Cornelius v. City of Andalusia

600 F. Supp. 2d 1209, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15285, 2009 WL 497559
CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Alabama
DecidedFebruary 26, 2009
DocketCase 2:06-CV-312-WKW [WO]
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 600 F. Supp. 2d 1209 (Cornelius v. City of Andalusia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cornelius v. City of Andalusia, 600 F. Supp. 2d 1209, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15285, 2009 WL 497559 (M.D. Ala. 2009).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

W. KEITH WATKINS, District Judge.

Before the court are two motions for summary judgment, one filed by Defendant Keith Kipp (“Officer Kipp”) (Doc. # 71), and the other by Defendant Andy Willis (“Willis”) (Does. # 79). Each motion is accompanied by a brief. (Docs. # 72 & 80.) Plaintiff Randy Cornelius (“Cornelius”) filed a response to Officer Kipp’s motion. (Doc. #82.) The motions are thus ripe for resolution. Based upon careful consideration of the arguments of counsel, the relevant law, and the record as a whole, the motions for summary judgment are due to be granted.

I. JURISDICTION AND VENUE

Subject matter jurisdiction is exercised pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331, 1343(a)(4), and 1367(a). The parties do not contest personal jurisdiction or venue, and there are allegations sufficient to support both.

II. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

A. Factual Background

Cornelius is suing Willis, a private citizen, and Officer Kipp, a game warden, 1 for incidents that occurred the night of November 13, 2004, when the police and Officer Kipp stopped Cornelius on his way back into town after a day of hunting. 2 Cornelius was bow hunting on property he leased outside the City of Andalusia, Alabama. 3 With him was Casey Johnston *1215 (“Johnston”), the son of a longtime customer of Cornelius’s barber shop. Cornelius and Johnston were hunting separately that day. When it was almost dark, Cornelius turned off a public road and onto a road that ran along a sewer-line on the leased property, picked Johnston up, and drove back out toward the public road. 4

On their way back out, Cornelius and Johnston confronted a pick-up truck positioned near the intersection of the sewer-line right-of-way and the public road. Willis was driving the truck. 5 In his deposition, Cornelius testified that the truck was blocking the right-of-way. (Cornelius Dep. 18-19, Oct. 9, 2008 (Mot. Summ. J. Br. Kipp Ex. 1).) In his words,

I went to pick [Johnston] up, come back out to the road, and there was a car that had me blocked in where I couldn’t get out.
It was a truck, I believe. And it was—had the driveway blocked. I rolled my window down and said, Hey, man what are you doing?
He said, what you doing?
I said I’m hunting; why? He didn’t say nothing. I sit there a little while, and he didn’t never move or anything. So I just pulled down in the ditch and around him. And I got out of the—I stopped the car, and I got out of the car. I was going to walk back there and ask him what was going on, and he just backed further down the road.

(Cornelius Dep. 18, 19-20.) Cornelius then returned to his. car and headed back to town.

Once inside the city limits, the police and Officer Kipp pulled Cornelius over. How he was pulled over is unclear. During his deposition, Cornelius at first testified that he could not remember if ■ the police stopped him by pulling in front or in back of his car. (Cornelius Dep. 96.) After reading an affidavit attached to his notice of claim and executed on December 13, 2004, however, Cornelius recalled that when he was driving back into town, the police cars were blocking the road and facing him. (Cornelius Dep. 113-16.) Cornelius claims that after stopping his car, the police ran up to his car window, pointed a gun at him, told him to get out of the car and to put his hands above his head. 6 (Cornelius Dep. 22.) He asked one officer, who was holding the gun and pointing it to his head, to remove the gun from his face. (Cornelius Dep. 22-23.) Cornelius testified that the officer was shaking his gun. 7 (Cornelius Dep. 22-23.) Cornelius testified that the officers also asked Johnston to get out of the car (Cornelius Dep. 24), though Johnston claims he was never ordered out of the car (Johnston Aff. ¶ 11 (Resp. Ex. 4)). According to Cornelius’s version of events, Officer Kipp then asked Cornelius to step to the back of the car (Cornelius Dep. 25), laid him over' the trunk, put his hands behind him, and handcuffed them (Cornelius Dep. 119). After Cornelius asked why he was being arrested, Officer Kipp told him that he was not being arrested but being detained for poaching. (Cornelius Dep. 25-26.) Cornelius then asked how one could poach on his own land, and told Officer Kipp about his lease to hunt there. (Cornelius Dep. 26.) Officer Kipp made a phone call, and found *1216 out that the land was leased to Cornelius. (Cornelius Dep. 27.) He unclasped Cornelius’s handcuffs, apologized to Cornelius, and allowed him to leave the scene of the stop. (Cornelius Dep. 29.) Thusly, the encounter ended.

At some point during the detention, the police officers or Officer Kipp searched the car even though Cornelius told them he and Johnston had no guns. 8 (Cornelius Dep. 29.) Cornelius stated that the search involved opening doors and looking in the car with flashlights, but that the officers did not get into the car or look under the seats, open the glove compartment, or open the trunk. (Cornelius Dep. 30-31.) Cornelius testified that the detention lasted fifteen to twenty minutes, though “[m]aybe longer[,] ... like two hours[,]” but that he “didn’t know how long it was to be honest.” (Cornelius Dep. 28.) 9

The stop and detention were initiated by a series of phone calls Willis made to Officer Kipp that evening. Officer Kipp and Willis are, in Officer Kipp’s words, “good friends.” (Kipp Dep. 72, Oct. 9, 2Q08 (Mot. Summ. J. Br. Kipp Ex. 2).) They have hunted together in the past, but Officer Kipp testified that he and Willis did not hunt together in the 2004 hunting season on the property near Cornelius’s leased land. (Kipp Dep. 16.)

On November 13, 2004, Willis was hunting on property across the road from the sewer-line right-of-way. When he finished hunting and was driving away, he noticed a car turning left onto the sewer-line road. 10 (Willis Dep. 25, Oct. 9, 2008 (Mot. Summ. J. Br. Willis Ex. 4).) The car he observed drove around a curve and out of sight. (Willis Dep. 28.) Willis then called Officer Kipp and told him that a suspicious car had turned onto the right-of-way. 11 (Willis Dep.

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Bluebook (online)
600 F. Supp. 2d 1209, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15285, 2009 WL 497559, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cornelius-v-city-of-andalusia-almd-2009.