Edison v. Northville, Township of

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedSeptember 30, 2024
Docket2:23-cv-11741
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Edison v. Northville, Township of, (E.D. Mich. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN SOUTHERN DIVISION

JONATHAN E. EDISON,

Plaintiff, Case No. 2:23-cv-11741 Honorable Anthony P. Patti v.

TOWNSHIP OF NORTHVILLE, et. al.,

Defendants. ___________________________________/

OPINION AND ORDER GRANTING DEFENDANTS SELLENRAAD AND NORTHVILLE TOWNSHIP’S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT (ECF No. 31)

I. OPINION

A. Procedural Background Plaintiff Jonathan E. Edison initiated this lawsuit on July 20, 2023. (ECF No. 1.) Following a motion to dismiss (ECF No. 14), the Court entered a stipulated order of dismissal as to Defendants Fadie Jamil Kadaf and Jeahad Kadaf. (ECF No. 21.) As a result, the only remaining Defendants are the Township of Northville and Northville Township police officer Ben Sellenraad (“Sellenraad”). Edison alleges that Northville Township and Officer Sellenraad violated his First Amendment right to free speech and the Michigan Constitution. (Id. at PageID.7- 8.) Edison also alleges malicious prosecution against Officer Sellenraad under Mich. Comp. Laws 600.2907. (Id. at PageID.8-9.) The parties consented on October 5, 2023 to adjudicate the entire dispute

before the Undersigned Magistrate Judge. (ECF Nos. 17 & 18.) Currently before the Court is Defendants Northville Township and Sellenraad’s motion for summary judgment under Fed. R. Civ. P. 56, based upon governmental and

qualified immunity and the non-viability of the state law claim. (ECF No. 31.) B. Factual Background In 2021, Plaintiff and Fadie Jamil Kadaf (“Kadaf”) became neighbors in Northville. (ECF No. 31-3, PageID.348 [Edison Dep. Tr., p. 22].) It did not go

well. In 2022, a dispute between the neighbors arose when Kadaf parked his car in front of Edison’s house. (Id. at p. 23.) 1. Plaintiff’s first & second letters

One day, Edison was having guests over and placed a note on Kadaf’s car, asking him: “Can you PLEASE park your cars in front of your house[?] Thank you!” (ECF No. 31-2, PageID.316, 331; ECF No. 33-1 [Pl.’s 1st Letter].) In response, Kadaf moved his car and placed a letter in Edison’s mailbox. (ECF No.

31-3, PageID.348 [Edison Dep. Tr., p. 25].) The response stated that Edison’s note was “rude” and that the road was “public domain.” (ECF No. 31-2, PageID.316, 331.) Things escalated from there.

Edison wrote a letter back to Kadaf, employing repeated expletives, such as “fuck,” “fucking,” “pussy,” “ass,” “motherfucker,” and “douche.” (ECF No. 31-2, PageID.329; ECF No. 33-2 [Pl.’s 2nd Letter].)1 The letter also asked numerous

times for Kadaf to leave Edison alone or else he will “ESCALATE THE SITUATION[] (to a legal matter!).” (Id. ECF No. 31-2, PageID.329 (emphasis in original).)

2. Kadaf’s September 23 & September 26, 2022 NTPD visits On September 23, 2022, Kadaf went to the Northville Township Police

Department (NTPD) to report his concern about the situation involving Edison and, inter alia, spoke with Officer Sellenraad about the above letter exchanges. (ECF No. 31-2, PageID.309, 324-325; ECF No. 33-8, PageID.539-540.) Kadaf felt “threatened” by the second letter and characterized it as containing “a little bit of

what I think is a racial undertone[.]” (ECF No. 33-3, PageID.456 [Trans. Sept. 23, 2022 Video Convers.]; see also ECF No. 31-2, PageID.311, 325.) Specifically, Kadaf felt threatened by the statement, “Maybe in Dearborn you just do what the

fuck you want but this isn’t Dearborn and you’re fucking with the wrong one!” (ECF No. 31-2, PageID.311, 317, 325; ECF No. 33-8, PageID.540.) The Court takes judicial notice under Fed. R. Evid. 201(b)(1) that Dearborn is widely known

1 At oral argument, Plaintiff’s counsel conceded that all of these words were in fact used by his client, consistent with para. 42 of the civil complaint, wherein they are listed. (ECF No. 1, PageID.7.) to have a large number of residents who are of Middle Eastern descent. In response, Officer Sellenraad explained that the letter Kadaf brought in –

the one that had been left in his mailbox – did not contain any threatening words and that “[t]here’s nothing that would escalate to a criminal nature. Expletives and those kinds of things are not enforceable from a legal standpoint or anything else.”

(ECF No. 33-3, PageID.457 [Trans. Sept. 23, 2022 Video Convers.].) At Kadaf’s request, Officer Sellenraad went to speak to Edison, which occurred on September 24, 2022, and Sellenraad reported that Edison had “no desire to take the situation any further[,]” and that Edison admitted “he may have taken the tone of his second

note ‘a bit far[.]’” (ECF No. 31-2, PageID.311.) Officer Sellenraad then updated Kadaf on the conversation. (Id.) On September 25, Kadaf reported suspicious activity to the Bureau of

Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF). (Id. at PageID.314-315.) According to the intake summary, Kadaf stated that he was concerned for his family’s safety due to Edison’s recent “erratic” behavior revolving around this parking dispute. (Id.) On September 26, NTPD Officer A. Micek spoke with

Kadaf, who asked if the officer could contact Edison. (Id. at PageID.319, 321.) On September 27, Micek spoke with Edison’s wife, and on September 30, Micek made contact with Edison. (Id.) 3. A third letter & Kadaf’s October 12, 2022 NTPD visit

On October 12, 2022, Kadaf went to the NTPD again, this time to turn over another letter he believed to be from Edison. (ECF No. 31-2, PageID.322, 325; ECF No. 33-8, PageID.540.) This note uses the words “fuck” or “fucking” on

eight occasions. (ECF No. 31-2, PageID.317-318, 332; ECF No. 33-4 [Pl.’s 3rd Letter]; ECF No. 33, PageID.436, 438.) Again, Sellenraad stated that, “I cannot charge someone for noncriminal behavior[,]” and “I can’t submit something that’s

not criminal in it’s [sic] nature to a prosecutor to review.” (ECF No. 33-5, PageID.489-90 [Oct. 12, 2022 Trans. Video Conv.].) 4. Warrant request & misdemeanor complaint

Following this second interaction, Lieutenant Reinke – Officer Sellenraad’s lieutenant – reviewed the police reports and “directed” Sellenraad to submit a warrant request. (ECF No. 33-10, PageID.571 [Reinke Dep. Tr., p. 11].)

According to Lieutenant Reinke, “At that point, I looked at the police reports, took a look at the case, and felt that the officer handled it appropriately, and that at that point the only thing that we could possibly do, aside from documenting what he

already had, would be to have a prosecutor look at it to see if there was some sort of a charge or offense that we weren’t identifying.” (Id.) On October 18, a local warrant request was submitted to the Northville Prosecutor, Gregory D. Demopoulos, for review. (ECF No. 31-2, PageID.325; ECF No. 33-8, PageID.539-540.) According to Officer Sellenraad, the warrant request was composed of police reports and associated documents, including the

letters between Edison and Kadaf. (ECF No. 31-7, PageID.426 [Sellenraad Dep. Tr., p. 48].) The warrant request did not recommend that charges be issued, and it did not list a specific Michigan statute under which to charge. (ECF No. 31-6,

PageID.404 [Demopoulos Dep. Tr., p. 12-13]; ECF No. 33-9.) As explained by Demopoulos, “[the officers] don’t recommend [that charges be issued]. They ̶ they leave that up to me. They … send it over to me like these might be the charges will you consider it? And I have independent authority to approve or

deny.” (Id., p.

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