D'Agastino v. City of Warren

75 F. App'x 990
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 24, 2003
DocketNo. 01-4357
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 75 F. App'x 990 (D'Agastino v. City of Warren) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
D'Agastino v. City of Warren, 75 F. App'x 990 (6th Cir. 2003).

Opinion

BATCHELDER, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff-appellant Hans D’Agastino appeals from the district court’s order granting summary judgment in favor of defendant-appellee Officer Richard Kovach, of the City of Warren Police Department, in this action brought pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and state law, seeking damages for Kovach’s alleged use of excessive force. On appeal, D’Agastino argues that the district court erred in its application of the doctrine of qualified immunity by deciding that the force used by Officer Kovach was reasonable and therefore no constitutional violation had occurred. Because we conclude that a reasonable fact-finder viewing the facts in a light most favorable to D’Agastino could conclude that the force used by Kovach was not objectively reasonable, we will reverse the judgment of [991]*991the district court and remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion.

BACKGROUND

Procedural History

This case arises from the defendant’s forceful arrest of D’Agastino on June 14, 2000, and the injuries D’Agastino suffered incident to that arrest. D’Agastino brought a two-count complaint against Kovach and the City of Warren; the first count, brought under section 1983, claimed that Officer Kovach used excessive and unreasonable force to arrest him, which caused him severe mental, emotional, and physical injuries; the second count raised the state law claim that Officer Kovach maliciously assaulted and battered him through the use of excessive force without legal justification. Officer Kovach and the City of Warren both moved for summary judgment on both counts. The district court granted the City’s motion as to the section 1983 claim, noting that D’Agastino had conceded that he had no evidence to support a finding of liability on the part of the City. The district court granted the City’s motion as to the state law claim on grounds of state law immunity. Finding no issues of material fact, the district court granted summary judgment to Officer Kovach on the section 1983 claim because his use of force during the arrest was objectively reasonable and therefore did not violate the Constitution; the court granted Kovach’s motion on the state law claim because Kovach’s actions during the arrest were not reckless, wanton or malicious, or taken in bad faith, and Kovach was therefore entitled to immunity under state law. D’Agastino timely appealed to this court, challenging the grant of summary judgment to Officer Kovach on both the section 1983 and the state law claims.

Factual History

Officer Kovach’s arrest of D’Agastino at approximately 9:00 p.m. on June 14, 2000, for disorderly conduct while intoxicated was the culmination of several events that occurred throughout the day. That morning, D’Agastino had been involved in a three-car accident in the City of Niles. He was taken to Trumbull Memorial Hospital where, complaining of pain in his neck and back, he was given a CAT scan, MRI, and blood tests, and released around 4:00 p.m. Immediately upon his release, the county sheriff arrested and booked him for failing to appear in court for a required hearing stemming from a previous incident in Niles. He posted bail and proceeded directly to Joe and Kay’s bar in Warren to begin — in his own words — drinking “enough to kill somebody” in less than an hour.1

While still at Joe and Kay’s bar, D’Agastino began making “suggestions” to “everybody in the bar” about his desire to commit suicide; he then pulled out a Bowie knife and began shaving his forearm. Leaving the bar, he started back to Trumbull Memorial Hospital in order to admit himself, but turned around and entered another bar, where he told the bartender that he wanted an ambulance. Emergency Medical Services and the police arrived and took D’Agastino back to Trumbull Memorial Hospital, where, as he was being processed in the emergency room, he was apparently told to strip down to his underwear and turn over his valuables. According to D’Agastino, he stood around in the emergency room lobby in his underwear for twenty minutes before deciding “to hell with it,” and running out of the hospital.

D’Agastino admits to running into the street, disrupting traffic, and forcing one driver to swerve his vehicle to avoid hitting [992]*992him. The police received reports of this activity from both the hospital and the driver of the vehicle, whereupon the police dispatcher sent two messages about D’Agastino to the officers on patrol. The first dispatch advised the officers that a white male in his fifties and wearing only green underwear had escaped from Trumbull Memorial Hospital. The second advised that a citizen had called and complained that this same man had attempted to get inside of the caller’s truck by pounding on the window. The dispatcher also told the officers that the subject was HIV positive.

Officer Kovach was the first one to arrive at the scene. At this point in the story, D’Agastino’s version of events differs somewhat from Officer Kovach’s. After spotting D’Agastino, Officer Kovach claims that he got out of his marked cruiser and told D’Agastino to stop, and that D’Agastino began running towards him and yelling that he wanted to die. D’Agastino, however, claims he began running away from Officer Kovach. Regardless, both agree that the two met in the middle of the road where Officer Kovach hit D’Agastino once in the leg with a police baton, and D’Agastino fell face-forward toward the ground. According to D’Agastino, he broke his fall with one outstretched arm and Officer Kovach repeatedly slammed his face into the pavement, Knocking out his teeth and fracturing his jaw. D’Agastino admits to accidentally spitting blood at Kovach, but only after the ambulance arrived and the medical personnel had helped him to his feet.

Officer Kovach, on the other hand, claims that before D’Agastino fell, Kovach hit him for a second time with the baton, this time in the shoulder area, causing D’Agastino to become limp and fall face-first onto the pavement, injuring his face and jaw. Officer Kovach claims he handcuffed D’Agastino without any difficulty, but then the plaintiff began spitting blood at Officer Kovach and saying he wanted to die. Moments later, a patrol car from the Braceville police department arrived on the scene and used its overhead lights to alert the other cars driving in the vicinity of the plaintiff and defendant.

D’Agastino was eventually taken to Trumbull Memorial Hospital, where he was diagnosed with a compound comminuted alveolar fracture of the maxilla, a compound comminuted fracture of the left side of the mandible, a compound fracture of the symphysis of the mandible, a displaced fracture of the left mandibular condyle, a probable fracture of the right mandible condyle, a four to five centimeter laceration of the chin through and through, four one to two centimeter lacerations of the lateral borders of the tongue, and multiple teeth fractures and upper teeth crushed into his sinuses. D’Agastino’s lawsuit seeks compensation for these injuries, which he claims Officer Kovach caused by his repeated use of excessive force once D’Agastino had been knocked to the ground. The plaintiff concedes that the use of the police baton was reasonable under the circumstances that evening.

ANALYSIS

Standard of Review

We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo, using the same standard under Rule 56(c) used by the district court, Williams v. Mehra,

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Bluebook (online)
75 F. App'x 990, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dagastino-v-city-of-warren-ca6-2003.