Constance Westfall v. Jose Luna

903 F.3d 534
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 13, 2018
Docket16-11234; C/w 16-11708
StatusPublished
Cited by244 cases

This text of 903 F.3d 534 (Constance Westfall v. Jose Luna) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Constance Westfall v. Jose Luna, 903 F.3d 534 (5th Cir. 2018).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

Police officers arrived at Constance Westfall's home at 2:00 a.m. to investigate allegations made against her son of trespass into a neighbor's home. What could have been a simple inquiry quickly escalated, resulting in one officer entering Westfall's home, two officers forcing and holding her to the ground, and Westfall's arrest for interfering with the officers' public duties. Because we conclude that genuine fact issues exist as to whether certain of the officers' actions were objectively reasonable, we REVERSE and REMAND the district court's grant of summary judgment to Officers Nathaniel Anderson, Jose Luna, and Venessa Trevino on Westfall's false-arrest claims and to Luna on the excessive-force claim. We AFFIRM the district court's grant of summary judgment to Trevino on the excessive-force claim, to Luna on the retaliation claim, and to Anderson, Luna, and Trevino on Westfall's denial-of-medical-treatment claims. We also AFFIRM the district court's dismissal of Westfall's claims against Officers Chris Melton and Thomas Roberson, and failure-to-train claim against the City of Southlake. In addition, we DISMISS Westfall's appeal of the district court's sealing order for lack of jurisdiction.

I.

Facts and Procedural History

In the middle of the night in January 2014, the Southlake Police Department received a call reporting a trespass. 1 The call was from a young woman. She reported that two teenage boys, one later identified as A.A., had entered her home without permission. She told the boys that they did not have permission to be in the house, and the boys left and walked toward the house next door. The caller was the older sister of one of A.A.'s friends. According to the caller, the boys were looking for a marijuana grinder.

Shortly thereafter, Trevino and Anderson arrived at the house to which the boys had returned. The house belonged to Westfall and her husband, Monte Westfall. Anderson and Trevino knocked on the front door of the house, and Westfall opened it. Trevino identified herself, asked for A.A., and relayed the allegations against A.A. Westfall responded by explaining that A.A. is her son and that his *540 best friend lived in the house next door. Trevino asked Westfall to go get her son. Westfall went inside the house and closed the door because it was cold outside. She began looking for her glasses, without which she is legally blind.

While Westfall was inside the house, the Southlake Police Department dispatcher called Westfall's home phone number. Monte answered the call. Monte believed it was a prank call and hung up the phone. By this time, Luna had arrived at the Westfall residence and began knocking loudly on the front door. The dispatcher called the house number again. A.A. answered. The dispatcher told A.A. to meet the officers outside.

A.A. and another teenage boy exited the house, with a third boy joining them soon afterwards. Trevino and Anderson began questioning the three minor boys outside. During the questioning, Trevino allegedly smelled marijuana on A.A.'s hands and asked the boys about the presence of marijuana. Then, Westfall exited the house, wearing boots and a coat over her nightgown.

While outside, Westfall complained about her inability to see the officers without her glasses and, in response to accusations that she had slammed the door in their faces, explained that she had only closed the door when the police first arrived because it was cold outside. Following this exchange, the officers stopped addressing Westfall, despite repeated requests that they identify themselves, and continued to question the minor boys.

Monte brought Westfall her glasses. Because it was cold, Westfall asked the officers to move inside of the house. The officers declined. Luna then asked Westfall to move to the side with him, so he could explain the situation to her. Westfall declined, and Luna said that was okay but asked her to stop talking. Westfall asked Luna why he was being so rude. A short while later, when Westfall spoke in response to a question by Trevino directed at the boys, Luna again instructed Westfall to stop talking.

Eventually, the boys admitted to the officers that there was marijuana in the house. After learning this from Anderson, Luna proclaimed that the officers could either wait for a search warrant or one of the boys could go into the house and retrieve the marijuana. Addressing Monte, Anderson explained to him that there was marijuana in the house and that, with Monte's permission, the officers would go upstairs and confiscate it. Anderson suggested that one of the boys take them upstairs. Westfall then said, "[A.A.], go get it." A.A. went inside of the house. Anderson told Monte to also go inside, and Anderson followed him.

According to Westfall, Monte shut the door behind them. As Westfall turned to follow them into her house, Luna approached her and told her, "You are not going anywhere. You slammed the door in our face." Westfall explained that she did not slam the door in his face, told Luna she was going into her house, and reached for the doorknob of the front door. Then, Luna "body-slammed" Westfall to the ground.

Defendants describe a more dramatic exchange leading up to the body-slam. According to Defendants, Westfall began to follow Anderson, Monte, and A.A. into her house when Anderson stopped her and told her she had to stay outside with the other officers. Defendants claim that Westfall insisted on going inside, and Anderson replied that she was not going to "walk up on [him]" and that he had already given her instructions to stay outside. Luna and Trevino asked Westfall to calm down and "get back over here." According to Defendants, Westfall continued to protest, saying, "Let me go, I don't want you people to go up there," and "stop telling me to calm *541 down." Then, Westfall "began to pursue" Anderson into the home, approaching him from behind "at a fast pace and in an aggressive manner." It was only then, according to Defendants, that Luna "brought [Westfall] to the ground."

Luna is 5'9" and weighs 175 pounds. Westfall is 5'5" and "has a small build." Westfall landed on the corner of the brick porch on her back. Luna and Trevino then held Westfall on the ground for about five minutes. During the time that Westfall was pinned, Anderson was in the house and retrieved a metal tin containing about 2.5 grams of marijuana from inside of the house.

Luna and Trevino handcuffed Westfall and placed her in a police car. After Westfall was handcuffed, Officers Chris Melton and Thomas Roberson arrived at the Westfall residence. While in the back of the police car, Westfall asked repeatedly for medical assistance. Roberson and Luna called for medical assistance shortly after 3:00 a.m., about thirty minutes after Luna slammed Westfall to the ground. About fifteen minutes later, medics arrived, and Roberson went with Westfall to a nearby hospital. In total, less than an hour elapsed between the time Westfall was pinned and the time she was taken to the hospital.

The hospital staff noted that Westfall had numerous abrasions and bruises, bloody urine, high blood pressure, and an increased heart rate. Westfall was released from the hospital, taken to the Keller Police Department, and released on bail later that morning.

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903 F.3d 534, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/constance-westfall-v-jose-luna-ca5-2018.