Garcia v. Dykstra

260 F. App'x 887
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 24, 2008
Docket06-2315
StatusUnpublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 260 F. App'x 887 (Garcia v. Dykstra) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Garcia v. Dykstra, 260 F. App'x 887 (6th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

JULIA SMITH GIBBONS, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from the district court’s grant of summary judgment in a civil rights action brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Plaintiffs alleged that several police officers and public officials were complicit in the unlawful taking of certain personal property from their storage unit. The district court rejected plaintiffs’ claims and granted summary judgment in favor of defendants. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm in part and reverse in part.

I.

This case arose out of a dispute between plaintiffs and defendants over the ownership of tools. On October 12, 2004, defendant Kevin Dykstra and plaintiff Stephanie Garcia entered into a purchase agreement in which Garcia agreed to purchase Dykstra’s business, True Cuts Lawn Care, LLC (“True Cuts”). Under the terms of the agreement, Garcia agreed to a purchase price of $1.00 for the True Cuts name, business goodwill, and all client lists and assumed the rights to all accounts receivables and certain assets. The agreement did not accurately reflect the nature of the transaction, however. First, Dykstra received $16,500 in cash, not $1.00, for his sale of True Cuts. Second, although the purchase agreement named Stephanie Garcia as the purchaser, she was merely acting as a proxy for her husband, plaintiff Joel Garcia, and plaintiff Brian Smith. Shortly after the signing of the purchase agreement, Joel Garcia and Brian Smith took possession of a number of tools from two locations: 2885 Brooks Road and 2815 Alder, operating on their belief that the tools had been transferred under the purchase agreement. Garcia and Smith eventually transferred the materials to a storage unit at Cloverville Store and Lock, the lease for which was in Smith’s name only.

Dykstra, it appears, took a different view of the meaning of the purchase agreement he signed with Stephanie Garcia. Dykstra believed the agreement’s reference to “assets” at “said location” was intended to encompass only the paperwork held at his residence at 2815 Alder and not the equipment stored at 2885 Brooks Road, what Dykstra described as his “shop.” In December 2004, Dykstra reported the tools taken by Garcia and Smith from 2885 Brooks Road to be stolen. Although Dykstra insisted that Garcia be arrested for the removal of assets from 2885 Brooks Road, Garcia claimed that he and Smith had lawfully accessed the building and that he had paid for the items he removed. The prosecutor’s office in *890 formed Dykstra that the matter was civil and that criminal charges would not be brought. Although the record is clear that an early determination was made that this dispute was civil in nature, a warrant for Garcia’s arrest was issued on May 20, 2005, containing Dykstra’s allegation that Garcia had received and concealed stolen property valued at more than $200 but less than $1000, in violation of Mich. Comp. Laws § 750.535(4)(a). 1 Those charges were subsequently dismissed.

On Saturday, July 16, Dykstra returned to the storage site, and with the permission of Jerry Lundberg, the owner of the Store and Lock, left his truck at the storage facility in order to discourage anyone from moving the tools out of the unit over the weekend. Dykstra’s wife, defendant Joanna Beth Dykstra, leased a storage unit at the Store and Lock to provide a place from which Dykstra could watch the unit in which he believed his property was held. By leasing the unit, the Dykstras also were given the access code for the gate surrounding the units at the Store and Lock. Dykstra and his wife spent most of Sunday, July 17, conducting “surveillance” at the facility.

Early Monday morning, July 18, Garcia and Smith arrived at the Store and Lock, but, according to Dykstra, they did not enter the storage unit about which Dykstra was concerned. Dykstra claimed that a police officer came shortly thereafter and inquired into the reason for his presence at the storage complex. Dykstra responded that he had permission from Lundberg to be.at the facility and that he was keeping watch over his tools. The officer informed Dykstra that the police had received a complaint from Garcia and Smith regarding his presence. Smith believed that Dykstra was stalking him, following him, and taking pictures of him. He made repeated complaints to the police concerning Dykstra’s presence near his storage unit. After the arrival and departure of a second officer, Lundberg arrived and told Dykstra that he could no longer be on the property “harassing” Garcia and Smith and had to leave. Dykstra complied but later in the day returned to an area adjoining Lundberg’s property.

At some later point on July 18, Dykstra contacted Ron Cooper, the Fruitport Charter Township Supervisor. Cooper called Paul Smutz, the chief of police, and asked that Smutz call Dykstra to see if he needed any assistance. Shortly thereafter, Dykstra called Smutz. Although Dykstra and Smutz agreed that they had more than one conversation on July 18, they offered differing testimony on the substance of those conversations. According to Dykstra, after he informed Smutz that he discovered the rest of his allegedly stolen property, Smutz assured him that he was going to speak to the prosecutor’s office to attempt to secure a “warrant or something” to retrieve the tools. Dykstra testified that Smutz then told him that there would be no arrest warrants issued if Dykstra went to the Store and Lock to collect his tools himself. When Dykstra inquired into whether it would therefore be appropriate to take independent steps to retrieve his property, Smutz responded: “Well, it would be better with a warrant, but as long as you have more proof that those tools are yours than they have that they’re theirs, you’re all right doing it.” Dykstra also testified that Smutz encouraged him to retain assistance in getting the tools and promised to send Fruitport Township police officers to the scene. Smutz, by contrast, disputed Dykstra’s representation that Smutz sought to obtain *891 a search warrant before Dykstra entered the storage unit. He also denied Dykstra’s claim that he assured Dykstra that no arrest warrants would issue for the entry into the Smith storage unit.

After being told by Lundberg that he was no longer permitted on Store and Lock’s property, Dykstra returned there with at least one other person, defendant Wayne Kamp. In the course of placing a lock on Dykstra’s storage unit and inspecting the exterior of Smith’s unit to ensure nothing had been removed, Kamp discovered what he believed to be a key to the Smith storage unit. According to Kamp, he observed something shining and told Dykstra that “[i]t looks like it could be a key laying on the ground, it could be.” 2 Dykstra relayed this information to Smutz, who said he would look into the matter. It is undisputed that on July 18, Smutz called Dykstra to confirm that he had discovered the key at the Store and Lock, used the key to open the Smith unit, looked inside, saw the tools inside, and secured the unit again. Smutz insisted that he did not go to the Store and Lock and search for the key as a partisan in the dispute but to confirm the veracity of Dykstra’s story.

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Bluebook (online)
260 F. App'x 887, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garcia-v-dykstra-ca6-2008.