Catrena Green v. Adam Throckmorton

681 F.3d 853, 2012 WL 2122494, 2012 U.S. App. LEXIS 11930
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 13, 2012
Docket10-4487
StatusPublished
Cited by116 cases

This text of 681 F.3d 853 (Catrena Green v. Adam Throckmorton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Catrena Green v. Adam Throckmorton, 681 F.3d 853, 2012 WL 2122494, 2012 U.S. App. LEXIS 11930 (6th Cir. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION

RONALD LEE GILMAN, Circuit Judge.

Following an evening traffic stop in Chillicothe, Ohio for failing to dim her high beams in the face of oncoming traffic, Ca-trena Green was arrested for driving under the influence of drugs or alcohol. The arrest was based on Green’s responses to a series of field sobriety tests administered by State Highway Patrol Trooper Adam Throckmorton. But when a more definitive test — Green’s urine sample — later came back clean, all charges against her were dropped.

Green subsequently brought suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against Trooper Throck-morton, alleging that he had violated her Fourth Amendment rights by (1) conducting the field sobriety tests without having a reasonable suspicion that she was impaired, and (2) arresting her without probable cause. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of Throckmor-ton on both counts and dismissed the case. Green has appealed. For the reasons set forth below, we REVERSE the judgment of the district court and REMAND the case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I. BACKGROUND

Green lives in Goose Point, South Carolina. On a Sunday in August 2008, she drove approximately 600 miles from her home in South Carolina to a popular motorcycle event taking place at the Ross County fairgrounds in Chillicothe, Ohio. She arrived at the fairgrounds around 8:30 p.m., leaving a couple of hours later to pick up food at a nearby Walmart. The roads at the time were wet from a recent rain, making visibility somewhat worse than normal. Green turned on her high beams while driving to help her see better.

Traveling in the opposite direction was Trooper Throckmorton. Throckmorton saw that Green was violating an Ohio traffic law by failing to dim her high beams as she approached oncoming traffic, see Ohio Rev.Code Ann. § 4513.15, so he made a U-turn and began trailing Green. His in-car video camera recorded the events that followed.

As shown by the video, Green briefly crossed over a shoulder lane marker while turning onto an exit ramp. Throckmorton then signaled Green to stop by activating his lights. Green pulled over immediately. After exiting his patrol car, Throckmorton asked Green for her license and registra *857 tion. She asked what she had done wrong, to which Throckmorton replied: “I’m trying to figure out why you picked me of all people to bright coming down the highway there. You brighted me as you were coming down the highway.” Green responded by stating, “Oh, because I can’t see.” She explained that the reason she could not see was because of the wet road conditions. Green then asked if she had done anything else wrong, and Throckmorton said, “No, not really. You just brighted me and blinded me.” He did not mention the brief lane violation.

Around this time, Throckmorton momentarily pointed his flashlight inside Green’s vehicle. Throckmorton stated in his deposition testimony that he aimed the flashlight’s beam toward the floor of the vehicle so as to illuminate Green’s face without shining the light directly into her eyes. He “noticed that her pupils were constricted,” which he thought “was kind of abnormal” because his training had taught him that a person’s pupils will typically dilate in a dark setting. But, as he noted during his deposition, “different chemicals or different types of drugs [can] hamper this process. So ... if you shine a light into somebody’s eyes, their pupils may stay completely dilated, they won’t react to the light. Or else ... they may be constricted, and you put them in a low lighting and they won’t dilate.”

In response to a question about where she was coming from, Green answered that she had just left the fairgrounds and was heading to Walmart. She told Throckmor-ton that her license was inside her purse in the trunk of her sport utility vehicle (SUV). Throckmorton allowed Green to exit the vehicle in order to retrieve her license. But before she did so, Green apologized for activating her high beams and explained: “It’s so dark, and it’s no streetlights like we have in South Carolina. And I was trying to see and be careful.” Green apologized once again and then opened her driver’s side door to get her license from the trunk.

As she stepped out of the SUV, Green either forgot to completely remove her seatbelt or became entangled in it. She must have already unfastened the seatbelt, however, because her foot touched the outside pavement before Throckmorton commented that she “might want to take [her] seatbelt off.” Green was able to remove her seatbelt quickly and easily.

Throckmorton followed Green to the back of her vehicle, where she opened the trunk. Being an SUV, the trunk was not a separately enclosed compartment, but instead part of the vehicle’s interior. Throckmorton used his flashlight to look into the SUV and could see that it was full of various items — presumably camping equipment and other materials for Green’s road trip. He did not notice anything suspicious. Nor did Throckmorton see or smell alcohol or drugs at any time during the stop.

Green retrieved her driver’s license from her purse and handed it to Throck-morton. After reviewing the license, he asked whether Green had had anything to drink that evening. She said, “Nope. Water.” He also asked whether she had taken any drugs or medication. She stated that she had not.

Throckmorton then immediately began conducting a series of field sobriety tests. He began with the horizontal-gaze nystag-mus test (HGN test), which involves moving a stimulus from side to side while the subject follows it with her eyes. The purpose of the test is twofold: it checks a person’s ability to follow directions and also detects nystagmus, “an involuntary jerking of the eye” that is a common indicator of impairment.

*858 Throckmorton instructed Green “to follow the tip of my pen back and forth with your eyes.” He started moving the pen, but Green apparently could not follow it. Throckmorton repeated the instructions and started over. He stopped after approximately 20 seconds and again asked Green whether she had taken any drugs or medication. She again said that she had consumed “just water.”

Suspecting otherwise, Throckmorton told Green: “You’ve taken something else. I mean, you’re, you’re just completely dazed off there for a second.” Green explained that she was tired, and Throck-morton said that she should be able to perform the test regardless. Throckmor-ton tried once more to administer the HGN test, but without success. As a result, he testified that he “was never able to observe whether she had any nystagmus in her eyes or not.” Throckmorton noted in his “impaired driver report” that Green “could not follow pen.” Green does not recall even taking the HGN test.

Throckmorton then tried another way to help determine whether Green was impaired. He administered what are known as the alphabet and numbers tests. Throckmorton first instructed Green to recite the alphabet, beginning with the letter “L” and ending with the letter “S.” She did so without difficulty. Throckmorton next asked Green to count backward from 57 to 42.

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Bluebook (online)
681 F.3d 853, 2012 WL 2122494, 2012 U.S. App. LEXIS 11930, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/catrena-green-v-adam-throckmorton-ca6-2012.