BYTHER EX REL. BYTHER v. City of Mobile

398 F. Supp. 2d 1222, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 28534, 2005 WL 3019756
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Alabama
DecidedNovember 9, 2005
DocketCiv.A. 040404CGB
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 398 F. Supp. 2d 1222 (BYTHER EX REL. BYTHER v. City of Mobile) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
BYTHER EX REL. BYTHER v. City of Mobile, 398 F. Supp. 2d 1222, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 28534, 2005 WL 3019756 (S.D. Ala. 2005).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

GRANADE, Chief Judge.

This cause is before the court on the motion of defendant, Scott Congleton, for summary judgment (Doc. 90), the motion of defendants, the City of Mobile, D. Brooks, Joseph Goff, B. Hines, and Robert Hammac, 1 for summary judgment (Doc. 94), the motion of defendant, Nelson Brown, for summary judgment (Doc. 96), plaintiffs responses to the motions for summary judgment (Docs. 104, 110, 112), and defendants’ replies (Docs. 117, 118, 121). For the reasons stated below, the court finds that summary judgment is due to be granted in favor of all defendants on all claims.

FACTS

This action arises from the events that took place during the capture and arrest of Carlos Byther on June 27, 2003. Byther himself claims to remember nothing about the morning of this incident; thus he sets forth no facts of what he did or what occurred on the morning of June 27, 2003. (Byther Depo. pp. 73, 87). At the time of the incident, Nelson Brown and Scott Con-gleton were police officers with the City of Mobile, Alabama. (Brown Depo. p. 13, Congleton Depo. p. 12). During the early morning hours of June 27, 2003, Brown and Congleton received dispatch over the radio that a robbery involving a weapon had been reported at the Circle K on *1225 Cottage Hill Road at Bel Air Boulevard. (Brown Depo. pp. 20-22, Congleton Depo. p. 24, Hammac Depo. p. 9). Before arriving at the location of the Circle K, Officer Brown and Congleton also heard a radio broadcast describing the suspect and reporting that the subject had told the clerk he was armed with a gun and that he had left the store on foot. (Brown Depo. p. 22, Congleton Depo. p. 24, Brooks Depo. p. 10).

Officer Congleton was the first to arrive on the scene. (Congleton Depo. p. 27). The store clerk informed Officer Congle-ton that an individual had entered the store, walked over to the beverage aisle, then asked the clerk to come over to him for a question. The man asked the clerk “do you have a gun?”. The clerk said “no”. The man then proceeded to reach into his waistband and said “I do, now give me all the money.” (Congleton Depo. p. 28). At that point, the man forced the clerk into the store’s cooler, then fled. (Congleton Depo. p. 29). When Brown arrived at the store, he was directed to several areas in the store where the clerk thought the subject may have touched surfaces, whereupon he attempted to lift fingerprints. (Brown Depo. p. 25). Officer Congleton obtained information from the clerk regarding the individual’s physical description and the clothing he was wearing, then he broadcast the information over the radio. (Congleton Depo. pp. 32-33). Brown reports that he overheard the clerk tell another officer that he thought he saw a gun in Byther’s waistband; however, other testimony indicates that such a statement was not made. (Brown Depo. p. 94, Hammac Depo. p. 13, Congleton Depo. p. 17, Hines Depo. p. 10, Brooks Depo. p. 13). Shortly thereafter, Sergeant Enas Ready, the patrol officers’ supervisor, and several other officers, located an automobile around the corner from the Circle K that contained items that matched those taken during the robbery. (Brooks Depo. p. 15). Found in the vehicle were a Cook’s champagne bottle with condensation on it and clothing matching the robber’s description in the back seat. (Congleton Depo. p. 35). Smith’s Towing Company, the contract wrecker service for the city, was summoned to impound and tow away the vehicle. (Brooks Depo. p. 16, Brown Depo. p. 28). As Smith’s Towing was preparing to remove the vehicle, the Smith’s towing driver radioed his dispatcher that a subject was attempting to take the vehicle, whereupon Officer Congleton left the Circle K store and went to the location of the vehicle. Other officers returned to the scene. (Congleton Depo. pp. 56-57, Brooks Depo. p. 19). Upon arriving at the vehicle, the Smith’s driver informed Officer Congleton that the subject came back to take his vehicle, and after being told he could not have it, ran north behind the Brown and Root building. (Congleton Depo. p. 58). Officer Congleton broadcast-ed this information to the other officers in the area, and they responded to that area. (Brown Depo. pp. 29-30). The officers began looking for the subject. (Congleton Depo. p. 58). Officer Brown drove to the north end of the parking lot, got out of his car and conducted a brief search on foot of the wooded area by the television station. (Brown Depo. p. 30). Not locating the suspect, Officer Brown continued searching the parking lot area. He then went through a hedge and a gap in a fence and came out onto a street in a residential area behind the parking lot, where he met up with Officers Congleton and Brooks. (Brown Depo. pp. 44-45). Believing that the subject had to be in the general area of Sage Avenue, Officer Congleton began patrolling that street when he saw a subject behind a house. (Congleton Depo. p. 59). Officer Congleton ordered the suspect to “stop where he was at”, whereupon the *1226 individual ran off to the back part of a house on Sage Avenue. (Congleton Depo. pp. 60-61, Brown Depo. p. 77). Following the subject, Officer Congleton approached a privacy fence on the side yard following the subject, and Officer Brown ran around the front part of the house. (Congleton Depo. p. 62, Brown Depo. p. 77). As Officer Congleton approached the backyard, he saw someone running behind the wooden fence through slats in the fence. He opened the gate in the fence and confronted the subject, Carlos Byther, standing approximately two to three feet away from him. (Congleton Depo. p. 62).

The occurrences up to this point on the day of the incident are predominantly undisputed. However, the officers’ statements regarding what took place when Congleton and Brown encountered Byther vary to some degree. Because the extent and effect of these variances are at issue in this case, the court will discuss them in considerable detail.

Congleton’s original narrative report described the incident as follows:

I threw him to the ground. As the subject was going to the ground his hands went to the inside of his waist band. I repeated to the subject “let me see your hands” and he refused and I struck the subject several times to the back of the upper back and neck until he gave me his hands. During the altercation the subject’s head struck the ground and had a small injury to the head and medical was notified. After securing the subject the subject dropped several small blue bags containing a white powder substance believed to be cocaine.

(Congleton narrative report). In a later statement, Congleton stated that he threw Byther down and he landed chest down with his left hand concealed, almost in a prone position with his right hand out. (Congleton Statement p. 2). Congleton was not sure when Brown came into control of Byther’s right hand, but knew Brown was holding the right hand when they got control of Byther and handcuffed him. (Congleton Statement p. 3). Brown delivered some kicks to Byther’s head while Byther was down in the prone position. (Congleton Statement p. 3). As far as Congleton knew, Brown had control of Byther’s right arm before blows were delivered to the back of Byther’s head. (Congleton Statement p. 3).

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Bluebook (online)
398 F. Supp. 2d 1222, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 28534, 2005 WL 3019756, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/byther-ex-rel-byther-v-city-of-mobile-alsd-2005.