Hicks v. City of Millersville

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Tennessee
DecidedAugust 22, 2025
Docket3:21-cv-00837
StatusUnknown

This text of Hicks v. City of Millersville (Hicks v. City of Millersville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hicks v. City of Millersville, (M.D. Tenn. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF TENNESSEE NASHVILLE DIVISION

MASON ROBERT JAMES HICKS,

Plaintiff, Case No. 3:21-cv-00837

v. Judge Aleta A. Trauger Magistrate Judge Alistair E. Newbern CITY OF MILLERSVILLE et al.,

Defendants.

To: The Honorable Aleta A. Trauger, District Judge

REPORT AND RECOMMENDATION Pro se plaintiff Mason Robert James Hicks brought this action alleging that his civil rights were violated by the City of Millersville, Tennessee, and several of its police officers when he was arrested and prosecuted for mailbox tampering. (Doc. No. 1.) After years of litigation, Defendant Dustin Carr is the only remaining defendant in the action. Carr sought the Court’s leave to file a motion for summary judgment more than nine months after the deadline to file dispositive motions had passed. (Doc. No. 107.) Recognizing that Carr had not shown good cause for missing the filing deadline but weighing that failure against “its own limited resources, the many other cases on its docket, and the interests of judicial efficiency,” the Court granted Carr’s motion and ordered him to file a motion for summary judgment. (Doc. No. 113.) Carr did not follow the Court’s direction. Instead, Carr filed a three-page motion to dismiss under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). (Doc. No. 114.) Hicks has responded in opposition to the motion (Doc. No. 121), and Carr has filed a reply (Doc. No. 122). For the reasons that follow, the Magistrate Judge will recommend that Carr’s motion to dismiss (Doc. No. 114) be denied. However, the Magistrate Judge will recommend that the Court grant summary judgment independent of a party’s motion under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56(f)(1). I. Background A. Factual Background The Court summarized the relevant factual background of Hicks’s claims in its report and recommendation on the motions for summary judgment filed by the City of Millersville and

Defendants Pearce and Riley. (Doc. No. 109.) Based on the evidentiary record established by Hicks and those defendants, the Court found as follows: 1. March 18, 2019 Arrest

In 2019, Hicks had been living at 1000 Heather Drive in Goodlettsville, Tennessee, for “roughly 16 [or] 15 years” with “[his] mom, dad, brother[,] and sister.” (Doc. No. 86-1, PageID# 493.) On March 18, 2019, at approximately 12:11 p.m., Summer County Police Department dispatch received a 911 call that Allison Absher, who lived at 998 Heather Drive, had seen a suspicious “male walking up and down the road trying to get into cars” and “going through [residents'] mailboxes ....” (Doc. No. 90-1, PageID# 698; Doc. Nos. 85, 100.) Pearce responded to the 911 call and was the first officer to arrive on Heather Drive. (Doc. Nos. 90, 90-2.) Pearce parked her car in front of Absher's residence and began to observe the area. (Doc. Nos. 85, 100.) A few minutes later, Pearce called Emmanuel Manoloules, a White House, Tennessee, police officer with whom Pearce had previously worked and who she knew lived at 1005 Heather Drive; Pearce gave Manoloules “a description of all vehicles” as “[she] drove through the neighborhood.” (Doc. No. 86-3, PageID# 603; Doc. No. 92-3.) Manoloules told Pearce that “[a]ll the vehicles ... that [she] described to him ... did belong in the neighborhood.” (Doc. No. 86-3, PageID# 603; Doc. No. 90.)

Riley and Carr also responded to the 911 call. Carr instructed Riley to “stay out of the neighborhood where the [i]ncident occurred while [Carr] and ... Pearce went to Heather Drive to look for a suspect.” (Doc. No. 90, PageID# 691, ¶ 5; Doc. No. 92.) Pearce and Carr saw a black Mercedes travel down Heather Drive and leave the subdivision, which they considered suspicious. (Doc. Nos. 90-2, 92-4.) Neither Pearce nor Carr was able to get the license plate number of the Mercedes to do a registration check. Riley, however, spotted the car outside the subdivision and ran the license plate number, which identified the Mercedes as registered to Shawn Stine. (Doc. No. 90-2, PageID# 705; Doc. No. 90.) Manoloules informed Pearce that the Mercedes “did not belong in the neighborhood.” (Doc. No. 90-2, PageID# 705; Doc. No. 92, PageID# 720–21, ¶ 9.) Carr instructed Riley to stop the Mercedes and Pearce to get a description of the mailbox-tampering suspect from Absher. (Doc. No. 90-2.) Absher told Pearce that the suspect “was wearing a light gray hoodie that covered his face, was approximately 5-11, slim build, [and] ... on foot.” (Doc. No. 90-2, PageID# 705; Doc. No. 92.) Stine, who was driving the Mercedes, told Riley that he was in the neighborhood to conduct a real-estate appraisal. Stine later stated that he “do[es] not remember what [he] was wearing that day”; he “do[es] not believe that [he] would have been wearing a hoodie” but “might have been wearing a hat.” (Doc. No. 91, PageID# 716, ¶¶6–7.) Riley ruled out Stine as suspect and let him leave. (Doc. No. 90.)

Carr, Pearce, and Riley then “converged on Heather Drive and were talking in front of” Manoloules's residence. (Doc. No. 92, PageID# 721, ¶ 12.) Pearce saw Hicks emerge from a house across the street and “pac[e] back and forth in front of his residence and in the street ....” (Doc. No. 92, PageID# 721, ¶ 12.) Hicks took photographs and video of the officers, and Pearce took four photographs of Hicks. (Id.; Doc. No. 90.) Hicks “was wearing a light gray hoodie.” (Doc. No. 92, PageID# 721, ¶ 12.)

Because Hicks's hoodie matched the description that Absher had given Pearce of the suspected mailbox tamperer, Pearce walked back to Absher's residence “to see if [Hicks] could possibly be the person [ ] Absher had seen.” (Doc. No. 92, PageID# 721, ¶ 13.) Pearce showed Absher the photographs of Hicks she had just taken, and “Absher said she believed the person depicted in [them] ... was the same person she had seen tampering with the mailboxes, but she was not certain based on [these] photographs ....” (Doc. No. 92, PageID# 721, ¶ 13.) Pearce relayed to the other officers that Absher “believe[d] that may be the individual.” (Doc. No. 90-2, PageID# 706.) Absher also identified three houses where she thought the suspect had opened the mailbox, including Manoloules's house. (Doc. No. 92.)

Pearce rejoined the other officers in front of Manouloules's house, where Hicks was “still pacing back and forth” across the street. (Doc. No. 92, PageID# 722, ¶ 15.) As Absher left for work, she drove up to the officers and saw Hicks “sitting on the curb[,]” wearing “[a] gray hoodie and black pants.” (Doc. No. 92-4, PageID# 738.) Absher stated that it was the “same gray hoodie and black pants that [she] had seen the person wearing earlier[.]” (Id.) Pearce and Riley state that Absher was “100% certain” that Hicks was the person she had seen tampering with the mailboxes. (Doc. Nos. 93, 101.) Pearce then spoke to Manoloules and the other mailbox owners, and all stated they wanted to press charges against the tamperer. (Doc. No. 90, PageID# 692, ¶ 13.)

Hicks states that, while he was standing outside his house watching the officers, he saw his neighbor also standing outside and decided to “go talk to her and have her clear [his] name [because] she would [have known] [that] [Hicks]” was not involved in the mailbox tampering. (Doc. No. 86-1, PageID# 503.) Hicks states that, before he could do so, “[Pearce] told [him] to freeze[,] so [he] stood still and then she told [him] he was under arrest.” (Id.) Pearce states that she “called out for [Hicks]” to come talk to her, but Hicks responded that he wouldn't talk to her without an attorney present.

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Hicks v. City of Millersville, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hicks-v-city-of-millersville-tnmd-2025.