Cholewin v. City of Evanston, Ill.

716 F. Supp. 369, 1989 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8281, 1989 WL 80139
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedJuly 17, 1989
Docket89 C 3125
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 716 F. Supp. 369 (Cholewin v. City of Evanston, Ill.) 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
Cholewin v. City of Evanston, Ill., 716 F. Supp. 369, 1989 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8281, 1989 WL 80139 (N.D. Ill. 1989).

Opinion

ORDER

BUA, District Judge.

On April 17, 1989, plaintiff filed the instant action claiming that defendant denied him the property right embodied in Chapter 70, Paragraph 91 of Illinois Revised Statutes without affording him due process of law as required by the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. The parties agreed to a bench trial, which was held on May 4 and 5. Having heard and considered all of the evidence presented at trial, the court hereby makes the following findings of fact and conclusions of law pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 52(a).

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. Plaintiff Lawrence Cholewin has been employed as a police officer by the defendant City of Evanston (“Evanston”), a municipality, since 1977. (Tr. 32.)

2. At about 10:00 a.m. on Sunday, September 4, 1988, while Cholewin was on duty as an Evanston police officer, he responded to a police call complaining of a possible burglary at the premises of 2100 Greenleaf in Evanston. (Tr. 32, 33.) The complaining call was placed by the owner, Jay Collier, who runs a furniture delivery service and self-storage company at the premises. (Tr. 13-14.)

3. When Officer Cholewin arrived at the scene, two other Evanston policemen, Officer Chuck Perry and Officer Siripong Sricharmom, a/k/a Officer Lek (Tr. 202.), were already there. (Tr. 16, 32, 150, 197.)

4. Officer Cholewin learned that Collier and Officer Sricharmorn had observed a man running from one of the boats parked in Collier’s fenced-in yard. (Tr. 13-14, 16, 34,196.) The man ran into a large patch of weeds located on the southwest portion of Collier’s property. (Tr. 16, 34, 196.) The weeds were thick and were approximately six feet high, making it difficult to see the intruder. (Tr. 16, 155, 196-197.) Officers Perry and Sricharmorn had attempted to follow the intruder but, after venturing a short distance into the weeds, Officer Sric-harmorn was bothered by allergies and Officer Perry determined that the weeds were too dense to get through. (Tr. 155, 197.)

5. When Officer Cholewin arrived, the three policemen and Collier guarded the weeded area and discussed their next step in attempting to apprehend the intruder. (Tr. 16, 34, 156.) Collier, whose van was parked five to ten yards away from where the group was standing, offered to drive his van into the weeded area. (Tr. 16-17, 35, 156.)

6. Collier and Officer Cholewin then walked over to Collier’s van, while Officers Perry and Sricharmom remained by the weeds. (Tr. 18, 24, 35, 158.) The van was attached to a trailer which was carrying Collier’s twenty-four foot boat. (Tr. 15, 35.) Collier explained that he wanted to unhitch the trailer before driving the van through the weeds. (Tr. 17, 35.)

7. Collier then backed up the van and the boat, trying to find a level spot to unhitch the trailer. (Tr. 18-19, 35-36.) Officer Cholewin was behind the boat, directing Collier. (Tr. 18, 36.) After finding a level spot, Collier exited the van to unhitch the trailer. (Tr. 19, 36.) This required pulling up on the front A-frame of the trailer, allowing the spring-loaded front wheel of the trailer to kick down, and then cranking up the leg supporting the front wheel until the front of the trailer was raised above the hitch on the van. (Tr. 19, 21.)

8. Officer Cholewin claims that he assisted Collier in unhitching the trailer by pulling up on the front of the trailer along with Collier to allow the front wheel of the *371 trailer to kick down into place. (Tr. 37.) Collier, however, did not see Officer Cho-lewin ever touching the boat, the trailer, or the van. (Tr. 22, 26.) To the best of Collier’s knowledge, he unhitched the trailer by himself. (Tr. 26-27.) Officers Perry and Sricharmom, who were guarding the weeded area while the trailer was unhitched, did not observe the entire unhitching process and, therefore, were unable to definitively state whether Officer Cholewin had helped pull up the trailer to unhitch the boat. (Tr. 151, 159-162, 198.)

9. After the trailer was unhitched, Sergeant Charles Heuer of the Evanston Police Department arrived on the scene. (Tr. Ill, 113, 163.) He was the patrol supervisor on duty that morning. (Tr. 110-111.) Sergeant Heuer walked through a path in the weeds and determined that the intruder had escaped through a hole in the fence. (Tr. 131, 164.)

10. The next day, Monday, September 5, 1988, Officer Cholewin was off from work due to the Labor Day holiday. Officer Cholewin also did not work the following Tuesday, the 6th, which was his regular day off. (Tr. 39.) On either the evening of the 5th or the morning of the 6th, Officer Cholewin told Sergeant Everett Erlandson, the supervisor on his regular shift, that he had sustained a neck injury while helping to unhitch Collier’s trailer in the course of his duty on September 4. (Tr. 39.) On September 6, Officer Cholewin also reported his injury to Sergeant Frank Pascher, who worked in the Personnel Bureau of the Police department. (Tr. 63-64.)

11. Officer Cholewin’s injury has been diagnosed as a herniated cervical disk at C-5 level, which is located just above the collar. (Tr. 4T, 75.) The herniated disk is impinging on Officer Cholewin’s spinal cord and causing damage to the nerves in his arms. (Tr. 41.) No-doctor who has examined Officer Cholewin has reported that he is able to return to his work as a police officer. (Tr. 44.)

12. Officer Cholewin began receiving injury-on-duty pay on September 7, 1988. (Def. Ex. 11; Tr. 188.)

13. Also on September 7, 1988, the Internal Affairs Bureau (IAB) of the Evans-ton Police Department began investigating Officer Cholewin’s claim that he had been injured while on duty. (Tr. 167.) Police Lieutenant John F. Popadowski was assigned the investigation. (Tr. 167.)

14. In the course of the IAB investigation, Lt. Popadowski conducted interviews of Collier, Officer Sricharmom, Sgt. Heuer, and Sgt. Pascher. (Tr. 168.) Lt. Popadow-ski also interviewed Dr. Vogel, who had examined Officer Cholewin. (Tr. ,180.) Sgt. Thomas Gallivan of the IAB aided Lt. Popadowski in the investigation by interviewing Officer Perry and Sgt. Erlandson. (PI. Ex. 6; Tr. 168.) Each of the interviews were tape recorded and the recordings were transcribed. (Tr. 168.) Lt. Popadow-ski also collected memos and other documents which pertained to the incident. (Tr. 168.)

15. On October 4, 1988, Lt. Popadowski gave written notice of the IAB investigation to Officer Cholewin. (Def. Ex. 1; Tr. 60.) The notice informed Officer Cholewin that the department was investigating his claim that he was injured on duty September 4, 1988, while disconnecting Collier’s trailer. The notice further informed Cho-lewin that “[Collier] stated that no officer ever touched the boat or trailer while it was being detached from the van.” (Def. Ex. 1; Tr. 60-61.)

16. In October 1988, after receiving the October notice from Lt. Popadowski, Officer Cholewin retained Noel Wroblewski, an attorney from the police officers’ union, to represent him during the investigation. (Tr. 70-71.)

17. Officer Cholewin received a second notice of the IAB investigation from Sgt. Gallivan on December 12, 1988. (Def. Ex. 2; Tr. 66-67.) In that notice, Officer Cho-lewin was again told that Collier had contradicted Officer Cholewin’s story regarding the events of September 4.

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Related

Danese v. Knox
827 F. Supp. 185 (S.D. New York, 1993)
Lawrence Cholewin v. City of Evanston
899 F.2d 687 (Seventh Circuit, 1990)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
716 F. Supp. 369, 1989 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8281, 1989 WL 80139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cholewin-v-city-of-evanston-ill-ilnd-1989.