Harris County, Texas G. Young D. Gehring and J. Cavitt v. Shirley Nagel, Individually and as Representative of the Estate of Joel Don Casey

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 25, 2011
Docket14-09-00780-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Harris County, Texas G. Young D. Gehring and J. Cavitt v. Shirley Nagel, Individually and as Representative of the Estate of Joel Don Casey (Harris County, Texas G. Young D. Gehring and J. Cavitt v. Shirley Nagel, Individually and as Representative of the Estate of Joel Don Casey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harris County, Texas G. Young D. Gehring and J. Cavitt v. Shirley Nagel, Individually and as Representative of the Estate of Joel Don Casey, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Appellants’ Motion for En Banc Reconsideration Denied as Moot; Opinion of June 7, 2011 Withdrawn; Affirmed, and Substitute Opinion filed August 25, 2011.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

___________________

NO. 14-09-00780-CV

Harris County, Texas; G. Young; D. Gehring; and J. Cavitt, Appellants

V.

Shirley Nagel, Individually and as Representative of the Estate of Joel Don Casey, Appellee

On Appeal from the 11th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 2007-08301

SUBSTITUTE OPINION

            After considering the appellants’ motion for en banc reconsideration, our judgment in this case remains unchanged; however, to address the points raised in the motion, we withdraw our opinion of June 7, 2011 and issue this substitute opinion in its place.  We deny the motion as moot. 

            In this civil-rights action, plaintiff Shirley Nagel, individually and as representative of the estate of her son Joel Don Casey, sued Harris County and members of the mental-health warrants division of the Precinct One Constable’s office.  A jury found the County and three deputy constables liable for $3 million in damages.  The defendants ask us to reverse the judgment because the deputies are entitled to qualified immunity, and because the evidence is legally insufficient to sustain the judgment against the County.  Because the record supports the conclusions that (a) the deputies are not entitled to qualified immunity, and (b) Constable Jack Abercia ratified his deputies’ unconstitutional use of excessive force, we affirm. 

I.  Background

            On Joel Don Casey’s 52nd birthday, deputy constables from Harris County Precinct One arrived at the home he shared with his mother, Shirley Nagel, to transport him to a psychiatric facility.  Because Casey had thrown away the medication used to treat his schizophrenia and his doctor had not returned Nagel’s repeated phone calls to request a replacement prescription, Casey was to be hospitalized to have his medication stabilized.  Fifteen minutes after deputies arrived at his home, Casey was dead.  Nagel’s evidence and witnesses present a version of the events of those fifteen minutes that is very different from that presented by the deputies and the County.  The jury resolved these conflicts in Nagel’s favor, and in accordance with the standard of review, we summarize the evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict.[1]

            Viewed in this light, the record shows that Casey had been treated for schizophrenia for decades.  He lived nearly his entire life with his mother, who knew that when he refused to take his medication, his symptoms worsened.  Shortly before the Harris County Precinct One Constable’s office became involved, Casey threw away his medication.  He became worried that there were bombs in the home’s air vents, and he began repeatedly rearranging the dishes. 

            In her attempts to have Casey’s medication refilled, Nagel called Casey’s doctor every weekday from Friday, February 11, 2005 through Thursday, February 17, 2005.  On Thursday, February 17, 2005, Anthony Green answered the doctor’s phone and said that he could not refill Casey’s medication and that it sounded as though Casey needed to be hospitalized to have his medication stabilized.[2]  Green asked Nagel if Casey ever had been suicidal, and because Casey had been suicidal decades earlier, Nagel answered in the affirmative.  Green told Nagel it was too late to get a mental-health warrant that day, and instructed her to call back the following morning and “a mental[-]health team from Harris County Mental Health Association would come and escort [Casey] to the hospital.”  Nagel did not know that law enforcement officers would execute the warrant.

            Nagel telephoned Green the next morning, and he told her to wait outside for the mental-health team to arrive so she could let them into the house.  That afternoon, Green applied for Casey’s emergency detention.  To obtain the mental-health warrant, Green was required to present evidence that Casey presented a substantial risk of serious harm to himself or others.  In the warrant application, Green wrote that Casey was having homicidal thoughts and had threatened his mother, but Nagel denies that she said these things.  In a “rap sheet” Green prepared for the deputy constables who would be assigned to execute the warrant, he again wrote that Casey had homicidal thoughts and added that Nagel was afraid of her son; however, he also wrote that Casey would not be violent or try to flee when the officers arrived. 

            Sergeant Cindy Leija of the Harris County Precinct One Constable’s office assigned deputies Gregory Young and Demonte Gehring to execute the warrant.  Young called Nagel to confirm that Casey would not fight them, and Nagel repeated that he would not.  She also informed Young that police had escorted Casey to the hospital peacefully twice before.[3]

            When Young and Gehring arrived, Nagel met them outside.  Gehring asked if Casey would give them any problems.  Nagel again repeated that Casey would not be combative, but she noticed that Young already had a taser in his hand while they were still outside the house.  As Young later agreed at trial, he already had made up his mind about what he was going to do before he ever saw Casey.

            The deputies knew that the area was safe before they entered the house—so safe that they asked Casey’s mother to enter the house first, even though she ambulated with the aid of a cane.  When they entered, Casey was seated on the sofa with his feet on the coffee table; he was listening to music and smoking a cigar.

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Harris County, Texas G. Young D. Gehring and J. Cavitt v. Shirley Nagel, Individually and as Representative of the Estate of Joel Don Casey, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-county-texas-g-young-d-gehring-and-j-cavitt-texapp-2011.