Coralynn White v. Joseph Fitzpatrick

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedNovember 26, 2018
Docket18-1741
StatusUnpublished

This text of Coralynn White v. Joseph Fitzpatrick (Coralynn White v. Joseph Fitzpatrick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coralynn White v. Joseph Fitzpatrick, (7th Cir. 2018).

Opinion

NONPRECEDENTIAL DISPOSITION To be cited only in accordance with Fed. R. App. P. 32.1

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit Chicago, Illinois 60604

Argued September 13, 2018 Decided November 26, 2018

Before

JOEL M. FLAUM, Circuit Judge

DANIEL A. MANION, Circuit Judge

ILANA DIAMOND ROVNER, Circuit Judge

No. 18-1741

CORALYNN E. WHITE, Appeal from the United States District Plaintiff-Appellant, Court for the Southern District of Illinois. v. No. 3:17-cv-00087 JOSEPH JAMES FITZPATRICK, et al., Defendants-Appellees. J. Phil Gilbert, Judge.

ORDER

Coralynn White was charged with battery, but a jury found her not guilty. She asserts that Officer Thomas Wuest and Sergeant Mark Berndsen of the Breese, Illinois, Police Department falsely charged her with assaulting Joseph Fitzpatrick, the father of her child, to bolster Fitzpatrick’s position in a custody hearing. White further alleges that Fitzpatrick, his wife Amber, and their neighbor, Jay Staser, conspired with the officers. White brought a Section 1983 action against the officers, the City of Breese, Fitzpatrick, Amber, and Staser asserting violations of the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments. She also brought various state law claims against the individual defendants (including claims for malicious prosecution and false arrest) and a Monell claim against the City of Breese. No. 18-1741 Page 2

The district court granted summary judgment in favor of defendants, and White appeals. For the reasons stated below, we affirm. I. White and Fitzpatrick had a child together and lived together for a brief time after the child was born, though they were never married to each other. In June 2015, White had primary custody of their then-six-year-old child, G.F., who visited Fitzpatrick every other weekend. The couple had custody disputes at various times including in June 2015. On Sunday, June 7, 2015, White had to drive to Fitzpatrick’s home to pick up G.F., who had been visiting his father that weekend. Originally, because they lived some distance from each other, Fitzpatrick and White agreed that he would meet her at a gas station about 30 minutes from his home in Breese, Illinois. Fitzpatrick, however, lied to White stating he could not meet White because he did not have a car seat for their son because Amber was not home. White was mad that she had to drive over an hour to Fitzpatrick’s home. What happened after White arrived at Fitzpatrick’s home is in dispute. According to White, shortly after she entered the home, Fitzpatrick said, “Are you ready for this?” and struck her in the side of the head, knocking her to the foyer floor. Fitzpatrick then pinned her to the floor and began screaming that White had cut him with a razor. White contends that she did not cut Fitzpatrick and that his wounds were self-inflicted. While she did not see him cut himself, she saw blood dripping around her while Fitzpatrick held her face- down on the floor. At some point she saw Amber, G.F., and a little girl run through the house. According to Fitzpatrick, when White came into his home, he yelled for G.F., who was in his bedroom, saying that his mom was there. White then “started running her mouth” about the pick-up schedule change and the court custody dispute. Next, she started hitting Fitzpatrick, and Fitzpatrick then noticed that he was bleeding. Once he realized that he had been cut, Fitzpatrick called to Amber, who was in the other room, and told her to get the kids out of the house and call 911. (In addition to G.F., there were two other children in the house: Amber’s daughter and Amber and Fitzpatrick’s daughter.) Fitzpatrick asserts that he struck White in the jaw in self-defense, knocking her to the ground. When he jumped on top of her, he noticed a knife in her hand and pushed it out, though he was unsure if he touched it. Amber ran next door to Jay and Jaime Staser’s house to get help and made a frantic call to 911 reporting that White had cut Fitzpatrick and said that she was going to kill him. Amber also asked the 911 dispatcher to send an ambulance. Jay Staser, in turn, ran No. 18-1741 Page 3

to the Fitzpatricks’ home, where he found that Fitzpatrick had been stabbed and White was on the floor screaming, “I will kill you!” Staser then helped Fitzpatrick restrain White until the police came. Officer Thomas Wuest of the Breese Police Department was contacted by 911 dispatch that there was an active, physical domestic incident. Dispatch also advised that the “stepmother” had a knife inside the house. This was not the first time Wuest was at the Fitzpatricks’ home; Wuest had responded to an earlier domestic disturbance call involving Fitzpatrick and Amber at their home. When Wuest arrived, Staser poked his head out of the front door and told him to hurry up and get inside. Wuest entered the home to find the foyer and Fitzpatrick covered in blood, Fitzpatrick and Staser pinning White to the floor, and Fitzpatrick yelling that White had stabbed him. Fitzpatrick had blood gushing from a wound in his arm, and White had blood on her face and on her shirt. In an attempt to secure the scene, Wuest handcuffed White, who was screaming, and took her to the curb where he left her with a Clinton County deputy. While Wuest took White outside, Fitzpatrick and Staser stayed in the house by themselves for thirty seconds to two minutes while Fitzpatrick tended to his wounds. Wuest also called for backup and asked dispatch to call his supervisor, Sergeant Mark Berndsen, to come to the scene because of the seriousness of the situation. Shortly thereafter, Berndsen, who was off-duty at the time, arrived. He saw White sitting on the curb and noticed that while she had blood on her face and shirt, she was not bleeding. Berndsen then went into the house where he listened as Fitzpatrick talked with Wuest and a deputy about what happened. Emergency medical personnel responded as well and treated Fitzpatrick at the scene for the multiple wounds to his face, neck, chest, and arm. Fitzpatrick was later treated at a nearby emergency room where he received five stitches in a wound near his collarbone and five staples in a wound in his arm. Wuest briefed Berndsen on the situation and then returned to the house where he took photographs of the scene and Fitzpatrick and collected a small wooden-handled pocket knife into evidence. (The knife had no visible blood on it.1) He also photographed White as she sat outside on the curb. There is conflicting deposition testimony in the record

1 On June 8, 2015, the day after the confrontation, G.F. told Berndsen that the knife was his and that his father had given it to him. G.F. stated that he did not have the knife at his father’s house that weekend and that he normally kept it in a “junk drawer” at his mother’s house. It is unclear from the record whether Berndsen spoke to G.F. about the knife before or after issuing his statement of probable cause. In July 2015, the knife was sent to the Illinois State Police forensic lab for testing which showed no blood or fingerprints. No. 18-1741 Page 4

about when the knife was discovered. Wuest testified at his deposition in this case that he saw the knife against the foyer wall while he was handcuffing White before removing her from the house, whereas Staser testified that he first saw the knife when one of the officers pointed it out after White had been taken out of the house. While Wuest gathered evidence, Berndsen called the State’s Attorney from the scene to ask whether they should take Fitzpatrick’s shirt into evidence. According to Berndsen, the State’s Attorney asked him what the shirt “was gonna prove,” to which he responded that it had Fitzpatrick’s blood on it.

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Coralynn White v. Joseph Fitzpatrick, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coralynn-white-v-joseph-fitzpatrick-ca7-2018.