Fontenot v. Fontenot

499 So. 2d 958, 1986 La. App. LEXIS 7848
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 8, 1986
DocketNo. 85-553
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 499 So. 2d 958 (Fontenot v. Fontenot) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fontenot v. Fontenot, 499 So. 2d 958, 1986 La. App. LEXIS 7848 (La. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

H. GARLAND PAVY, Judge Pro Tern.

Plaintiff-appellant appeals from a judgment denying recovery of his tort claim growing out of his arrest and detention by officers of the City of Ville Platte in Evangeline Parish. Defendant sued the city, four of its policemen and Leroy Fonte-not who owned the Kit Kat Lounge at which place the arrest occurred.

The claim against Mr. Fontenot, the lounge owner, stems from an attack upon plaintiff by Stephen Vidrine, allegedly then in the employ of Mr. Fontenot. That claim has been informally abandoned in the appellate court and we will not rule on it.

On Saturday, February 20,1982, plaintiff and a companion, Robert Davis, both from Calcasieu Parish, proceeded to a camp near Mamou in Evangeline Parish. They were to remain there for the weekend and the Mardi Gras holidays the next week. That Saturday afternoon they went to Ville Platte and visited various entertainment spots. Sometime during the latter part of the evening they were in the Kit Kat Lounge for the second time. A difficulty arose concerning plaintiff. The owner, Fontenot, called the police and he and Stephen Vidrine, a sometime employee at the lounge, had plaintiff and Davis leave the lounge. Outside, as plaintiff and Davis were going to the car, a further difficulty arose between plaintiff and Stephen Vid-rine, who hit plaintiff supposedly when plaintiff swung at him. About that time the police arrived. Upon instructions or request from the lounge owner, Fontenot, the police officers arrested plaintiff and Davis.

The details of these two incidents, inside and outside the lounge, are in dispute. They will be referred to only as necessary as we are not concerned with the liability of either Fontenot or Vidrine.

At the police station plaintiff and Davis were placed in separate rooms. Officer Hargrave was to process plaintiff and Officer Fontenot was with Davis. Officer Fon-tenot left with Lt. Roy Jenkins to answer a call. According to Officer Hargrave, when he asked plaintiff to empty his pockets, plaintiff assumed a karate-like stance in defiance of the order. Hargrave approached plaintiff, and they engaged in struggling or scuffling. Plaintiff had brain surgeries which left a partially plastic skull; he was subject to epileptic seizures. He claimed that when Hargrave gave the order he was attempting to explain his condition and that his left side became nonfunctional from paralysis or a seizure and his left hand was caught in his left pocket which held his antiseizure medication.

The dispatcher, Joe Doucet, joined the officer in the struggle with plaintiff. Shortly thereafter Officer Fontenot and Lt. Jenkins returned from the call and they joined in the struggle. Plaintiff claimed he was beaten several times, passed out because of a seizure and regained consciousness later at the hospital. Lt. Jenkins admitted hitting plaintiff once on the back with his night stick and causing him to fall. Officer Fontenot stated that Jenkins hit plaintiff three or four times. Officer Fon-tenot admitted he also used his stick on plaintiff but claimed it was only to punch or poke him.

[960]*960Plaintiff was carried to his cell by the four policemen. Apparently he was unconscious. Davis, in another room during this episode, heard the scuffle and plaintiff hollering during the struggle. He saw them carry plaintiff to the cell and told them of plaintiffs epileptic condition. Plaintiff was taken to a hospital by ambulance. There was an argument about responsibility for the hospital charges. Ultimately, plaintiff was sedated with Valium and Dilantin and returned to jail. He awakened the next morning and was bonded out.

Dr. Landreneau, who was in attendance at the hospital, remembered little about the episode and relied on his notes. They showed plaintiff had a two-centimeter laceration of his left forehead and was brought to the emergency room because of a focal seizure activity in the left leg. Plaintiff was alert and oriented and was having no seizure activity at the time.

Pictures taken of plaintiff the next day show the scalp laceration and several markings on his back. These were narrow, elongated rectangles with discoloration only along the edges.

The trial judge concluded, in pertinent part, as follows:

“Plaintiff, a known drug user and dealer who has been convicted both in Louisiana and Florida served time in the penitentiary, acted in a manner calculated to annoy and alarm law-abiding citizens in a public place; that he attempted to sell drugs and marijuana to a barmaid at the Kit Kat Lounge; that he provoked a fight with Stephen B. Vidrine, and resisted the police when they sought to arrest him; that further he became violent and uncontrollable at the City Jail forcing the police officers to use force to restrain him, and that he injured his head while struggling with the police officers.
“The court further finds that he was using medication, whether prescribed or not, which coupled with the alcohol he consumed that night, produced intoxication to a marked degree.
“That the police officers acted in a lawful manner in arresting and subduing plaintiff.”

Plaintiff contends that his arrest was without probable cause, that he had the right to resist the unlawful arrest and that, even if the arrest was lawful, unreasonable force was used at the police station and the officers wrongly failed to heed his warning or explanation as to his condition.

Officers Hargrave and Fontenot arrested defendant. Lt. Jenkins arrived shortly thereafter. According to the two arresting officers plaintiff was arrested on the instructions of Leroy Fontenot, the lounge owner, for a disturbance or disturbing the peace or knocking over chairs. There is no evidence that either of the police officers interrogated the lounge owner or anyone else or conducted any type of summary investigation to substantiate the arrest. An affidavit filed the following day and signed by Officer Hargrave listed charges against plaintiff of resisting arrest, battery upon officers and threatening officers and disturbing the peace under Revised Statutes 14:103, subd. 7. This latter provision was repealed by Act 222 of 1979. The other charges in the affidavit must have occurred after the initial arrest. They cannot serve as a basis for it. Article 213 of Code of Criminal Procedure provides:

“A peace officer may, without a warrant, arrest a person when ... (3) the police officer has reasonable cause to believe that the person to be arrested has committed an offense although not in the presence of the officer;”

There was evidence that plaintiff knocked over some stacked chairs in the lounge. They were restacked without any substantial commotion. The barmaid testified that plaintiff had tried to sell her a controlled dangerous substance. Plaintiff had two previous convictions for dealing in cocaine and marijuana. None of this was known to any of the parties that night. It is doubtful that the barmaid told anyone about the proposed sale before the arrest. Moreover, neither the officers nor the lounge owner proposed that as a basis for the arrest.

[961]*961There is evidence that plaintiff was jumping up and down in the club and may have become offensively intrusive upon another customer. These may be reasons to eject plaintiff but none of them come within the definition of disturbing the peace as set out in Article 103 of the Criminal Code (R.S. 14:103).

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Braud v. Painter
730 F. Supp. 1 (M.D. Louisiana, 1990)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
499 So. 2d 958, 1986 La. App. LEXIS 7848, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fontenot-v-fontenot-lactapp-1986.