Lewis v. Adams County

244 F. App'x 1
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedApril 26, 2007
Docket06-3893
StatusUnpublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 244 F. App'x 1 (Lewis v. Adams County) 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
Lewis v. Adams County, 244 F. App'x 1 (6th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

OBERDORFER, District Judge.

On July 9, 2002, Everett Lewis was shot and killed by the police in Adams County, Ohio. His wife, Teresa Lewis, on her own behalf and as administrator of his estate, filed suit in federal district court alleging that the use of deadly force against Lewis violated the Fourth, Fifth, Sixth and Eighth Amendments to the United States Constitution and various state laws. Finding no constitutional violations, the district court granted summary judgment for the defendants on all of the federal claims and dismissed the remaining state law claims without prejudice. The plaintiff now appeals, challenging only the district court’s grant of summary judgment on the Fourth Amendment claims and its dependent dismissal of the state law claims. Because no rational juror could find that the defendant-officers’ use of deadly force violated the decedent’s Fourth Amendment rights, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Facts

Up to a point, the facts in this case are not in dispute. The events leading up to Lewis’s shooting began on the morning of July 9, 2002. At approximately 7:80 that morning, Lewis, who lived at 1111 Barrackman Road, drove over to David Copher’s house, who lived at 510 Barrackman Road, and asked Copher to make a telephone call for him because Lewis did not have phone service at the time. (Although Copher and Lewis were “neighbors,” the area was rural and the houses were not within sight of each other.) Lewis asked Copher to call Baxla Tractor Sales, where Lewis worked, and to tell them that he would not be at work that day. Lewis also told Copher that he was getting a divorce.

Rather than calling Baxla Tractor Sales, Copher decided that he would stop by there and relay Lewis’s message while he was in town running other errands. Copher left his residence at around 8:00 a.m. and returned home some time between 11:00 a.m. and 11:30 a.m. At approximately 12:00 p.m., Lewis showed up again.

Hearing Lewis’s truck pull up outside the house, Copher went out onto to his porch to see what Lewis wanted. According to Copher, Lewis raised his hands, motioned Copher back away from his truck, and said, “I shot the mother f- — s. They’re laying in the yard dead____Dial 911.... Dave, don’t come near the truck.” JA 407. When Copher asked whom Lewis had shot, Lewis responded, according to Copher, “The mother f — s that are moving the stuff out of my house and her.” JA 414. Copher thought “her” was Lewis’s wife, Teresa. Copher later testified at his deposition that Lewis’s “eyes were red and his speech was like he had done it.” JA 407.

In response to Lewis’s request to Copher to call 911 and to report what Lewis had just told Copher, Copher told Lewis *3 he would do so. Lewis then left, telling Copher that he was going back to his house. Through his window, Copher saw Lewis drive his orange Dodge truck to the end of Copher’s driveway and turn right onto Barrackman road, which was the direction back toward Lewis’s house.

At approximately 12:36 p.m., Copher called 911 and had the following conversation with the dispatcher there:

Copher: Yes ma’am my name is David Copher and Everett Lewis just cam[e] up here and said that he has 2 victims uh 2 victims up there where he lives at I guess he shot ‘em or somethin.
Dispatcher: Two victims?
Copher: That’s what he told me to say.
Dispatcher: What’s his name?
Copher: Everett Lewis lives out there on Barrackman Road.
Dispatcher: He shot ‘em
Copher: He said he did, he told me not to come up near the truck.
Dispatcher: Where’s he at now?
Copher: He just left, he’s driving an orange and white Dodge pick up truck, looks like (I can’t make it out) but I don’t know. He’s been going through a divorce type thing.
Dispatcher: Ok did he say he was going back to the ...
Copher: He said he was going to try to work something out. I don’t know what he’s going to do. He’s driving slow so apparently he’s going back up there. I don’t know, he shot ‘em I guess. I don’t know what to do go over there or stay here.
Dispatcher: Sir, did he go back toward his house or which way did he go?
Copher: Yeah he said he was goin back toward his house so he just told me to call 911.
Dispatcher: You don’t happen to know ' his phone number or anything else do ya?
Copher: His phone been disconnected.
Dispatcher: Disconnected.
Copher: I let him use my phone yesterday to call the Sheriff he said something about getting a restraining order.
Dispatcher: Ok, and did he say who he shot?
Copher: He didn’t say anything he just said he had two victims laying on the ground so I don’t know what ...
Dispatcher: Ok we’ll get somebody right up there.

JA 661-63. After receiving Copher’s call, the dispatcher immediately alerted the police and officers were sent to Lewis’s house to investigate.

Copher then had a second conversation with a 911 dispatcher that was not transcribed. During that conversation, Lewis reappeared at Copher’s house. He asked Copher whether he had called 911 and whether the police were coming. He also told Copher that he had hostages in his house, and he warned Copher that no one should come within 100 yards of the house. Lewis was yelling, appeared to have been drinking, and appeared “mad at something.” Although the dispatcher could not understand exactly what Lewis was saying, she could hear that he “was agitated” and sounded angry. JA 529. Lewis then left again. As he left, the wheels on his truck were spinning and throwing gravel. Copher relayed to the 911 dispatcher that Lewis had told him there were three hostages in the house and that no one should come within 100 yards of the house.

*4 At approximately 1:05 p.m. Copher had his third conversation with a 911 dispatcher, during which the following exchange occurred:

Copher: The first time he showed up he was kinda calm about it. The second time he was kinda pissed so apparently he said he’s got three of them in the house.
Dispatcher: Adams County to 14 be advised he had stated that there was three at the house.
(background noise)
Dispatcher: These were the three victims or just three people?
Copher: The first time he said there’s two victims in the yard.
Dispatcher: Two in the yard?
Copher: and I said what happened he said I shot ‘em
Dispatcher: Ok hang on

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Bluebook (online)
244 F. App'x 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-adams-county-ca6-2007.