Joshua Aldridge v. City of Warren, Mich.

682 F. App'x 461
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMarch 20, 2017
Docket16-1128/16-1732
StatusUnpublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 682 F. App'x 461 (Joshua Aldridge v. City of Warren, Mich.) 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
Joshua Aldridge v. City of Warren, Mich., 682 F. App'x 461 (6th Cir. 2017).

Opinion

ROGERS, Circuit Judge.

This case involves the grant of summary judgment for defendants and the imposition of sanctions against plaintiff Joshua Aldridge arising out of a complaint that police officers stopped him on his way to work, dragged him across the ground, and beat him while handcuffed. The defendants’ motion for summary judgment contained evidence, including video footage, compelling the conclusion that no such thing happened. Instead, Aldi-idge was arrested without incident while drunkenly trying to break into a private residence, and he injured himself in a jail fight following his arrest. The district court’s grant of summary judgment and its award of sanctions were proper.

The complaint alleged that Officers McCabe and Teolis approached Aldridge in their squad car while he was walking to his usual bus stop on the way to work, and asked him through the squad-car window to stop so they could talk. Aldridge declined, saying he was running late, at which point the officers allegedly leapt out of their car, grabbed him, and in the ensuing scuffle “slammed him to the ground” and “proceeded to drag [him] across the cement.” He was then “handcuffed and punched repeatedly in the face causing injuries and damages.” Only after his ar *463 rest and transport in the squad car to jail was he then “taken to the hospital for treatment of his injuries.”

The defendants filed a motion for dismissal under Rule 12(b)(6) or alternatively for summary judgment, and included with it a number of exhibits, among them a backseat video from the squad car showing Aldridge during his arrest. Those exhibits contained compelling evidence that Al-dridge was instead found heavily intoxicated after trying to break into a private residence, and that following an uneventful arrest he was taken by the two officers to the Warren jail where he suffered an injury to his face during a fight with his cellmate. Aldridge opposed that motion, arguing that he had stated valid claims for relief, or alternatively that the defendants’ motion for summary judgment was inappropriate because he had yet to be given the opportunity for discovery.

The district court disagreed. Because the defendants had answered Aldridge’s complaint, and had attached seventeen exhibits to their motion to dismiss, the court concluded that the motion had effectively become one for summary judgment. The court also denied Aldridge discovery because he had failed to “file an affidavit with the [c]ourt pursuant to Rule 56(d)” describing in detail what discovery he needed and why.

After reviewing the footage and other exhibits, the district court also sided with the defendants on the merits: what Al-dridge alleged in his complaint “simply could not have happened.” Aldridge had argued that the backseat video was inconclusive, showing only what had happened after he was placed in the squad car and not the initial encounter with the officers. But in light of Aldridge’s evident intoxication and the lack of visible injuries in the video, and the other evidence suggesting that he had sustained his injuries in a jail-cell fight, not at the hands of the officers, the court concluded that “[tjhere could be no reasonable juror found anywhere who would possibly be able to have a legal basis or a basis in fact to rule for [Aldridge].” The court therefore granted summary judgment for the defendants.

The district court also granted the defendants’ motion for Rule 11 sanctions against Aldridge’s counsel, concluding that they “continued to assert that they believed their client’s story despite the overwhelming and objective evidence to the contrary.” The court therefore ordered monetary sanctions against Aldridge’s counsel’s firm in the amounts of $10,000 to the defendants’ counsel and $2,000 to the court. The court also ordered six hours of court-approved remedial legal education for all of Aldridge’s counsel of record. Al-dridge now appeals that decision as well as the grant of summary judgment.

On appeal Aldridge again argues that the district court improperly treated the defendants’ motion to dismiss as one for summary judgment, and that even if that motion was properly considered under Rule 56, he was nevertheless entitled to discovery before the court considered the motion. But he is wrong on both counts. First, while the defendants’ motion sought both a Rule 12 dismissal and, in the alternative, a Rule 56 summary judgment, the presence of a Rule 12 alternative motion did not somehow eliminate the Rule 56 motion. The district court explained in the clearest fashion to Aldridge’s counsel that the motion was unquestionably one brought for summary judgment:

[The motion] says in the heading, “or alternatively for summary judgment.” And they attached 17 exhibits. You’re a sophisticated and experienced lawyer. You know that that becomes a Rule 56 motion. Also, that 12(b)(6) was not permitted in this particular case because *464 they answered. So there is nothing about this that will allow you to argue in any reasonable fashion that this is a motion to dismiss.

Given that the defendants’ motion was correctly treated as one for summary judgment, the burden then fell on Al-dridge, if he wanted discovery, to “file an affidavit pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. [56(d) ] that detailed] the discovery needed, or file a motion for additional discovery.” Abercrombie & Fitch Stores, Inc. v. Am. Eagle Outfitters, Inc., 280 F.3d 619, 627 (6th Cir. 2002). By his own admission Aldridge did neither. He did argue, however, that he needed more time for discovery, but offered no more than the vaguest generalities about why further discovery was necessary or what he hoped to show through that discovery, both of which he was required to explain in at least some detail, see Short v. Oaks Corr. Facility, 129 Fed.Appx. 278, 283 (6th Cir. 2005) (citing Abercrombie, 280 F.3d at 627). Nor is it clear what Aldridge could have said given the evidence arrayed against him. The district court therefore did not abuse its discretion by denying discovery, 1

The grant of summary judgment for the defendants was also proper on the factual showing they made. Although Al-dridge disputes its force, the backseat video provided by the defendants in fact undercuts every paragraph of the story told in his complaint. Aldridge alleged that Officers McCabe and Teolis tried to stop him while he was walking to his usual bus stop, and that he declined because he had done nothing -wrong and “was running late to work.” But the evidence compellingly shows a different scenario. An inebriated man matching Aldridge’s description was reported trying to break into a private residence, and when the officers arrived at the scene, they found Aldridge. Although there is no footage of that initial encounter, witnesses say they saw no beating, and the backseat video reveals that Aldridge was in fact profoundly intoxicated. In the video he can be seen explaining to the officers, between slurred words and while occasionally dozing, that he could not walk (“I kept walking around falling, and falling, and falling”), after what he appears to admit was a night of partying. Aldridge has offered no evidence of his own to contradict any of these exhibits.

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682 F. App'x 461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joshua-aldridge-v-city-of-warren-mich-ca6-2017.