James Ex Rel. Murphy v. Chavez Ex Rel. Mayor of Albuquerque

511 F. App'x 742
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 19, 2013
Docket11-2246
StatusUnpublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 511 F. App'x 742 (James Ex Rel. Murphy v. Chavez Ex Rel. Mayor of Albuquerque) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
James Ex Rel. Murphy v. Chavez Ex Rel. Mayor of Albuquerque, 511 F. App'x 742 (10th Cir. 2013).

Opinion

ORDER AND JUDGMENT **

PHILIP A. BRIMMER, District Judge.

This case arises out of a standoff between James Murphy, Sr. and the Albuquerque Police Department (“APD”) that ended when a SWAT team officer shot and killed Mr. Murphy in Mr. Murphy’s home. Theresa James, as Mr. Murphy’s estate representative and custodial parent , of her and Mr. Murphy’s daughter, brought a complaint in the United States District Court for the District of New Mexico regarding Mr. Murphy’s death. However, this appeal does not involve the officer who fired the fatal shots, but rather another officer, Russell Carter, who fired a shot at Mr. Murphy earlier in the encounter and missed. Appellant claims that Officer Carter’s errant shot and his subsequent order for the SWAT team to enter Mr. Murphy’s house set in motion a chain of events that foreseeably resulted in the SWAT team killing Mr. Murphy, thus making Officer Carter liable.

The district court granted summary judgment in favor of Officer Carter, holding that Officer Carter did not seize Mr. Murphy under the Fourth Amendment by shooting at him, that his actions do not shock the conscience, and that exigent circumstances justified his decision to order the SWAT team to enter the house.

We affirm the district court’s holding without reaching the Fourth Amendment issues, since this case can be resolved solely on the grounds that Officer Carter’s actions did not proximately cause Mr. Murphy’s death.

I

In the early afternoon of June 5, 2007, Mr. Murphy’s neighbor, Arturo Bandera, called the APD and reported that Mr. Murphy was standing at his front door armed with a knife. Aplt. App’x at 126. Mr. Bandera requested that the police respond quickly. Id. Immediately after Mr. Bandera called the police, Mr. Murphy left Mr. Bandera’s house in a green pickup truck. Id. APD dispatched an officer to the area, who spotted the green pickup truck. Id. at 127. The responding officer saw Mr. Murphy wave a knife out of the window of the truck and throw a beer bottle. Id. Mr. Murphy eventually drove back to his house, got out of the truck, yelled at the officer, and ran inside. Id. Mr. Murphy’s ten-year-old son stepped outside the house in order to advise the officer of his father’s emotional state. Id. *744 at 128. 1 The officer placed Mr. Murphy’s son in the rear seat of his patrol car for the child’s safety and because he was a potential witness. Id.

Ten minutes later, after additional APD officers had arrived, Mr. Murphy came outside holding a foot-long knife, a boom box radio, and a bottle of beer. Id. He told the officers to release his son or someone would get hurt. Id. He approached one of the officers and motioned as if he were going to throw the boom box at him. Id. He threw the beer bottle at another officer, and it shattered in front of him. Id. Mr. Murphy also threw the boom box at the officers, but it did not hit anyone. Id. He then retreated behind his wrought iron front door, still holding the knife. Id.

One of the officers noticed a teenage girl, Mr. Murphy’s daughter, looking out the front window of the house. Id. at 129. 2 The APD used a public address system to direct Mr. Murphy to allow the girl to leave the house, but Mr. Murphy refused. Id. An officer began negotiating with Mr. Murphy face-to-face, during which time his daughter came downstairs and tried to walk out of the house. Id. Mr. Murphy grabbed his daughter’s arm and pulled her back inside, saying “You’re not going anywhere.” Id. at 130. APD officers then continued their attempts to negotiate the release of Mr. Murphy’s daughter. Id.

Appellant does not dispute this sequence of events; however, she “denies that Mr. Murphy threatened or restrained his daughter from leaving, other than out of fear for her safety.” Id. at 99. An affidavit from the daughter attests that “[w]hen he put his arm by me as we stood at the front door, it was to protect me from the police outside.” Id. at 122. For the purposes of summary judgment, the lower court accepted as true the assertion that Mr. Murphy never threatened or harmed his daughter while they were in the house together. Id. at 130.

At this point, an officer asked the APD SWAT team to respond. Id. Officer Carter was one of the SWAT team members who arrived at Mr. Murphy’s house after the call. Id. at 131. Acting on his own initiative, Officer Carter positioned himself in the upstairs bedroom of the house next door, where he could see into the second-story bedroom of Mr. Murphy’s house. Id. at 132. Officer Carter knew that the police had been negotiating with Mr. Murphy regarding his daughter, but he did not know how the negotiations were proceeding or what had been said. Id. at 131.

At his deposition, Officer Carter explained the circumstances of what led him to shoot at Mr. Murphy. Id. at 117-18. From his position in the house next door, Officer Carter saw Mr. Murphy in an upstairs room with his daughter. Id. Mr. *745 Murphy was holding a knife. Id. Officer Carter saw Mr. Murphy approach his daughter with the knife raised over his head. Id. Believing that Mr. Murphy’s daughter was in immediate danger of death or serious bodily injury, Officer Carter fired one round from his rifle at Mr. Murphy. Id. at 116-17,133. The shot did not hit Mr. Murphy. Id. at 133. Mr. Murphy’s daughter testified that, at the time the shot was fired, she was not in the room, but rather going down the stairs to get her father something to drink, and that she saw Officer Carter’s bullet pass through the wall near her as she walked down the stairs. Id. at 122. For the purposes of summary judgment, the district court accepted as true the assertion that she was not in the room when Officer Carter fired at Mr. Murphy. Id. at 133.

After firing the single shot, Officer Carter immediately ordered the SWAT team to enter the house. City Defendants’ Motion for Partial Summary Judgment No. II: Dismissal of the Estate’s Fourth Amendment Excessive Force Claim Against Officer Brown at 4, ¶ 10. 3 SWAT team member Josh Brown, designated as the “point man,” entered through the front door and moved up the staircase to the second floor. Id. at 4, ¶¶ 11, 13. The staircase was narrow, and Officer Brown could not see the top of it because the stairs took a ninety-degree turn halfway up. Id. at 4, ¶ 14. As Officer Brown neared the top of the stairs, he encountered Mr. Murphy standing above him holding a microwave oven in his left hand and a foot-long knife in the other hand. Id. at 5, ¶¶ 16-17.

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Bluebook (online)
511 F. App'x 742, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-ex-rel-murphy-v-chavez-ex-rel-mayor-of-albuquerque-ca10-2013.