Doak Walker and Maurice Turner v. R. Schaeffer, Patrolman, and J. Sheridan, Patrolman

854 F.2d 138, 26 Fed. R. Serv. 763, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 11083, 1988 WL 82760
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 12, 1988
Docket87-3383
StatusPublished
Cited by115 cases

This text of 854 F.2d 138 (Doak Walker and Maurice Turner v. R. Schaeffer, Patrolman, and J. Sheridan, Patrolman) 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
Doak Walker and Maurice Turner v. R. Schaeffer, Patrolman, and J. Sheridan, Patrolman, 854 F.2d 138, 26 Fed. R. Serv. 763, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 11083, 1988 WL 82760 (6th Cir. 1988).

Opinion

WELLFORD, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiffs, Doak Walker and Maurice Turner, sued two police officers, defendants Schaeffer and Sheridan, under 42 U.S. C. § 1983 for false arrest, detention, and imprisonment in violation of their constitutional rights. Walker was arrested for disorderly conduct in a McDonald’s parking lot following a high school football game, and Turner was arrested for reckless driving following Walker’s arrest. The plaintiffs’ arrests were related to the presence and actions of a primarily white crowd in the parking lot that apparently threatened the plaintiffs, both of whom are black. The defendant police officers, who are white, moved for summary judgment following discovery, claiming that on the basis of undisputed facts they had probable cause to make the arrests and thus were entitled to the defense of qualified immunity. The district court denied the motion, finding that there existed genuine issues of material fact in dispute that bore on the question of whether a reasonable police officer would have believed that probable cause existed for the arrests of plaintiffs effectuated by the defendants. The parties’ versions of the facts of this episode differ considerably.

Walker and Turner, both of Canton, Ohio, pulled into the parking lot of a McDonald’s in Austintown, Ohio, at approximately 10:30 on a Friday night following a high school football game between a Canton high school and Austintown. Walker parked his car and was going to leave Turner in the car and go into the McDonald’s. Officer Sheridan, according to Walker’s deposition, grabbed Walker by the chest through the open car window and told him to repark the car properly in a lined space. Walker complied by realigning his car.

Walker started to go into the McDonald’s, but turned back before he went inside. At the time, a crowd of several hundred white Austintown high school students was gathered in the McDonald’s parking lot. Again, according to Walker’s deposition, as he started to walk back toward his car, the crowd closed behind him hindering his return. He heard members of the crowd making racial comments. In order to get back to the car he was forced *140 to push his way through the crowd. Officer Sheridan’s police report and affidavit, by contrast, stated that Walker was shouting at people in the crowd and pushing them in an attempt to pick a fight.

Walker testified that once he got back in his car, he planned to leave, but that the crowd had completely surrounded his car and was kicking, pounding, and spitting on his car. Officer Sheridan then approached the car and allegedly ordered Walker to leave the premises. Walker said that he put his car into reverse, but could not back up without striking one of the crowd around the car. According to Walker’s testimony, Officer Sheridan again grabbed him by the chest and ordered him out of the car. As he was getting out of the car in response to these directions, the crowd was chanting “Arrest the nigger. Arrest the nigger.” Sheridan arrested Walker for disorderly conduct and led him inside the McDonald’s restaurant. Sheridan’s statement was that he advised Walker several times to get into his car and leave, and that Walker's failure promptly to leave in light of the threatening circumstances resulted in his arrest for disorderly conduct.

As Walker was being arrested, Turner, according to his own deposition, got out of the car and asked Officer Sheridan what was going on. Sheridan told Turner that Walker was being arrested and that Turner had better get out of there before he was arrested also. Turner then got back into the car, which was still surrounded by the crowd, and as Sheridan led Walker into the McDonald’s, Turner decided to try to get away from the threatening crowd. Turner backed the car up and then pulled out into traffic as people from the crowd were running alongside the car and throwing objects at it. As Turner backed up and then left the lot, he allegedly struck several members of the crowd. Turner stated that he soon realized he was heading the wrong direction on the street and turned around in a parking lot about 700 yards away from the McDonald’s. He asserts that as he drove back past the McDonald’s, members of the crowd came back out on the street to throw things at his car and that he swerved across the center line in order to avoid hitting them or being hit. Defendants by affidavit asserted that Turner twice spun the car completely around in traffic and drove away in the wrong lane of traffic. Turner denied spinning the car.

Turner in due course drove to the Austin-town police station to inquire about his companion, Walker. He was then arrested for reckless driving and held in a cell for four hours. Both plaintiffs assert separate claims arising out of the alleged false arrest and wrongful imprisonment.

The complaint sets out that in response to the charges placed against them they appeared in Mahoning County Court for a trial. Both were represented by an attorney, and prior to the hearing there was a conference among the prosecutor, the attorney or attorneys for Walker and Turner, and Schaeffer and Sheridan, defendants in the instant action. Plaintiffs assert that defendants stated that they ordered plaintiffs away from the McDonald’s premises “solely in order to save the lives of Doak Walker and Maurice Turner.” (Complaint, paragraph 15.) The complaint proceeds to admit that both plaintiffs agreed to enter “no-contest pleas in open court.” The complaint goes further to admit that plaintiffs did enter the pleas and that “the Court found [them] guilty and sentenced each of them to pay a fine.” (Complaint, paragraph 16.) In their depositions each plaintiff admitted paying the fine assessed. The complaint asserts that plaintiffs “have appealed their convictions.” (Complaint, paragraph 16.) Although more than two years have since elapsed, we are not advised whether the alleged appeal was pursued or of its outcome. We are not advised as to the contentions made or asserted on appeal or whether plaintiffs may have abandoned the appeal. In any event, there is no contrary assertion but that plaintiffs, by their own actions on advice of counsel, in effect admitted a factual basis for the as yet undisturbed determination of guilt on the offenses charged against them.

Defendants argue that the district court, as a matter of law, should have found, based on the material facts that are not essentially disputed in this case, that the *141 officers acted reasonably in believing that probable cause existed for the arrests of both Walker and Turner. They assert that summary judgment for Sheridan and Schaeffer on qualified immunity grounds was appropriate. The district court, however, determined that the pleadings and plaintiffs’ depositions raised genuine issues of material fact regarding the applicability of qualified immunity.

The Court must determine whether a reasonable officer, knowing what Officer Sheridan and Officer Schaeffer knew at the time of the arrest and the issuance of the citation, would have known that no probable cause supported the arrest or the issuance of the citation, in deciding whether the officers are entitled to qualified immunity.

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Bluebook (online)
854 F.2d 138, 26 Fed. R. Serv. 763, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 11083, 1988 WL 82760, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doak-walker-and-maurice-turner-v-r-schaeffer-patrolman-and-j-sheridan-ca6-1988.