Farris v. Oakland County

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedAugust 2, 2023
Docket2:20-cv-10295
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Farris v. Oakland County, (E.D. Mich. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN SOUTHERN DIVISION

KELLIE FARRIS,

Plaintiff, Case No. 20-10295 v. HON. DENISE PAGE HOOD

OAKLAND COUNTY, et al.,

Defendants. _______________________________________/

ORDER GRANTING DEFENDANTS’ MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT [ECF No. 27] and DISMISSING ACTION

I. INTRODUCTION This lawsuit arises out of the arrest of Plaintiff Kellie Farris by Oakland County Sheriff deputies on March 31, 2019. On July 6, 2021, Defendants filed a Motion for Summary Judgment. [ECF No. 27] The Motion has been fully briefed, and a hearing was held on September 16, 2021. For the reasons that follow, Defendants are entitled to summary judgment on all claims, and Plaintiff’s cause of action is dismissed. 1

II. BACKGROUND In considering the Motion for Summary Judgment, the Court must view all of

the facts in a light most favorable to Plaintiff. The following version of the “facts” is consistent with that obligation. The Court is not limited to including only those “facts” as represented by Plaintiff, and additional relevant “facts” are included in

order to assess whether the individual defendants are entitled to qualified immunity. Plaintiff is a 29-year-old single mother of two minor children. Antoine Kyles is the father of one of Plaintiff’s two children and was dating a woman named Danniqua Franklin on March 31, 2019. On that day, Ms. Franklin walked into

Plaintiff’s residence and began threatening Plaintiff. Plaintiff told Ms. Franklin that she needed to leave her house and Ms. Franklin left. Plaintiff tried calling Mr. Kyles after Ms. Franklin left her residence, but he did not answer. Since Mr. Kyles did not

answer his phone, Plaintiff drove up the street to Mr. Kyle’s mother’s house, which is where Mr. Kyles resided. (Id. at p. 55). Upon arriving at Mr. Kyles residence, Plaintiff did not initially see Ms. Franklin’s car. While Plaintiff was in her car, Ms. Franklin came out from between

two cars, ran up to Plaintiff’s car, and began kicking Plaintiff’s car, which caused Plaintiff’s car to be dented. Plaintiff claims she backed up her car to get away from Ms. Franklin, parked, called 9-1-1, and spoke to the operator until law enforcement

arrived. Plaintiff told the dispatcher that Ms. Franklin had kicked her car and damaged her car. Plaintiff was advised by the 9-1-1 operator to remain in her car,

and she has stated that she never left her car until after law enforcement arrived on scene. Defendants Mendicino and Winborn were dispatched to the scene on the

malicious destruction of property call. Plaintiff was in her car when Defendants Mendicino and Winborn arrived.1 Plaintiff told Defendant Mendicino what happened at her house earlier with Ms. Franklin and how Ms. Franklin kicked her car and damaged her car. Plaintiff also talked to Defendant Winborn and told him

that Ms. Franklin kicked and damaged her car in the front and back. Defendants Winborn and Mendicino saw the damage to the front and rear of Plaintiff’s vehicle. As Plaintiff claims, it is a crime of malicious destruction of property to damage

another individual’s vehicle. Defendants Winborn and Mendicino also talked to Ms. Franklin to understand her side of the story regarding what transpired in the parking lot of Mr. Kyles’ mother’s residence. Ms. Franklin told Defendant Winborn that Plaintiff attempted to

1 From this point until Plaintiff was removed from Defendant Winborn’s squad car at the Oakland County Jail, there is an audio recording of almost all events described during that period (and a squad car video that captures a few of those events). 3

hit her with her car twice and Plaintiff got out of her car and displayed in a threatening manner a purple or silver knife or purple or silver scissors. Ms. Franklin

then described what would be the shape of scissors to Defendant Mendicino (and not the shape something that was the shape of a knife). Ms. Franklin admitted to kicking Plaintiff’s car but claimed that it was in self-defense. Plaintiff denied Ms. Franklin’s

version of events and claimed Ms. Franklin was lying. Plaintiff consented to a search of her car, and she represents that she informed Defendant Winborn prior to the search that she had scissors and a pocketknife in her car. Plaintiff reports that the scissors were her children’s scissors. A search was

conducted of Plaintiff’s car, and three scissors and a three-inch pocketknife were found. After talking to Plaintiff and Ms. Franklin, Defendant Mendicino acknowledged that the women had their own version of events as to what occurred.

Both Plaintiff and Ms. Franklin provided written statements at the scene, and both of their statements comported to what they told Defendants Winborn and Mendicino. Defendant Winborn attempted to talk to Mr. Kyle, however, Mr. Kyle was uncooperative and did not corroborate Plaintiff’s version of events or Ms. Franklin’s

version of events. There were no other witnesses to the aforementioned events that took place on March 31, 2019.

Defendants Winborn and Mendicino called Sergeant Hunt from Oakland County Sheriff’s Department to discuss the situation. During the discussion,

Sergeant Hunt said that making an arrest “will stop them from doing dumb shit in the future.” Sergeant Hunt suggested, and Defendant Winborn agreed, that arresting one or the other would “solve a problem.” Sergeant Hunt also advised that if it is

determined that Plaintiff did not follow Ms. Franklin to the scene, to go with whatever you feel is the stronger case. Defendant Winborn admitted in his deposition that for the sake of just solving a problem and contact between two people, an officer cannot make an arrest on that basis solely. After the Defendants’ conversation with

Sergeant Hunt, Defendants Winborn and Mendicino decided to arrest Plaintiff. Defendant Winborn arrested Plaintiff for aggravated felonious assault with a weapon.

On the ride to the Oakland County Jail (“OCJ”), Plaintiff kept telling Defendant Winborn that she did not do anything. Shortly after Defendant Winborn and Plaintiff left the scene in Winborn’s patrol vehicle, Defendant Winborn observed Plaintiff rolling her head and wrapping the seat belt three to four times around her

neck and making a gurgling sound. ECF No. 27, Ex. C at 56. Defendant Winborn then called out over the radio that Plaintiff was attempting to hang herself, stopped and exited the vehicle, opened the rear door and unwound the seat belt from around

Plaintiff’s neck. Id. at 57. During this time, Defendant Winborn heard Plaintiff state that she wanted to kill herself. Id. at 57. Plaintiff was handcuffed at this point in

time during transport. Id. at 59. Defendant Winborn communicated Plaintiff’s actions and statements to supervisors and stopped the vehicle to await assistance. Sergeant Hunt and multiple other deputies arrived at the scene, along with an

ambulance and paramedics. Sergeant Hunt made the decision to have Defendant Mendicino, who is a female deputy, ride with Plaintiff in the back seat during the remainder of the transport to Oakland County Jail. Id. at 59-60. While in the backseat for the duration of the transport, Defendant Mendicino attempted to hold

Plaintiff by her shoulders so she could not wrap the seatbelt around her head. ECF No. 27, Ex. B at 70. When Defendant Mendicino would remove her hands from Plaintiff, Plaintiff would attempt to wrap the seatbelt around her head. Id.

The Booking Supervisor for OCJ notified Defendant Sergeant Jordan that Plaintiff was uncooperative and actively attempting to strangle herself while en route to the OCJ. ECF No. 27, Ex. D at 6. As a result, the OCJ Cell Extraction Team (“CET”) was activated to escort Plaintiff to her cell. (Exhibit D, p. 6).

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Farris v. Oakland County, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farris-v-oakland-county-mied-2023.