Fisher v. District of Columbia

498 A.2d 198, 1985 D.C. App. LEXIS 473
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 29, 1985
Docket84-896
StatusPublished

This text of 498 A.2d 198 (Fisher v. District of Columbia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fisher v. District of Columbia, 498 A.2d 198, 1985 D.C. App. LEXIS 473 (D.C. 1985).

Opinion

PAIR, Associate Judge, Retired.

This appeal presents a challenge to the trial court’s grant of summary judgment to the District of Columbia and William J. Yeith in a suit against them founded on allegations of false arrest, negligence, and a violation of civil rights. Appellants Robert and Alice Fisher, the plaintiffs below, submit that summary disposition was inappropriate in light of the material factual disputes surrounding their claims. We conclude that with one exception, viz., the disposition of Alice Fisher’s negligence claim against the District, their position is well taken. Accordingly, we affirm in part and reverse and remand for trial on the other counts.

I

April 25,1982, was, to say the very least, a day of misfortune for Robert and Alice Fisher. Early in the preceding evening, the Fishers arrived at Maggie’s Restaurant on Wisconsin Avenue, Northwest. They were accompanied by Alice Fisher’s sisters, Mary Boyle and Eleanor Boyle Duckett, and were later joined by Alice’s brother and his date. The group dined, drank beer, and socialized at Maggie’s for a good portion of the night.

At about 11:00 p.m., the party sought a change of venue and decided upon a nearby restaurant named Windsor-McKay’s. The group walked the short distance to Windsor-McKay’s and remained there until it closed, 2:00 a.m., all the while drinking beer, dancing, and socializing. Daylight savings time had gone into effect on that date at 2:00 a.m., so the Fishers, Boyle, and Duckett actually left the restaurant at 3:00 *201 a.m. (E.D.T.). Alice Fisher’s brother and his date had left earlier in the evening.

After talking outside Windsor-McKay’s for about a half an hour, the group went to their vehicles, a pickup truck and a Volkswagen, which were parked a few blocks away on 39th Street, Northwest. The events which followed are largely disputed.

A. The Arrest of Robert Fisher

According to the Fishers, the four reached the Fishers’ pickup truck and then Boyle escorted Duckett across 39th Street to Duckett’s Volkswagen. As Boyle was returning (she was to travel home with the Fishers), another pickup truck came “bar-relling” up 39th Street and then stopped, apparently to let her pass. She attempted to do so, but was immediately discouraged as those inside the truck taunted her with a game of “cat and mouse” — the truck would start, stop, and then start up again each time Boyle took a step into the street. As it turns out, the driver of the vehicle was appellee William Veith, a police cadet/trainee of the Metropolitan Police Department. However, Veith was not in training at the time; rather, he and two friends were just driving around the city and had been doing so since 8:00 p.m. the previous evening.

Unable to cross 39th Street, Boyle asked Veith and his friends to stop. At this point, Veith jumped out of his truck and then, in Boyle’s words, began berating her. Hearing this, Robert Fisher went over to Veith and asked him to leave her alone. Veith yelled in response that he was a police officer and could have them all arrested. However, when asked to produce a badge, Veith showed Fisher only his police identification card. According to Fisher, he was unable to read the card or to recognize what it was because Veith was not holding it steadily.

During the confrontation, Fisher had his back to Veith’s pickup truck and Veith was directly in front of him. At some point, Veith’s two friends got out of the truck, presumably one from each side, approached Fisher and then surrounded him. In order to fend off one of them or, as Boyle put it, “[t]o keep the kid from stepping in on him,” Fisher stuck out his arm and made contact with the person. As this occurred, Veith opened his jacket revealing his service revolver. This prompted Eleanor Duckett, who had witnessed the entire incident from a position near her car, to warn Fisher about the gun. She then accompanied Boyle to the Fishers’ truck where Alice Fisher had been waiting.

At about this time, Officer Antoine Clai-born came upon the scene in his police cruiser. Veith rushed to Claiborn, informed him of Fisher’s “assault” on his friend and then stated that he wanted to arrest him. Consequently, Claiborn informed Fisher that he was under arrest, placed handcuffs on him, and then transported him to the police station. Veith and his friends followed in their pickup truck.

Veith saw the events leading to Fisher’s arrest differently. The Fishers, Boyle, and Duckett were standing in the middle of 39th Street when Veith came upon them in his pickup truck. He politely asked them to move so that he could go home but Robert Fisher stated, in no uncertain terms, that they would not get out of his way. Veith then got out of his truck, confronted the group, and again politely asked them to step aside. When they refused, Veith identified himself as a police officer. Fisher responded: “I don’t care who the f_you are. You ain’t no one.” Over the next few minutes, Veith made several requests that they leave and repeatedly identified himself as a police officer. Finally, Veith showed the group his badge, which Fisher then tried to swat away.

For Veith, the scene became progressively more threatening. Fisher and the others started yelling at him, using profanity, and then began to approach him. As they came “closer and closer,” Veith sensed that Boyle and Duckett were surrounding him, and warned his friends in the truck, saying: “If anything happens, if anything looks like it’s going to happen ... come out and back *202 me up.” However, the group continued its menacing behavior and, before long, Veith’s friends got out of the truck to render assistance. As Veith describes it, Fisher then all of the sudden turned around and without justification punched one of his friends in the face. At Veith’s admonition, the friend did not strike back. Several minutes later, after consulting Officer Claiborn, who had by then arrived on the scene, Veith arrested Fisher for assault.

B. The Assault on Alice Fisher

Robert Fisher asked Officer Claiborn to drive slowly to the station so that his wife and her sisters could follow in the Fishers’ truck. He agreed to do so, but after travelling only a short distance had to stop and wait for the women who themselves had stopped. After waiting briefly, he proceeded to the station without them.

According to the Fishers, the women had stopped the truck because they were distraught and confused. At some point, a second police cruiser, driven by Officer John Poland, pulled up behind them. Eleanor Duckett, who had been driving the pickup truck, got out and explained to Poland what had happened and asked that he take care of her sisters. She had decided to drive her Volkswagen to the station house so that both vehicles would be available in the event Robert Fisher was released that night.

After Duckett left, Boyle and Alice Fisher conferred with Officer Poland on the street. They related to him that neither was in a condition to drive: Boyle did not feel comfortable driving the Fishers’ truck and Mrs. Fisher was too upset. Although Officer Poland agreed that neither should drive, because of police regulations he refused their request for a ride to the station. He did, however, consent to their parking the truck in a nearby lot.

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Bluebook (online)
498 A.2d 198, 1985 D.C. App. LEXIS 473, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fisher-v-district-of-columbia-dc-1985.