FOULKE v. SIMMONS

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Florida
DecidedMarch 14, 2022
Docket3:20-cv-05506
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
FOULKE v. SIMMONS, (N.D. Fla. 2022).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF FLORIDA PENSACOLA DIVISION

MARY FOULKE AS PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE FOR THE ESTATE OF JOHN C YOUNG, et al.,

Plaintiffs, v. Case No. 3:20cv5506-MCR/EMT

DANIEL WELLER, et al.,

Defendants. _________________________________/

ORDER This civil rights suit stems from a fatal incident in which John C. Young was shot and killed at his apartment by deputies responding to Young’s 911 call. Plaintiffs, Personal Representatives of the Estate of John C. Young, brought suit alleging constitutional and state law claims against the Sheriff of Escambia County and several deputies of the Escambia County Sheriff’s Office (“ECSO”) involved in the shooting. Plaintiffs filed a motion in limine requesting an adverse inference as a sanction for the failure to timely preserve evidence consisting of a pair of pants, a cell phone, and a cell phone case, which now cannot be forensically examined.1

1 Plaintiffs contend the evidence should have been preserved on the day of the incident, instead of months later, after the pants had been washed and the phone had been in continued use, and also question whether these items are in fact the same, based on a chain of custody question. Page 2 of 9

Pending is the magistrate judge’s Report and Recommendation, ECF No. 72,

recommending that Plaintiffs’ motion for evidentiary sanctions be denied, ECF No. 35. The parties have been given an opportunity to object. See ECF No. 73. Having fully considered the objections and the record, the Court adopts the Report and Recommendation. The district court reviews the disputed portions of a magistrate judge’s report and recommendation de novo. 28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(1). The court “may accept, reject, or modify the recommended disposition; receive further evidence; or resubmit the

matter to the magistrate judge with instructions.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 72(b)(3). Applying de novo review, the court examines the legal conclusions reached and independently considers factual issues based on the record. See Jeffrey S. ex rel. Ernest S. v. State Bd. of Educ., 896 F.2d 507, 513 (11th Cir. 1990).

As noted by the magistrate judge, the facts are largely undisputed but the parties disagree as to the inferences to be derived from the facts and the application of law to them. Undisputed evidence established that on December 1, 2018, John C.

Young called 911 from his apartment and reported that he had “just murdered someone” with a meat cleaver and that he was thinking about killing himself or someone else too. ECF No. 42–2 at 5–6. He stated he also intended to kill one of the responding deputies and that he had a gun. Id. at 8–9. Several deputies Case No. 3:20cv5506-MCR/EMT Page 3 of 9

responded to the scene and within minutes, Young was dead, having been shot approximately 27 times. The deputies’ accounts are stated within the Report and Recommendation and will be summarized here only for context. When they arrived, Young stepped out of the apartment, holding a meat cleaver in one hand and a knife of some sort in the

other.2 Young failed to comply when the deputies ordered him to drop the weapons. As a result, the deputies fired five rounds of non-lethal bean bags and a Taser, none of which had any effect on Young. He raised the meat cleaver as if he intended to

throw it, and the deputies fired their weapons. Deputy Daniel Weller recalled that other deputies were firing at Young as the knife was in the air and said the knife hit his leg before he discharged his gun. See generally ECF No. 72 at 2–3; ECF No. 35–1 at 109; ECF No. 42–4 at 4.

Shortly after the incident, Weller noticed two holes in his pants and a red mark on his leg. He later noticed a two or three inch scrape on his cell phone case, which he said matched up with the hole in his pants. See ECF No. 72 at 4; ECF No. 35–1

at 6–10. The pants and cell phone case were photographed but not immediately collected by either the Florida Department of Law Enforcement (“FDLE”) or the

2 A meat cleaver and a box cutter were recovered from the scene. ECF No. 42–21. Case No. 3:20cv5506-MCR/EMT Page 4 of 9

ECSO. Weller continued to wear and wash the pants and continued to use the phone in the case. ECF No. 35–1 at 18–22. Despite Plaintiffs’ early general request for the preservation of evidence, Defendants did not collect these items from Weller until 26 or 27 months later when Plaintiffs’ counsel requested them expressly. ECF No. 42–34.

Based on this evidence, the magistrate judge concluded (1) that the pants, cell phone, and case existed at the time of the incident, (2) that a duty to preserve arose when the FDLE investigation began, (3) that, while the evidence as it existed on

December 1, 2018, is not crucial to the Plaintiffs’ case in chief, a comparison of the indentations with the meat cleaver could be helpful to defeat claims of self-defense, but (4) notwithstanding these conclusions in Plaintiffs favor and a strong case for carelessness, the circumstantial evidence does not support a finding of bad faith. The

magistrate judge thus recommended denying the request for sanctions but explained that Plaintiffs are not without a remedy because they will have broad latitude at trial to challenge officer credibility and the authenticity of the evidence.

Plaintiffs object, arguing the magistrate judge erred by accepting the Defendants’ “self-serving assertions” that the physical items currently in the Escambia County Sheriff’s Office evidence room are the same items involved on December 1, 2018. But self-serving statements based on personal knowledge are Case No. 3:20cv5506-MCR/EMT Page 5 of 9

admissible and not inherently unworthy of credence. See United States v. Davis, 809 F.2d 1509, 1512–13 (11th Cir. 1987) (explaining that “self-serving testimony, by itself” can create a genuine dispute of material fact, especially where it is not directly contradicted and not “so fantastic” that it “falls of its own weight”). Here, Plaintiffs point to nothing but speculation to assert that the pants and cell phone case

in the evidence room are not the same items Deputy Weller had on his person on the day of the incident. There is some corroboration of Weller’s statements in that the items are documented in contemporaneous reports and photographs, despite the

questionable chain of custody. Plaintiffs are free to challenge credibility and raise doubts based on the lack of evidence or gaps in evidence before the jury. Plaintiffs also argue that the magistrate judge erred by ignoring the Defendants’ concessions that the items had been “physically and substantially

altered.” ECF No. 73 at 9. The Court disagrees. The magistrate judge acknowledged that the pants had been worn and washed several times after the shooting and that Weller continued to use the phone case, but even so, concluded

that this does not establish bad faith. Sanctions cannot be imposed based on spoliation of evidence “for negligently losing or destroying evidence,” and in the spoliation context, bad faith “generally means destruction for the purpose of hiding adverse evidence.” See Tesoriero v. Carnival Corp., 965 F.3d 1170, 1184 (11th Cir. Case No. 3:20cv5506-MCR/EMT Page 6 of 9

2020) (quoting Guzman v. Jones, 804 F.3d 707, 713 (5th Cir. 2015)), cert. denied, 141 S. Ct. 2516 (2021).

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FOULKE v. SIMMONS, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foulke-v-simmons-flnd-2022.