Fanester James v. City of Detroit, Mich.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedNovember 23, 2021
Docket21-1053
StatusUnpublished

This text of Fanester James v. City of Detroit, Mich. (Fanester James v. City of Detroit, 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
Fanester James v. City of Detroit, Mich., (6th Cir. 2021).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 21a0538n.06

Case Nos. 20-1805/21-1053

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT FILED Nov 23, 2021 ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk FANESTER JAMES, ) ) Plaintiff-Appellant, ) ON APPEAL FROM THE ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT v. ) COURT FOR THE EASTERN ) DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN CITY OF DETROIT, MICHIGAN; SAMUEL ) PIONESSA; REGINALD BEASLEY; NICO ) HURD; ALANNA MITCHELL; JUAN DAVIS; ) JOHNNY FOX; SAMUEL GALLOWAY; JASON ) OPINION CLARK; LAMAR WILLIAMS, ) ) Defendants-Appellees. )

Before: DAUGHTREY, COLE, and CLAY, Circuit Judges.

COLE, Circuit Judge. On September 6, 2016, Detroit Police executed a search warrant at

the home of Fanester James. When the police rammed her door open, James was seriously injured.

James filed a complaint against the City of Detroit and the officers, alleging Fourth Amendment

violations and other claims. Eventually, the district court granted summary judgment to the City

and the officers on all claims, one of which involved a sua sponte grant of qualified immunity.

James then moved for reconsideration. When the district court denied this motion, it also struck

some of James’s amended allegations from the record. Later, the district court denied James’s Case Nos. 20-1805/21-1053, Fanester James v. City of Detroit, et al.

motion for relief from judgment. James contests each of these decisions. For the following

reasons, we reverse and remand in part, vacate and remand in part, and affirm in part.

I. BACKGROUND

In 2016, plaintiff Fanester James was a 59-year-old woman living at 7183 Mackenzie Street

in Detroit, Michigan. On September 5, 2016, an informant told Detroit Police Officer Reginald

Beasley that marijuana was being sold at 7183 Mackenzie Street. Officer Beasley and the

informant conducted a controlled narcotics transaction the same day, purchasing $10 of marijuana

from a 20-year-old male in front of James’s residence. James was at the Heartland Rehabilitation

Center at the time.

Based on the controlled purchase, Officer Beasley obtained a search warrant for 7183

Mackenzie Street on September 6, 2016. Later that day, nine members of Detroit Police’s “Major

Violators Unit”—Officers Samuel Pionessa, Reginald Beasley, Nico Hurd, Alanna Mitchell, Juan

Davis, Johnny Fox, Samuel Galloway, Jason Clark, and Lamar Williams (collectively, the

“Officers”)—executed a narcotics raid at James’s home.

Shortly before the raid, James recalls retrieving her Meals on Wheels and mail from her

enclosed porch and then using the bathroom with the door open. According to James, the bathroom

is located just to the left of the living room, which is adjacent to the front door. When she exited

the bathroom and entered her living room, her dog alerted her to someone outside the home. Still

standing in her living room, James also heard “a little noise” but did not hear the officers announce

themselves. (James Dep. II, R. 58-10, PageID 1005.) James describes that she then took about

“eight steps” to her front door, placed her hand on the knob, looked through the front door window,

and made “[d]irect eye contact” with a white officer who was standing on the other side of the

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door, an “inch or two” away. (James Dep. I, R. 58-7, PageID 962; James Dep. II, R. 58-10, PageID

1006.) James testified that she did not know the individuals on her porch were police officers at

the time. The officers then rammed the door while James stood just behind it, striking her in the

face and forcibly knocking her backwards into a wall. She sustained an injured neck and shoulder

and a bad cut above her eye, which began bleeding immediately.

Officer Pionessa testified that, in the moments leading up to the forced entry, the Officers

exited their van and shouted a combination of “Detroit police” and “search warrant” while running

to James’s front porch. (Pionessa Dep., R. 58-13, PageID 1125.) After the Officers reached the

front porch, Officer Pionessa ordered Officer Hurd to ram open the front door. Officer Hurd

complied. Prior to ordering the ram, Officer Pionessa testified that he “was able to see [the]

window” on the front door, but that he did not see anyone standing there. (Id. at PageID 1126.)

Officer Pionessa estimates that twenty-five seconds passed from the time they exited the van to

the time of entry, and five to ten seconds elapsed between reaching James’s porch and entry.

Officer Pionessa also denies that James was struck by the door and injured. Officer Hurd, however,

testified that he observed “Sergeant Pionessa ask [James] if she needed EMS[.]” (Hurd Dep., R.

61-15, PageID 1492.)

According to James, at some point during the search, one of the officers took her into a

bedroom, closed the door, and said: “I just want to make sure we’re on the same page. . . . You fell

and hit your head before we got here, right? I just don’t want this to go any further . . . You don’t

need an ambulance. You can take care of that little cut, can’t you?” (James Dep. I, R. 58-7,

PageID 963, 966–67) (internal quotations omitted).) After the officers left, James called 911 and

received several stitches on her eye at Henry Ford Hospital. A few days later, her face turned

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“black and blue” and “started drooping.” (Id. at PageID 973.) Her physician referred her to a

plastic surgeon, who later performed corrective surgery on her eye.

On February 16, 2017, James filed a six-count complaint against the City of Detroit and

the Officers (collectively, the “City”), alleging excessive force, unlawful search and seizure,

municipal liability, and claims under Michigan law.

The district court ordered the parties to conclude discovery by November 20, 2018, and to

submit any dispositive motions by February 1, 2019. The City filed a motion for summary

judgment on January 27, 2019. Although the City responded to James’s Fourth Amendment

search-and-seizure claim, it did not address whether the Officers failed to knock and announce in

its motion.

Two weeks later, on February 15, 2019, James filed a motion to amend her complaint. She

asked to add a retaliation claim and sought to include new factual allegations to clarify her knock-

and-announce claim. Despite the City’s objection, on August 20, 2019, the district court granted

James leave to amend, finding that the amendment was not “brought in bad faith,” would “not

result in undue prejudice” or unreasonable delay, and would not be futile. (Op. and Order, R. 65,

PageID 1919–21.) Per the district court’s order, James filed her amended complaint on August

20, 2019.

The court also granted the City leave to file an additional motion for summary judgment

concerning the new claim. The City submitted a supplemental brief on September 4, 2019, arguing

that it was entitled to summary judgment because there was no “genuine dispute of material fact

that the [Officers] failed to announce their presence, or that they failed to give [James] sufficient

time to respond to their presence[.]” (Suppl. Br., R. 68-2, PageID 1984.) The City did not raise a

qualified immunity defense with respect to the knock-and-announce claim.

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On December 20, 2019, the district court granted the City’s motion for summary judgment.

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