Daulatzai v. State of Maryland

CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedJune 9, 2022
Docket1:21-cv-00590
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Daulatzai v. State of Maryland, (D. Md. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF MARYLAND DR. ANILA DAULATZAI, * Plaintiff,

Vv. * CIVIL NO. JKB-21-0590 STATE OF MARYLAND, et al, * Defendants. * * * * * te * * * * * * MEMORANDUM . □ This case arises from Plaintiff's removal from a flight operated by Defendant Southwest ~ Airlines Co. (“Southwest”) in September 2017. Plaintiff has sought leave to file a Third Amended Complaint. (See ECF Nos. 55, 59.) In her proposed Third Amended Complaint, Plaintiff again brings claims against Southwest, the State of Maryland (““Maryland,” and collectively with

Southwest, “Defendants”), and now seeks to also bring claims against the five individual officers (the “Officer Defendants”) who were involved in her allegedly unlawful removal from the Southwest flight and subsequent detention. (See Third Am. Compl. (“TAC”) at 1, ECF No. 55-2.) Defendants oppose amendment on numerous grounds, including Plaintiffs failure to. meet the standard set by Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b) and that many of the factors bearing on amendment under-Rule 15 disfavor amendment. (See generally ECF No. 60.) The Motion is fully briefed, and no hearing is required. See Local Rule 105.6 (D. Md. 2021). For the following reasons, a separate Order shall issue denying Plaintiff's Motion for Leave to file a Third Amended Complaint! (ECF Nos. 55, 59).

The presently pending’ Motion was originally styled as a Motion for Relief from the Court’s August 26, 2021 Opinion and Order, an Opportunity to be Heard on Judicially Notice Facts, and Leave to Amend. (See ECF No. 55.) The other

L Factual Background’ On September 26, 2017, Plaintiff was ticketed to fly on Southwest Airlines Flight 1525 from Baltimore to Los Angeles, a flight she took routinely to care for her father. (TAC 9 11-12.) Before boarding the flight, Plaintiff noticed several dogs in the waiting area and asked a Southwest agent how many dogs would be on her flight. (id. 13, 15.) Plaintiff, who “has an allergy to dogs that, at its most extreme, causes itchy eyes and a runny nose,” was informed that only one dog would be on the flight and that it would be seated near the front of the plane. Ud. J 14-15.) To avoid aggravating her allergies, Plaintiff “took a seat near the rear of the aircraft,” where she was informed by a flight attendant that there were, in fact, two dogs on the flight, but that both were seated near the front of the aircraft. Ud. 16-17.) Plaintiff told the flight attendant that this was not problematic because although “she has a dog allergy, but it is not a serious one.” (Ud. | 17 (emphasis added); ef Second Am. Compl. (“SAC”) § 15 (“[Plaintiff] responded that she has a dog allergy, but it is not a life-threatening one.”) (emphasis added), ECF No. 40.)

Shortly thereafter, another flight attendant approached Plaintiff and informed her “that, in the event that she needed an EpiPen, there was one on board the plane.” (TAC { 18.) Plaintiff thanked the flight attendant but reiterated that her allergy was “not that severe and shared that she had never needed to use an EpiPen.” (/d.) Various other Southwest personnel followed up with Plaintiff about her allergy, “and each time she reiterated that her allergy was not a serious one.”

relief sought was denied by prior Memorandum and Order of this Court. (See ECF No. 56.) Accordingly, for brevity and clarity, the Court refers to currently pending Motion as a Motion for Leave to File a Third Amended Complaint, * The facts in this Section are largely the same as those described in the Court’s Memorandum dismissing Plaintiffs Second Amended Complaint, though Plaintiff makes additional allegations regarding her initial interaction with Captain Medeiros as well as more specific allegations regarding her removal from the flight and subsequent detention. (Compare generally TAC, with ECF No. 45.) Although the Court ultimately denies leave to amend, it discusses the Pgations in the Third Amended Complaint because those are the operative allegations for its futility analysis in Part

2 .

(id. (emphasis added); ¢f SAC { 16 (“each time she reiterated that her allergy was not □□□□□ threatening”) (emphasis added).)

Plaintiff was then approached by “an older gentleman [she] subsequently learned was an MDTA police officer (and believes to be included among the Officer Defendants)” who asked if she had a food allergy. (TAC 7 19.) Plaintiff attempted to clarify that she had a dog allergy, but the officer insisted that various people told him that she had a food allergy and “that he had been □ called to discuss her food allergies.” (/d.) After Plaintiff requested to speak to whoever informed the officer that she had a food allergy, he returned with Captain Darren Medeiros (the “Captain”), who immediately told Plaintiff, “I do not feel comfortable with you on this plane.” (Ud. J] 20-21.) Plaintiff tried to explain to the Captain that “she did not have any food allergy and her dog allergy [was] not a serious one,” and that «she was her sick father’s primary caretaker and needed to be in Los Angeles the following morning.” (/d. | 22 (emphasis added); cf SAC J 19 (“She also reiterated that... her dog allergies are not life threatening.”) (emphasis added).) While the Captain “acknowledged that [Plaintiff] did not have a food allergy” he “continued to assert without any further explanation that he did not feel comfortable with her on the plane [due to his understanding that] she had a ‘life threatening’ dog allergy.” (TAC 7 22.) The Captain further informed Plaintiff “that he had already summoned additional police officers to escort her from the plane.” (Id. 23.) Plaintiff implored the Captain “‘to reconsider and directly asked him to ‘call off the police.” During this conversation, the officer who previously spoke to Plaintiff advised the Captain, “] think [Plaintiff] knows her allergy better than we do. If she says it’s not life-threatening and she flies often, why don’t we just go?” (id) Apparently agreeing with this suggestion, “[t]he

3 This entire paragraph is not alleged in Plaintiffs Second Amended Complaint, which instead alleges that Captain Medeiros did not acknowledge Plaintiff’s explanation of her allergy or attempt to call off the officers but rather immediately requested that additional officers remove Plaintiff from the flight. (See SAC Jf 19-21.)

Captain said he would try to ‘call off the other police officers and then walked to the rear of the aircraft, where he appeared to call or radio someone else.” (/d.) Plaintiff next alleges that, notwithstanding this conversation, “at the insistence of the

_ Captain and other airline personnel, additional MDTA police officers, including, but not limited to, Officers McLhinney and Mossman, came aboard the aircraft and forcibly removed [her] from the plane without her consent and without probable cause[.]” (/d. at 25.) Specifically, she alleges that two MDTA police officers “began lifting [Plaintiff] out of her seat by her belt loops.” (Ud. J 26.) Plaintiff, who was pregnant with her first child and concerned “about her health and that of her unborn child[,] immediately informed [them] that she was pregnant and . . . would walk off the aircraft by herself” (dd. {| 27.) Despite this, the officers “physically grabbed □□□ dragged/pushed [Plaintiff] from the plane.” (/d. J 30.) Plaintiff alleges that the officers who removed her from the flight commented that “she looked like ‘some sort of teacher’ and said that she was ‘going to learn a lesson today’” and then “high fived” each other after successfully removing Plaintiff from the flight. (See id.

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