Jim David, Jr. v. City of Bellevue, Ohio

706 F. App'x 847
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 24, 2017
Docket16-3754
StatusUnpublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 706 F. App'x 847 (Jim David, Jr. v. City of Bellevue, Ohio) 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
Jim David, Jr. v. City of Bellevue, Ohio, 706 F. App'x 847 (6th Cir. 2017).

Opinion

BOGGS, Circuit Judge.

The Estate of Jim David brings this appeal from a grant of summary judgment below to two officers and the City of Belle-vue. David was shot and killed when officers approached him at night while he sat on his porch in order to get his side of a complaint by a neighbor. David was holding a gun, and the officers testified that he aimed it at an officer, leading to their opening fire. The Estate put forth evidence and testimony that David never raised his gun and was shot without provoking the officers. Because the Estate has made a showing of a genuine issue of material fact that David had not raised his gun and aimed it at an officer and therefore that David did not pose an imminent threat to the officers’ safety, we reverse the district court’s grant of summary judgment to the officers.

I

Just after 10 p.m. on September 22, 2010, the City of Bellevue Police Department received a 911 call reporting a dispute and a man brandishing a gun. Sergeant Jeffrey Matter and Patrolman Erik Lawson had just begun their shift and left to investigate and interview the caller at an apartment building on Greenwood Heights Boulevard, a .road in Bellevue, Ohio. First Lawson, and later Matter, arrived at the apartment building of the caller, James Armstrong; neither used lights or sirens. Armstrong and several others were on Armstrong’s back porch. Armstrong was known to the police as someone who had been an aggressor in a few criminal incidents in the past, and had had several interactions with the police for domestic issues and drugs. Lawson asked him about the situation. Armstrong responded with “[pjlenty of expletives, but that there was a guy with a gun and that [he and others] were being threatened.” Armstrong elaborated that the man had been “eyeballing” them from the sidewalk across the street and had proceeded to pull out a pistol and cock the slide to chamber a round. Lawson inquired where the man had gone, and Armstrong pointed to a house visible through the backyards on a residential street that was sixty to one-hundred yards away from Armstrong’s back porch. Lawson stated that he saw someone sitting on the porch of the home, asked Armstrong for a description, and was told it was “an older guy.” Others at *849 Armstrong’s residence interjected occasionally in support of Armstrong’s narrative. Lawson conveyed the story to Matter and the two decided to approach and speak to the man on the porch. Lawson did not ask Armstrong whether he and the “older guy” had encountered each other earlier in the evening. At his deposition, Lawson at first denied that Armstrong told him that he and several others had gone to the older guy’s home earlier that night to confront him about “eyeballing” them, but when his recollection was refreshed with his police report, Lawson admitted that Armstrong told him that he, Armstrong, had confronted the older guy at his home on Union Street and that it was when the older guy was at his home that he brandished the gun.

The .officers walked through backyards of houses fronting Union Street, which runs perpendicular to Greenwood Heights Boulevard, to reach the man on the porch rather than walk on the streets. They then crossed Union Street to enter the man’s lawn. The man’s front yard had a large tree on one side and a smaller tree on the other side. They approached in the darkness with weapons drawn and flashlights on. The two were in grey or dark blue uniforms and did not have on their police hats. As they drew closer and walked on the lawn, Lawson and Matter split up to come toward the man from two different directions. Lawson testified that he began to introduce himself: “Good evening, sir. I’m Officer Lawson, Bellevue Police Department. I’m responding to—.” (Matter testified that he could not hear what Lawson said, but he believed that he was introducing himself “by the cadence of his voice and kind of the tone.”) At this, the man— James David, Sr.—rose and walked away from the officer toward his door. Just before David entered his home, Lawson called out to him. David turned around and moved along the porch in the direction of Lawson. The officers testified that they then saw David point a gun at Lawson as he walked. Lawson shouted, “Gun,” and fired at David; Matter quickly followed suit. The officers fired a total of twenty-four rounds at David: Lawson fired his entire clip and Matter fired eight shots. David was struck at least fifteen times. But he never fired his weapon.

After the shooting, David was slumped next to a chair on the porch. Matter and Lawson confirmed that they were both unharmed, and then Matter radioed dispatch to report the shooting and call for an ambulance. Matter went up to the porch, moved David’s gun away from him, and checked David for signs of life. But there were none. Suddenly, Karen David (David’s wife) emerged from the home— having been awakened by the officers shooting her husband—and Matter ordered her back inside. Matter then examined David’s gun and reported that it had a round in its chamber and was loaded. The Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation and Identification (BCI) arrived and processed the scene. They investigated the incident and in October 2010 determined that the officers had responded with a lawful use of force. The City of Bellevue did not conduct its own investigation and did not discipline Lawson or Matter.

In September of 2012, Karen David brought suit on behalf of the estate of James David, Sr., against the City of Bellevue, its police department, Chief Dennis Brandal, Matter, and Lawson. After two months, Mrs. David filed a notice of voluntary dismissal and the case was dismissed without prejudice. In November 2013, Karen David filed a new complaint. The district court dismissed a number of claims, including all claims against the Bellevue Police Department and Chief Brandal. After amendment, the complaint alleged violations of David’s Fourth and *850 Fourteenth Amendment rights, wrongful death, and negligent infliction of emotional distress. The amended complaint also substituted Jim David, Jr., in place of Karen David, as the Administrator of the estate of James David, Sr. After defendants sought summary judgment, the district court granted it with regard to David’s Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment claims on the basis of qualified immunity for the officers and held that the city had performed an adequate investigation. With regard to the officers, the district court held that there was no genuine issue of material fact that Lawson had given a warning and that a reasonable officer would have believed himself or his partner under immediate threat in Lawson and Matter’s positions. The district court’s ruling was timely appealed.

II

A. Legal Framework

We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo. Phillips v. Roane County, 534 F.3d 531, 538 (6th Cir. 2008). Summary judgment should be granted where “there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the mov-ant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a).

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706 F. App'x 847, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jim-david-jr-v-city-of-bellevue-ohio-ca6-2017.