Fleming v. City of Bridgeport

935 A.2d 126, 284 Conn. 502, 2007 Conn. LEXIS 492
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedDecember 4, 2007
DocketSC 17627
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 935 A.2d 126 (Fleming v. City of Bridgeport) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fleming v. City of Bridgeport, 935 A.2d 126, 284 Conn. 502, 2007 Conn. LEXIS 492 (Colo. 2007).

Opinion

Opinion

KATZ, J.

The named plaintiff, Sylvia Fleming, appeals from the judgment of the Appellate Court holding that: (1) the individual defendants James Dixon and Susie Dixon (Dixons), the owners of a multifamily house in which the plaintiff occupied an apartment, did not violate Connecticut’s entry and detainer statute, General Statutes § 47a-43, 1 by requesting that the police remove the plaintiff from the apartment on May 7, 1998; and (2) the municipal defendants, the city of Bridgeport *505 (city) and several of its police officers, were entitled to qualified immunity for allegations that they unlawfully had removed the plaintiff from that apartment on both May 7 and May 8, 1998. 2 Fleming v. Bridgeport, 92 Conn. App. 400, 404, 407, 886 A.2d 1220 (2005). The Appellate Court affirmed in part the trial court’s judgment rendered in favor of all of the defendants as to the allegations pertaining to May 7, but reversed in part the trial court’s judgment concluding that the Dixons had not violated § 47a-43 by having the police remove the plaintiff on May 8. Id., 410. On appeal to this court, the plaintiff claims that the Appellate Court improperly determined that the Dixons had not evicted the plaintiff forcibly and illegally in violation of § 47a-43 on May 7, and that the municipal defendants are entitled to qualified immunity for the plaintiffs claims that the police officers violated her rights under the fourth 3 and fourteenth 4 amendments to the federal constitution, and *506 article first, §§ 7 5 and 9, 6 of the state constitution. We agree with the Appellate Court’s determinations and, accordingly, we affirm the judgment.

The trial court found the following facts that, unless otherwise noted, are undisputed. From 1991 to 1998, the plaintiffs father, Ed Harris, lived in the second floor apartment of the multifamily house owned by the Dixons, who lived on the first floor of the premises. Approximately two years after Harris moved in, Carl Terry moved in with him. From 1993 to 1997, the plaintiff sporadically stayed with her father, primarily when she fought with one of her boyfriends. In November, 1997, after she had been beaten severely by her then boyfriend, the plaintiff moved into the apartment with her father and Terry. The plaintiff did not seek the Dixons’ permission to stay in the apartment. She thereafter received mail at the apartment and paid her father or Terry $35 a week in rent. Some time in early 1998, Harris vacated the apartment, but the plaintiff stayed continuously until May 7, 1998. There was some evidence that the plaintiff had caused “disturbances” during the time that she stayed at the apartment. These disturbances were reported to the Dixons by Harris, Terry, and other tenants.

On May 7, 1998, the defendant police officers Juan Gonzales and David Santos responded to a telephone call from Susie Dixon regarding a tenant problem at 215 Read Street, the address of the second floor apartment. In the call, Susie Dixon complained of scuffling, *507 yelling, screaming and swearing by the plaintiff in the second floor apartment. Because these officers had responded to a previous incident in February, 1998, at that address, they were familiar with the occupants of the premises. Upon the officers’ arrival, one of the Dixons told Gonzales and Santos that the plaintiff was intoxicated, that she had caused a disturbance, that she was only a guest and not a tenant of theirs, and that they wanted her removed from the property. 7 The officers then went upstairs to the apartment to investigate, where Santos first talked to Terry. Terry informed Santos that the plaintiff was a guest and that he wanted her to leave. The plaintiff told Gonzales that she and Terry were married. Terry became angry when he heard the plaintiff say this, denied that he and the plaintiff were married, and again told the officers that he wanted the plaintiff to leave. Gonzales then told the plaintiff that she had to leave because she was only a guest and that both Terry and the Dixons wanted her removed. Although the plaintiff continually questioned why she was being made to leave, she nonetheless walked with the officers out of the apartment and to the street. Once there, however, the plaintiff became angry and began yelling. After she ignored the officers’ warnings to be quiet, they arrested her for breach of the peace.

On May 8, 1998, the plaintiff returned to the apartment. When the Dixons learned of her return, they telephoned the police. Officer Garfield Bums responded to the call from dispatch regarding “an unwanted person [that] the landlord wanted removed.” When Bums arrived, James Dixon told him that the plaintiff was not his tenant, that she had caused a disturbance the night *508 before, and that she had been arrested and removed and told not to return. Bums decided to investigate the situation and went upstairs to talk with the plaintiff and Terry. Neither the plaintiff nor Terry informed Bums that the plaintiff had occupied the premises continually for several months or that she had contributed to the rent. After investigating the situation, Bums asked the plaintiff to leave the apartment. 8 The plaintiff agreed to leave, but asked to take a shower first. She then locked herself in the bathroom for forty minutes. During this time, an additional officer, Sergeant Solomon Holly, arrived at the scene. 9 The plaintiff then went into the bedroom where she spent more than one-half hour, claiming to be getting dressed. At some point, Bums and Holly followed Terry into the bedroom, where they found the plaintiff only partially clothed. The officers then covered her and arrested her for criminal trespass and disorderly conduct.

The plaintiff thereafter brought this action against the defendants, alleging, inter alia, 10 that both the municipal defendants and the Dixons illegally had evicted her from the apartment in violation of § 47a-43 and that the municipal defendants had violated her constitutional *509 rights to freedom from unlawful searches and seizures and to due process of law under the federal and state constitutions. 11 See footnotes 3 through 6 of this opinion. At the close of the bench trial, the court directed verdicts on certain counts of the complaint that are not considered here 12 and received posttrial briefs on the remaining counts. In its memorandum of decision, the court found that the plaintiff was in actual possession of the apartment from November, 1997, to May 6, 1998, but that she was not in “lawful or peaceable possession” on May 7 and 8, 1998.

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Bluebook (online)
935 A.2d 126, 284 Conn. 502, 2007 Conn. LEXIS 492, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fleming-v-city-of-bridgeport-conn-2007.