DiPino v. Davis

729 A.2d 354, 354 Md. 18, 1999 Md. LEXIS 242
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 11, 1999
Docket78, Sept. Term, 1998
StatusPublished
Cited by232 cases

This text of 729 A.2d 354 (DiPino v. Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DiPino v. Davis, 729 A.2d 354, 354 Md. 18, 1999 Md. LEXIS 242 (Md. 1999).

Opinion

WILNER, Judge.

This is the second appearance of this case before this Court. It involves an action filed in the Circuit Court for Worcester County by Wayne Davis against the Mayor and City Council of Ocean City (the City), Bernadette DiPino, a police officer employed by the City, and Donald Turner, a District Court Commissioner. The action was first filed in December, 1991, but we are concerned here with an amended complaint filed in April, 1995. Mr. Davis’s complaint, alleging both Constitutional violations and common law torts, arises from his arrest on July 6, 1991, upon a charge of hindering and obstructing Officer DiPino and a fellow officer, Alice Brumbley, in the performance of their duties. The arrest was pursuant to a warrant and Statement of Charges issued by Commissioner Turner upon application of DiPino.

At issue before us is whether (1) the evidence sufficed to establish the violations and torts alleged, (2) if so, DiPino and the City are immune from liability, and (8) certain claims against the City were preserved for appellate review. Some of the underlying facts were in dispute, mostly as to what Davis knew about DiPino and what was said by Davis and DiPino at various times.

*24 BACKGROUND

During the period most relevant to this case—from the spring of 1990 through the first week of July, 1991—Officer DiPino worked as an undercover narcotics agent for the City police department. Her job required her to identify drug dealers and purchase drugs from them, and she therefore had to develop contacts and build trust with potential sellers. The plaintiff, Wayne Davis, was a bartender at the Inlet Lodge on the Ocean City boardwalk, where he had worked for about 10 years. DiPino first learned of Davis through an informant, who told her that he had seen marijuana in Davis’s apartment. Nothing immediate came of that information.

In the spring of 1990, DiPino met Davis on the boardwalk and, as part of a “reversal” operation—an attempt to sell, rather than buy, drugs—she told him that she had some marijuana for sale and wanted to trade it for cocaine. She said that they discussed such a trade and exchanged telephone numbers, that, as a result of that conversation, Davis became a “target,” and that she made a number of attempts during the summer of 1990 to consummate a drug trade with Davis, without success. 1 We need not recount the several ensuing contacts between DiPino and Davis. It will suffice to say that, by the end of September, 1990, Davis had sufficient information to believe that DiPino was an undercover police officer, that DiPino suspected that Davis was aware of her occupation, and that, as a result, she terminated her effort to engage him in a drug transaction. Some of Davis’s suspicion arose from his having seen DiPino twice in the company of a person— Sergeant Holtzman—whom he knew to be a police sergeant; some of it came from his seeing her leave the courthouse and learning that she had just testified in a drug case.

The event that ultimately led to Davis’s arrest occurred in the late hours of May 11-12, 1991. Davis had just closed the *25 bar and was standing somewhere in the vicinity of the boardwalk and Wicomico Street with his friend, Frederick King. The area, according to DiPino, was populated with drug users, drug sellers, and “biker gangs.” DiPino and Detective Brumbley had just left a bar where, in their undercover capacities, they had met with two “targets.” When Davis saw DiPino and Brumbley, about ten feet away, he said something to King indicating that the women were police officers. Precisely what was said and how it was said were in dispute. According to DiPino and Brumbley, Davis said, in a voice loud enough for them to hear some nine to ten feet away, that they were “nares,” “undercover detectives,” “undercover officers,” or “undercover cops.” Davis said that, upon spying the women, he told King, in a normal conversational tone, “[l]ook, those were the two girls that were going to come in last year and give me some pot and have Mr. Holtzman bust me, right?” When King asked if they were “nares,” Davis responded “I don’t know what they are,” that “[t]hey could be under cover or anything.”

Whatever was said, DiPino believed that Davis made the statement in a voice loud enough to indicate to her an intent to “blow our covers.” Although it appears that there was not a large crowd in the area, it being late at night, DiPino said that she noticed some “bikers” who gave them “dirty looks.” Concerned for their safety, DiPino and Brumbley got into their car, left the area, and returned to the police station, without incident. There was no evidence that the particular “targets” they were pursuing that evening were still in the area when the comment was made or, if they were, that they overheard the remark; there was no evidence that Frederick King was a particular “target.” DiPino believed, however, that “anybody that was standing out on the street was a potential ... target.” She also believed that, by his loud statement to King, Davis had compromised her investigation, her ability to continue working undercover, and her safety, and that, as a result, he had committed some kind of crime, although she was unsure of what it was. She never contacted the State’s Attorney’s office to seek legal advice but instead conferred *26 with a District Court Commissioner, who informed her that Davis could be charged with “hindering.”

Despite her immediate concerns, DiPino put the matter on the “back burner.” She could have preferred charges against Davis at any time, but for two months she declined to do so. On July 5,1991—during one of the busiest weekends in Ocean City—she applied to Commissioner Turner for a Statement of Charges against . Davis. In her application, she stated that Davis had said to an unknown white male: “Look those two girls are nares.... This statement was said in a loud enough voice as so the Det’s, approx. 3 yds away, could hear and any passerby could also hear placing the Det’s in extreme danger and compromising their cover.” Upon that application, Commissioner Turner issued a warrant for Davis’s arrest and a Statement of Charges charging Davis with two counts of the common law crime of obstructing and hindering, one count as to DiPino and one as to Brumbley. In each, Davis was charged with “intentionally and knowingly obstructing] and hindering] a police officer ... in the performance of the victim’s lawful duties____” Pursuant to the arrest warrant, Davis was arrested at the Inlet Lodge on Saturday evening, July 6, 1991; in the presence of his customers, he was handcuffed and taken away. He was promptly presented before Commissioner Turner, who, despite Davis’s established residence and employment in Ocean City, set bond at $50,000. Unable to post that bond immediately, Davis spent the next two nights in jail. On October 2, 1991, the day of his scheduled trial, the State entered a nol pros to both charges.

As noted, this action against DiPino, Turner, and the City was filed in December, 1991. The circuit court initially granted summary judgment in favor of all three defendants.

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Bluebook (online)
729 A.2d 354, 354 Md. 18, 1999 Md. LEXIS 242, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dipino-v-davis-md-1999.