Griffith v. Coburn

408 F. Supp. 2d 491, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 40213, 2005 WL 3050461
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Michigan
DecidedNovember 15, 2005
Docket1:04-cv-00728
StatusPublished

This text of 408 F. Supp. 2d 491 (Griffith v. Coburn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Griffith v. Coburn, 408 F. Supp. 2d 491, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 40213, 2005 WL 3050461 (W.D. Mich. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION

ROBERT HOLMES BELL, Chief Judge.

This 42 U.S.C. § 1983 civil rights action is before the Court on the Defendants’ motions for summary judgment. For the reasons that follow Defendants’ motions will be granted.

I.

Arthur L. Partee died on April 13, 2003, in the course of his arrest. Plaintiff Liler Razor Griffith, personal representative of the Estate of Arthur L. Partee, filed this action against Benton Township Police Officers Tim Sutherland and William Bradshaw, alleging excessive force, and against Benton Township Police Chief Jim Co-burn, and Benton Township, alleging failure to train.

On April 13, 2003, Arthur Partee (“Par-tee”) was a 27 year old male who lived with his mother, Ethel Lela Partee, at 777 East Napier, Apt. U-6, in Benton Township, Michigan. In the week leading up to April 13, 2003, Mrs. Partee became concerned about her son’s mental health. *494 Partee was acting strangely, not sleeping, making accusations, and behaving inappropriately. (E. Partee Dep. 18, 27-28, 40). Mrs. Partee was unable to convince Partee to check into the hospital, so she went to the Benton Township Police Department to request assistance in having him committed. (E. Partee Dep. at 29-30). Sutherland advised that he could not make Partee go to the hospital, but that he had an outstanding warrant on a traffic ticket that he could use to arrest and evaluate him. (E. Partee Dep. at 31; Sutherland Dep. at 15-16).

Officers Sutherland and Bradshaw went to the Partees’ apartment and. were met by Mrs. Partee in the hallway. Mrs. Partee invited them in, but asked them not to let her son know that she had requested them to come. When the two officers entered the room, Partee was sitting on the sofa. Sutherland told him he had a warrant for his arrest and attempted to verify his date of birth, but Partee refused to give information and repeatedly responded that the warrant was not for him. (Sutherland Dep. at 35-36; E. Partee Dep. at 32). Sutherland told him he was under arrest and ordered him to stand up and be handcuffed. Partee continued to ignore him. (Sutherland Dep. at 42-43). Bradshaw moved the coffee table and Sutherland pulled his handcuffs from his pouch. (Sutherland Dep. at 44).

Officers Sutherland and Bradshaw testified that Partee came up off the sofa, lunged towards Sutherland, and Sutherland pushed him back on the sofa. (Sutherland Dep. at 47; Bradshaw Dep. at 27). Mrs. Partee testified that Partee did not lunge at Sutherland, and that Sutherland just attacked Partee while he was still seated on the sofa. (E. Partee Dep. at 26). Because this Court must view the conflicting testimony in the light most favorable to Plaintiff, for purposes of this opinion the Court will assume that Partee did not lunge at Sutherland.

The officers got on either side of Partee on the sofa and tried to force his hands out from under his body so that they could handcuff him. (Sutherland Dep. at 53, 57-58; Bradshaw Dep. at 17-25). Partee resisted their efforts. Partee rolled from a sitting position to a kneeling position with his torso on the sofa and his arms tucked under his chest. (Bradshaw Dep. at 23, 27). At one point Bradshaw was able to pull Partee’s right arm out from beneath his chest area to behind his back, but Partee was “incredibly strong” and moved his arm right back. (Bradshaw Dep. at 15). Sutherland testified that during the struggle Partee reached for his gun and managed to unsnap one of the snaps on the holster. (Sutherland Dep. at 79-82, 124). In response, Sutherland put Partee into a vascular neck restraint. (Sutherland Dep. at 82). According to Sutherland, after applying the vascular neck restraint for two or three seconds, he was able to get control of Partee, to pull him off the sofa onto the floor, and to handcuff him. (Sutherland Dep. at 90-92).

Bradshaw did not see Partee reach for Sutherland’s gun. (Bradshaw Dep. at 84-88). However, .he was aware when Sutherland placed Partee into the vascular neck restraint because at that point the three of them rose up off the couch, Partee went limp, Bradshaw was able to get Partee’s arm behind his back, and they all went to the floor. (Bradshaw Dep. at 34-35; 42-43).

Mrs. Partee’s testimony corroborates the Officers’ recollection of the struggle in most significant respects. Mrs. Partee described the struggle as follows:

After he got his handcuffs out, Arthur had his arms on the couch and he was laying back, and he got his handcuffs out and got on him and tried to put his arm *495 behind his back, and he was refusing to help, you know, resisting it, and they wrestled him, and he had his arm around his neck, all the time, like that (indicating), and Arthur hollered help.

(E. Partee Dep. at 34-35). Mrs. Partee explained what Arthur was doing to resist the. officers:

Holding back, holding back, he was strong; he was strong. He just .was resisting them with his strength, you know, like for instance I’m trying to pull you up and I don’t go up, I’m resisting.

(E. Partee Dep. at 35). One of the officers took out the pepper spray, but put it away when Mrs. Partee hollered at him not to spray Partee’s eyes. (E. Partee Dep. at 40). One of the officers had his arm around Partee’s neck, with his elbow pointing away from Arthur’s face. (E. Partee Dep. at 37). Partee yelled for help after the officer’s arm was around his neck. (E. Partee Dep. at 38). The officers were wrestling with Arthur for about two to three minutes. (E. Partee Dep. at 36). The officers did not punch or kick Partee. (E. Partee Dep. at 39).

The dispatch tape confirms the limited duration of the struggle. Sutherland requested back up at 21:29:07 because “they were fighting one.” (Def. Ex. 3 at 13; Sutherland Dep. at 68). Approximately two and a half minutes later, at 21:31:42, Sutherland called dispatch again and advised that the subject was in custody. (Def. Ex. 3 at 14).

After handcuffing Partee, the officers were tired and breathing heavily. (Sutherland at 101-03; Bradshaw at 72, 78). Partee rolled himself over onto his right side, his eyes were open, he was breathing, and he was not completely limp. (Sutherland Dep at 95, 111-12; Bradshaw Dep. at 78). Within a minute, as the officers were catching their breath, Officer Koza arrived. (Sutherland Dep. at 100; Bradshaw Dep. at 70, 76). Koza attempted to help Bradshaw lift Parteé up, but noticed some blood on Partee’s arm and went to his car to obtain gloves. (Bradshaw Dep. at 73-74). Bradshaw noticed that Partee did not seem to be breathing as heavily as the officers. (Bradshaw Dep. at 78-79). While Koza was out, Sutherland noticed that Partee’s breathing seemed to be deteriorating. (Sutherland Dep. at 114-16). At 21:34.57, approximately three minutes after he called dispatch to advise that the subject was-in custody, Sutherland called for an. ambulance. (Incident Rpt. at 14). Fifteen seconds later, at 21:35:12, Sutherland called dispatch again, advising that there was a medical problem and requesting the medic to “step it up.” (Incident Rpt. at 14; Sutherland Dep. at 116).

The officers put ammonia under Partee’s nose and he jerked back,- but then went back to being silent. (Bradshaw Dep. at 82-83).

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Bluebook (online)
408 F. Supp. 2d 491, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 40213, 2005 WL 3050461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/griffith-v-coburn-miwd-2005.