Eric Morillo v. Monmouth County Sheriff's

117 A.3d 1206, 222 N.J. 104, 2015 N.J. LEXIS 661
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJuly 13, 2015
DocketA-88-13
StatusPublished
Cited by64 cases

This text of 117 A.3d 1206 (Eric Morillo v. Monmouth County Sheriff's) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eric Morillo v. Monmouth County Sheriff's, 117 A.3d 1206, 222 N.J. 104, 2015 N.J. LEXIS 661 (N.J. 2015).

Opinion

Justice LaVECCHIA

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The doctrine of qualified immunity shields law enforcement officers from personal liability for civil rights violations when the officers are acting under color of law in the performance of official duties. This protection extends to suits brought under 42 U.S.C.A. § 1983 and under New Jersey’s analogue, the Civil *108 Rights Act, N.J.S.A. 10:6-1 to -2. As both federal and state case law on this immunity doctrine recognize, members of law enforcement must be permitted to perform their duties without being encumbered by the specter of being sued personally for damages, unless their performance is not objectively reasonable. Thus, the defense’s protection is denied only to officers who are plainly incompetent in the performance of their duties or who knowingly violate the law.

In this appeal, we must address whether, on the basis of qualified immunity, three police officers were entitled to dismissal of an action brought by plaintiff. The action sought to impose personal liability on the officers for alleged civil rights violations arising from a charge brought against plaintiff for unlawful possession of a weapon under N.J.S.A. 2C:39-5(b)(l). The charge was later administratively dismissed.

For the reasons expressed herein, we hold that the civil rights causes of action against the officers should have been dismissed based on the affirmative defense of qualified immunity that the officers asserted. It cannot be said as a matter of law that no reasonably competent officer would have believed that probable cause existed to charge plaintiff with unlawful possession of a weapon. Under the facts and circumstances involved in charging plaintiff with a violation of N.J.S.A. 2C:39-5(b)(l), there was neither a knowing violation of law nor a transgression of the competence standard demanded of law enforcement officers for qualified immunity to provide a shield from personal liability for alleged civil rights violations arising from the performance of their duties.

The judgment of the Appellate Division is reversed.

I.

A.

Plaintiff was charged with unlawful possession of a handgun under N.J.S.A. 2C:39-5(b)(l), which provides: “Any person who knowingly has in his possession any handgun, including any *109 antique handgun, without first having obtained a permit to carry the same as provided in [N. J.S.A] 2C:58^4,[ 1 ] is guilty of a crime of the second degree.” The next section of that chapter provides an exemption from prosecution for unlawful possession of a handgun, which states that

[n]othing in subsections b., c. and d. of [N.J.S.A.] 2C:39-5 shall be construed to prevent a person keeping or carrying about his place of business, residence, premises or other land owned or possessed by him, any firearm, or from carrying the same, in the manner specified in subsection g. of this section, from any place of purchase to his residence or place of business, between his dwelling and his place of business, between one place of business or residence and another when moving, or between his dwelling or place of business and place where such firearms are repaired, for the purpose of repair. For the purposes of this section, a place of business shall be deemed to be a fixed location.
[N.J.S.A. 2C:39-6(e) (emphasis added).]

In this matter, we review the combined involvement of sheriffs officers and their supervisory officer, after soliciting advice from a representative of the county prosecutor’s office, in the decision to charge plaintiff with a violation of N.J.S.A. 2C:39-5(b)(l). The relevant facts as contained in the summary judgment record are summarized as follows.

At about 8:30 p.m. on December 15, 2010, Monmouth County Sheriffs Officers Alexander Torres and Thomas Ruoeco arrived at a Matawan address to execute a child-support warrant on plaintiff Eric Morillo. The address was the one listed on the warrant. While Torres went to knock on the front door, Ruocco went around the side of the home and discovered plaintiff sitting in an idling car parked toward the rear of the side driveway of the residential home at the listed address, 1 2 which, it turned out, was *110 his mother’s. Although the car’s engine was running, its headlights were off. Other cars were also parked in the side area of the property.

As Ruocco approached the car, he observed plaintiff in the passenger seat smoking what appeared to Ruocco to be a marijuana “roach,” described as being not a “full marijuana cigarette.” Ruocco opened the passenger-side door. He stated that the smell of burnt marijuana emanated from the vehicle’s interior.

When Ruocco asked plaintiff if he had any other drugs on him, plaintiff told Ruocco that he was carrying a loaded weapon tucked in the right side of the waistband of his pants. Ruocco ordered plaintiff and the person seated in the driver’s seat to raise their hands to the car’s ceiling. Ruocco seized the weapon and called Torres on his hand-held radio to come and assist. Plaintiff and his companion were removed from the vehicle and patted down. Plaintiff was arrested on the child-support warrant.

While still at the scene, Ruocco phoned his supervisor, Sergeant Steven Cooper, to alert him to the circumstances involved in executing the warrant and the seizure of the weapon. He advised Cooper that while he and Torres were executing the child-support warrant, they discovered plaintiff, carrying a loaded handgun concealed in his waistband, smoking marijuana while seated inside a car, with its motor running, parked at the home.

Although Ruocco did not ask plaintiff at the scene whether he had a permit to carry the gun, while en route to police headquarters, plaintiff informed the officers that the handgun was registered to him and that he had “paperwork” for it. Plaintiff told the officers that he was involved in gang activity and was carrying the handgun because he feared retaliation. Plaintiff also told Ruocco that the home was his mother’s and that he had lived in different places. That said, according to Ruocco, he assumed that plaintiff was living at the home at the time the warrant was executed because the officers found plaintiff there.

*111 Under questioning, Ruoceo and Torres admitted that they never asked plaintiff at the scene whether the firearm paperwork was in the house, but when they arrived at headquarters they told Sergeant Cooper that plaintiff claimed to have such paperwork. They also indicated that they were operating on the belief that the address at which plaintiff was found was the location where he was presently residing, essentially because it was the address listed for him for child-support purposes and the location where plaintiff was found when executing the warrant.

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Bluebook (online)
117 A.3d 1206, 222 N.J. 104, 2015 N.J. LEXIS 661, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eric-morillo-v-monmouth-county-sheriffs-nj-2015.