Ellis v. Vance

227 F. Supp. 3d 627, 2017 WL 29020, 2017 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 306
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Mississippi
DecidedJanuary 3, 2017
DocketCIVIL ACTION NO. 3:15cv123
StatusPublished

This text of 227 F. Supp. 3d 627 (Ellis v. Vance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ellis v. Vance, 227 F. Supp. 3d 627, 2017 WL 29020, 2017 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 306 (N.D. Miss. 2017).

Opinion

ORDER

Michael P. Mills, UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE, NORTHERN DISTRICT OF MISSISSIPPI

This cause comes before the court on the motion of defendants, pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 56, for summary judgment. Plaintiff Stella Ellis has responded in opposition to the motion, and the court, having considered the memoranda and submissions of the parties, concludes that the motion is well taken and should be granted.

This is, inter alia, a false arrest case in which plaintiff contends that she was unlawfully arrested, convicted and incarcerated for simple assault upon her neighbor, Darlene White. Plaintiff was convicted of assaulting Darlene on January 22, 2014 by Calhoun County Justice Court Judge Jimmy Vance, in a bench trial which was conducted the very next day after the two neighbors were arrested for fighting outside their homes at a Calhoun County trailer park. Judge Vance, who is a defendant in this action, sentenced plaintiff to six months in jail, with five of those months suspended, and a fine of $336.75. Vance subsequently sentenced plaintiff to two thirty-day sentences for contempt, the first for “screaming” in court that she would “never” pay the fine and the second for referring to Vance, in plaintiffs recollection, as “a dirty old judge.”1 [Vance depo. at 29; Plaintiffs depo. at 51].

The arrest of the neighbors for assaulting each other represented the culmination of a lengthy feud between the two women, as well as Darlene’s husband Charles White. The feud centered around whether a large oak tree represents the boundary line between the Ellis and White properties. The plaintiff, Stella Ellis, claims the tree as the property line. The Whites disagree. This old oak tree served as the focal point for the neighbors’ arguments. Plaintiff contends that her neighbors threatened to burn it down. She testified in her deposition that she found the behavior of Charles White to be particularly objectionable, and she asserts that she called the sheriffs department on Charles dozens of times for “cussing and hollering and raising cane” as well as making threats and “starting fires.”2 [Plaintiffs depo. at 15]. [630]*630Plaintiff complains that, frequently, the sheriffs department refused to respond to her 911 calls and even threatened to arrest her if she continued to make them.

On January 21, 2014, the dispute among the neighbors reached, for the first time, the point of a physical confrontation. This altercation began as the Whites had pulled up them vehicle and were unloading firewood in a location (under the disputed tree) which plaintiff found to be objectionable. In her deposition, plaintiff admitted that she was highly agitated by what she saw as a provocation by her neighbors, and she concedes that she confronted them about it. In her deposition, plaintiff described the January 21 altercation as follows:

Well, I went out the door and I was mad, and I told them they wasn’t going to do it and to get their truck off of my land and away from my trailer. And we got all this videotaped and everything. And we got into an argument. And so Darlene winds up—me and Darlene winds up in the road, in the city street here. And Darlene just politely beats me up. So I called the law. And the law comes down there and he arrests me and Darlene. And I told him, I said “I didn’t do nothing.” And I didn’t. I didn’t hit the girl. I didn’t do nothing. I just stood there and took my beating and called the cops. And we both wind up in jail.

[Plaintiffs depo. at 28-29]. After interviewing plaintiff and her neighbors, the responding deputies concluded that a mutual fight had occurred, and they arrested both women for simple assault.

Plaintiffs neighbors testified that plaintiff deliberately provoked the fight. Specifically, Darlene testified that:

A: We had been to the doctor, to dentist, and we come in with a load of firewood. And Charles had backed the pickup down. And before he even got the truck cut off, she was out there beating on the hood of the truck, cussing, threatening to kill us, threatening to blow our brains out. And you know, we were just trying to ignore her. *** And she kept trying to provoke Charles to fight. She had even poked him in the chest with her finger, you know, a time or two. *** And I told him, you know, wasn’t no need in all the fighting and stuff. If we are going to fight, you know, to fight. You know, just quit all this mess. Or she had said something about fighting. I don’t remember who said something about it first. And she went up on in the road. You know, it was a public street where it happened. She had went on up in the road. And I followed her up in the road.
Q: So did she—did she—who touched who first?
A: I don’t know. She was already drawed up to hit me when I got there. I don’t know whether she hit me first or I hit her first.

[Darlene White depo. at 10-11]. In describing the manner in which plaintiff confronted his wife, Charles White testified that plaintiff:

[G]ot up there in the street hollering and screaming “You want to whoop my ass?3 Just come on up here,” and everything like that. “Your mama is this and your mama is that.” And my wife just done absolutely had a damn belly full of it.

[Charles White depo. at 12].

Charles White’s story about which woman struck the other first has changed [631]*631greatly since plaintiff’s arrest and conviction. At a probable cause hearing the morning after the fight, Charles initially testified before Calhoun County Justice Court Judge Mark Ferguson that plaintiff had struck his wife first.4 [Charles White depo. at 15]. Judge Ferguson apparently found Charles’ account believable and issued a warrant for plaintiffs arrest. Charles gave this same testimony at a bench trial that same day before Judge Vance, who, as noted previously, found plaintiff guilty of simple assault. The parties appear to agree that it was highly unusual to have a trial on the same day as plaintiff was arrested, but they disagree regarding who is responsible for this occurring. Judge Vance, supported by an affidavit from the prosecutor, testified that plaintiff insisted on having a trial that same day, even though she was informed that she did not have to do so. [Vance Depo. at 23; Tina Scott affidavit at 1]. Plaintiff denies this assertion and maintains that she was forced to go to trial that day, without having first been advised of her right to counsel. [Plaintiffs depo. at 40-41],

In his deposition, Judge Vance conceded that, at trial, plaintiff raised the existence of a video of the altercation which, she contended, would exonerate her. [Vance Depo. at 19]. This video was made as part of a homemade surveillance system set up and maintained by plaintiffs daughter Melanie Fuller. Plaintiff testified that she did not know how to retrieve video from the surveillance system, and she contends that jail administrators denied her permission to call her daughter and tell her to retrieve it and bring it to court. [Plaintiffs depo. at 56]. Fuller testified in her own deposition, however, that she had .learned that her mother would be in court by talking to local officials after plaintiff had called her immediately following the altercation. [Fuller depo. at 10-12].

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
227 F. Supp. 3d 627, 2017 WL 29020, 2017 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ellis-v-vance-msnd-2017.