Geraldine Burley v. Jeffery Gagacki

834 F.3d 606, 2016 FED App. 0203P, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 15330
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 22, 2016
Docket14-2482/2542
StatusPublished
Cited by137 cases

This text of 834 F.3d 606 (Geraldine Burley v. Jeffery Gagacki) 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
Geraldine Burley v. Jeffery Gagacki, 834 F.3d 606, 2016 FED App. 0203P, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 15330 (6th Cir. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION

GRIFFIN, Circuit Judge

Following a remand for a new trial, Burley v. Gagacki, 729 F.3d 610 (6th Cir. 2013), the jury found that defendants did not participate in the police raid that resulted in plaintiffs’ claims of excessive force. Plaintiffs appeal several of the district court’s pre-trial rulings regarding the new trial. Finding none of the issues meritorious, we affirm.

I.

Plaintiffs contend that the law enforcement personnel who executed a search warrant at their house used excessive force upon them when securing the house. In our prior opinion, we described plaintiffs’ allegations as follows:

[Plaintiffs] were inside their home located at 20400 Greeley Street in the City of Detroit on June 13, 2007, when they heard a loud boom. When Geraldine Burley came upstairs from the basement, an officer put a gun to her face and said “[g]et on the floor.” She explained that she needed to ease herself to the floor because she had undergone two knee replacements. At that point, another officer appeared, ordered Geraldine to the floor, and shoved her into the table. She hit her head, shoulder, neck, and back against the table as she fell to the ground. Another officer walked on top of her body. When Geraldine’s adult daughter, Caroline, heard the loud boom and entered the living room, an officer allegedly put a gun to her face and told her, “[s]top, put your hands up.” The officer threw her against the wall and onto the floor. When he placed his foot on her back, Caroline hollered, “[g]et your feet out [of] my back. I’ve had back surgeries.” Sometime thereafter, another officer placed his foot on her back, and Caroline again explained that she had undergone back surgeries.

Id. at 614.

The offending officers exacerbated the situation by intentionally concealing their identities. Specifically, “the officers were dressed in black clothing with their faces covered except for their eyes, concealing their identities. When Geraldine Burley asked for the officers’ names, one of the officers was about to write them down when another officer stopped him and said, ‘No, just put Team 11.’ ” Id. Subsequently, *612 plaintiffs learned that “Team 11” was part of a vast multi-law enforcement operation involving Wayne County, and federal, state, and municipal law enforcement agents. Id. at 613, 614-15. In this regard, it took over two years for Wayne County to disclose an investigation report that purportedly revealed the identities of the officers who executed the search warrant. Id. at 614-15. Moreover, the present federal defendants “did not affirmatively assert their lack of involvement in the raid” during “the initial stages of discovery.” Id. at 615. “It was only in their depositions, after the limitations period had run, that the[y] ... alleged that they did not participate in the raid of plaintiffs’ home but were instead executing a search warrant” nearby. Id.

In plaintiffs’ previous appeal, we reversed the district court’s entry of a directed verdict. Id. at 617, 622. In so doing, we expressed our dismay regarding the manner in which the alleged perpetrators concealed their identities to plaintiffs’ detriment: “[W]e are not inclined to shield the federal defendants from liability as a reward for their unethical refusal to identify themselves by name and badge number.” Id. at 622. To this end, we considered, but did not decide, whether this court should adopt a burden-shifting approach similar to the approach taken by the Ninth Circuit in Dubner v. City & Cty. of San Francisco, 266 F.3d 959 (9th Cir. 2001), whereby once a plaintiff in an unlawful arrest case meets her burden on the issue of unlawful arrest, the burden of production then shifts to officers to produce evidence of probable cause. This burden-shifting approach, reasoned Dubner, “prevent[s] this exact scenario where police officers can hide behind a shield of anonymity and force plaintiffs to produce evidence they cannot possibly acquire.” Id. at 965 (footnote omitted).

On remand, the district judge declined to apply Dubne^s burden-shifting paradigm, reasoning that Dubner does not extend beyond false arrest claims. He also refused to disqualify himself from the case, assessed juror expenses related to one of the plaintiffs’ non-forthcoming trial delay, and entered several in limine orders. At trial, the jury heard testimony from plaintiffs and the defendant federal officers, and thereafter returned a verdict finding that defendants did not “participate in the raid of plaintiffs’ home.” Plaintiffs filed a timely notice of appeal, appealing six orders: the burden-shifting order; the disqualification order; and four orders regarding in limine motions. 1

II.

First, we turn to plaintiffs’ primary issue on appeal — the district court’s decision not to apply DubneFs burden-shifting regime. After remand, the Burleys significantly broadened our suggestion, asking the district court not to “shift[ ] the burden of production onto the federal agents to establish their lack of involvement,” Burley, 729 F.3d at 613, but rather that the district court “impose the burden of which amongst the Defendants personally inflicted the harm complained of by the Plaintiffs upon the Defendants themselves.” The district court declined, finding Dubner inapplicable to excessive force claims. As a result, plaintiffs contend, the subsequent trial was “toothless.” Plaintiffs’ motion addressed the jury instructions — i.e., who bears the burden of persuasion regarding defendants’ involvement and the force *613 used; because the correctness of jury instructions is a question of law, we review this issue de novo. Gibson v. City of Louisville, 336 F.3d 511, 512 (6th Cir. 2003).

In Dubner, the plaintiff claimed San Francisco police officers falsely arrested her at a demonstration. 266 F.3d at 962-64. Because she was unable to identify the officers who arrested her, she filed § 1983 false arrest claims against all the officers listed on her arrest report. Id. at 963-64. Apparently, the City of San Francisco had a practice of listing officers who arrived first on scene as arresting officers — even if they did not participate in the arrest — in order to “deliberately ... frustrate the efforts of potential plaintiffs in false arrest cases to establish lack of probable cause.” Id. at 964-65. After a bench trial, the district court found that the plaintiff could not prove her arrest’s unlawfulness based upon her inability to conclusively identify her arresting officers. Id. at 964.

The Ninth Circuit reversed, relying upon cases that shift the burden of production regarding the existence of probable cause to a defendant upon the showing of a warrantless arrest. Id. at 965.

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834 F.3d 606, 2016 FED App. 0203P, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 15330, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/geraldine-burley-v-jeffery-gagacki-ca6-2016.