Cooper v. Lister

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Alabama
DecidedJanuary 13, 2023
Docket1:21-cv-00324
StatusUnknown

This text of Cooper v. Lister (Cooper v. Lister) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cooper v. Lister, (S.D. Ala. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF ALABAMA SOUTHERN DIVISION

RANDOLPH CLAY COOPER, ) an Individual, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) vs. ) CIVIL ACTION NO.: 1:21-cv-00324-C ) SHAWN LUCAS LISTER, an Individual; ) AARON GLASS, an Individual; ZACH ) KUIKEN, an Individual; and the TOWN ) OF LOXLEY, ALABAMA, ) ) Defendants. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER1

This matter is before the Court on the Motion for Summary Judgment filed by the Defendants Shawn Lucas Lister, Aaron Glass, Zach Kuiken (the “Defendant officers”), and the Town of Loxley, Alabama (Doc. 51). The parties have filed briefs and evidentiary materials in support of their respective positions (Doc. 52, 53, 54, 58, 59, 60, 61, and 64), including bodycam videos which the court has reviewed (Doc. 54, 61). The Court heard oral argument from the parties on November 29, 2022. The motion is ripe for review. After careful consideration of the parties' briefs and arguments, the Court grants the Defendants' motion for summary judgment. I. Nature of Lawsuit The Plaintiff Randolph Clay Cooper (“Clay”) filed this lawsuit on July 22, 2021, seeking damages under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for alleged violation of his constitutional rights arising out of his arrest by Defendants, Lister, Glass and Kuiken on May 27, 2020 and against the Town of Loxley

1 Upon consent of the parties, this action has been referred to the undersigned to conduct all proceedings, including trial, entry of a final judgment and post-judgment proceedings pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §636(c) and Fed.R.Civ.P. 73. See Docs 22 & 23. for an alleged deliberate policy or custom of indifference in failing to train and/or supervise its officers (Doc. 2). The last amended complaint, filed on March 22, 2022, contains a first cause of action against the Defendant officers for violation of his Fourth Amended rights arising out of his arrest on May 27, 2020 and a second cause of action against Defendant Kuiken for violation of his Fourth Amendment rights for malicious prosecution leading to a grand jury indictment and his

subsequent arrest on May 24, 2021, for theft of hay (Doc. 36). In the second cause of action the Plaintiff has merged this malicious prosecution claim with a claim against the Town of Loxley, alleging that the actions of the Defendant officers resulted from deficiencies in the training and supervision of those officers and from a deliberate policy of indifference by the Town to the need for such training and supervision with the knowledge of on-going civil litigation between Clay and his siblings. (Doc. 36, ¶ 37, PageID.117). On April 5, 2022, the Defendants answered the Plaintiff's last amended complaint asserting qualified immunity, among other defenses (Doc. 39, PageID.126). Defendants filed a motion for summary judgment on September 16, 2022 (Docs. 51, 52 & 53).

II. Findings of Fact A. Record Ownership of 10.1-Acre Parcel Where Trespass Occurred 1. David Bonner (“David”) and Rebecca Anne Bonner ("Becky") are the record title owners of a 10.1-acre parcel, located at 19540 County Road 64 in Baldwin County, Alabama. Becky and David acquired this parcel from Becky’s mother, Carol Evans Cooper (“Carol”), who conveyed it to them in her capacity as trustee of the Carol Evans Cooper Revocable Living Trust (the "Carol RLT") by quitclaim deed recorded on March 10, 2011, reserving to herself a life estate (Doc. 52-8, PageID.220). The legal description was subsequently corrected by a Scrivener’s Affidavit recorded on November 29, 2011. (Doc. 52-9, PageID.222). This 10.1-acre parcel had been carved out of a larger 110-acre parcel (the “Farm Property”), which had been earlier conveyed to the Carol RLT by Carol, as personal representative of the estate of her husband, Nolan P. Cooper, Jr. (“Nolan, Jr.”) (Doc. 52-5, PageID.176-77). 2. As shown in the record, and as confirmed by counsel at the hearing on the motion for summary judgment, it is undisputed that this 10.1-acre parcel was the property on which Clay was

operating a tractor and on which he was arrested for trespass by the Defendant officers on May 27, 2020. (Deposition of Clay Cooper at 23:2-17) (Doc. 60-9, PageID.1031). It is also undisputed that this was the property from which Clay took certain hay bales, leading to his indictment and subsequent arrest on May 24, 2021, for theft of hay. 3. The 10.1-acre parcel deeded to Becky and David included a residence where Carol and her husband, Nolan, Jr., had lived and raised their three children, Becky, Clay, and Garland Terrance Cooper (“Terry”) (Deposition of Rebecca Bonner at 52:16-22) (Doc. 52-10, PageID.235). At the time of the conveyance in 2011, Carol was still living on the 10.1-acre parcel. Because she was sick, David and Becky had moved in to take care of her. (Rebecca Bonner at

49:19-21) (Doc. 52-10, PageID.232). B. Clay’s 2012 and 2015 Litigation Challenging Title 4. Following his mother’s death in April of 2012, Clay began filing lawsuits in state court against his siblings, Becky and Terry, claiming that certain assets of Nolan, Jr.'s estate, including the 10.1-acre parcel, should have been placed in a unified credit trust created in his father's will (hereinafter the “Nolan UCT"). Carol was the trustee and sole beneficiary of the Nolan UCT during her lifetime and upon her death any remaining trust assets were distributable in equal shares to Nolan Jr.'s children, Becky, Clay and Terry (Doc. 52-4, PageID.167-68). Clay complained that these assets, instead of being placed in the Nolan UCT, were conveyed by his mother Carol, as personal representative of Nolan, Jr.'s estate, to herself or to the Carol RLT, under which the trust assets were distributable to Becky and Terry, but not to him. See Carol RLT, Art. I (Doc. 52-6, PageID.196). 5. Clay’s 2012 and 2015 lawsuits are described in the November 16, 2018, decision of the Alabama Supreme Court in Cooper v. Cooper, 279 So. 3d 561 (Ala. 2018), reh’g denied

(Ala. Jan. 4, 2019). (Doc. 52-11, PageID.247-252). In 2012, following his mother’s death in April of 2012, Clay sued Becky, Terry, David, and Diane Porter, an attorney and accountant, alleging that, at Becky's direction, his mother Carol reopened Nolan, Jr.'s estate in 2008 and wrongfully transferred property, including property that should have been in the Nolan UCT, to herself or to the Carol RLT. Id. at 563, PageID.248. Clay sought a full accounting of all assets "held by [Mr. Cooper's] trust or rightfully belonging to [that trust], including those which already have been dissipated, transferred or sold." Id., PageID.248-249 (brackets in original). He also sought a judgment "requiring that one-third of the assets which should have funded [Mr. Cooper's trust], but which were instead diverted to the Carol Cooper Revocable Trust(s), and thereafter to Becky

and [Becky's husband], be distributed to [Clay] (and likewise to Terry)." Id., PageID.249 (brackets and parenthetical in original). Finally, he sought a judgment "ordering the partition and sale, or alternatively the equitable distribution of [Mr. Cooper's trust] assets, in accordance with the Nolan Cooper will and [Mr. Cooper's trust]." Id. (brackets in original). The circuit court entered a summary judgment without opinion in favor of the defendants, and on appeal, the judgment was unanimously affirmed by the Alabama Court of Civil Appeals without opinion on September 12, 2014. Id. (citing Cooper v. Bonner, 190 So. 3d 60 (Ala. Civ. App. 2014) (table)). 6. The opinion in Cooper v.

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Cooper v. Lister, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooper-v-lister-alsd-2023.