Halvorsen v. Baird

146 F.3d 680, 98 Daily Journal DAR 6126, 50 Fed. R. Serv. 338, 98 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 4441, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 12333, 1998 WL 304492
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJune 11, 1998
DocketNos. 95-35677, 95-35705
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 146 F.3d 680 (Halvorsen v. Baird) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Halvorsen v. Baird, 146 F.3d 680, 98 Daily Journal DAR 6126, 50 Fed. R. Serv. 338, 98 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 4441, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 12333, 1998 WL 304492 (9th Cir. 1998).

Opinions

Opinion by Judge KLEINFELD; Partial Concurrence and Partial Dissent by Judge RYMER.

KLEINFELD, Circuit Judge.

This case involves several issues relating to brief civil confinement of intoxicated persons.

FACTS

An intruder had been in Mr. Halvorsen’s neighbor’s home, and had fled. The neighbor, Mr. Slack, had called the police. While awaiting their arrival, he and Mr. Halvorsen went outside to look for the intruder. Mr. Slack carried a shotgun in case they encountered him. It was around 11 P.M. on a summer evening.

When the first policeman came, he treated Halvorsen and Slack as the suspects, and did not pursue the intruder. He saw the two men, one (Slack) with a shotgun, and ordered them to drop the gun and get on the ground. The police officer probably drew his gun and pointed it. Slack told the police officer that his wife was the person who had called the police, and the intruder was black (Slack and Halvorsen were white). The officer wanted the weapon down before listening to the argument. Slack did not want his shotgun on the ground, so he walked behind some [683]*683bushes, left the gun on the hood of his truck, and came back.

The officer ordered the two of them to the ground and waited for backup. He patted down Halvorsen. When a second officer came as backup, the two officers handcuffed Halvorsen and Slack. A number of people gathered. Halvorsen’s wife was yelling that the police had the wrong people, the ones who had called them instead of the intruder. Halvorsen’s child was screaming “don’t shoot my daddy!” The Halvorsens’ dogs were barking. Other people were telling the police they were wrong. The police were yelling themselves to make Halvorsen and Slack get on the ground and to make the spectators go away or be quiet, making it even harder to hear what was being yelled at. them.

The police officers brought the men to a gas station about three blocks away to decide how to proceed. They did not decide to arrest Halvorsen for anything. But they thought he was drunk, because of his obtuseness in not getting down on the ground when ordered to, and his continuing to call them vulgar names and making vulgar remarks. They decided to drop Halvorsen off at a private detoxification facility. About eighteen minutes elapsed between the beginning of the police encounter with Halvorsen and departure for the facility.

The facility was a detoxification center operated by a private nonprofit corporation, under contract with the county. A state statute provides for holding intoxicated individuals at such facilities. The owner and several employees of the facility were named as defendants in this case. The testimony established that the facility made its own admission decisions, and sometimes rejected people the police dropped off, so it was not bound to hold Halvorsen because he had been taken there by the police.

Halvorsen insisted that he was sober and requested that he be tested so he could prove it. It was the practice of the facility not to give blood tests or breathalyzer tests to see whether people dropped off were really drunk. The facility also did not give field sobriety tests — walk a straight line, touch your nose with your eyes shut, count backwards from 20, etc. — such as police give to suspected drunk drivers. The facility’s witnesses did not remember Halvorsen when they testified, because they processed thousands of admissions. The admissions form classified “behavior” in four categories. The first was mental state: “Alert,” “Drowsey” [sic], “Stuperous” [sic], or “Unconcious” [sic]. Halvorsen was graded as alert. The second was speech: clear, slurred or unintelligible. Halvorsen was graded as clear. The third was gait: steady, unsteady, or unable to walk. Halvorsen was graded as unsteady. The fourth was physical: parasites, vomiting, or diarrhea, and nothing was noted for Hal-vorsen. The comments said that “[client] appears unable to care for self’ and “odor etoh [ethyl alcohol] on breath.” The facility had a practice of recording all admissions in a book and checking the book when someone was brought in, so since Halvorsen had been there once before, the admitting employees may have checked the book and found his name. Halvorsen was held against his will from about 11:30 p.m. to 5:30 a.m., when he was released with a group of other people held overnight.

Mr. Halvorsen asked for permission to call his wife, to tell her where he was, but the facility would not let him call her. Nor would they call her. She called 911 to ask where the police had taken her husband, but was told that 911 only took emergency calls. Then' she repeatedly called the police precinct station, and eventually someone told her that her husband had been taken to the detox facility. ' Then she called the detox facility to ask if her husband was there, but they told her that they would not tell her, because that was confidential. Then she drove over there with clothes for him, because all he .had on when he was taken away was . a pair of shorts, no shoes or shirt. The facility would not .admit that he was there and would not take the clothes in for him, even though she told them (based on what the police officer at the precinct house had told her) that she knew he was there. Her husband spent the night in a stinking drunk tank with urine on the floor and was released in the morning. She spent the night parked nearby waiting for him with his clothes.

[684]*684Mr. Halvorsen sued the police, the municipality, and the owner and several employees of the detox facility under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, for various Constitutional violations. The case went to jury trial, and the jury returned a verdict in favor of all defendants.

ANALYSIS

I. The police.

A. The stop.

Halvorsen claimed that the police violated his constitutional rights by arresting him without probable cause, and unreasonably searching his person when he was patted down. Both these claims went to the jury, which returned a verdict in favor of the police. Halvorsen claims that he was entitled to judgment as a matter of law.

The police characterized them relationship to Halvorsen between first encountering him and dropping him off the detox center as a Terry stop. See Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1, 88 S.Ct. 1868, 20 L.Ed.2d 889 (1968). Halvor-sen argues that the detention was so coercive and extended that it was an arrest, and that there was no probable cause for an arrest. Halvorsen said that Officer Kaer pointed a gun at him, and Kaer said he did not récall whether he had or not, but that it would not have been inconsistent with the circumstances for him to have done so. It was undisputed that Halvorsen was required to lie on the ground, was handcuffed, and was taken away, first for three blocks to a gas station, then to the detox center. The trial judge let the question go to the jury, with an instruction Halvorsen does not challenge that told the jury how to distinguish between a stop and an arrest.

We held in Allen v. City of Los Angeles,

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146 F.3d 680, 98 Daily Journal DAR 6126, 50 Fed. R. Serv. 338, 98 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 4441, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 12333, 1998 WL 304492, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/halvorsen-v-baird-ca9-1998.