City of Fort Worth, Texas v. Harmit Chattha

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 16, 2012
Docket02-11-00342-CV
StatusPublished

This text of City of Fort Worth, Texas v. Harmit Chattha (City of Fort Worth, Texas v. Harmit Chattha) 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.

Bluebook
City of Fort Worth, Texas v. Harmit Chattha, (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS FORT WORTH

NO. 02-11-00342-CV

CITY OF FORT WORTH, TEXAS APPELLANT

V.

HARMIT CHATTHA APPELLEE

----------

FROM THE 352ND DISTRICT COURT OF TARRANT COUNTY

MEMORANDUM OPINION1 ----------

I. Introduction

Appellant City of Fort Worth appeals the trial court‘s order denying its plea

to the jurisdiction. We reverse and remand.

II. Factual and Procedural Background

On February 10, 2010, Fort Worth Police Officer Byrd conducted a traffic

stop while on duty. Believing the driver to be intoxicated, Officer Byrd called for a

1 See Tex. R. App. P. 47.4. DWI unit to conduct a field sobriety test. While awaiting this unit, Officer Byrd

told Lisa Valenzuela, the front seat passenger, to call someone to pick up the

car‘s passengers; she called her brother, Alex Morfin.

According to Officer Byrd, Appellee Harmit Chattha, one of the back seat

passengers, refused to leave and insisted that the vehicle be released to him

instead of being towed. What happened next is the subject of dispute, and what

follows are excerpts from affidavits submitted by Officer Byrd, Chattha, and two

witnesses.

According to Officer Byrd,

Based on Mr. Chattha‘s behavior in refusing my reasonable requests to move away from traffic, and my observations of him that he had a strong smell of alcoholic beverage on his person, that he had bloodshot eyes, slurred speech, and was swaying, I determined that I had probable cause to believe that Mr. Chattha was intoxicated to the degree that he was a danger to himself and others, and decided to arrest Mr. Chattha for Public Intoxication. I told him he was under arrest. I grabbed him by the left hand and leaned him against the door of the BMW. I took my handcuffs to place them on Mr. Chattha. I was able to place a handcuff on his left wrist. I attempted to grab Mr. Chattha‘s right arm but he stiffened his arm, thus frustrating the arrest process. I warned Mr. Chattha not to resist. Mr. Chattha then jerked his arm free and was able to turn away from me toward the open driver‘s door of the BMW. The female who was getting her purse began to scream for me not to arrest him. She climbed through the BMW and came out on the driver‘s side of the door, therefore Mr. Chattha was now facing her. Both Mr. Chattha and the female were between me and the driver‘s seat. I could not see Mr. Chattha‘s right hand, and based on our positions at the vehicle, and his continued resistance to my attempt to handcuff him, I decided to take him to the ground in order to complete the arrest process.

I determined that the only way I could take Mr. Chattha to the ground safely without throwing him into traffic was to take him down directly behind me. I was still holding on to the handcuff on Mr. Chattha‘s left arm. I grabbed the back shoulder area of his shirt, 2 twisted him around and took him to the ground. As he went to the ground, our legs became entangled, and I fell to the ground also. I landed on the lower half of Mr. Chattha‘s body. I observed that Mr. Chattha went limp as soon as he struck the ground. . . .

I made the decision to take Mr. Chattha to the ground in an effort to gain control of him because he was resisting my attempt to arrest him. I intentionally took Mr. Chattha to the ground. . . .

I believe the force used on Mr. Chattha was necessary and reasonable because he was actively resisting my attempt to arrest him, he was resisting near traffic, he was close enough to a running vehicle to take control of the vehicle in an intoxicated state, and I was outnumbered by his friends on the scene.

According to Chattha,

I was trying to talk to the officer but I was not threatening anyone, staggering, walking into traffic or slurring my words. I don‘t recall a lot of the details after I was handcuffed but I do remember the officer telling me to turn around, which I did. Then he grabbed my arm to cuff my hand behind my back. I had a car fall from a lift onto my left arm some months prior to this and still suffered from physical injury from that incident. So the range of motion in my arm was not good. I was not struggling or resisting but it was not easy to get my arm behind me because of the injury. That is the last thing that I remember until waking up in the hospital.

According to Alex Morfin, Chattha‘s brother-in-law and a witness, he went

to pick up the passengers after Valenzuela called him. In his affidavit, Morfin

stated:

I could not clearly hear everything, but I did hear [Chattha] tell the officer that he could take the car. [Chattha] was not staggering or slurring his words. He was not doing anything dangerous. I next saw Officer Byrd grab [Chattha] and slam him against the car. The officer got one side of the handcuffs on. [Chattha] has an arm injury from a time when a car fell from a jack and landed on his arm. It was a severe injury and his arm did not work normally. I could see that his arm was not bending back easily to put the other cuff on and then the officer grabbed him and swung him around like a rag doll. The officer threw [Chattha] to the ground head first. Since Officer Byrd had [Chattha] at least partially in handcuffs and was holding the 3 cuff, [Chattha] had no way to break his fall and his head slammed into the ground, knocking him unconscious.

According to Valenzuela, Chattha‘s sister-in-law,

When we were initially pulled over, I called my brother who was nearby and told him that we were being pulled over. My brother and his friend Joe were in a separate vehicle. They were not intoxicated and they arrived at the scene quickly. There was no legitimate reason that one of us could not drive the car home. It seemed as if the officer refused to talk to us about it for no good reason. At that point, [Chattha] said something about calling an attorney. The officer responded by telling [Chattha] to put his hands behind his back and was going to handcuff him. We were very surprised and [Chattha] said[,] ―[B]ut I didn‘t do anything!‖ The officer responded with[,] ―[O]h, yeah!‖ and slammed [Chattha] onto the car at the driver‘s side behind the driver‘s side door. [Chattha] was not swaying or acting drunk. He was not slurring his words and was not staggering into traffic. He was speaking to the officer clearly and walking normally. He wasn‘t doing anything dangerous. He was just trying to talk to the police officer.

After the officer slammed [Chattha] against the car, the officer was trying to handcuff [Chattha]. [Chattha] had an injury to his arm that affected how far back it would go. [Chattha] did not resist in any way[;] he did not struggle[,] and he did not pull away. [Chattha] did not say anything during this time. But the officer grabbed [Chattha] behind his neck and turned him to the side. The officer then threw his weight onto [Chattha‘s] back, throwing him to the ground and landing on top of him. I screamed and rushed to [Chattha] and turned him over. There was blood coming out of his ear and his mouth and he was unconscious. I knew he was severely hurt.

Chattha subsequently filed suit against the City for his injuries. The City

then filed a plea to the jurisdiction, which the trial court denied, and this appeal

followed.

III. Jurisdiction

The City argues that its plea to the jurisdiction should have been granted

under the Texas Tort Claims Act (TTCA) because there was no use of tangible

4 personal property; the officer‘s official immunity applied, precluding a waiver of

the City‘s immunity; and the act committed by the officer was an intentional tort.

A. Standard of Review

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