Hattaway v. McMillian

903 F.2d 1440, 1990 WL 75061
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedJune 25, 1990
DocketNo. 89-3208
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 903 F.2d 1440 (Hattaway v. McMillian) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hattaway v. McMillian, 903 F.2d 1440, 1990 WL 75061 (11th Cir. 1990).

Opinion

CLARK, Circuit Judge:

I. FACTS AND PRIOR PROCEEDINGS

On September 16, 1987, Noah Laningham and his brother Joe Laningham left the Hardees in DeFuniak Springs, Florida. The Hardees employees suspected that the brothers were too intoxicated to operate an automobile and notified the DeFuniak Springs Police Department. By the time the officers reached the Hardees, the Lan-ingham brothers had left the restaurant. They were next spotted by a state wildlife official who radioed for assistance. Two Walton County Deputies and two DeFuniak Springs officers responded to the call. The situation quickly escalated into a high speed chase.

Quinn A. McMillian, the Walton County Sheriff, was in an unmarked radio car at the time that the chase began. From the radio traffic, he realized that the intoxicated drivers were proceeding towards his present location. McMillian then parked his car in the middle of the road facing the direction the Laningham car would be coming. McMillian’s police car was parked with its blue police lights flashing. McMil-lian then stood in the front of his car to await the Laningham automobile.

A few minutes later the Laningham car raced by the Sheriff. After almost hitting him, the car swerved and went around the Sheriff’s car. As the car sped by, McMilli-an drew his gun and shot at the Laningham car’s tires. The ear then swerved out of control and pulled over approximately one-fourth of a mile from where McMillian was standing. Both of the brothers jumped out of the car. Joe Laningham was apprehended almost immediately. Noah, however, ran into the woods. The officers pursued him into the woods and finally apprehended him several hundred yards from the parked cars. At this time Laning-ham who appeared to be unconscious, was then handcuffed. Apparently because of the heat of the day, the Sheriff asked for some water or a hose. A garden hose with a pistol grip spray nozzle was brought to the Sheriff from a nearby farm house.

At this point in the incident, the eyewitnesses disagree on what happened next. Sheriff McMillian and several of the other witnesses testified that the Sheriff sprayed a fine mist over Noah Laningham and attempted to get him to drink some of the water. These witnesses testified that the entire incident took from one to six minutes. Several of these witnesses testified that the nozzle was never placed into Lan-ingham’s mouth, and that any water that Laningham received to drink was provided in the form of a fine mist from the hose.

The plaintiff presented quite a different story. Tracy Laird testified that the Sheriff took the hose and forced water into Laningham’s mouth at a pressure so high that his cheeks fluttered. Laird also testified that the water shot out of Laning-ham’s nose and caused his stomach to heave up and down so that he looked like he was having convulsions. In addition, the plaintiff also presented the testimony [1443]*1443of Florida Department of Law Enforcement Special Agent Ken Bridges who recounted the following conversation he had with the Sheriff:

The Sheriff told me ... that he had gotten involved in an arrest where a vehicle was being chased ... and then when the car pulled down the road and had stopped [one of the] passengers had jumped out ... and led them on quite a lengthy foot chase through the woods. They finally caught him ... and brought him out near a house, and it was hot that day and he was sweaty. So he told one of the bystanders ... to bring him the hose.... He got the hose and wet the boy down. The boy wasn’t responsive. He would ask him who he was and what he was doing, and he wasn’t responding. He was also not moving, not getting up, not doing anything. So he told him to get up and he forced some water in his mouth and the boy didn’t respond to that. So he said, in his words, I stuck the hose in his mouth again and gave him a good squirt and told him if he didn’t get up, I was going to drown him.

Trial Transcript at 179-80 (emphasis added). Similarly, Officer Rayburn of the De-Funiak Springs Police gave the following testimony on cross-examination:

Q. Now as I understand, Mr. Rayburn, the Sheriff took the nozzle ... and stuck it down [Laningham’s] britches in his genital area?
A. I would say he stuck it under his belt. I wouldn’t say to the genital area.
Q. How far was it from his genital area did he spray?
A. I have no idea.
Q. But it was below the belt?
A. It was under the belt.
Q. And it was in the front?
A. Right.
Q. And that’s the genital area; right?
A. I suppose.
Q. Now, give us a little flavor for the amount of pressure that was coming out of the Plaintiffs Exhibit 1 there when he would stick the nozzle up to his lips?
A. With my hand not being on the nozzle I don’t know how much force was there. As I said before, there was enough force that you noticeably see the water going into his mouth by the movement of his cheeks.
Q. Cheeks were fluttering?
A. Cheeks were a little fluttering, yes, and there was water coming out of the corner of his mouth.

Trial Transcript at 666 (emphasis added).

After the hosing incident, Laningham was taken to the Walton County Jail. He received medical treatment at the jail and was later transferred to a hospital. Although there was some testimony that Lan-ingham was talking and walking around the jail following the hosing incident, some time after the incident Laningham lapsed into a mute and catatonic state. One of Laningham’s doctors diagnosed his condition as a post traumatic stress disorder. Another testified that he has a combination of depression and psychosis. The plaintiff's experts testified at trial that Laning-ham’s condition was most likely caused by the hosing incident described by the plaintiff’s witnesses. Both sides’ experts agreed, however, that the defendant’s version of the hosing incident would not have been likely to cause his injuries. Laning-ham’s condition prevented him from attending the trial. The estimate for the costs of Laningham’s future treatment is 3.3 million dollars at today’s costs.

Betty L. Hattaway was appointed as Laningham’s guardian. On October 26, 1987 she gave notice to McMillian that she intended to bring an action against him for Laningham’s injuries. On October 27, 1987, she filed a multi-count complaint in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Florida alleging several state and federal causes of action.1

[1444]*1444After hearing the testimony presented by both parties, the case was submitted to a jury. The jury was furnished separate special interrogatory verdict forms for each of the four counts of the complaint. The jury found in favor of Sheriff McMilli-an on all federal claims, on the state claim alleging assault and battery and on the state claim alleging intentional infliction of extreme emotional distress. Only on the pendent claim alleging negligence did the jury find in favor of the plaintiff.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
903 F.2d 1440, 1990 WL 75061, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hattaway-v-mcmillian-ca11-1990.