Cynthia Easley, Individually and as Administrator of the Estate of Christopher B. Easley v. David Kirmsee

382 F.3d 693, 59 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 699, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 18281, 2004 WL 1920796
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedAugust 30, 2004
Docket03-1421
StatusPublished
Cited by110 cases

This text of 382 F.3d 693 (Cynthia Easley, Individually and as Administrator of the Estate of Christopher B. Easley v. David Kirmsee) 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.

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Cynthia Easley, Individually and as Administrator of the Estate of Christopher B. Easley v. David Kirmsee, 382 F.3d 693, 59 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 699, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 18281, 2004 WL 1920796 (7th Cir. 2004).

Opinion

COFFEY, Circuit Judge.

Cynthia Easley appeals the district court’s denial of her motion under Fed. R.Civ.P. 60(b) to vacate its grant of summary judgment against her in an action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against four Wisconsin local governmental units and a number of their respective police officers. We affirm.

I. Background

A Geneva Township, Wisconsin, police officer, David Kirmsee, shot and killed Christopher Easley on October 26, 2000. The unfortunate incident occurred when Officer Kirmsee (and the other named defendant officers) responded to a call placed by Cynthia Easley asking for police help with her eighteen-year-old son, Christopher, whom Easley reported had just left her house brandishing a knife and bleeding profusely from self-inflicted knife wounds. Easley advised police that Christopher was both emotionally disturbed and intoxicated. Kirmsee and the other law enforcement officers who responded came upon Christopher, knife in hand, in the middle of a residential neighborhood. Kirmsee drew his weapon and attempted to convince Christopher to surrender, but the boy refused to drop the knife and instead raised the knife threateningly and advanced on *695 Kirmsee. Initially Kirmsee attempted to retreat, but was forced to hold his ground when he discovered that he was on uneven and unfamiliar terrain, without a known route or path of escape. When Christopher continued to advance, and continued to ignore warnings to stop and drop the knife, Kirmsee fired his weapon at Christopher and hit him in the chest, fatally injuring him.

After a lengthy inquest, a jury finding absolved Kirmsee of wrongdoing in the shooting. The decedent’s mother, Cynthia Easley, in spite of this finding, filed suit on behalf of herself and Christopher’s estate on September 14, 2001, alleging that Kirm-see violated her son Christopher’s Fourth Amendment -right to' be free from unreasonable seizures by use of excessive force in apprehending him, and also alleging that the remaining officer-defendants failed to intervene to prevent Kirmsee’s alleged use of excessive force, and furthermore that the four defendant local governmental units failed to train their officers properly to apprehend the young man without the use of excessive force.

After the parties voluntarily exchanged initial discovery, the court held a scheduling conference on December 11, 2001, and announced its pretrial schedule. At the conference, both parties agreed that, because ,of the extensive jury inquest, resulting in a transcript of some thousand pages consisting of testimony as well as forensic materials relevant to the shooting incident, both parties had thus garnered much of the necessary information that would normally be received through discovery. With this in mind, the court ordered an abbreviated discovery schedule focusing on the disclosure of expert witnesses: Easley was ordered to disclose her experts by July 1, 2002, and the defendants were to disclose their experts by August 1, 2002. The court further designated August 15, 2002 as the deadline for filing dispositive motions and ordered that the discovery of all expert witnesses be completed by September 1, 2002, and that all remaining discovery be completed by December 1, 2002.

Easley’s discovery schedule did not proceed as expeditiously as previously planned and agreed upon. After making her required initial disclosures, Easley did nothing further in relation to discovery until the court’s July 1, 2002 deadline for disclosure of expert witnesses came and passed. . The day after, on July 2, 2002, Easley moved to extend the deadline to August 15, 2002 for the disclosure of her experts. The court granted Easley’s belated request, but only “as to those experts not needed in connection with any anticipated dispositive motions to be filed on August 15, 2002.” The court further ordered that its original scheduling order was to remain in full force and effect in all other respects.

The defendants complied and filed motions for summary judgment within .the court-ordered due date, August 15, 2002. Easley also filed a brief (three-page) motion for summary judgment that same date, but her motion papers were barren of any argument — much less any proposed findings of fact — in support of her Fourth Amendment claim. 1 On August 15 Easley *696 also disclosed her expert, Dr. George Kirk-ham, but failed to include any report or statement of facts or any opinion by Dr. Kirkham with her disclosure as mandated in the court’s scheduling order. Not surprisingly, on September 16, 2002, she moved for additional time to complete the discovery of expert witnesses so that the defendants could depose Dr. Kirkham. The court denied Easley’s motion to reset the discovery schedule, but did allow her until October 1, 2002 to file Dr. Kirkham’s report, and until October 7, 2002 to make the doctor available for a deposition. The court further ordered that all discovery of experts must be completed by November 15, 2002, and that the court’s original scheduling order was in all other respects to remain in full force and effect.

Easley, however, never did file a response to the defendants’ summary judgment motions (local rule mandated the response within thirty days), and on November 26, 2002 (more than two months after the response due date), the court granted summary judgment to the defendants. The court noted Easley’s failure to file a response, adopted the defendants’ findings of fact, and ruled on the merits of defendants’ (unopposed) motions, holding that Easley failed to establish that Kirmsee’s use of force was unreasonable, and, furthermore, that she also failed to prove that the four local government entities’ officers were inadequately trained.

Easley filed a motion to reconsider on December 26, 2002, arguing that the court’s grant of summary judgment to the defendants was improper because the parties had not completed discovery. Easley posited that, when the court granted extensions on discovery, it implicitly extended the date for responding to dispositive motions. Easley also attached to her motion transcripts of the jury inquest and transcripts of the expert depositions that the parties had taken after the deadline for filing dispositive motions had passed. Easley argued that the documents she submitted demonstrated disputed issues of fact that precluded the entry of summary judgment. Easley did in this instance partially support her arguments with citations, but only as to the jury inquest, and not as to the experts’ depositions.

The court denied Easley’s motion, ruling that she failed to present an adequate excuse for neglecting to file a response to the defendants’ motions for summary judgment, nor any other grounds under Fed.R.Civ.P. 60 “to persuade the court” to reopen the case. 2

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382 F.3d 693, 59 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 699, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 18281, 2004 WL 1920796, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cynthia-easley-individually-and-as-administrator-of-the-estate-of-ca7-2004.