Fant v. Ferguson, Missouri, City of

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Missouri
DecidedSeptember 27, 2022
Docket4:15-cv-00253
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Fant v. Ferguson, Missouri, City of, (E.D. Mo. 2022).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF MISSOURI EASTERN DIVISION

KEILEE FANT, et al., ) ) Plaintiffs, ) ) v. ) Case No. 4:15-CV-00253-AGF ) CITY OF FERGUSON, MISSOURI, ) ) Defendant. )

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER Plaintiffs filed this putative class-action complaint under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging that their federal constitutional rights were violated by Defendant City of Ferguson’s (the “City”) policies and practices of jailing individuals in inhumane conditions when these individuals could not pay bonds or other fines or fees, without inquiring into their ability to pay or considering alternatives to detention, without a neutral determination of probable cause to justify their continued confinement (in the case of warrantless arrests) or a first appearance before a judge (in the case of arrests on warrants), and without affording them counsel. The Court has certified five damages classes and one class seeking declaratory and injunctive relief. Both sides seek to present expert opinion testimony regarding liability and damages as they relate to Plaintiffs’ classwide claims. And both sides have now moved (ECF Nos. 438, 440, 442, 450, 494 & 496) to exclude from evidence at trial the opinions, testimony, and reports of the other’s experts. For the reasons set forth below, the motions to exclude Plaintiffs’ corrections expert, Eldon Vail, and the City’s corrections expert, Tony Wilkes, will be denied; each of the remaining motions will be granted in part and

denied in part. BACKGROUND Plaintiffs’ Experts and the City’s Objections I. Stephen Demuth Demuth is a professor of sociology whose research has focused primarily on quantitative data analysis related to the influences of race, gender, and social class on

decisions and outcomes at the pretrial and sentencing stages of the criminal justice process. He was retained by Plaintiffs’ counsel to analyze arrest records produced by the City in order to opine regarding the number and length of detention of arrestees in each proposed class. In order to arrive at his opinions, Demuth relied on data sets in the form of

Microsoft Excel spreadsheets that contained arrest records from the City and the City’s third-party vendor over the relevant period. Some of these arrest records were originally produced by the City as a single PDF document containing multiple years’ worth of arrest sheets. According to Plaintiffs, Plaintiffs’ counsel converted the PDF into an Excel spreadsheet so that the data could be more easily analyzed by Demuth.

Demuth analyzed the arrest records in order to identify, for example, persons arrested on warrants for failure to appear or for non-misdemeanor and non-felony

2 municipal ordinance violations, persons arrested without warrants, and persons arrested on warrants from other jurisdictions; fines or fees associated with such arrests;

payments (if any) made by arrestees at release; and length of detention. Demuth further estimated the number of individuals in each category by using social security numbers to account for situations when a single individual was arrested on multiple occasions. Based on his analysis, Demuth calculated median detention lengths, fee or fine totals, and payment amounts. Demuth also analyzed the detentions based on other demographics, such as arrestees’ race, gender, and employment status.

Demuth calculated the number of arrestees in each class proposed by the Plaintiffs by assuming that Plaintiffs could prove their theories of liability. For example, Demuth assumed that, as to the Bearden Class defined in the Court’s class certification Order (ECF No. 519),1 those arrested on failure-to-appear warrants never received indigency determination and were held for as long as it took to extract money

for a bond or other payment, as Plaintiffs had alleged in their complaint. Therefore, Demuth counted such arrestees as members of the Bearden Class. Demuth then created formulas that could be used as a classwide damages methodology if damages were based on the length of detention. Demuth did not opine

1 The Bearden Class definition was recently amended to impose an end-date to the class period. See ECF No. 535. The Class, as amended, is defined as “[a]ll persons who have, at any time from February 8, 2010 through September 30, 2017, been kept in jail by the City of Ferguson for failing to pay a fine, fee, bond, surcharge, or cost, without an inquiry into their ability to pay (Count One).” ECF No. 535 at 1.

3 regarding the appropriate per-hour dollar value to be applied to such damages. However, Demuth created formulas for each damages class based on the characteristics

of each class of arrestees, and Demuth explained how a per-hour dollar value (as found by the fact-finder at trial) could be applied to the formula. For example, as to the Bearden Class, which Demuth described as the “First Damages Class,” Demuth created the following classwide damages formula, with the dollar amount to be filled in by the fact-finder at trial:

For each person in the First Damages Class: [$ per hour detained] x [number of hours detained for the arrests meeting criteria for First Damages Class] = Class-wide damages for First Damages Class.

ECF No. 439-1, Demuth Report at 35. Demuth also produced a rebuttal expert report, responding to the City’s expert witness, Judge Douglas R. Beach, who challenged some of assumptions underlying Demuth’s opinions, including the assumption that all persons held in the Ferguson jail were entitled to an indigency determination and did not in fact receive an inquiry into their ability to pay. See ECF No. 495-1, Beach Report at 6, 10. In his rebuttal report, Demuth opined that nothing in Beach’s report contradicted Demuth’s methodology or conclusions and that Demuth identified class members solely by reviewing the charges reflected in the arrest record data for people detained by or on behalf of the City and who had arrest charges for violations of City ordinances or failure-to-appear warrants issued by the City. See ECF No. 439-3, Demuth Rebuttal Report.

4 In its motion to exclude Demuth’s opinions, the City argues that Demuth is unqualified to render his opinions because he admittedly has never served as a damages

expert or prepared a damages methodology. The City further asserts that Demuth’s opinions should be excluded because they rely in part on Excel spreadsheets created with the assistance of Plaintiffs’ counsel. The City contends that “clearly established law and professional conduct rules . . . mandate that if [counsel’s law firm] White & Case did prepare [the spreadsheets], the document[s] must be excluded lest White & Case would be disqualified from serving as trial counsel.” ECF No. 510 at 1.

Next, the City asserts that Demuth’s rebuttal report goes beyond merely responding to Beach’s report and instead improperly expands Demuth’s initial opinions. Finally, the City argues that Demuth’s opinions should be excluded to the extent they comment on the race of class members, as race is irrelevant to any issue in this case.2 II. Eldon Vail

Plaintiffs have also retained Eldon Vail, a former correctional administrator, to opine on whether the City’s policies and practices conform to national correctional standards and whether they created a substantial risk of harm to detainees.3

2 As part of its Daubert motion, the City also reiterates its opposition to class certification and its argument that individualized damages determinations will predominate in this action. This Court has already rejected such arguments in its Order granting class certification in part and will not repeat that analysis here.

3 The City’s jail ceased operations in late 2017.

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