Carolyn Barnes, Individually and as Next Friend of William Zimmer Barnes and Charles Austin Lee Bednorz v. Calvin R. Sulak Lt. Wayne Lock Sgt. Ralph Fisher R.C. Nichols And Williamson County Sheriff's Department

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 8, 2002
Docket03-01-00159-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Carolyn Barnes, Individually and as Next Friend of William Zimmer Barnes and Charles Austin Lee Bednorz v. Calvin R. Sulak Lt. Wayne Lock Sgt. Ralph Fisher R.C. Nichols And Williamson County Sheriff's Department (Carolyn Barnes, Individually and as Next Friend of William Zimmer Barnes and Charles Austin Lee Bednorz v. Calvin R. Sulak Lt. Wayne Lock Sgt. Ralph Fisher R.C. Nichols And Williamson County Sheriff's Department) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Carolyn Barnes, Individually and as Next Friend of William Zimmer Barnes and Charles Austin Lee Bednorz v. Calvin R. Sulak Lt. Wayne Lock Sgt. Ralph Fisher R.C. Nichols And Williamson County Sheriff's Department, (Tex. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-01-00159-CV

Carolyn Barnes, Individually and as Next Friend of William Zimmer Barnes and Charles Austin Lee Bednorz, Appellant

v.

Calvin R. Sulak; Lt. Wayne Lock; Sgt. Ralph Fisher; R. C. Nichols; and Williamson County Sheriff's Department, Appellees

FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF WILLIAMSON COUNTY, 368TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. 99-360-C368, HONORABLE DONALD HUMBLE, JUDGE PRESIDING Carolyn Barnes, individually and as next friend of her minor sons, William Zimmer Barnes

and Charles Austin Lee Bednorz, 1 appeals the summary judgment that she take nothing on her claims

against the Williamson County Sheriff=s Department2 and its employees, Deputy Calvin R. Sulak, Lt. Wayne

Lock, and Sgt. Ralph Fisher, as well as Williamson County Attorney=s Office investigator R.C. Nichols.

Her claims arise from her arrest after Sulak stopped her vehicle on a highway upon perceiving that she failed

to signal a turn sufficiently in advance of the turn; the arrest followed a verbal confrontation during which

Barnes admittedly refused to produce proof of financial responsibility, refused to cease talking on her mobile

telephone, and reportedly threatened legal action against Sulak. She claims appellees violated common-

law, statutory, and constitutional provisions while arresting and jailing her. She contends that the district

court erred by refusing to hear or grant several of her motions directed against appellees= pleadings and

summary-judgment evidence, by refusing to hear or grant her motion for continuance, by striking her

response to appellees= motion for summary judgment, by granting appellees= motion for summary judgment,

by granting Rule 13 sanctions against her without holding a hearing, and by refusing to hear her

1 The parties treat the minors, William and Charles, as appellants. However, the petition presents them as minors represented by Barnes as their next friend, not suing on their own behalf. Thus, we refer to Barnes as a single appellant, albeit here in two capacities. 2 This is the governmental entity Barnes named in her original petition. In response to the appellees= motion for summary judgment that argued in part that the sheriff=s department was the incorrect defendant, Barnes filed amended petitions that named Williamson County the defendant Ain all its capacities whether doing business as Williamson County Commissioner=s Court and/or Williamson County Sheriff=s Department, and/or Williamson County Jail, jointly and severally.@ In the caption of her petition she named the defendants as AWilliamson County Sheriff=s Department a/k/a Williamson County@ doing business as the other entities. Because the judgment expressly names the sheriff=s department, however, we use that name in the style of the case.

2 postjudgment motions. We will affirm the judgment in part and reverse and render judgment in part. The

revised judgment will be that both sides take nothing by their claims.

BACKGROUND

Factual background

The parties agree that, on July 20, 1997, Sulak stopped Barnes=s vehicle as she was driving

on a public highway near Seward Junction with her two sons, then ages three and nine years, that Barnes

used her cellular phone after the stop despite directives to hang up, that more officers arrived on the scene,

and that Barnes was arrested and taken to jail for an overnight stay. The sides differ in the details and the

motivations behind the others= actions.

The defendants= version

Sulak=s version appears in his offense report, attached to appellees= motion for summary

judgment. He said he was driving slowly (forty miles per hour in a sixty-five zone) and became suspicious

of a car that would not pass him. He pulled over, let the car pass, and followed it to the intersection of

Texas Highway 29 and United States Highway 183. He noted that the car=s rear license tag was expired

and that the trunk lock had been removed; the latter indicated to him that the car might be stolen. When the

car signaled a turn only fifty feet before the intersection instead of the required one hundred, Sulak activated

his overhead lights to signal the vehicle to stop.

Sulak wrote that he approached the vehicle and requested to see the driver=s license and

proof of insurance or financial responsibility. He said that the driver, Barnes, responded belligerently,

3 demanding to know why she was being stopped. He told her he would tell her the reason for the stop when

she supplied the requested documents. She provided her license, but did not supply her proof of insurance.

Instead, she called his supervisor. Sulak said he repeatedly demanded that she stop talking on the phone;

after she refused to show proof of insurance, he asked her who could pick up her children. He denied

making any threats other than that he would yank her from her car. Sulak said Barnes told him she would

sue him if he arrested her and that he was Amessing with the wrong person.@ Barnes refused to do anything

until Sulak=s supervisor arrived; upon learning that a supervisor was on the way, Sulak returned to his car to

await the supervisor=s arrival.

Fisher arrived, followed by Lock. Both talked with Barnes, but neither could gain

compliance with their demands. Lock initiated, and Fisher and Sulak assisted, the physical removal of

Barnes from her car, which she resisted. Sulak wrote that, based on her threats of a lawsuit in response to

his threat of arrest, Barnes was arrested and booked for coercion of a public servant.

Barnes=s version

Barnes, especially in her third amended petition, characterizes the events much more direly.

She calls Williamson County Aan abusive infrastructure funded by tax dollars which Plaintiff is forced to

pay.@ She also calls it Aa racketeering influenced corrupt organization that has persisted in a pattern of

abuse, flagrantly breaking the law, and engaging in gang-like activity for decades in Williamson County.@

She asserts that the sheriff=s department is Ano better than a street gang of thugs roaming around harassing

people and extracting huge unconstitutional penalties in order to support their organized criminal activity.

The Mafia has more ethics, scruples, and decency than this poorly trained group of egomaniacs, who are

4 wasting taxpayer dollars to support their abusive habits and criminal enterprises.@ She describes the officers

as Athugs@ and one of them as Aan abusive, threatening officer with a neo-nazi shaved head and gun.@

Barnes either alleges legitimate explanations for or denies the observations that Sulak

contends aroused his suspicions. She and her children were returning from a camping trip. She says that

she was driving slowly for safety because of road conditions, traffic density, and wildlife. Although her rear

license tag appeared out of date, her registration was current as shown by the sticker on the front

windshield. She broke the trunk lock at the campsite to retrieve the car keys after her children locked the

keys in the trunk. She denies that she failed to timely activate her turn indicator.

She contends that appellees= conduct following the stop was unjustified. She alleges that

Sulak told her he would explain the stop after she provided her license, but then refused to explain until after

she provided proof of insurance. His reaction to her refusal to do so caused her to fear that he either was

irrational or was not a legitimate law-enforcement officer. She said he used improper language and

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