Fiddemon v. Maholik

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 31, 2023
Docket3:21-cv-00144
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Fiddemon v. Maholik, (M.D. Pa. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT MIDDLE DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

CLEO FIDDEMON, :

Plaintiff : CIVIL ACTION NO. 3:21-144

v. : (JUDGE MANNION)

PATROLMAN ROBERT MAHOLIK, : PATROLMAN JOSEPH WOZNIAK, and WILKES-BARRE TOWNSHIP, :

Defendants :

MEMORANDUM Presently before the court is the defendants’ motion for summary judgment. (Doc. 23). Defendants filed a brief in support, (Doc. 25); Plaintiff Cleo Fiddemon filed a brief in opposition, (Doc. 30), and Defendants replied, (Doc. 31). Fiddemon brings this civil rights action pursuant to 42 U.S.C. §1983 alleging numerous constitutional violations arising out of his arrest in Wilkes-Barre Township on December 13, 2019. Defendants filed their motion for summary judgment after their motion to dismiss Fiddemon’s amended complaint but before the court’s decision thereon. On April 31, 2022, the court issued an order on Defendants’ motion to dismiss, granting the motion in part and dismissing the following claims with prejudice: Fiddemon’s claims in Count I against the defendants in their official capacities; Fiddemon’s claims in Count II; Fiddemon’s claims for injunctive relief and declaratory judgment; and Fiddemon’s claims for punitive damages against Wilkes-Bare

and the defendant officers in their official capacities. (Doc. 33). Accordingly, the court will only address Defendants’ summary judgment motion with respect to Fiddemon’s remaining claims in Count I: (1) Excessive force

against the officer defendants; (2) False arrest against the officer defendants; (3) punitive damages against the officer defendants; and (4) municipal liability claims against Wilkes-Barre. Defendants’ motion raises the principal issue of the constitutionality of

police officers forcibly dragging an allegedly noncompliant individual from the processing room of a police station to a holding cell pending arraignment. Due to the significant disputed facts in the record regarding Fiddemon’s

alleged noncompliance with the officers’ commands to get up and walk to the holding cell, and the precise nature of Officer Maholik’s pain compliance technique effected on Fiddemon to gain compliance, the question of excessive force should go to a trier of fact. However, Fiddemon has failed to

raise a genuine dispute of material fact as to his remaining claims against the officers and Wilkes-Barre. Thus, the court will GRANT in part and DENY in part Defendants’ motion for summary judgment. I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND1 With respect to Defendants’ motion for summary judgment, the

essential, undisputed facts are as follows. A. The Initial Stop and Detention On December 13, 2019, Fiddemon went to a Wal-Mart in Wilkes-Barre

Township, Pennsylvania, to purchase a bag of chips. (Doc. 30-1). Fiddemon was on his journey home to Georgia from Buffalo, New York, where he had recently delivered a load of freight a couple days prior. Fiddemon, a self- employed truck driver, says he was “off-duty,” meaning he had been relieved

from work by the motor carrier who hired him. According to Fiddemon, this meant he no longer needed to don a magnetic Department of Transportation (DOT) number on his truck, which he says he removed from his truck before

he left Buffalo. Defendant Officer Robert Maholik, a police officer employed by the Wilkes-Barre Police Department, saw Fiddemon driving his commercial motor vehicle without the appropriate stickers prior to entering the Wal-Mart parking lot. Officer Maholik ran Fiddemon’s tag and discovered

Fiddemon had been stopped in Arkansas years prior for a commercial vehicle inspection. Officer Maholik drove into the Wal-Mart parking lot,

1 The factual background is taken from the parties’ submissions to the extent they are consistent with the evidence in the record. (Docs. 23, 24, 25, 30, 31). approached Fiddemon on foot—Fiddemon having exited his vehicle by this point—and requested Fiddemon produce identification. Fiddemon refused to

produce any license, registration, or vehicle information documents. Officer Maholik explained that this was a traffic stop, to which Fiddemon protested, “It’s not a traffic stop. I’m not in my truck,” and still refused to turn over any

identification. Fiddemon returned to his truck approximately 60 feet away to retrieve his cell phone and started recording video. Then Officer Maholik informed Fiddemon that the nature of the stop was to conduct a DOT inspection.

Fiddemon continued to refuse to produce his identification when requested because, “I did not commit a crime; I wasn’t about to commit a crime; and I hadn’t committed a crime.” Fiddemon informed Officer Maholik that he was

off duty and had removed the magnetic DOT identifiers from his vehicle prior to going off duty. Fiddemon shed more light on his reason for noncompliance and tape recording in his deposition, explaining that “it’s not normal for an officer to approach anyone on foot and just ask them for their ID . . . he can’t

approach me because he’s curious about something . . . his authority does not start because he has on a uniform. His authority starts when there is a crime being committed. There was no crime[,]” since, according to Fiddemon, not having a DOT identifier displayed on his truck was not a DOT violation because he was not “engaged in commerce.” (Doc 30-3).

Since Fiddemon would not cooperate in the inspection, Officer Maholik had to contact a local towing company to dispatch someone to operate the controls of Fiddemon’s vehicle. Officer Maholik also had to request another

officer come to the scene due to Fiddemon’s lack of cooperation. Defendant Officer Joseph Wozniak and Officer Isaac Troutman arrived on the scene shortly thereafter. Officer Maholik had Fiddemon sit on his trailer while he called Southwestern Trucking, the company Fiddemon was contracted with,

which confirmed Fiddemon was returning from a trip to New England. Despite further requests, Fiddemon refused to produce his identification, logbook, or bills of lading. Officer Maholik proceeded to conduct a

commercial vehicle inspection, during which Fiddemon was placed in handcuffs in the back of a patrol car. Fiddemon testified he was in the back of the patrol car for approximately one to two hours while Officer Maholik conducted his investigation. Near the end of the investigation, Fiddemon

indicated that he had a previous shoulder injury and that he was experiencing discomfort because the handcuffs were too tight and were aggravating the preexisting injury. Officer Maholik summoned EMS to evaluate Fiddemon at

the station. B. The Transportation to the Police Station Following the inspection, the officers took Fiddemon to the police

station. Officer Maholik arrested Fiddemon because of his vehicle code infractions, failure to identify himself, and failure to cooperate with the inspection. Officer Maholik explained, “[Fiddemon] was detained and brought

forthwith to our police department so that I could take him before a duty magistrate. The Commonwealth allows for us, as police officers, to bring forthwith to a duty magistrate any person who is either from out of state or who we believe would not comply with any penalties that may or may not

have been assessed.” (Doc. 24-2 at 19).2 Fiddemon was to go before a judge because he was from out of state and would be arraigned on the citations. At the station, Fiddemon was handcuffed to a pole in a processing room.

Officer Maholik, Officer Wozniak, and Officer Jonathan Kaskey were all on scene. Officer Maholik spoke with the on-duty magistrate who indicated that several other people needed to be seen before Fiddemon, and that it would be over an hour before Fiddemon was seen. As a result, Officer Maholik

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