Jamie Peterson v. David Heymes

931 F.3d 546
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJuly 25, 2019
Docket17-2270/2281
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 931 F.3d 546 (Jamie Peterson v. David Heymes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jamie Peterson v. David Heymes, 931 F.3d 546 (6th Cir. 2019).

Opinion

OLIVER, District Judge.

In 2014, the Circuit Court for the County of Kalkaska, Michigan vacated Plaintiff-Appellee Jamie Lee Peterson's ("Peterson") conviction for a 1996 rape and murder. Thereafter, he commenced this action, asserting federal claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and various state-law claims in the United States District Court for the Western District of Michigan against Defendants-Appellants David Israel (a Deputy in the Kalkaska County Sheriff's Department), Gregory Somers and Mark Uribe (officers of the Michigan State Police), and the County of Kalkaska ("Defendants"). 1

*551 Peterson seeks redress for claims arising from an allegedly coerced confession, which was admitted into evidence in Peterson's criminal trial, but was not the basis for Peterson's relief from judgment. The district court found that Peterson was not collaterally estopped from relitigating the voluntariness of his confession and thus denied Defendants qualified immunity, absolute witness immunity, and governmental immunity. Defendants appeal.

For the following reasons, we AFFIRM the district court's decision to deny qualified immunity and governmental immunity to Defendants Somers and Uribe and to deny their Motion to Dismiss on all claims. Additionally, we REVERSE the district court's decision to deny Defendant Israel qualified immunity and governmental immunity. Thus, we find that the district court erred in declining to dismiss the federal-law and state-law claims against Israel. Finally, we REVERSE the district court's decision to deny governmental immunity to the County of Kalkaska and to deny the County's Motion to Dismiss as to the federal-law and state-law claims against it. We REMAND to the district court for further action consistent with this opinion.

I. BACKGROUND

In 1996, Geraldine Montgomery was sexually assaulted and murdered in her home in Kalkaska, Michigan. Months later, 22-year-old Jamie Lee Peterson was in the Kalkaska County Jail on an unrelated charge, when another inmate informed Officers Heymes, Israel, and Somers that Peterson had made an incriminating statement about the Montgomery crime. Peterson claims that at the time, he suffered from brain damage, mental illness, and severe depression, and was placed on suicide watch. Peterson also claims that Defendants knew of Peterson's mental illness and cognitive disabilities.

Somers met with Peterson to follow up on the lead. Peterson initially denied involvement, but after nine interrogations and several polygraph examinations by Heymes, Somers, and Uribe, Peterson confessed to committing the crime. Peterson alleges that the officers took advantage of his mental state, fed him information to provide in his statements, and induced his confession with false promises, including that he would be sent to a psychiatric hospital instead of prison. He also claims that the officers continued to mislead him about the consequences of his confession in order to pressure him into maintaining his statement even after he attempted to recant it.

A week after Peterson confessed, the DNA results came back showing Peterson's DNA was not a match for the semen sample from the victim's vagina. However, there was a second sample from the victim's shirt, which could not be tested using the technology available at the time. Nevertheless, charges were brought against Peterson based on his confession, pursuing a multiple assailant theory.

Before trial, Peterson's attorney moved to suppress Peterson's confession, arguing that Peterson lacked the capacity to confess, and that the police officers used unlawful tactics that led to his false confession. After a suppression hearing regarding the voluntariness of his confession, which under Michigan law is called *552 a Walker hearing, 2 a judge found his confession admissible. A jury subsequently convicted Peterson of the murder and rape charges, as well as the commission of larceny in a building.

In 2013, after improvements in DNA technology, Peterson's attorneys from the University of Michigan Law School Innocence Clinic and Northwestern Law School's Center on Wrongful Convictions obtained new DNA test results that excluded Peterson as a contributor to the previously inconclusive DNA sample found on the victim's shirt. Based on this evidence, Peterson's conviction was vacated in 2014. He was granted a new trial, and the prosecution subsequently dismissed the charges.

In 2015, Peterson commenced the instant case in the United States District Court for the Western District of Michigan under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 , seeking damages from Defendants for the following claims: violations of the right against self-incrimination under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments (Count I); due process violations under the Fourteenth Amendment (Count II); failure to intervene to prevent the violation of federal constitutional rights (Count III); federal malicious prosecution under the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments (Count IV); conspiracy to deprive federal constitutional rights (Count V); intentional infliction of emotional distress (Count VI); malicious prosecution under state law (Count VII); civil conspiracy under state law (Count VIII); respondeat superior (Count IX); and indemnification (Count X). Defendants Somers and Uribe, and Israel and the County of Kalkaska, respectively filed motions to dismiss under Rules 12(b)(6) and 12(c). The officers each raised qualified immunity in regard to the federal-law claims, and governmental immunity in regard to the state-law claims, as affirmative defenses. The County of Kalkaska also moved to dismiss the federal claims against it on the basis of Defendant Israel's qualified immunity and governmental immunity. In support of immunity, Defendants claimed Peterson was collaterally estopped from relitigating the voluntariness of his confession, which the Michigan trial court had already determined was admissible in Peterson's criminal trial. Absent allegations of a coerced confession, Defendants argued that Peterson could not defeat their immunity defenses.

Because Defendants relied upon transcripts and other evidence from the Walker hearing that were not raised in Peterson's Amended Complaint, the district court converted the motions to ones for summary judgment under Rule 12(d), but it is clear from the record that he did so only as to the issue of collateral estoppel. The parties do not dispute that the court's bifurcation was proper. On September 29, 2017, the district court denied Defendants' motions, finding that the Michigan trial court's determination did not have preclusive effect after Peterson's conviction was vacated.

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931 F.3d 546, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jamie-peterson-v-david-heymes-ca6-2019.