Graham v. City of Duluth

759 S.E.2d 645, 328 Ga. App. 496, 2014 WL 2976104, 2014 Ga. App. LEXIS 436
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJuly 3, 2014
DocketA14A0152
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 759 S.E.2d 645 (Graham v. City of Duluth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Graham v. City of Duluth, 759 S.E.2d 645, 328 Ga. App. 496, 2014 WL 2976104, 2014 Ga. App. LEXIS 436 (Ga. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

McMlLLIAN, Judge.

This is the third appeal that has come before this Court stemming from the events of February 1, 2008, when Matthew Dailey, an intoxicated, off-duty City of Duluth (“the City”) police officer, attacked appellant Leresa Graham and others, including another off-duty police officer, Paul Phillips, who came to Graham’s aid. In Dailey v. State, 313 Ga. App. 809 (723 SE2d 43) (2012), we affirmed Dailey’s conviction on multiple crimes against four victims based on his actions that day. In Phillips v. City of Duluth, 322 Ga. App. XXIV (March 27, 2013) (unpublished), we affirmed without opinion the trial court’s grant of summary judgment to the City of Duluth and two of its police department officials after Phillips filed suit against those defendants seeking damages for the injuries he suffered during the attack. Graham also brought suit1 against the City, the two police department officials and Dailey, and after dismissal of her claims against the two police officials,2 the trial court granted summary [497]*497judgment to the City on Graham’s remaining claims based on respondeat superior and negligent hiring and retention. Graham now appeals from that order.

The relevant circumstances surrounding Dailey’s employment with the City of Duluth Police Department (“Department”) are as follows. Dailey submitted his application for employment to the Department in September 2002, indicating that he was currently certified as a police officer under Georgia law. The application contained a specific section on drug and alcohol use, under which Dailey indicated that he had never been arrested because of alcohol consumption or drug use, had never been disciplined or terminated from employment because of drug or alcohol use, had never called in sick because of drug or alcohol use, and during the past ten years, had never used alcohol during working hours. Further, Dailey also represented that he had never been arrested or convicted of any criminal offense or placed on parole or probation. There is no evidence in the record that any of Dailey’s responses were false at the time they were made.

The first employer Dailey listed under the section on employment showed that Dailey currently worked as a “reserve” or “volunteer” motor deputy for the Fulton County Sheriff’s office and that he had done so since 1999. Dailey indicated his job duties included serving warrants, working at the jail, and assisting at special community events, and listed Major Richard Davis as his supervisor. The second employment Dailey listed was his employment by an advertising agency as an ad salesman to used car dealers, and this appeared to be Dailey’s paid employment at the time he submitted his application.

Consistent with the Department’s Standard Operating Procedures (“Operating Procedures”) governing the hiring and selection of new employees, Major Don Woodruff was assigned the task of conducting a pre-employment background check on Dailey. In December 2002, Woodruff obtained a copy of Dailey’s officer profile report as maintained by the Peace Officers Standards Training Council (“P.O.S.T.”), which reflected that Dailey had obtained his jailer certification and basic law enforcement certification in 2001, and that Dailey’s certifications had never been revoked or suspended. Wood-ruff obtained a copy of Dailey’s birth certificate, high school diploma, college certification and driver’s license, and performed a criminal background check of Dailey through the GCIC and NCIC, which indicated that Dailey had never been arrested, either in the state of Georgia or anywhere in the country.

As part of the pre-employment investigation, Woodruff was also required to interview Dailey’s current and former employers, and [498]*498Woodruff contacted Stanley Green at the Fulton County Sheriff’s office regarding Dailey’s employment there. However, Woodruff indicated on Dailey’s “Employment Check Off List” that Dailey was a “reserve” and that Green had no information about Dailey.

Dailey was not hired when he submitted his application in 2002, but a position became available about a year later, and Woodruff scheduled a personal interview with Dailey for September 30, 2003. A notation appearing on the Employment Check Off List indicates Dailey was made a conditional offer sometime around October 3, 2003, which was dependent on his evaluation by a licensed psychologist, which Woodruff arranged. Consistent with the Department’s hiring policy, Woodruff also arranged for Dailey to undergo a polygraph examination by an independent polygrapher and a urine screen by an independent entity. Following the completion of these tests, Dailey was deemed fit for duty by the psychologist, drug free, and to have given non-deceptive responses during the polygraph examination.

Unbeknownst to the City, just a few weeks before he was hired, on September 21, 2003, Dailey had been involuntarily committed to a hospital for one night after an incident in his neighborhood (“neighborhood incident”). The record, which includes the incident report and an affidavit from one of Dailey’s neighbors, shows that Dailey, while highly intoxicated, brandished his service weapon and two other weapons in front of his neighbors, who persuaded him to turn the guns over to them because of the danger presented by Dailey having guns in such an intoxicated state. However, Dailey, who stated to his neighbors he had so many guns because he was a police officer, asked for his guns back, and when his neighbors refused, he became “very angry,” and started to walk toward his house to get more guns he said he had there. At that point, Dailey’s neighbors became afraid for their safety and went inside and called police.

The police arrived and talked to Dailey. During this conversation, they detected a strong odor of alcohol emanating from Dailey’s body and breath. Dailey told the officers that he was a Fulton County Sheriff’s Deputy, admitted that one of the weapons he carried to his neighbors’ house was his service weapon, and made a remark to them concerning whether they also carried their weapons when they were off duty. The officers persuaded Dailey to stay at his house and go to sleep and sober up, and Dailey agreed that he would not go out again.

However, about five to ten minutes after the officers left, Dailey went back outside with a flashlight, which he shined into his neighbor’s window. Dailey was using profanity, and the police were again summoned. The officers once again attempted to get Dailey to calm down, but Dailey started yelling words to the effect that he wanted to [499]*499blow his brains out and then became angry at the officers. The officers tried to persuade Dailey to voluntarily get into their patrol car, and at first he appeared to be cooperating, but then he became belligerent and combative and eventually had to be handcuffed in order to be transported to the hospital for treatment.

On the way to the hospital, Dailey asked one of the police officers if he had ever been addicted to alcohol or drugs and when the officer replied in the negative, Dailey again became combative and attempted to kick out the rear passenger window of the patrol car. Dailey continued to be combative and belligerent after arriving at the hospital, and had to be restrained several times.

The incident report further shows that one of the officers contacted the Fulton County Sheriff’s office to see if he could verify that Dailey worked for them as a Deputy Sheriff. The officer spoke to Fulton County Jail shift commander Lt.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
759 S.E.2d 645, 328 Ga. App. 496, 2014 WL 2976104, 2014 Ga. App. LEXIS 436, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graham-v-city-of-duluth-gactapp-2014.