Justin Matteson v. You Walk Bail Bond Agency Inc

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 17, 2017
Docket332345
StatusUnpublished

This text of Justin Matteson v. You Walk Bail Bond Agency Inc (Justin Matteson v. You Walk Bail Bond Agency Inc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Justin Matteson v. You Walk Bail Bond Agency Inc, (Mich. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

JUSTIN MATTESON and CALLIE MATTESON UNPUBLISHED individually and as next friend for SABRINA October 17, 2017 MATTESON, NICHOLAS MATTESON, and ALYSSA MATTESON,

Plaintiffs-Appellees,

v No. 332345 Oakland Circuit Court YOU WALK BAIL BOND AGENCY, INC., and LC No. 2015-145252-NO CHRISTOPHER SLUPKA,

Defendants, and

AARON HODGESON,

Defendant-Appellant.

Before: GLEICHER, P.J., and HOOD and SWARTZLE, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Following a bench trial, the circuit court found defendant Aaron Hodgeson liable to plaintiffs for his role in a botched bounty hunt and assessed damages totaling $30,000. Hodgeson challenges the evidentiary support for the trial court’s verdict. We affirm.

I. PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Defendant Hodgeson and Christopher Slupka worked for You Walk Bail Bond Agency, Inc. The agency sought a red-headed absconder named Justin Dallencourt. Defendants misidentified red-headed plaintiff Justin Matteson as Dallencourt. They entered the Mattesons’ home, handcuffed Justin Matteson in the presence of his wife and children, and searched the entire premises. After discovering that Justin was not a wanted man, defendants departed. The Mattesons called the police. White Lake Township charged the bondsmen with various misdemeanors. Slupka pleaded guilty and testified against Hodgeson, who was acquitted.

Matteson and his family then filed this civil suit against the bondsmen and You Walk, alleging defamation, battery, intentional infliction of emotional distress, false arrest and imprisonment, invasion of privacy, tortious interference with a business relationship, trespass, -1- and violation of their constitutional right to be free from unreasonable search and seizure. In an amended complaint, plaintiffs added claims of negligent supervision and respondeat superior against the bail bond agency. Slupka and the agency did not respond and the court entered default judgments against them. Slupka was held liable for $120,835.79. The agency was held liable for $100,000.

II. BENCH TRIAL TESTIMONY

On December 15, 2014, defendants Aaron Hodgeson and Christopher Slupka worked as bail bond agents for defendant You Walk Bail Bond Agency. While searching for Dallencourt, they were directed to Mike Tuminelli, a friend of the absconder. Tuminelli told defendants “that the only red head Justin [he knew was] Mr. Matteson.” Tuminelli described that the absconder would be found in “the first house on the right that was yellow.” He also described the car used by the absconder and gave his physical description.

Defendants arrived in the neighborhood of Justin and Callie Matteson in Slupka’s Jeep at approximately 7:40 p.m. About an hour later, they spoke to plaintiffs’ neighbor. The bondsmen showed the neighbor a photograph of Justin Dallencourt and the man “said that that looks like Justin that lives over there in the yellow house, again confirming the same house that Mike Tuminelli did.” According to Hodgeson, the photograph was a “tangible photo,” not an electronic image, and was “fuzzy” and “grainy.”

Between 9:10 and 9:15 p.m., Justin Matteson returned home from work. Hodgeson observed Justin park his car and go into the home. After observing Callie watching from the home’s picture window, Hodgeson waved, prompting Slupka to pull into the driveway and block Justin’s vehicle. Slupka testified that Hodgeson had been working at the agency longer than he and acted in a supervisory role that night. Hodgeson denied that he was ever a “supervisor” during his employment.

Hodgeson inspected Justin’s parked vehicle while Slupka approached the home alone. Hodgeson first ran a record check on the license plate, but it “came back no record.” Hodgeson then attempted to run a record check on the vehicle’s VIN number, but he was unable to complete it.

Slupka testified, contrary to Hodgeson, that he waited to approach the home’s door until Hodgeson could follow. Slupka “knocked on the door, told him we’re fugitive recovery. Asked him if he was Justin. Open the door. Turn around.” Slupka denied pushing open the door and asserted that plaintiffs granted defendants permission to enter. Hodgeson described that while he was still at Justin’s car, Slupka “was doing a lot of yelling, pounding on the door.” Slupka entered the home alone, according to Hodgeson, and had already cuffed Justin before Hodgeson arrived at the door. Hodgeson subsequently claimed that he asked Callie whether the men could enter to “sort this all out” and she agreed.

Slupka admitted that he placed Justin in handcuffs and then “turned him over to Mr. Hodgeson.” Hodgeson “detain[ed]” Justin, meaning that he stood “next to him” and ensured that he did not run away or hurt anyone. Slupka then searched the home. Slupka indicated that Justin

-2- was handcuffed for approximately 10 minutes. Afterward, Slupka apologized and described plaintiffs as “very understanding of the whole situation.”

Hodgeson asserted that he inspected Justin’s driver’s license and Callie voluntarily provided hers. As defendants gathered “more information,” they determined that Justin Matteson was not Justin Dallencourt. Slupka then removed Justin’s handcuffs. Hodgeson provided a business card to plaintiffs as they left. And according to Hodgeson, Justin “shook our hand” and said, “thank you for what you do.”

Justin testified that when he arrived home on the night in question, he “noticed a suspicious vehicle parked” in the driveway of a vacant home across the street. Justin was in the house for about 10 minutes, changing and getting ready to shower after work, when his wife reported that someone was “looking at our vehicle.” Justin looked out the window and saw a white Jeep speed into the driveway, blocking his car. “Moments later [he] heard pounding on the door . . . saying Justin, open the door, you’re under arrest and you’re going to jail.” Justin “unlatched the door” and defendants pushed it open, entering without permission. “They had black shirts, khaki pants, guns, tasers. They had gear that would suspect them [sic] of being a SWAT member.” Justin thought defendants were police officers.

Slupka cuffed Justin’s hands behind his back. Defendants “interrogate[d]” him, asking him questions about his parents, his vehicles, and his children. Defendants wanted to know the names of Justin’s parents and where they lived. Justin inquired why defendants were in his home and they responded “that they were looking for a Justin with red hair and he was wanted for multiple offenses, including possession of narcotics, failure to appear and driving on a suspended license.” Justin realized “they had the wrong guy” and “offered to show them identification.” Callie showed defendants both her and Justin’s driver’s licenses, but defendants did not remove the cuffs. Slupka searched their home while Justin remained in handcuffs in Hodgeson’s custody.1 Justin described that Hodgeson “presented himself as being confident that he had the right person that he was in search of. And he wasn’t taking no for an answer, that I was the correct person that he was looking for” despite that Justin denied being the suspect “[c]ountless times.” When Slupka finally removed Justin’s cuffs, Justin “shook their hand and thanks [sic] that they weren’t taking me to jail.” Justin believed he had remained in cuffs “[f]or at least 45 minutes.”

Callie testified that after Justin returned home, she “looked out the dining room window and . . . saw two men dressed in all black, scoping the house out. And I thought we were about to be robbed.

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