Grant v. Cafferri

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedDecember 4, 2019
Docket1:19-cv-02148
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Grant v. Cafferri, (E.D.N.Y. 2019).

Opinion

IN CLERK'S OFFICE —— U.S. DISTRICT COURT E.D.NLY. UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK DEC 04 a nn nn nnn nn nn nnn ne seeeonn ELIZABETH GRANT/GRACE GRANT, BROOKLYN OFFICE Plaintiffs, MEMORANDUM AND ORDER -V- 19-CV-2148 (RRM) (LB) ADA NICOLETTA CAFFERRI, ef ai., Defendants. nn ene et err □□ ecee nmnceenecneess—==95X ELIZABETH GRANT/GRACE GRANT, Plaintiffs, -v- 19-CV-2204 (RRM) (LB) LORRAINE VULTAGGIO, et al., Defendants. eee nn ne nnn nn nnn nnn nese nen nnnnensnnncnonee=X ELIZABETH GRANT/GRACE GRANT. □

Plaintiffs, -V- 19-CV-2911 (RRM) (LB) ROBERT RESAN, ef ai., Defendants. nana nn nnn sean nn cece neem aneesenesn seers nnseesashX ELIZABETH GRANT/GRACE GRANT, Plaintiffs, -V- 19-CV-3244 (RRM) (LB) QUEENS SUPREME COURT, et al., Defendants. eer ese reser er ne ne senses mene □□ eeesennensnennn seen ELIZABETH GRANT/GRACE GRANT, Plaintiffs, -V- 19-CV-3689 (RRM) (LB) ASPCA, et al., Defendants. ee enn tee nace am ceen swe nase eens seen X ROSLYNN R. MAUSKOPF, United States District Judge.

Plaintiff Elizabeth Grant (“Grant”) brings these five pro se actions on behalf of herself and her mother, alleging that defendants — who are largely the same in all five actions — violated her constitutional rights. Grant has applied for leave to proceed in forma pauperis and for appointment of counsel in all five cases, and has filed documents purporting to be an “Amended Complaint” in two of the cases: Grant v. Vultaggio, No. 19-CV-2204 (Doc. 18) and Grant v. Queens Supreme Court, No. 19-CV-3244 (Doc. No. 9). Grant may proceed in forma pauperis in each of the five actions. For the reasons set forth below, the “Amended Complaints” are construed as supplemental pleadings, the complaints in all five actions are dismissed, the cases are consolidated under Docket No. 19-CV-2148, and Grant is given leave to file a single amended complaint under the docket number within 30 days of the date of this Order. The motions for appointment of counsel are denied at this time. BACKGROUND . The complaint in each of these five actions consists of a completed civil rights complaint form, to which Grant has added a rambling, handwritten narrative. Grant’s handwriting is illegible in places and she alleges the facts in a disjointed, stream-of-consciousness style. Since these allegations are difficult to understand, the Court has taken judicial notice of several other documents in order to place Grant’s allegations in the proper context. Specifically, the Court will take judicial notice of Grant v. ASPCA, No. 16-CV-2765 (ER), 2017 WL 1229737 (S.D.N.Y. Mar. 31, 2017) (“Grant P’) — a case in which Grant unsuccessfully sued some of the defendants named in the instant actions in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (“SDNY”); allegations Grant made in Grant v. Warden of Rose M. Singer Center, No. 19-CV-2046 (RRM); and court documents attached to the complaint in Grant v. Zaro, No. 19-CV-2832 (RRM) (LB). .

The allegations in the instant actions principally relate to events which occurred on or before January 28, 2016, and on or about August 29, 2018. At these times, Grant was living with her elderly mother, Grace, in a multi-story house in Jackson Heights, Queens. Sometime prior to January 2016, Grant took in dozens of rescue animals, which she kept in the house. At some point, Grace Grant was “hit in the head by mistake.” (Compl. in Grant v. Vultaggio (Doc. No. 2 in 19-CV-2204) at 9; Compl. in Grant v. ASPCA (Doe. No. | in 19-CV- 3689) at 5.)' Thereafter, the Jewish Association for Services for the Aged (“JASA”) began providing adult protective services to Grace. The social worker assigned to the case, Lisa Mallon, wanted to rid the home of the many rescue animals and, to that end, “tipped of[f]” the New York City Police Department (the “NYPD”) about conditions in the house. (/d.) In response to that tip, Police Officer Lorraine Vultaggio of the NYPD’s 115th Precinct allegedly entered the home on or about January 6, 2016, where she observed approximately 40 cats and 10 dogs, some which were allegedly in bad condition. Based on Vultaggio’s affidavit, Judge Michelle A. Armstrong of New York City Criminal Court, Queens County, issued a warrant to search the Grants’ home. That warrant authorized the NYPD to seize the animals and to deliver them “to the ASPCA Animal Hospital, or other veterinary partners, hospitals, and facilities, for ‘examination and treatment and ... to retain such property until directed otherwise by [the] Court.” Grant 2017 WL 1229737, at *2. On January 28, 2016, the NYPD executed the search warrant, seized Grant’s rescue animals, and placed them in the custody of the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (the “ASPCA”). There, they were examined by Dr. Robert Reisman, an ASPCA

’ Since the complaints are not paginated, the Court will use the “Page ID #” assigned to the page by the Court’s Electronic Case Filing (“ECF”) system.

veterinarian. He diagnosed them with various maladies and billed Grant for services he allegedly rendered. . In the months following the seizure, Grant wrote letters to the Queens County District Attorney’s Office and to property clerks at the NYPD, demanding the return of the animals. In mid-April 2016, after learning that the animals were in the custody of the ASPCA, Grant commenced Grant J against the ASPCA, the City of New York (the “City”), the NYPD, Queens County, Queens County District Attorney Richard A. Brown, and Assistant District Attorney (“ADA”) Nicoletta Caferri, alleging violations of her First, Fourth, and Fourteenth Amendment rights arising from the seizure and continued retention of her animals.” Two days after Grant commenced Grant / in the SDNY, a warrant was issued for Grant’s arrest on charges that she violated sections 353 and 353-a of New York Agriculture and Markets Law — statutes which prohibit the mistreatment of animals. Grant elected to go to trial on these charges and was convicted of multiple misdemeanor counts. On April 30, 2018, Queens Criminal Court Judge Stephanie Zaro sentenced Grant to three years’ probation. Under the conditions of probation set by Judge Zaro, Grant was prohibited from owning, harboring, or having custody or control of any animals for ten years and was required to submit to unannounced home visits by probation officers. On the morning of August 29, 2018, Probation Officers Monique Begy and Azalea Soba made an unannounced visit to the Grants’ home. According to Grant, the officers knew that Grant occupied the basement apartment, yet pushed their way into the upper portion of the house, occupied by Grant’s mother, Grace. There, the officers found 16 animals which, Grant claims, belonged to her mother. According to a Department of Probation document containing

2 Although Grant refers to this prosecutor as ADA Cafferri, the Court assumes that she is referring to Nicoletta Caferri, the Chief of the Queens County District Atomey™ Animal Cruelty Prosecutions Unit.

the “Specification(s) of Alleged Violation of Probation,” Grant assaulted one of the probation officers. Grant was arrested and dragged out of the house without being allowed to dress. She

was subsequently charged with various felony offenses, including assault in the second degree, as well as violations of probation. Grant’s complaints suggest that she is currently in jail awaiting a hearing on the alleged violations of probation and a trial on the felony offenses. The Complaints Grant v. Cafferri The complaint in the first action — Grant v. Cafferri, No. 19-CV-2148 (RRM) (LB) — is dated April 1, 2019, and was delivered to prison authorities for mailing that same day. It names at least seven defendants, four of whom — the ASPCA, the NYPD, District Attorney Brown, and ADA Caferri — were also named as defendants in GrantJ. Three others were not: Probation Officers Begy and Soba and Dr.

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