’s arrest that Guvenc asserted that at some point while withholding her phone Bisettti had “struck her on her right cheek using the back of his closed fist

causing her pain,” and noted that “there was some minor redness to the right cheek area.” Dkt. 85-3, at 3. McMorrow later testified at the couple’s divorce proceeding that he did not believe an assault took place on the day Bisetti was arrested because he “didn’t see any evidence of it” and “she seemed to tell me [a] story not indicative of most victims of assault.” Dkt. 90-4, at 10-12, 14-15; 90-9, at 46. McMorrow testified that he only arrested Bisetti because he believed he “didn’t

have a choice” under the APD family violence policy, which he believed required him to make an arrest “whenever there is an accusation of family-violence assault.” Dkt, 90-4, at 13. McMorrow further testified that he believed he could not include anything Bisetti had told him in his arrest affidavit unless “it help[ed] go towards probable cause.” Dkt. 90-9, at 41. McMorrow stated he would not have arrested Bisetti absent his understanding that he was required to do so under APD policy. Dkt, 90-4, at 13. APD police chief Brian Manley testified that if McMorrow “did not believe the assault had occurred, then he should not have filled out a [probable cause] affidavit saying an assault occurred and signed it” because “[i]f an assault didn’t occur, there

can’t be probable cause for an assault.” Dkt. 90-5, at 32, 40. McMorrow testified that he did not receive any further training after arresting Bisetti under the APD family violence policy. Dkt. 90-9, at 33. II. LEGAL STANDARDS Summary judgment is appropriate when the pleadings, the discovery and disclosure materials on file, and any affidavits show that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter

of law. Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a); Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 323-25 (1986); Washburn v. Harvey, 504 F.3d 505, 508 (5th Cir. 2007). A dispute regarding a material fact is “genuine” if the evidence is such that a reasonable jury could return a verdict in favor of the nonmoving party. Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 248 (1986).

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