Garcia v. Amaranto (In Re Amaranto)

252 B.R. 595, 2000 Bankr. LEXIS 1029, 2000 WL 1285632
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedSeptember 13, 2000
Docket19-30189
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 252 B.R. 595 (Garcia v. Amaranto (In Re Amaranto)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Garcia v. Amaranto (In Re Amaranto), 252 B.R. 595, 2000 Bankr. LEXIS 1029, 2000 WL 1285632 (Conn. 2000).

Opinion

DECISION AND ORDER ON DISCHARGEABILITY OF DEBT

ALAN H. W. SHIFF, Chief Judge.

The plaintiff-creditor seeks a determination that he was injured by the defendant-debtor’s civil rights (police brutality) action against him in the Connecticut Superior Court and that the resulting debt should not be discharged because the injury was “willful and malicious.” See 11 U.S.C. *597 § 523(a)(6). 1 For the reasons that follow, judgment shall enter in favor of the plaintiff.

BACKGROUND

The following facts are found from the evidence adduced at trial and an assessment of the credibility of the witnesses. The plaintiff is a Bridgeport, Connecticut police officer. He and other members of the Bridgeport police department were on notice that human body parts were being deposited in public receptacles. On August 5, 1995, the plaintiff, while off-duty, out of uniform, and driving his personal automobile, observed the defendant abruptly stop in front of him in a pickup truck heading eastbound on Boston Avenue near The Green in Bridgeport. Tr. 2 at 9-10. 2 The plaintiff identified himself as a police officer and told the defendant that he could not stop his car there. Id. The defendant ignored him and began dumping the contents of numerous buckets into a receptacle on The Green. Id. at 11-12. The plaintiff asked the defendant what he was doing. The defendant continued to ignore him, hurriedly completed the dumping, and drove away. Id. at 12. The plaintiff followed, sounding his horn. Id. at 13. He passed the defendant’s vehicle, showed his badge, and instructed him to pull over. The defendant accelerated past the plaintiff, and the plaintiff continued the pursuit. Id. at 14. The defendant stopped on Wake Street. The plaintiff got out of his vehicle and, while holding his badge, approached the defendant’s truck. The defendant then abruptly drove about 15 feet in reverse, stopped, and ducked inside the truck. Id. at 15-16. Fearing that the defendant might be reaching for a weapon, the plaintiff put his hand on his holstered weapon. The defendant sat up, saw the plaintiff, and abruptly drove his vehicle back toward where the plaintiff was standing. Id. The plaintiff then drew his weapon but returned it to its holster during a patdown search after the defendant, as directed, exited his vehicle. The plaintiff did not arrest the defendant, id. at 18-20, but instead called for back up assistance. The Bridgeport police department dispatched officer Michelle Hernandez, who ascertained that the defendant had been dumping leaves. Tr. 3 at 14. The defendant did not tell officer Hernandez that he had been attacked by the plaintiff or that he had urinated in his pants out of fear, as he later claimed. Tr. 3 at 5, 8. Officer Hernandez did not observe any physical injury or urine stain. Tr. 3 at 6, 7-8. After Officer Hernandez determined that the defendant did not have insurance, and a check of the license plates on the defendant’s truck revealed that it was not registered, she arranged for it to be towed from the scene. Tr. 3 at 9,13.

On August 9, 1995, the defendant filed a citizens’ complaint with the Bridgeport Police Department in which he claimed that the plaintiff had physically abused, harassed, and frightened him, causing him to “involuntarily urinat[e] in [his] pants twice.” See Plaintiff’s Complaint at ¶ 4 and Plaintiff’s Exh. 8. The defendant repeated those allegations to the Office of Internal Affairs, which commenced an investigation. 3 Tr. 3 at 47-48. See Plaintiffs Complaint at ¶ 7.

*598 On October 3, 1995, the defendant commenced a police brutality claim against the plaintiff in Connecticut Superior Court, alleging that the plaintiff had violated his civil rights by assaulting him on August 5. Tr. 2 at 31-32; Plaintiff’s Exh. 1. The matter was reached for trial on January 8, 1998. Several days before that date, two prospective witnesses for the defendant informed a Bridgeport Police Department detective that the defendant had offered to buy their testimony. As a result of that information, arrangements were made for the use of a recording device to be worn by those informants. Testimony of Detective Leonard Sattani, tr. 3 at 19-20. On the basis of the recorded conversation, the defendant was arrested in court as the trial was about to commence. Plaintiffs Exh. 8; tr. 2 at 33-35, 41; tr. 3 at 21-42. On January 9, the defendant withdrew his civil rights action. Plaintiff’s Exh. 2; tr. 2 at 33. Subsequently, the defendant pleaded guilty to witness tampering, CGS § 53a-151. He was thereafter convicted, sentenced, and incarcerated for six months. See tr. 3 at 31. It is worthy of note that the defendant did not object to the admissibility of this evidence or offer any mitigating explanation.

On March 20, 1998, the plaintiff commenced an action against the defendant in Connecticut Superior Court, alleging that the defendant’s civil rights action constituted vexatious litigation. Two weeks later, the defendant filed this chapter 7 case which stayed the plaintiffs state court action. See 11 U.S.C. § 362(a). On December 8, 1998, the plaintiff commenced the instant adversary proceeding which alleges that he was willfully and maliciously injured by the defendant’s civil rights complaint which the defendant knew was based upon fictitious allegations of police brutality. As a result of that action and subsequent conduct, he suffered an exacerbation of a preexisting Crohn’s disease, humiliation, disgrace, pain, suffering, and mental anxiety. As a consequence, the plaintiff seeks a determination that the debt resulting from that injury should not be discharged. See § 523(a)(6) and Complaint at ¶¶ 3, 6, 11, and p. 4.

DISCUSSION

Code section 523(a)(6) excepts from discharge a “debt ... for willful and malicious injury by the debtor to another entity .... ” The dischargeability analysis first requires a determination whether there was an injury. If so, it must be determined whether that injury was “willful and malicious.”

Was there an injury?

The plaintiffs treating physician, Dr. Douglas Duchin, testified that he began treating the plaintiff in November 1992 for various ailments, including abdominal pain, diarrhea, anxiety, fatigue, and stress which were the basis of his diagnosis that the plaintiff had Crohn’s disease. Following treatment, the plaintiffs symptoms abated by the end of 1993. The plaintiff testified credibly that he was upset by the false accusations of the civil rights action, tr. 2 at 25, 32, 36-43, and that the defendant had frightened him by insinuating that he would have the plaintiffs house repainted a new color once the defendant won his lawsuit.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
252 B.R. 595, 2000 Bankr. LEXIS 1029, 2000 WL 1285632, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garcia-v-amaranto-in-re-amaranto-ctb-2000.