Henry Z. Spell v. Charles D. McDaniel Individually and as Patrolman, City of Fayetteville Police Department, and John P. Smith, City Manager, City of Fayetteville, and William P. Dalton, Command Sergeant, City of Fayetteville Police Department Roger T. Holman, Command Sergeant, City of Fayetteville Police Department William C. Johnson, Director of Internal Affairs Division, City of Fayetteville Police Department Daniel K. Dixon, Chief, City of Fayetteville Police Department and the City of Fayetteville, N.C., a Municipal Corporation Organized Under and Pursuant to the Laws of the State of N.C., (Three Cases). Henry Z. Spell v. Charles D. McDaniel Individually and as Patrolman, City of Fayetteville Police Department, and William P. Dalton, Command Sergeant, City of Fayetteville Police Department Roger T. Holman, Command Sergeant, City of Fayetteville Police Department William C. Johnson, Director of Internal Affairs Division, City of Fayetteville Police Department Daniel K. Dixon, Chief, City of Fayetteville Police Department John P. Smith, City Manager, City of Fayetteville and the City of Fayetteville, N.C., a Municipal Corporation Organized Under and Pursuant to the Laws of the State of N.C., Henry Z. Spell v. Charles D. McDaniel Individually, and Charles D. McDaniel Patrolman, City of Fayetteville Police Department William P. Dalton, Command Sergeant, City of Fayetteville Police Department Roger T. Holman, Command Sergeant, City of Fayetteville Police Department William C. Johnson, Director of Internal Affairs Division, City of Fayetteville Police Department Daniel K. Dixon, Chief, City of Fayetteville Police Department John P. Smith, City Manager, City of Fayetteville and the City of Fayetteville, N.C., a Municipal Corporation Organized Under and Pursuant to the Laws of the State of N.C.

824 F.2d 1380, 1987 U.S. App. LEXIS 9899
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJuly 24, 1987
Docket85-1524
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 824 F.2d 1380 (Henry Z. Spell v. Charles D. McDaniel Individually and as Patrolman, City of Fayetteville Police Department, and John P. Smith, City Manager, City of Fayetteville, and William P. Dalton, Command Sergeant, City of Fayetteville Police Department Roger T. Holman, Command Sergeant, City of Fayetteville Police Department William C. Johnson, Director of Internal Affairs Division, City of Fayetteville Police Department Daniel K. Dixon, Chief, City of Fayetteville Police Department and the City of Fayetteville, N.C., a Municipal Corporation Organized Under and Pursuant to the Laws of the State of N.C., (Three Cases). Henry Z. Spell v. Charles D. McDaniel Individually and as Patrolman, City of Fayetteville Police Department, and William P. Dalton, Command Sergeant, City of Fayetteville Police Department Roger T. Holman, Command Sergeant, City of Fayetteville Police Department William C. Johnson, Director of Internal Affairs Division, City of Fayetteville Police Department Daniel K. Dixon, Chief, City of Fayetteville Police Department John P. Smith, City Manager, City of Fayetteville and the City of Fayetteville, N.C., a Municipal Corporation Organized Under and Pursuant to the Laws of the State of N.C., Henry Z. Spell v. Charles D. McDaniel Individually, and Charles D. McDaniel Patrolman, City of Fayetteville Police Department William P. Dalton, Command Sergeant, City of Fayetteville Police Department Roger T. Holman, Command Sergeant, City of Fayetteville Police Department William C. Johnson, Director of Internal Affairs Division, City of Fayetteville Police Department Daniel K. Dixon, Chief, City of Fayetteville Police Department John P. Smith, City Manager, City of Fayetteville and the City of Fayetteville, N.C., a Municipal Corporation Organized Under and Pursuant to the Laws of the State of N.C.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Henry Z. Spell v. Charles D. McDaniel Individually and as Patrolman, City of Fayetteville Police Department, and John P. Smith, City Manager, City of Fayetteville, and William P. Dalton, Command Sergeant, City of Fayetteville Police Department Roger T. Holman, Command Sergeant, City of Fayetteville Police Department William C. Johnson, Director of Internal Affairs Division, City of Fayetteville Police Department Daniel K. Dixon, Chief, City of Fayetteville Police Department and the City of Fayetteville, N.C., a Municipal Corporation Organized Under and Pursuant to the Laws of the State of N.C., (Three Cases). Henry Z. Spell v. Charles D. McDaniel Individually and as Patrolman, City of Fayetteville Police Department, and William P. Dalton, Command Sergeant, City of Fayetteville Police Department Roger T. Holman, Command Sergeant, City of Fayetteville Police Department William C. Johnson, Director of Internal Affairs Division, City of Fayetteville Police Department Daniel K. Dixon, Chief, City of Fayetteville Police Department John P. Smith, City Manager, City of Fayetteville and the City of Fayetteville, N.C., a Municipal Corporation Organized Under and Pursuant to the Laws of the State of N.C., Henry Z. Spell v. Charles D. McDaniel Individually, and Charles D. McDaniel Patrolman, City of Fayetteville Police Department William P. Dalton, Command Sergeant, City of Fayetteville Police Department Roger T. Holman, Command Sergeant, City of Fayetteville Police Department William C. Johnson, Director of Internal Affairs Division, City of Fayetteville Police Department Daniel K. Dixon, Chief, City of Fayetteville Police Department John P. Smith, City Manager, City of Fayetteville and the City of Fayetteville, N.C., a Municipal Corporation Organized Under and Pursuant to the Laws of the State of N.C., 824 F.2d 1380, 1987 U.S. App. LEXIS 9899 (4th Cir. 1987).

Opinion

824 F.2d 1380

Henry Z. SPELL, Appellee,
v.
Charles D. McDANIEL, Individually and as Patrolman, City of
Fayetteville Police Department, and John P. Smith,
City Manager, City of Fayetteville, Defendants,
and
William P. Dalton, Command Sergeant, City of Fayetteville
Police Department; Roger T. Holman, Command Sergeant, City
of Fayetteville Police Department; William C. Johnson,
Director of Internal Affairs Division, City of Fayetteville
Police Department; Daniel K. Dixon, Chief, City of
Fayetteville Police Department; and the City of
Fayetteville, N.C., a municipal corporation organized under
and pursuant to the laws of the State of N.C., Appellants
(Three Cases).
Henry Z. SPELL, Appellee,
v.
Charles D. McDANIEL, Individually and as Patrolman, City of
Fayetteville Police Department, Appellant,
and
William P. Dalton, Command Sergeant, City of Fayetteville
Police Department; Roger T. Holman, Command Sergeant, City
of Fayetteville Police Department; William C. Johnson,
Director of Internal Affairs Division, City of Fayetteville
Police Department; Daniel K. Dixon, Chief, City of
Fayetteville Police Department; John P. Smith, City
Manager, City of Fayetteville and the City of Fayetteville,
N.C., a municipal corporation organized under and pursuant
to the laws of the State of N.C., Defendants.
Henry Z. SPELL, Appellee,
v.
Charles D. McDANIEL, Individually, Appellant,
and
Charles D. McDaniel, Patrolman, City of Fayetteville Police
Department; William P. Dalton, Command Sergeant, City of
Fayetteville Police Department; Roger T. Holman, Command
Sergeant, City of Fayetteville Police Department; William
C. Johnson, Director of Internal Affairs Division, City of
Fayetteville Police Department; Daniel K. Dixon, Chief,
City of Fayetteville Police Department; John P. Smith, City
Manager, City of Fayetteville and the City of Fayetteville,
N.C., a municipal corporation organized under and pursuant
to the laws of the State of N.C., Defendants.

Nos. 85-1524, 85-1523, 85-1691, 85-1714 and 85-1757.

United States Court of Appeals,
Fourth Circuit.

Argued June 4, 1986.
Decided July 24, 1987.

John N. Fountain and Gary S. Parsons (Gary K. Joyner, Raleigh, N.C., Carolin D. Bakewell, Richmond, Va., Bailey, Dixon, Wooten, McDonald, Fountain & Walker, Raleigh, N.C., Bobby G. Deaver; Brown, Fox & Deaver, Fayetteville, N.C., George Colvin Cochran, Law Center, University of Mississippi, on brief), for appellants.

Alfred S. Bryant (Bruce M. Marshall; Carter H. Tucker; Obenshain, Hinnant, Ellyson, Runkle & Bryant, Richmond, Va., on brief) and H. Gerald Beaver (William Richardson; Beaver, Thompson, Holt & Richardson, P.A., Fayetteville, N.C., on brief), for appellee.

Before PHILLIPS, CHAPMAN and WILKINSON, Circuit Judges.

JAMES DICKSON PHILLIPS, Circuit Judge:

This is a 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1983 action in which after two trials Henry Spell was awarded substantial damages against the City of Fayetteville, North Carolina (the City), and Charles McDaniel, a City police officer, as a result of physical injury inflicted on Spell by McDaniel while Spell was in McDaniel's custody following Spell's arrest. McDaniel and the City have appealed, assigning various trial rulings as error and challenging as unreasonable the amount of attorney fees awarded to Spell as prevailing party.

We find no reversible error in the trials and therefore affirm the judgment on the merits against McDaniel and the City. Except for its inclusion of a "contingency multiplier," we also affirm the district court's award of attorney fees.

* Spell, admittedly inebriated on alcohol and quaaludes, was stopped by Officer McDaniel while driving an automobile in the City of Fayetteville. After talking with Spell and finding a quantity of quaaludes in his automobile, McDaniel arrested him along with a passenger in Spell's automobile, handcuffed the two of them and took them in a patrol car to the police station. There Spell was subjected to various sobriety tests, including a breathalyzer test, and was formally charged with driving while impaired and with the possession of quaaludes.1 Just after Spell completed the breathalyzer test and was returned, still handcuffed and inebriated, to McDaniel's direct custody, McDaniel, possibly angered by Spell's failure to respond to his questioning, and in any event without any physical provocation, brutally assaulted Spell. When Spell warded off a blow toward his head by raising his arms, McDaniel seized his handcuffed arms, pulled them down and violently kneed Spell in the groin. The blow to Spell's groin ruptured one of his testicles, necessitating its surgical removal. This resulted in irreversible sterility and of course in considerable associated pain and suffering.2

Spell then brought this Sec. 1983 action naming as defendants McDaniel, the City of Fayetteville, the City Manager, the City Chief of Police, the Director of the police department's Internal Affairs Division and two police department command sergeants. He structured the action as one against McDaniel in his individual and official capacities; against the City Manager, Smith, the Police Chief, Dixon, the Internal Affairs Division Director, Johnson, and the two command sergeants, Dalton and Holman, in their several official capacities; and against the City as a suable municipal corporation.

His pleaded theory of recovery against McDaniel individually was that McDaniel, acting under color of state law, had deprived him of rights secured by the fourth, fifth and fourteenth amendments by using excessive physical force against him in a custodial situation, thereby inflicting serious personal injuries.3 For this conduct he sought recovery of money damages against McDaniel in his individual capacity.

His pleaded theory of recovery against the City of Fayetteville was that the City was liable for damages under the doctrine of Monell v. Department of Social Services of the City of New York, 436 U.S. 658, 98 S.Ct. 2018, 56 L.Ed.2d 611 (1978), for the constitutional deprivation with consequent physical injuries directly inflicted by its employee McDaniel, because McDaniel's conduct was pursuant to a municipal "policy or custom." Id. at 694, 98 S.Ct. at 2037.

McDaniel denied inflicting any injury on Spell as a defense to the individual-capacity claim against him. The City also denied (for lack of sufficient knowledge or information) that McDaniel had inflicted injury on Spell, and alternatively denied that there was any basis for imposing municipal liability upon it under Monell.4

The case then went to trial before a jury on the issues whether, as a matter of fact, McDaniel had assaulted Spell and was therefore liable individually, and if so, whether there existed a basis in law and fact for also imposing joint liability upon the City for the resulting constitutional deprivation.

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Henry Z. Spell v. Charles D. McDaniel Individually and as Patrolman, City of Fayetteville Police Department, and William P. Dalton, Command Sergeant, City of Fayetteville Police Department Roger T. Holman, Command Sergeant, City of Fayetteville Police Department William C. Johnson, Director of Internal Affairs Division, City of Fayetteville Police Department Daniel K. Dixon, Chief, City of Fayetteville Police Department John P. Smith, City Manager, City of Fayetteville and the City of Fayetteville, N.C., a Municipal Corporation Organized Under and Pursuant to the Laws of the State of N.C., Henry Z. Spell v. Charles D. McDaniel Individually and as Patrolman, City of Fayetteville Police Department, and John P. Smith, City Manager, City of Fayetteville, and William P. Dalton, Command Sergeant, City of Fayetteville Police Department Roger T. Holman, Command Sergeant, City of Fayetteville Police Department William C. Johnson, Director of Internal Affairs Division, City of Fayetteville Police Department Daniel K. Dixon, Chief, City of Fayetteville Police Department and the City of Fayetteville, N.C., a Municipal Corporation Organized Under and Pursuant to the Laws of the State of N.C., (Three Cases) Henry Z. Spell v. Charles D. McDaniel Individually, and Charles D. McDaniel Patrolman, City of Fayetteville Police Department William P. Dalton, Command Sergeant, City of Fayetteville Police Department Roger T. Holman, Command Sergeant, City of Fayetteville Police Department William C. Johnson, Director of Internal Affairs Division, City of Fayetteville Police Department Daniel K. Dixon, Chief, City of Fayetteville Police Department John P. Smith, City Manager, City of Fayetteville and the City of Fayetteville, N.C., a Municipal Corporation Organized Under and Pursuant to the Laws of the State of N.C.
852 F.2d 762 (Fourth Circuit, 1988)

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Bluebook (online)
824 F.2d 1380, 1987 U.S. App. LEXIS 9899, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henry-z-spell-v-charles-d-mcdaniel-individually-and-as-patrolman-city-ca4-1987.