City of Westland v. Kodlowski

298 Mich. App. 647, 2012 WL 6028243
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 4, 2012
DocketDocket No. 301774
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 298 Mich. App. 647 (City of Westland v. Kodlowski) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Westland v. Kodlowski, 298 Mich. App. 647, 2012 WL 6028243 (Mich. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinions

MURRAY, J.

Defendant, Jeffrey Kodlowski, appeals by leave granted two orders of the circuit court. The first [653]*653order embodies the circuit court’s decision affirming the district court’s judgment convicting defendant of resisting arrest in violation of Westland Ordinance, § 62-36(a), while the second order denies defendant’s motion for reinstatement of oral argument. We affirm both orders.

I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

This case arises from a marital dispute that resulted in the arrest of defendant after he allegedly battered two Westland Police Officers, Michael Little and Kyle Dawley, and resisted arrest in his Westland residence. On March 18, 2009, Marilyn Kodlowski resided with defendant (her husband), son, and daughter in the city of Westland. Around 4:00 a.m., Kodlowski and defendant had a disagreement regarding Kodlowski’s cellular telephone. Defendant accused Kodlowski of having an extramarital affair, and he wanted to see Kodlowski’s cellular telephone to determine to whom she had been talking.

Kodlowski called the Westland Police Department on two occasions that morning to seek assistance in retrieving the personal belongings that defendant withheld from her. After calling the police the first time, Kodlowski handed defendant the phone, defendant spoke with the police, and then defendant provided Kodlowski her keys and purse, but not her cellular telephone. Kodlowski called the second time to receive assistance in retrieving her cellular telephone from defendant.

After the second phone call, Little and Dawley arrived at the residence in uniform and located Kodlowski in the driveway near her van. When first speaking with the officers, Kodlowski informed them that she had had an argument with defendant and that he accused her of [654]*654cheating on him, but there had never been violence in the home and defendant had not been drinking. There was conflicting testimony as to whether Kodlowski informed the officers that there were no weapons in the residence.

After speaking with the officers, Kodlowski walked with the officers to the residence and defendant “allowed them in.” Again, there was conflicting evidence regarding defendant’s demeanor when the officers first entered the house. Nevertheless, the officers proceeded to talk to defendant and inquire into the location of the cellular telephone. Although the testimony was not consistent on what was initially said upon entering the home, there is no dispute that Officer Dawley made several antagonistic and sarcastic remarks to defendant, and that when defendant was asked where the cellular telephone was located, defendant responded by saying something along the lines of, “I’m not giving the phone back. You’ll have to arrest me.”

In order to control the situation, Little instructed defendant to sit down in a chair, after which, according to Little, defendant changed his mood from irritated to calm. At one point, defendant became irritated, stood up and attempted to go to the back bedroom. Little, however, instructed defendant to stay in the chair. Little observed that when defendant stood up, “[h]e looked irritated. He had [a] clenched fist down at his side and on and off would tighten his neck and jaw muscles and he just looked mad and upset.” Little then placed his arm on defendant’s chest to keep defendant at a distance and to keep defendant from going to the back bedroom. As Little spoke with defendant, Dawley walked with Kodlowski around the house looking for the cellular telephone.

[655]*655According to Kodlowski, defendant asked the officers to leave. While the officers were present, Kodlowski grabbed defendant’s wallet and told him that she would take his wallet if he did not return her cellular telephone. However, Kodlowski then decided to leave the residence without her phone. Little believed at that point that the incident was over, so he followed Kodlowski toward the front door as Dawley followed. As Little was walking out of the door, he felt defendant grab and squeeze his left arm. As witnessed by Dawley, defendant then “spun” Little around so that he was facing defendant. Little then used his arm to create distance between himself and defendant, and after telling defendant that he was under arrest, Little and Dawley each grabbed onto one of defendant’s arms so that he could be handcuffed.

Defendant then “started pulling and just kind of thrashing his body, swinging his arms to try to make [Little] let go.” Little indicated that as defendant twisted and attempted to break from the officers’ grip, the officers and defendant ended up on the couch. Dawley then instructed defendant to stop resisting, but defendant continued to thrash his body and swing his arm. While trying to secure defendant in handcuffs, defendant kicked backward, “like a rearward kick,” striking Dawley.

After defendant continued to twist, Dawley applied a brachial stun to defendant’s neck, yet defendant continued to twist and fight the officers Dawley then pulled out his baton and struck defendant on his arm and the top of the baton “also hit the back of [defendant’s] head.” Dawley testified that after he struck defendant’s arm, defendant released his grip, Officer Dawley dropped the baton, grabbed the handcuffs, and the officers were then able to secure defendant with the [656]*656handcuffs. Dawley indicated that he struck defendant once with the baton.1 Both Kodlowski, who “could see everything that was going on” and defendant testified that defendant was not resisting when Dawley instructed defendant to “stop resisting.” Defendant in fact testified that he never offered any resistance to the officers and never engaged in physical contact with them.

The prosecutor filed a motion in limine in the district court, seeking to exclude evidence regarding the nature and extent of defendant’s injuries and any documentary evidence concerning the department policy on the use of force. Defendant argued that the evidence was relevant to show that the officers fabricated the facts of the case to cover up their use of excessive force, while the prosecution argued that the evidence would be relevant to a civil claim for excessive use of force, not to any issues in the criminal case.

The prosecution also separately raised the issue of the admissibility of a transcript prepared from an audio recording which captured a portion of the events surrounding defendant’s arrest.2 Apparently defense counsel intended to either have the transcript read to the jury, or have the jury read the transcript while listening to the audio recording. The prosecution’s position was that the transcript was inaccurate and therefore inadmissible. The district court indicated that it would be for the jury to determine the content of the audio [657]*657recording, and that it could do so through the playing of the audio recording for the jury.

In regard to the prosecution’s motion to exclude evidence, the district court concluded that because defendant was charged with assault and battery along with resisting arrest, any evidence regarding the treatment and nature of defendant’s injuries was irrelevant and thus inadmissible. The district court indicated, however, that it would allow defendant to introduce evidence that he was injured during the exchange.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
298 Mich. App. 647, 2012 WL 6028243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-westland-v-kodlowski-michctapp-2012.