Diane Cook v. City of Bella Villa

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedOctober 2, 2009
Docket08-2712
StatusPublished

This text of Diane Cook v. City of Bella Villa (Diane Cook v. City of Bella Villa) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Diane Cook v. City of Bella Villa, (8th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT ___________

No. 08-2712 ___________

Diane Cook; Michael Cook, * * Appellants, * * Appeal from the United States v. * District Court for the Eastern * District of Missouri. City of Bella Villa; Chief of Police * Edward Locke, Jr., in his individual * capacity, * * Appellees. * __________

Submitted: April 16, 2009 Filed: October 2, 2009 ___________

Before RILEY, BENTON, and SHEPHERD, Circuit Judges. ___________

RILEY, Circuit Judge.

Diane Cook (Diane) and Michael Cook (Michael) (collectively, Cooks), filed suit against Chief of Police Edward Locke Jr. (Chief Locke) and the City of Bella Villa (City) (collectively, Appellees) for alleged federal civil rights violations. The Cooks included supplemental state law claims against Chief Locke for malicious prosecution and indecent assault and battery, and against the City on a theory of respondeat superior. The Cooks voluntarily dismissed their state law respondeat superior claims against the City. Appellees filed a motion for summary judgment on the Cooks’ remaining claims. The district court1 granted summary judgment in part, leaving only three claims for the jury to consider. The Cooks did not pursue the one remaining state law claim, indecent assault and battery. During the jury trial, at the close of all the evidence, the district court granted judgment as a matter of law on the Cooks’ municipal liability claim. The jury then found for Chief Locke on the remaining claim that Chief Locke, in violation of the Fourth Amendment, improperly touched Diane. The Cooks now assert seven errors. We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND A. Factual Background On August 26, 2005, Diane and her husband, Michael, joined two friends, Elizabeth Walkmaster (Walkmaster) and Brenda Markley (Markley), to celebrate Diane’s birthday. Diane drove her mother’s car; Diane and Michael picked up Walkmaster and Markley; and the four arrived at K.C.’s Bar and Grill (K.C.’s) at approximately 7:00 p.m.2 Diane claims she had two beers while seated at the bar, and then she had a third beer with dinner. Michael drank only Pepsi that evening, but he did take prescription medications, including an inhaler, Vicodin, and Robaxin. Walkmaster consumed two white Russians, and Markley consumed four to six rum and Cokes and considered herself to be “drunk.”

“[A] little before midnight,” Diane, Michael, Walkmaster, and Markley decided to leave K.C.’s because Walkmaster, who had been diagnosed with a terminal brain tumor, was not feeling well. Upon leaving K.C.’s, Diane drove, Walkmaster was seated in the front passenger seat, Michael was seated in the rear passenger seat

1 The Honorable Stephen N. Limbaugh, Sr., United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Missouri, now retired. 2 Markley stated in her deposition that Markley’s husband dropped Markley off at K.C.’s, where she waited about two hours for Diane, Michael, and Walkmaster to arrive.

-2- behind Walkmaster, and Markley sat in the rear passenger seat behind Diane. After stopping for gas, followed by a trip home for money, and a purchase of cigarettes, Diane drove towards Walkmaster’s home. Diane usually avoids driving in Bella Villa because the City has a “reputation” for being a “speed trap.” On this occasion, Diane claims she was in a hurry to get Walkmaster home, so Diane decided to drive through Bella Villa.

Diane proceeded west on Bayless Avenue, stopped at a light near the entrance to Highway 55, and noticed a patrol car had pulled behind her. The officer was Chief Locke, whom neither Diane nor Michael had ever met. Chief Locke claims he was monitoring traffic at 3955 Bayless Avenue when he saw a vehicle, driving in the fast lane, cross over the double yellow street lines three times. Diane denies crossing over the street lines. Chief Locke activated his patrol car’s lights and sirens, and pulled Diane over on Highway 55. Chief Locke parked behind the vehicle Diane was driving, approached the driver’s side of the vehicle, and asked Diane for her driver’s license and insurance card.

Diane produced her driver’s license, but could not locate the insurance card in her mother’s car. After Diane searched for a period of time, Chief Locke stated, “Don’t worry about the [insurance] card.” Chief Locke then asked Diane if she had been drinking. Diane “sarcastically” replied she was “working on 32 ounces of Diet Pepsi,” although Diane understood Chief Locke was inquiring whether Diane had consumed alcohol. Chief Locke asserts Diane slurred her words and smelled of alcohol. Diane denies slurring her words and states she does not know if she smelled like alcohol.

Chief Locke asked Diane to exit her vehicle and Diane complied, following Chief Locke to the front of his patrol car. Chief Locke states Diane was swaying and almost lost her balance, but Diane states she was walking “very steadily.” Chief Locke opened his patrol car’s front passenger side door, reached in the vehicle, and

-3- instructed Diane to get rid of the cigarette she was smoking. Chief Locke asserts he asked Diane to blow into a preliminary breath test device and to submit to three field sobriety tests, but Diane refused. At this point, Michael, who was straining to see out the back window of the vehicle, opened the rear passenger side door about ten inches so he could see out of the door.

Diane “asserts that when Chief Locke requested her to blow into a preliminary breath test device[,] he did so by holding his fist closed and demanding that she blow in it, all without explaining either that he had a[n] alcohol testing device in his hand or why he wanted her to blow into his hand.” Diane maintains she asked Chief Locke, “Why,” and Chief Locke responded, “Because I told you to. That’s why.” Diane replied, “Well, I don’t understand,” and Chief Locke answered, “You have failed to maintain a single lane for a full mile.” Diane then argued,

For starters, you haven’t been behind me for a full mile, and for second, I don’t know what you have in your hand, where it came from, what it’s for. . . . You haven’t even, you know, said anything that, you know, I’m stumbling, I’m stinking of alcohol, you know. Don’t you do some kind of roadside test or sobriety test or—You haven’t looked in my eyes or anything.

Diane claims Chief Locke responded, “I can do whatever I want and I can choose to give you whatever test I want, so either you blow in this or you’re going to jail for DWI.” Diane said “[f]ine,” and Chief Locke instructed Diane to turn around and put her hands behind her back because she was under arrest for driving while intoxicated. Diane complied by putting her hands behind her back, and when Chief Locke handcuffed her, she exclaimed, “Fine. We’ll see who’s drunk.” Diane contends Chief Locke then slammed her onto the hood of his patrol car. Diane responded sarcastically, stating, “Damn, Danno, take it easy.”

-4- Michael states, when he saw Chief Locke “slam[] [Diane] onto the hood of the car,” he started to get out of the car, to which Markley responded, “Mike, don’t do it.” Michael decided to sit back down. At this point, Walkmaster had also opened her door and was crying and yelling, “She didn’t do anything. She didn’t do anything. What are you doing?”

Diane says after she made the “Danno remark,” Chief Locke thrust his knee between her legs, and while Diane was still leaning on the hood of the patrol car, Chief Locke began to paw and stroke her, beginning at Diane’s waist and moving down to her buttocks. Diane testified Chief Locke was “rubbing down [her] butt onto and around [her] inner/outer thighs, [and then] around the front.” Diane could hear Michael and Walkmaster yelling, but she told them, “I’ll take care of it.

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Diane Cook v. City of Bella Villa, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/diane-cook-v-city-of-bella-villa-ca8-2009.