Hollingsworth v. Dixon

55 So. 3d 1171, 2010 Ala. LEXIS 130, 2010 WL 3075294
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedAugust 6, 2010
Docket1081048
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 55 So. 3d 1171 (Hollingsworth v. Dixon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hollingsworth v. Dixon, 55 So. 3d 1171, 2010 Ala. LEXIS 130, 2010 WL 3075294 (Ala. 2010).

Opinion

PARKER, Justice.

Cecilia J. Dixon and the City of Montgomery (“the City”) petition this Court for a writ of mandamus directing the Montgomery Circuit Court to vacate its order denying their immunity-based motion for a summary judgment. We grant their petition and issue the writ.

Background

The plaintiff, Linda Hollingsworth, a correctional officer employed by the City at the Montgomery municipal jail, sued Dixon, a major with the City of Montgomery Police Department and the Administration Division Commander, in her individual capacity and in her official capacity as a correctional officer with the Montgomery Police Department; the City of Montgomery Police Department; and three fictitiously named defendants. The cause of action arose when Dixon conducted a body search of Hollingsworth because Hollingsworth was the last person known to have been in possession of an inmate’s money, which was subsequently reported to be missing. As Administration Division Commander, Dixon was responsible for the operation of the Montgomery municipal jail. The complaint alleged four counts: assault and battery, invasion of privacy, negligent hiring, training, and/or supervision (against the City of Montgomery Police Department), and false imprisonment. The City responded to the complaint on behalf of the Montgomery Police Department, explaining the substitution in the barest terms in a footnote in its motion for a summary judgment, saying: “Because the Montgomery Police Department is not a legal entity to be sued, this Motion for Summary Judgment is submitted by City of Montgomery.” 1

The incident underlying this action occurred on May 15, 2007, when Dixon was advised by one of the supervisors at the jail that an inmate’s money was missing. The warden of the jail was not available, so Dixon went to the jail to resolve the matter. She was told that the newly installed video equipment, which should have recorded all the pertinent activity, was not working. Dixon obtained the assistance of *1173 officers who could get the video equipment working, and she proceeded to assess the situation. These events are summarized in Dixon’s deposition:

“We had new videos installed in the jail when I was the admin, commander. We were in the process — they hadn’t been in the jail very long. And it was for the jailers’ own protection and everything. So we had video installed in the jail. Some of it was so that when jailers were checking people in, the cameras went right down onto the desk where money and everything was. There were cameras put all over the jail. It was new equipment, so a lot of the jailers weren’t familiar with the way to handle the equipment.
“They said that the video cameras weren’t working.... Anyway, there were three or four other police officers that came to the jail to help me see if we could get the cameras up and running.
“They had been dealing with this an hour, an hour and a half — maybe. The person who the money belonged to was kind of over here in our holding cell, so he saw us kind of running around like chickens with our head cut off, you know. Then the attorney was over here. He saw what we were trying to do, that the money was gone and, you know, we didn’t really know where it was. I mean, it had been such a long time, and I thought, we’ve got to get it settled.
“So Ms. Hollingsworth was the last person seen with the money, and so I took it upon myself — and I called Marie Jenkins and I asked her if she would escort me to go into the office with Ms. Hollingsworth, because I was fixing to start searching everybody. But since she was the last person with the money, I started with her. Now, my intention was I was going to get everybody. But when we came back in, they were getting the video — after I had searched Ms. Hollingsworth, they were getting the video up and running.
“Well, while I was in the office with Ms. Jenkins and Ms. Hollingsworth about searching her, I apologized to her and told her — we have a policy that anybody can be searched, you know, in the jail and it includes employees.” 2

Dixon later testified in the same deposition regarding the actual search of Holl-ingsworth:

“Q. And did you order Ms. Hollings-worth for a strip search?
“A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Okay.
“A. Let me clarify that. Can I clarify that?
“Q. Sure. Yes, ma’am.
“A. I apologized to her for what I was about to do. I never touched Ms. Holl-ingsworth. The only thing I was doing was — my concern was about the money. She unbuttoned her shirt and she undid her bra. She never took her bra totally off. She undid her bra, and I told her that was fine, because I thought if she had taken the money, it would either be right here in her bra and would fall out or it would be right here in her pants. *1174 So she never took her clothes entirely off. She just unbuttoned her shirt and then she unbuckled her bra and just kind of turned it a little bit. She never took her clothes off. And when she started to undo her pants and she took her belt loose, I saw that — I mean, nothing fell out, and I told her to stop. I said, ‘That’s enough.’ I never laid my hands on her. I apologized to her and told her that I had seen enough. So as far as taking her clothes off, no, sir, she never took her clothes totally off. She still had her shirt on and she still had her bra on.”

In regard to her reason for conducting a body search of Hollingsworth, Dixon testified:

“Q. What specific objective facts did you have to believe that Ms. Hollings-worth had taken the money?
“A. Because she was the last one that had the money. It was in her hands. People said she was the last one to have the money. And she had gotten on the telephone and called — called her husband to tell her husband to bring money, that we were accusing her of taking money.
“Q. Okay. And where was the money found?
“A. I happened to find the money, because after we searched Ms. Hollings-worth and came out of the office, we came back into the office and they were bringing up the video. Okay. So her hands were the last ones on there. And we kept watching the video and watching the video and there were hands here and hands there, and the money was put in a brown envelope and she slid the brown envelope behind other envelopes when she should have given it to the officer behind the window. It was in a brown manila envelope with nothing written on it and it was slid behind other envelopes. And I followed the hands on the camera and I was the one that found the envelope.
“Q. Okay. And no one had searched the envelopes prior to you coming upstairs?
“A. Yes, sir, they had. They said they had. Now, I had to take—
“Q. Apparently, they had not.
“A. Apparently, they had not.

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55 So. 3d 1171, 2010 Ala. LEXIS 130, 2010 WL 3075294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hollingsworth-v-dixon-ala-2010.