Lum v. Koles

314 P.3d 546, 2013 WL 6516414, 2013 Alas. LEXIS 167
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 13, 2013
Docket6855 S-14424
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 314 P.3d 546 (Lum v. Koles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lum v. Koles, 314 P.3d 546, 2013 WL 6516414, 2013 Alas. LEXIS 167 (Ala. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

WINFREE, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

In response to a domestic disturbance call, police officers entered a residence without a warrant and pepper sprayed and handcuffed a resident. The family sued for excessive force and unlawful entry. The superior court dismissed the claims on summary judgment, granting qualified immunity for the excessive force claims and holding that the family had not raised a cognizable unlawful entry claim. The superior court later denied the family's Alaska Civil Rule 60(b)(2) motion to set aside the rulings based on newly discovered evidence. The family appeals; we affirm the summary judgment ruling and the denial of the Rule 60(b)(2) motion, but we remand for further proceedings on the family's trespass and invasion of privacy claims raised for the first time during the summary judgment proceedings.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Facts

In September 2007 the North Slope Borough (NSB) Police Department received an emergency-line telephone call requesting officers to go to Polly and Daniel Lum's residence "for a welfare check on some children." The caller stated that she was a friend of Polly's and had just received a call for help. The caller reported hearing Polly and Daniel "fighting and sereaming" and children ery-ing. She also reported that Polly had "bruises and a cut on her head." She indicated that there were four or five children in the home and that the incident had happened within the last five minutes.

*551 The police dispatcher then contacted all units, explaining that a call had come in from a "[flemale asking [for al welfare check on [a] couple as they were having a domestic dispute. Kids are erying, and she is concerned regarding kids' welfare. ..." Two NSB police officers, Sgt. Jose Gutierrez and Officer Gwen Grimes, responded to the Lum residence, a duplex with a common hallway access. The officers activated their recorders, creating audio recordings of the incident. Sgt. Gutierrez and Officer Grimes later stated that they could hear an argument inside the residence, although the parties contest whether this is reflected in the recordings. Sgt. Gutierrez knocked on the outer door and a child invited the officers into the common hallway. Sgt. Gutierrez asked where the child's parents were, and the child replied "over there," pointing to the Lums' apart ment. The officers walked through the hallway, and, without knocking or announcing their presence, entered the Lum residence.

When the officers entered the apartment, Daniel and Polly were in the bathroom with their infant daughter. Daniel told the officers to leave. Officer Grimes told Daniel to come out of the bathroom. Daniel accused Officer Grimes of shooting at him during a previous encounter and attempted to shut the bathroom door, separating himself, Polly, and their infant from the officers. The officers pushed against the door to stop Daniel from closing it. Officer Grimes then sprayed oleoresin capsicum (pepper spray) once in Daniel's face to subdue him. Daniel immediately stopped resisting and came out of the bathroom. The officers handcuffed Daniel due to what they later described as his "er-ratie behavior and resistance."

Daniel had a strong and immediate reaction to the pepper spray, calling repeatedly for water and saying he could not breathe. Officer Benjamin Hunsaker then arrived, and Officers Hunsaker and Grimes took Daniel outside to defuse the situation and ameliorate the pepper spray's effects. Daniel continued saying that he could not breathe and began complaining that he was having or about to have a panic or heart attack. He repeatedly asked for someone to wipe his eyes; he also requested an ambulance. The officers wiped Daniel's face multiple times, pointed him into the wind to lessen the pepper spray's effects, and informed him that the effects would take some time to wear off naturally.

Daniel also complained that the handcuffs were too tight and asked that they be taken off. The officers declined because of "the way [he was] acting." Daniel told the officers that his behavior was erratic because he had failed to take prescribed methadone. When Daniel again complained about the handcuffs, the officers switched them for a larger pair and double-locked them so they would not tighten. Daniel stated that the new handcuffs were more comfortable. About eight minutes after the application of the pepper spray, the officers confirmed that Daniel did in fact want to go to the hospital. The officers called an ambulance to transport Daniel, and it arrived ten minutes later.

No charges were filed against Daniel as a result of the encounter.

B. Proceedings

In December 2007 the Lums sued the officers for use of excessive force and for unlawful entry in violation of the Alaska Constitution and AS 12.25.100, Alaska's knock and announce statute, 1 and sued NSB for negligent training and supervision. The officers moved for summary judgment, seeking dismissal of the excessive force claims on the basis of qualified immunity. The Lums opposed the motion, and oral argument was held in March 2010.

After oral argument the Lums filed several motions to supplement the evidentiary record, including consolidated appendices of exhibits, a complete transcript of Polly's deposition, and evidence showing the officers were aware that Daniel had been in a weak physical state due to back surgery. The court struck the motions and attached evidence as untimely.

*552 In May the superior court granted partial summary judgment, ruling that the officers were entitled to qualified immunity and dismissing the excessive force claims with the exception of one for failure to give Daniel water after applying the pepper spray. The Lums requested reconsideration, and the officers requested reconsideration as to the one remaining claim. The court requested responses 'to both reconsideration motions. NSB's response to the Lums' reconsideration motion included the incident police report previously filed by the Lums with their opposition to summary judgment. The Lums challenged the admission of this evidence and moved to file rebuttal evidence. The superi- or court rejected their motions.

In July the superior court granted full summary judgment dismissing all of the Lums' exeessive force claims on the basis of qualified immunity. The superior court later granted summary judgment dismissing the Lums' unlawful entry claims under the Alaska Constitution and A.S. 12.25.100, holding that neither could support a claim for damages.

In January 2011 the Lums filed an Alaska Civil Rule 60(b)(2) motion for relief from the summary judgment orders based on newly discovered evidence and requested that the court accept the new evidence. The superior court denied the motion and rejected the evidence, stating that it was not material and the Lums had not been diligent in submitting it. The court then dismissed the Lums' negligent training and supervision claims against NSB because the direct claims against the officers had been dismissed.

The Lums appeal the summary judgment decisions, including the decision striking submitted evidence and the denial of the Rule 60(b)(2) motion.

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Bluebook (online)
314 P.3d 546, 2013 WL 6516414, 2013 Alas. LEXIS 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lum-v-koles-alaska-2013.