Lotus Industries LLC v. Duggan

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedFebruary 19, 2020
Docket2:16-cv-14112
StatusUnknown

This text of Lotus Industries LLC v. Duggan (Lotus Industries LLC v. Duggan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lotus Industries LLC v. Duggan, (E.D. Mich. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN SOUTHERN DIVISION KENNETH SCOTT BRIDGEWATER,

Plaintiff, Case No. 16-14112

v. Honorable Laurie J. Michelson Magistrate Judge Anthony P. Patti ROBERT HARRIS and KELVIN HARRIS,

Defendants.

FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW Centre Park Bar hosted a party called “Ticket to Paradise” on Saturday, July 22, 2017. Kenneth Scott Bridgewater was managing the bar that night, and he indeed received a ticket—but not to paradise. Instead, his trip ended in jail. And ever since that incident, the reason for Bridgewater’s arrest has been hotly disputed. Bridgewater alleged that he was arrested because the City of Detroit had a policy of retaliation against him. The two remaining defendants in this case— Police Sergeant Robert Harris and Fire Chief Kelvin Harris—contend that Bridgewater was arrested for obstructing a fire official, not because of retaliation. To resolve the dispute, this Court held a three-day bench trial. Based on the evidence presented and governing law, the Court finds Bridgewater’s arrest did not constitute First Amendment retaliation. Therefore, Sergeant Harris and Chief Harris are not liable for damages. I. A. Bridgewater was a general manager of Centre Park Bar (“Bar”), which was located at 1407 Randolph Street in the Harmonie Park neighborhood of the City of Detroit (“City”). (Def. Exs. 11- 12.) Bridgewater and Christopher Williams, his brother, operated the bar, which was owned by their family’s company: Lotus Industries, LLC (“Lotus”). (ECF No. 278, PageID.8367–8369; ECF No. 279, PageID.8484, 8487, 8515, 8563.) The Bar opened in April 2014. (ECF No. 278, PageID.8368.) Included in the Bar’s property was an outdoor cafe, for which the Bar received an annual permit from the City. (Def Exs. 11, 12.)

Among the permit’s many requirements was a mandate that the patio area close for the night by 1:00 a.m. (Id.) The posted occupancy card allowed a maximum of 100 people on the patio. (ECF No. 278, PageID.8171.) Moving ahead to 2015, the City’s Downtown Development Authority (“DDA”) invited bids for a redevelopment project in Harmonie Park. (ECF No. 227, PageID.7028.) Bridgewater and Williams put together a bid, but they submitted their proposal past the deadline, and the DDA refused to accept late proposals. (ECF No. 227, PageID.7028.) Then, Bridgewater and Williams publicly complained in the media that the bid process was a sham and a conspiracy orchestrated by the City. (ECF No. 211-16, PageID.5851.) They believed that, regardless of the bids, the

decision had been made to award the project to businessman Dennis Archer, Jr. (ECF No. 211-16, PageID.5851–5864.) And after they made those accusations, they claim that the Detroit Police Department (“DPD”) watched the Bar more closely. (ECF No. 211, PageID.5890.) Around this time, the nearby Hilton Garden Inn also filed a noise complaint against the Bar with the City. (Def. Ex. 22.) On November 19, 2016, Bridgewater—along with Lotus, Williams, and his mother (the Bar’s owner)—filed this lawsuit, alleging that the City and others had conspired to prevent Plaintiffs’ participation in the Harmonie Park redevelopment. (ECF No. 1.) Then, the Plaintiffs amended their complaint to allege they suffered First Amendment retaliation for bringing this suit. (ECF No. 66.) In particular, they claimed that the City and its officers issued retaliatory citations and then, eventually, arrested Bridgewater. (Id.) That arrest, in turn, set off a chain of events resulting in the Bar’s permanent closure. (Id.) The amended complaint included four plaintiffs, seven defendants, and multiple counts, but the claims were significantly narrowed by the time of trial. More specifically, Lotus filed for

bankruptcy and settled its claims. (ECF No. 126, PageID.2462; ECF No. 208.) And following dispositive motion practice, Bridgewater was the only plaintiff who was not dismissed. (Id.) The only claim that survived summary judgment was Bridgewater’s allegation of First Amendment retaliation against the two remaining defendants: Police Sergeant Robert Harris and Fire Chief Kelvin Harris. See generally Bridgewater v. Harris, No. 16-14112, 2019 WL 3289845 (E.D. Mich. July 22, 2019) (order denying in part and granting in part motion for summary judgment); Williams v. City of Detroit, No. 16-14112, 2019 WL 2410719 (E.D. Mich. June 7, 2019) (order granting the DEGC’s motion to dismiss). The Court drew “all justifiable inferences” in Bridgewater’s favor at the summary-judgment stage, as it must, see Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 247–

48 (1986), and found that there was a question of fact as to whether Bridgewater was arrested by City officers as retaliation for filing his original lawsuit, see Bridgewater, 2019 WL 3289845, at *5. So the case proceeded to trial with one plaintiff, two defendants, and one claim. That is, Kenneth Bridgewater alleged that two officials from the City (Robert Harris and Kelvin Harris) orchestrated his July 2017 arrest in retaliation for his protected First Amendment right to file a lawsuit. (None of the other claims—including the claim in the original complaint about the bid rejection—were still at issue.) A three-day bench trial on this lone question began on November 25, 2019. B. On the first day of the trial, the Court heard testimony from Defendant Robert Harris, a 22- year veteran officer of the DPD. (ECF No. 278, PageID.8233.) At the time of the events here, he was a sergeant with the department’s Violent Crime Task Force. (ECF No. 278, PageID.8234.) In the wake of several high-profile shootings during the summer of 2017, DPD supervisors

ordered an increased officer presence in certain parts of downtown Detroit, Sergeant Harris testified. (ECF No. 278, PageID.8294.) (This was corroborated by Lieutenant Ilaseo Lewis, who testified later in the trial. (ECF No. 279, PageID.8659.)) The DPD had issued a directive to station 20 to 30 additional officers downtown on summer nights during the weekends. (Id.) Sergeant Harris recalled his supervisor ordering him to “Go downtown. Be present. Talk to people. And don’t let anything bad happen where your station is.” (ECF No. 278, PageID.8295.) He said his supervisor did not tell him anything about Centre Park Bar in particular. (ECF No. 278, PageID.8294.) Nor was Sergeant Harris then aware of this lawsuit (filed about 7 months earlier) or even the identity of Bridgewater. (ECF No. 278, PageID.8295–8296.)

That summer, Sergeant Harris often was stationed at the intersection of Gratiot and Randolph near Harmonie Park. (ECF No. 278, PageID.8295, 8303.) Sergeant Harris sought to build rapport with the owners of bars in the area, including Centre Park Bar. (ECF No. 278, PageID.8309–8310.) He also periodically performed Michigan Liquor Control Commission (“MLCC”) inspections. (Id.) Overall, between 2014 and 2018, the MLCC fined Centre Park Bar at least 18 times for violations. (ECF No. 278, PageID.8407; Def. Ex. 8.) Although his interactions with Bridgewater during that time were sometimes “testy,” Sergeant Harris described their relationship as professional “for the most part.” (ECF No. 278, PageID.8309–8310.) One of those “testy” interactions took place on July 14, 2017, the Friday night before the event in question. (ECF No. 278, PageID.8323.) According to an MLCC violation report, Sergeant Harris and another officer inspected Centre Park Bar and asked to see Bridgewater’s MLCC license at 10:37 p.m. (Def. Ex. 9.) Bridgewater first handed the officers an expired license. (Id.) Then, he located the correct license in an envelope. (Id.) The officers informed Bridgewater that they would

submit an MLCC violation for failure to display his liquor license.

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Bluebook (online)
Lotus Industries LLC v. Duggan, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lotus-industries-llc-v-duggan-mied-2020.