Edward Ruemenapp v. Oscoda Twp., Mich.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 28, 2018
Docket17-1793
StatusUnpublished

This text of Edward Ruemenapp v. Oscoda Twp., Mich. (Edward Ruemenapp v. Oscoda Twp., Mich.) 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
Edward Ruemenapp v. Oscoda Twp., Mich., (6th Cir. 2018).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION File Name: 18a0323n.06

No. 17-1793

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

EDWARD OTTO RUEMENAPP, ) ) FILED Plaintiff-Appellant, ) Jun 28, 2018 ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk v. ) ) OSCODA TOWNSHIP, MICH., ) ) ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED Defendant, ) STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE ) EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN ) GREG ALEXANDER and GERALD ) SOBOLESKI, in their individual and ) personal capacities, ) ) Defendants-Appellees. ) )

BEFORE: DAUGHTREY, GIBBONS, and WHITE, Circuit Judges.

MARTHA CRAIG DAUGHTREY, Circuit Judge. Shortly after Oscoda Township police

officers Greg Alexander and Gerald Soboleski1 arrived on the scene of a heated, yet nonviolent,

landlord-tenant dispute, the situation escalated to the point that the officers pushed plaintiff

Edward Ruemenapp into a wall, allegedly to facilitate handcuffing him. Ruemenapp sustained

abrasions to his face and filed a 42 U.S.C. § 1983 excessive-force claim against the officers and

the township. The district court granted the defendants summary judgment, and Ruemenapp now

appeals only the dismissal of his claims against the two officers. Because Ruemenapp has

1 The district court opinion and the parties’ briefs refer to defendant Soboleski as “Sobolewski.” When deposed during discovery, however, the officer clearly indicated that he spelled his last name “S-O-B-O-L-E-S-K-I.” We thus will refer to the defendant with the spelling of his surname that he himself provided. No. 17-1793 Ruemenapp v. Oscoda Twp., et al.

identified genuine disputes of material fact that make the grant of summary judgment to those

officers inappropriate, we reverse and remand the case to the district court for such further

proceedings as are necessary.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Many of the facts in this litigation are not disputed. For example, the parties do not contest

that, in addition to being employed as a stockroom clerk in the shipping department of Kalitta Air,

Edward Ruemenapp is the owner of the Oscoda Resort and Motel in Oscoda, Michigan. As the

owner and manager of the resort, Ruemenapp entered into a one-year lease in July 2014 with

Kristina Reker, who was to pay $600 per month to rent Unit 2 of the establishment. Although

Reker paid the required rent through February 28, 2015, on Saturday, February 21, 2015, she left

the unit and told Ruemenapp and the resort’s handyman, “You’re going to have another

[apartment] to clean.” The following day, February 22, Reker also informed Ruemenapp’s

daughter “that she was done. [Ruemenapp] could do anything [h]e wanted with that apartment.”

Three days later, on Wednesday, Ruemenapp’s daughter mentioned to her father the

conversation she had had with Reker. Believing that Reker “was done” with the apartment,

Ruemenapp locked the door to Unit 2, peered through the window, and noticed that “[t]he floors

were totally littered with paper and waste and trash, holes in the walls, holes in the doors, sliding

doors, closet doors.” Ruemenapp then called Reker at her place of employment to inquire “why

she’d left, destroyed the apartment, and left it in the condition that she had.” The conversation

became heated, and Ruemenapp admitted that he called Reker a number of derogatory names

before hanging up on her.

-2- No. 17-1793 Ruemenapp v. Oscoda Twp., et al.

On the morning of Saturday, February 28, Ruemenapp entered Unit 2 and got a closer look

at the damage he had observed through the window on the previous Wednesday. He also stated

that, at that time, he did not see any of Reker’s personal property in the unit, other than dirty dishes

on the counter. He thus rekeyed the lock on the door and returned to his own residence on the

property. That evening, however, Reker returned to the unit to retrieve additional items to take to

her new residence. Because she was unable to access the unit, she asked Ruemenapp to let her in

her apartment. When he refused to do so, informing her that she had abandoned the unit, Reker

called the local police to enlist their assistance in recovering her belongings.

Officers Alexander and Soboleski responded to the call and, upon arriving at the Oscoda

Resort and Motel, spoke with Reker, who informed them that the locks on her apartment had been

changed and that she was unable to remove her possessions from the residence. Alexander and

Soboleski thus approached Ruemenapp and inquired why Reker was locked out of her apartment

when she had paid rent that entitled her to occupancy through the end of that day. Ruemenapp

responded that Reker had abandoned the property and, consequently, had no further right to gain

entry to the unit.

In their descriptions of the ensuing events, the versions of the facts offered by Alexander

and Soboleski differ drastically from the version offered by Ruemenapp. According to Alexander

and Soboleski, when they asked Ruemenapp why he refused to allow Reker into the apartment,

Ruemenapp “became belligerent quickly, started screaming obscenities that she was not going

back in that apartment,” and began pointing his finger in Soboleski’s face from six inches away.

When Ruemenapp continued to point at Soboleski, the officer told Ruemenapp “to take his finger

out of [the officer’s] face,” and Alexander grabbed Ruemenapp’s right arm and pulled it into a

wristlock while Soboleski grabbed Ruemenapp’s other arm. Soboleski stated that Ruemenapp -3- No. 17-1793 Ruemenapp v. Oscoda Twp., et al.

then pulled his arm away from Alexander, even though Alexander did not believe that he ever lost

contact with Ruemenapp’s arm, and Soboleski himself later revised his testimony to state that he

did “not recall if [Alexander] lost contact with [Ruemenapp’s] arm or not.” Nevertheless,

Alexander spun Ruemenapp around, pushed him against a wall, handcuffed him, and arrested him

for disturbing the peace and for assaulting, resisting, or obstructing a police officer.

During his deposition, Alexander claimed that he did not push Ruemenapp’s face into the

wall, but rather “pushed from the center of [Ruemenapp’s] back into the wall, so his chest would

have had contact.” He further claimed that any injuries to Ruemenapp’s face did not result from

him pushing Ruemenapp’s face into the siding covering the wall but “[f]rom when [Ruemenapp]

was moving his head back and forth, attempting to negotiate with [the officers] about going to

jail.”

The proof offered by Ruemenapp paints a much different picture—one of overly

aggressive, vindictive police officers frustrated by nonviolent resistance to their requests. Contrary

to the portrayal of the incident by Alexander and Soboleski, Ruemenapp denied acting belligerent

in the presence of the officers and denied ever pointing his finger at Soboleski. Instead,

Ruemenapp maintained that he explained calmly to the police that Reker had abandoned her

apartment and thus no longer had any right to enter the premises. He further asserted that after

denying the officers’ request to enter and inspect the unit, he turned to walk away, but Alexander

physically blocked his retreat. At that point, Ruemenapp turned, pointed up the sidewalk toward

Unit 2, and exclaimed, “That bitch has no business even being here.” Although Ruemenapp was

adamant that he never pointed his finger toward either officer, he claimed that Alexander then

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