Boyle v. Patridge

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedFebruary 21, 2020
Docket3:17-cv-50121
StatusUnknown

This text of Boyle v. Patridge (Boyle v. Patridge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boyle v. Patridge, (N.D. Ill. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS

OWEN PATRICK BOYLE, as Administrator ) of the Estate of TROY J. BOYLE, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) No. 17 C 50121 v. ) ) Judge Sara L. Ellis OFFICER SEAN PATRIDGE, in His Individual ) Capacity, and THE VILLAGE OF ) STOCKTON, ) ) Defendants. )

OPINION AND ORDER While responding to a suspicious activity call, Defendant Officer Sean Patridge, a police officer for the Village of Stockton, discharged his weapon and struck Troy J. Boyle twice. Boyle died later that day, and his father, Plaintiff Owen Patrick Boyle, as the administrator of Boyle’s estate (the “Administrator”), filed this lawsuit against Patridge and the Village. The Administrator brings a 42 U.S.C. § 1983 claim against Patridge for excessive force, as well as state law wrongful death and survival claims.1 Patridge has filed a motion for summary judgment. Because factual disputes prevent the Court from determining the reasonableness of Patridge’s use of deadly force, the Court denies Patridge’s motion. BACKGROUND2 On Wednesday, March 29, 2017, Patridge, who was on duty in full uniform and driving a marked Village police car, received a suspicious activity call from a Village resident around

1 The Administrator also brought a § 1983 claim against the Village for failure to train, which the Court dismissed. See Doc. 30. The Village remains a Defendant solely for indemnification purposes.

2 The facts set forth in this section are derived from the statements of fact submitted by the parties to the extent they comport with Local Rule 56.1. They are taken in the light most favorable to the Administrator, the non-movant. 11:30 a.m. The resident reported a suspicious vehicle parked on a private driveway, with three individuals walking to and from the vehicle with bags to a tree line. The resident also informed Patridge that the individuals were acting erratically and that he did not recognize any of them. Patridge responded to the area and observed three individuals on the south side of Front Avenue

on property belonging to Stockton Township. Patridge found one of the individuals, later identified as Timothy Hess, walking eastbound parallel to Front Avenue. Patridge observed the remaining two individuals, later identified as Boyle and Anna Kaiden, walking south toward a shed. Patridge parked his police car, exited, and told Hess to stop. Hess identified himself as Tyler Magee, but Patridge knew Hess was not Tyler Magee. Hess then reported that the other male was Tyler Magee and told Patridge to stop him. As Hess began walking away from Patridge, Patridge grabbed Hess’ left arm to place him in handcuffs. When Hess pulled away, Patridge instructed him to stop resisting. Around that time, Jo Daviess County Deputy Sheriff Chad Heidenreich arrived and helped Patridge detain Hess. Both Patridge and Heidenreich testified that, as Patridge placed handcuffs on Hess,

Heidenreich warned Patridge of someone approaching from behind. Patridge testified that he looked over his shoulder and observed Boyle approaching from in front of the shed somewhere between fifteen to twenty-five yards away with his right arm concealed behind his back. Heidenreich agreed that he could not see Boyle’s right hand as he approached. Patridge and Heidenreich perceived Boyle’s approach with his right hand concealed as threatening. Patridge testified that he disengaged from Hess and turned to face Boyle, who continued to approach. Patridge indicated he asked Boyle “what is going on” but received no response. Doc. 87-1 at 70:2–3. Patridge testified that Boyle continued to approach with his hand behind his back. Patridge and Heidenreich both testified that they ordered Boyle to show his hands. According to both Patridge and Heidenreich, Boyle did not comply and continued walking, causing Patridge to fear for his life because he thought Boyle had a weapon behind his back. Patridge testified that he then drew his gun and held it in the low-ready position. After Patridge again ordered Boyle to show his hands and Heidenreich told Boyle to stop, Patridge testified that

Boyle drew his right arm up from behind him and extended it in a shooting stance toward Patridge, Heidenreich, and Hess. Patridge indicated that he saw a gray object protruding from Boyle’s hand, which he thought was a handgun. Heidenreich also testified that he perceived Boyle to point a gun or other weapon at them. Patridge testified that he feared for his life and the lives of others. To stop the perceived threat, Patridge stated he raised his gun and fired it several times in Boyle’s direction. Hess, who initially had his back to Patridge upon hearing the shots, stated that he turned around and saw Boyle with his arms pointed at the officers as if he were holding and shooting a gun at them.3 Heidenreich testified that when he heard the shots, he grabbed Hess and pushed him behind his squad car to take cover. Patridge testified that he did not know if his initial shots hit Boyle but

that he observed Boyle run to his left toward a sand pile located in front of the shed after the first round of shots while continuing to point a gun at Patridge. Patridge stated he paralleled Boyle’s movement and fired another round as he retreated to his squad car for cover. Patridge indicated that Boyle reemerged from the sand pile, knelt down, and continued pointing at Patridge. In response, Patridge testified he fired one more shot, after which he observed Boyle slump onto his back. In total, Patridge fired his weapon eight times, with two rounds striking Boyle.

3 The Administrator objects to the use of Hess’ affidavit on summary judgment because Patridge produced it after the close of fact discovery. As Patridge points out, the court left discovery open for the purposes of obtaining a deposition of Hess if the parties located him. Once Patridge located Hess, he produced Hess’ affidavit over a month before filing for summary judgment. The Administrator did not thereafter seek to take Hess’ deposition. Scott Kurth, a mechanic and truck driver for Stockton Township, observed the events from inside a shop on the Township’s property, approximately 100 yards from the scene. Kurth testified that he had noticed Hess, Boyle, and Kaiden walking behind the shed on the property before returning to work. When he looked out the window again, he stated he saw Patridge and

Heidenreich interacting with Hess. Kurth testified that he then observed Boyle walk up to them and make a motion as if he was getting something out of his trousers. Kurth claimed Boyle got into a shooting stance with his hands clasped together straight in front of his body and his fingers pointing straight out, as if he had a weapon and was shooting at the officers. Kurth did not observe a weapon, however. Providing a different version of events, Kaiden recalled that after she reached the back of the shed with Boyle, Boyle told her to get down, right before she heard the first set of shots. She testified that Boyle then began pacing back and forth, after a time moving along the side of the shed to the front with his hands out and toward his shoulders at a ninety-degree angle. Kaiden did not recall seeing anything in Boyle’s hands. Soon after Boyle reached the front of the shed,

at which point Kaiden could no longer see him, Kaiden testified she heard gunshots again. Given how soon Kaiden heard the gunshots after Boyle rounded the corner of the shed, Kaiden did not think Boyle would have had time to put something in his hands before the second set of gunshots. She did recall hearing officers yelling “come out” and “put your hands up” between the two sets of gunfire, with the second set occurring seconds after the commands. After the shooting, Heidenreich located Kaiden behind the shed and secured her.

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Boyle v. Patridge, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyle-v-patridge-ilnd-2020.