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8 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 9 SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA 10
11 MICHAEL A. HARTSELL, ) No. 16-cv-1094-LAB-LL ) 12 Plaintiff, ) ORDER: 13 ) v. ) 1) DENYING MOTION FOR 14 ) JUDGMENT AS A MATTER OF 15 COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO; SAN ) LAW [Dkt. 228]; DIEGO COUNTY DEPUTY SHERIFF ) 2) DENYING MOTION FOR A NEW 16 TRENTON STROH; DOES 1-15, ) TRIAL [Dkt. 228]; and 17 ) 3) GRANTING MOTION TO RETAX Defendants. ) COSTS [Dkt. 236] 18 ) 19
20 Shortly before dawn on May 21, 2015, a multi-agency, DEA-organized 21 narcotics task force attempted to serve a search warrant at Plaintiff Michael 22 Hartsell’s home. The task force, aware that Hartsell was a convicted felon with a 23 lengthy criminal history, tried to gain entry through the locked gate. Hartsell’s 24 friend, Michael Ferguson, saw the task force from the bedroom and warned 25 Hartsell. Both fled through the back door, with the task force in pursuit. 26 Task force members eventually found Hartsell lying prone in a thicket. After 27 Hartsell failed to respond to several warnings, Defendant Deputy Trenton Stroh 28 ordered his dog, Bubo, into the bushes to bite and hold Hartsell. 1 As the Court ruled at the summary judgment stage, “deploy[ing] a ‘bite and 2 hold’ canine to apprehend a concealed subject who was a wanted felon fleeing on 3 foot and hiding in brush who had not been searched for weapons, was 4 nonresponsive to several canine announcements, who potentially presented a 5 danger to the public, and where a second fleeing suspect was still on the loose” is 6 a reasonable use of force as a matter of law. (Dkt. 64; Dkt. 70 (adopting Report 7 and Recommendation in full).) But the parties went to trial over what happened 8 next: without directing Bubo to release Hartsell, Stroh ordered Hartsell to crawl the 9 five to fifteen feet out of the bushes. Hartsell complied, dragging along Bubo, 10 whose jaws were still clamped down on Hartsell’s arm. Hartsell argued that this 11 direction, and the failure to first command Bubo to release him, was an 12 unreasonable use of force. 13 The jury found in favor of Stroh and his co-defendant, the County of San 14 Diego, on each of Hartsell’s three claims. Hartsell now moves for judgment as a 15 matter of law or, in the alternative, a new trial, arguing that a reasonable jury 16 couldn’t have found in Defendants’ favor and, at a minimum, the clear weight of 17 the evidence favored Hartsell, so he should have another chance at finding a jury 18 that might give him a favorable verdict. (Dkt. 228.) But because the Court finds 19 that the weight of the evidence established that Stroh’s use of force was 20 reasonable, both motions are DENIED. 21 Hartsell also asks the Court to deny taxation of costs. (Dkt. 236.) The 22 Court’s discretion to grant or deny such a motion is limited, and where taxation of 23 costs would render a party indigent, the Court must grant the motion. Because the 24 $15,115.55 taxed by the Clerk’s order is beyond Hartsell’s ability to pay, that 25 motion is GRANTED. 26 27 28 1 DISCUSSION 2 I. Applicable Standards 3 Motions for judgment notwithstanding the verdict under Fed. R. Civ. P. 50 4 and motions for a new trial under Fed. R. Civ. P. 59 both require the Court to 5 evaluate the jury’s verdict in light of the evidence adduced at trial. Under Rule 50, 6 the movant must show that “a reasonable jury [didn’t] have a legally sufficient 7 evidentiary basis to find for the [non-movant] on [an] issue.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 8 50(a), (b). Rule 59 permits the Court to order a new trial for several reasons 9 including, as Hartsell argues here, that the jury’s verdict was “against the clear 10 weight of the evidence . . . or to prevent . . . a miscarriage of justice.” United States 11 v. 4.0 Acres of Land, 175 F.3d 1133, 1139 (9th Cir. 1999); (Dkt. 228-1 at 15). But 12 “[i]t is not the courts’ place to substitute our evaluations for those of the jurors.” 13 Union Oil Co. of Cal. V. Terrible Herbst, Inc., 331 F.3d 735, 743 (9th Cir. 2003). 14 The weight of the evidence must clearly contradict the verdict—the Court can’t 15 order a new trial “simply because it would have arrived at a different verdict.” 16 Wallace v. City of San Diego, 479 F.3d 616, 630 (9th Cir. 2007). 17 II. The Jury’s Verdict Wasn’t Contrary to the Clear Weight of the 18 Evidence 19 Hartsell alleged three claims against Defendants: violation of Hartsell’s 20 Fourth Amendment rights via 42 U.S.C. § 1983; battery; and negligence. Each of 21 these required him to prove that Stroh’s use of force was unreasonable under the 22 circumstances. (See Dkt. 221, Court’s Instruction Nos. 14, 16, 17.) 23 The use of force at issue wasn’t whether Stroh should have directed Bubo to 24 bite and hold—before trial, the Court held that to be reasonable as a matter of law. 25 (Dkt. 64; Dkt. 70.) Instead, the jury considered whether Stroh used unreasonable 26 force in directing Hartsell, while being held by Bubo in the bushes, to crawl out 27 without first verbally commanding Bubo to release the bite. This reasonableness 28 determination required the jury to take into account all the circumstances known 1 to Stroh, including, among others: the nature of the crime; whether Hartsell or his 2 accomplice who fled the scene posed an immediate threat to the safety of the 3 officers or to others; and the availability of alternative methods to take Hartsell into 4 custody. (Dkt. 221, Court’s Instruction No. 15.); Graham v. Connor, 490 U.S. 386, 5 396–97 (1989). 6 Hartsell contends that the evidence made it plain that Stroh’s directive to him 7 to crawl out of the bushes with Bubo still engaged was unreasonable. Hartsell had 8 shown his hands, was unlikely to be able to conceal a weapon in his clothing 9 because he was in his underwear, wasn’t known for or suspected of violence, and 10 had a loaded gun trained on him throughout. These circumstances weigh in favor 11 of minimizing the amount of force used. 12 But they don’t account for every relevant circumstance. Most critically, Stroh 13 still needed to disengage Bubo from Hartsell’s arm, and his options for doing that 14 were limited. The parties agree that Stroh couldn’t safely enter the bushes to 15 physically remove Bubo. (See Dkt. 238 at 5 (“Plaintiff agrees that officers should 16 not have gone into the bushes.”)). Stroh could either order Hartsell to come out, 17 with Bubo remaining on the bite until he could be removed physically, or he could 18 give a verbal release command from a distance. 19 The evidence doesn’t clearly establish that the latter would have been both 20 effective and a lesser use of force. First, the order might not have been effective. 21 As Hartsell acknowledges, once he crawled out of the bushes, “Bubo [did] not 22 immediately release despite commands to do so.” (Dkt. 228-1 at 10.) Instead, 23 Bubo released only when Stroh physically removed him. (Dkt. 228-3 at 3.) And 24 while Stroh could have tried a verbal-only command, doing so risked using still 25 greater force.
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8 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 9 SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA 10
11 MICHAEL A. HARTSELL, ) No. 16-cv-1094-LAB-LL ) 12 Plaintiff, ) ORDER: 13 ) v. ) 1) DENYING MOTION FOR 14 ) JUDGMENT AS A MATTER OF 15 COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO; SAN ) LAW [Dkt. 228]; DIEGO COUNTY DEPUTY SHERIFF ) 2) DENYING MOTION FOR A NEW 16 TRENTON STROH; DOES 1-15, ) TRIAL [Dkt. 228]; and 17 ) 3) GRANTING MOTION TO RETAX Defendants. ) COSTS [Dkt. 236] 18 ) 19
20 Shortly before dawn on May 21, 2015, a multi-agency, DEA-organized 21 narcotics task force attempted to serve a search warrant at Plaintiff Michael 22 Hartsell’s home. The task force, aware that Hartsell was a convicted felon with a 23 lengthy criminal history, tried to gain entry through the locked gate. Hartsell’s 24 friend, Michael Ferguson, saw the task force from the bedroom and warned 25 Hartsell. Both fled through the back door, with the task force in pursuit. 26 Task force members eventually found Hartsell lying prone in a thicket. After 27 Hartsell failed to respond to several warnings, Defendant Deputy Trenton Stroh 28 ordered his dog, Bubo, into the bushes to bite and hold Hartsell. 1 As the Court ruled at the summary judgment stage, “deploy[ing] a ‘bite and 2 hold’ canine to apprehend a concealed subject who was a wanted felon fleeing on 3 foot and hiding in brush who had not been searched for weapons, was 4 nonresponsive to several canine announcements, who potentially presented a 5 danger to the public, and where a second fleeing suspect was still on the loose” is 6 a reasonable use of force as a matter of law. (Dkt. 64; Dkt. 70 (adopting Report 7 and Recommendation in full).) But the parties went to trial over what happened 8 next: without directing Bubo to release Hartsell, Stroh ordered Hartsell to crawl the 9 five to fifteen feet out of the bushes. Hartsell complied, dragging along Bubo, 10 whose jaws were still clamped down on Hartsell’s arm. Hartsell argued that this 11 direction, and the failure to first command Bubo to release him, was an 12 unreasonable use of force. 13 The jury found in favor of Stroh and his co-defendant, the County of San 14 Diego, on each of Hartsell’s three claims. Hartsell now moves for judgment as a 15 matter of law or, in the alternative, a new trial, arguing that a reasonable jury 16 couldn’t have found in Defendants’ favor and, at a minimum, the clear weight of 17 the evidence favored Hartsell, so he should have another chance at finding a jury 18 that might give him a favorable verdict. (Dkt. 228.) But because the Court finds 19 that the weight of the evidence established that Stroh’s use of force was 20 reasonable, both motions are DENIED. 21 Hartsell also asks the Court to deny taxation of costs. (Dkt. 236.) The 22 Court’s discretion to grant or deny such a motion is limited, and where taxation of 23 costs would render a party indigent, the Court must grant the motion. Because the 24 $15,115.55 taxed by the Clerk’s order is beyond Hartsell’s ability to pay, that 25 motion is GRANTED. 26 27 28 1 DISCUSSION 2 I. Applicable Standards 3 Motions for judgment notwithstanding the verdict under Fed. R. Civ. P. 50 4 and motions for a new trial under Fed. R. Civ. P. 59 both require the Court to 5 evaluate the jury’s verdict in light of the evidence adduced at trial. Under Rule 50, 6 the movant must show that “a reasonable jury [didn’t] have a legally sufficient 7 evidentiary basis to find for the [non-movant] on [an] issue.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 8 50(a), (b). Rule 59 permits the Court to order a new trial for several reasons 9 including, as Hartsell argues here, that the jury’s verdict was “against the clear 10 weight of the evidence . . . or to prevent . . . a miscarriage of justice.” United States 11 v. 4.0 Acres of Land, 175 F.3d 1133, 1139 (9th Cir. 1999); (Dkt. 228-1 at 15). But 12 “[i]t is not the courts’ place to substitute our evaluations for those of the jurors.” 13 Union Oil Co. of Cal. V. Terrible Herbst, Inc., 331 F.3d 735, 743 (9th Cir. 2003). 14 The weight of the evidence must clearly contradict the verdict—the Court can’t 15 order a new trial “simply because it would have arrived at a different verdict.” 16 Wallace v. City of San Diego, 479 F.3d 616, 630 (9th Cir. 2007). 17 II. The Jury’s Verdict Wasn’t Contrary to the Clear Weight of the 18 Evidence 19 Hartsell alleged three claims against Defendants: violation of Hartsell’s 20 Fourth Amendment rights via 42 U.S.C. § 1983; battery; and negligence. Each of 21 these required him to prove that Stroh’s use of force was unreasonable under the 22 circumstances. (See Dkt. 221, Court’s Instruction Nos. 14, 16, 17.) 23 The use of force at issue wasn’t whether Stroh should have directed Bubo to 24 bite and hold—before trial, the Court held that to be reasonable as a matter of law. 25 (Dkt. 64; Dkt. 70.) Instead, the jury considered whether Stroh used unreasonable 26 force in directing Hartsell, while being held by Bubo in the bushes, to crawl out 27 without first verbally commanding Bubo to release the bite. This reasonableness 28 determination required the jury to take into account all the circumstances known 1 to Stroh, including, among others: the nature of the crime; whether Hartsell or his 2 accomplice who fled the scene posed an immediate threat to the safety of the 3 officers or to others; and the availability of alternative methods to take Hartsell into 4 custody. (Dkt. 221, Court’s Instruction No. 15.); Graham v. Connor, 490 U.S. 386, 5 396–97 (1989). 6 Hartsell contends that the evidence made it plain that Stroh’s directive to him 7 to crawl out of the bushes with Bubo still engaged was unreasonable. Hartsell had 8 shown his hands, was unlikely to be able to conceal a weapon in his clothing 9 because he was in his underwear, wasn’t known for or suspected of violence, and 10 had a loaded gun trained on him throughout. These circumstances weigh in favor 11 of minimizing the amount of force used. 12 But they don’t account for every relevant circumstance. Most critically, Stroh 13 still needed to disengage Bubo from Hartsell’s arm, and his options for doing that 14 were limited. The parties agree that Stroh couldn’t safely enter the bushes to 15 physically remove Bubo. (See Dkt. 238 at 5 (“Plaintiff agrees that officers should 16 not have gone into the bushes.”)). Stroh could either order Hartsell to come out, 17 with Bubo remaining on the bite until he could be removed physically, or he could 18 give a verbal release command from a distance. 19 The evidence doesn’t clearly establish that the latter would have been both 20 effective and a lesser use of force. First, the order might not have been effective. 21 As Hartsell acknowledges, once he crawled out of the bushes, “Bubo [did] not 22 immediately release despite commands to do so.” (Dkt. 228-1 at 10.) Instead, 23 Bubo released only when Stroh physically removed him. (Dkt. 228-3 at 3.) And 24 while Stroh could have tried a verbal-only command, doing so risked using still 25 greater force. Stroh, Deputy Brandon Carlos, and Lieutenant Jacob Pavlenko all 26 offered evidence that officers (including Stroh and Carlos) are trained that the 27 safest practice is to release a biting dog physically while giving a simultaneous 28 command because giving the verbal command alone risks a second bite. 1 (Dkt. 232 at 151:7–15, 153:3–11, 191:4–23; Dkt. 231 at 56:5–17.) And Stroh 2 testified that a second bite would be more likely than the first to cause a serious or 3 lethal injury. (Dkt. 232 at 151:10–15.) 4 The jury heard substantial evidence supporting a conclusion that a 5 reasonable officer with Stroh’s training would have determined that the least 6 dangerous method of removing Hartsell from the bushes was to order Hartsell to 7 crawl out with Bubo still engaged, and that therefore Stroh’s decision to take that 8 course wasn’t an unreasonable use of force. Considering that evidence, the Court 9 cannot find that the clear weight of the evidence contradicts the jury’s verdict in 10 Defendants’ favor, nor that the verdict constituted a miscarriage of justice. The 11 motions for judgment as a matter of law and for a new trial are both DENIED. 12 III. Awarding Costs in this Case Would Render Hartsell Indigent 13 Fed. R. Civ. P. 54(d)(1) establishes a presumption that the prevailing party 14 will be permitted to recover its costs. The Court has limited discretion to set this 15 presumption aside in “extraordinary” circumstances where “it would be 16 inappropriate or inequitable to award costs.” Ass’n of Mexican-American 17 Educators v. California, 231 F.3d 572, 593 (9th Cir. 2000). But courts abuse that 18 discretion in refusing to set aside a cost award where there is evidence that the 19 award would render indigent the party bound to pay it. Stanley v. Univ. of S. Cal., 20 178 F.3d 1069, 1080 (9th Cir. 1999); Escriba v. Foster Poultry Farms, Inc., 743 21 F.3d 1236, 1248 (9th Cir. 2014) (following Stanley). 22 Hartsell asks the Court to set aside the clerk’s order taxing costs of 23 $15,442.05 because of the disparity between his resources and the County’s, 24 potential chilling effects on civil rights litigation, and issues of substantial public 25 importance in this case. This case doesn’t involve issues of sufficient interest to 26 the public to decline to tax costs—Hartsell didn’t challenge any generally 27 applicable policy, and the reasonableness inquiry at the heart of the case is highly 28 fact-sensitive. Nor are these costs so high that they are likely to have a substantial 1 chilling effect on potential plaintiffs with the ability to pay. But financial information 2 provided by Hartsell establishes that awarding costs to the County is likely to 3 render Hartsell indigent. Between July and December 2020, his income was only 4 $8,000, which he attests is “just enough to pay monthly expenses,” and he has no 5 real property or savings that he could use to satisfy the debt. (Dkt. 236-1.) 6 Hartsell’s Motion to Retax Costs is GRANTED—the Court declines to award costs 7 to Defendants. 8 IT IS SO ORDERED. 9 Dated: September 17, 2021 10 HON. LARRY A. BURNS 11 United States District Court Judge 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28