Malone v. Fields

335 So. 2d 538
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 7, 1976
Docket12938
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 335 So. 2d 538 (Malone v. Fields) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Malone v. Fields, 335 So. 2d 538 (La. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

335 So.2d 538 (1976)

Rosetta MALONE et al., Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
Troy J. FIELDS et al., Defendants-Appellees.

No. 12938.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

July 7, 1976.

*539 Baker, Culpepper & Brunson by Joseph A. Cusimano, Jr., Farmerville, for plaintiffs-appellants.

Durrett, Hardin, Hunter, Dameron & Fritchie, by Emile C. Rolfs, III, Baton Rouge, Hargrove, Guyton, Ramey & Barlow by Michael R. Mangham, Shreveport, for defendants-appellees.

Before BOLIN, MARVIN and JONES, JJ.

MARVIN, Judge.

Plaintiffs appeal from the rejection of their respective demands for personal injury, humiliation and embarrassment against a deputy sheriff, his employer, the Sheriff of Union Parish, and their liability insurer. This suit arose out of an incident between plaintiffs and a Sheriff's deputy in front of a tavern. The deputy admittedly physically attacked the several plaintiffs but claims reasonableness in the force used and justification because plaintiffs were interfering with his investigation into a shooting at the tavern, which did not involve plaintiffs. We reverse the lower court and render judgment for the several plaintiffs.

The tavern, called "Ne-Ne's," is situated about 100 feet from a public road in or near Bernice, Louisiana. Deputy Fields was directed to the tavern on a Saturday afternoon to investigate a shooting. He arrived in uniform in his Sheriff's car about the same time as the Bernice City Marshal. There were several people outside the tavern, including plaintiffs. The City Marshal estimated the number at "probably fifteen" and said they were "spread out" in smaller groups.

Plaintiffs are (1) Rosetta Malone, the mother of plaintiffs (2) Willie Ray Jones and (3) Mrs. Peggie Dunn. Mrs. Dunn is the wife of plaintiff (4) Tommy Lee Dunn. Except for Tommy Lee Dunn, each of plaintiffs had drunk one or two beers prior to the incident, but were not found to be intoxicated.

The record establishes the following circumstances: When Deputy Fields began to walk the 100 feet towards the tavern he asked Rosetta Malone where the trouble was. She told him it had happened inside the tavern and the deputy proceeded towards *540 the tavern. Peggie Dunn was sitting on the hood or fender of a parked car some twenty feet away from the building and not in the path of the deputy towards the doorway of the tavern. Peggie Dunn said to Deputy Fields as he walked by her and got near the door of the tavern, "By the time the cops get here we all be dead." Fields then turned and walked to Peggie Dunn and told her to "shut up" and slapped her. She told him he could not tell her to shut up and he slapped her again. She returned the slap. At one point, Fields told her to shut up and go home. Peggie's husband, Tommy Lee Dunn, was standing on the porch of his home next to the tavern and saw Deputy Fields slap his wife. Tommy Lee Dunn then came up to Fields and inquired why Fields was slapping his wife. Fields then began to slap Tommy Lee Dunn. About the fourth time Fields slapped him, Dunn grabbed Fields' arm to keep him from slapping again.

From some distance away, Willie Ray Jones saw Fields hit Dunn and came to where Fields and Dunn were. Willie Ray admittedly used profanity (but did not curse Fields) in asking Fields what was going on and why he was hitting people. Fields then hit or slapped Willie Ray Jones twice, the second time knocking him to the ground and dazing him.

Rosetta Malone then approached Deputy Fields demanding to know why he was slapping her "children." Fields attempted to ignore Mrs. Malone, telling her to shut up, but she persisted in asking such questions. Fields then sprayed her in the face with Mace, a chemical irritant, and went into the tavern. There he learned that those involved in the earlier shooting had been picked up by another lawman before he arrived. After Fields came out of the tavern and started towards his car, Mrs. Malone followed him with the same persistent questions as to why he had slapped her children. Fields again sprayed Mrs. Malone with Mace when she was about 10 feet away.

Testimony concerning the incident was elicited from plaintiffs, from Deputy Fields and Marshal Wright, and from two witnesses, George Sheldon and Michael Lowe. Sheldon and Lowe corroborated plaintiffs' versions of the incident. The record clearly shows Deputy Fields hit or slapped Mrs. Dunn and her husband before he went into the tavern. When Fields hit Tommy Lee Dunn for the fourth time, Dunn grabbed Fields' arm to keep him from hitting him again. At that time the Marshal manipulated a shotgun to cock it and place a shell in the chamber. Wright had obtained the shotgun from his police car parked near the Sheriff's car. When Tommy Lee Dunn heard the noise of the shotgun being manipulated he released his grip on Fields' arm.

The record is not as clear whether it was before or after Fields went into the tavern that he struck Willie Ray Jones and sprayed Mrs. Malone the first time with Mace. Deputy Fields said he was within ten or twenty feet from the tavern door when Peggie Dunn "started running off at the mouth." He acknowledged that she was not keeping him from going to the building but that "every time I try to . . . walk away from her, she'd start back running off at the mouth. . ." Fields did not remember in what order he hit Willie Ray Jones and Tommy Lee Dunn after he hit Peggie Dunn. He did not remember how many times he hit Peggie Dunn, Tommy Lee Dunn or Willie Ray Jones.

Deputy Fields testified about his actions after he had hit these people.

"I think I stood around there for a few minutes. They were all upset and hollering and I kept telling them to go home and they just keep standing around and then Rosetta [Malone] kept running off at the mouth."

He said Rosetta Malone was not between him and the doorway of the tavern and that he sprayed her because "I couldn't get her to go on and get out of my way." He said that none of the people were blocking his way or holding him in any way.

*541 The second spraying incident he described in these words:

"She followed me all the way back to the car [from the tavern] ["I'd say 10 feet behind me"] . . . we [Fields and the Marshal] was trying to stand up there and talk about what had happened and she came up there again and I sprayed her again . . . I think she kept saying the same thing over and over that something was going to be done."[1]

Fields acknowledged no one threatened him but that he "thought" they were because they "gathered" around him.

Marshal Wright said Peggie Dunn was sitting on a car and was not blocking Fields' passage to the building and that her remarks about the late arrival of the police were directed at him and the other people as well as at Fields, and that Fields hit her first without her threatening him when no one else was nearby ("it was a one sided fight . . . at that time I was starting back to the car"). Wright got the shotgun from his car and turned around in time to observe Willie Ray Jones on the ground.

Wright "assumed" that Fields struck the plaintiff men in "self-protection," but said that he did not see anyone "throwing blows" beside Fields. He did say Willie Ray Jones "reached out" for Fields just before Jones went to the ground [from Fields' blow]. Wright admitted that he and Fields could have walked past Peggie Dunn and into the tavern after Peggie Dunn's initial remark.

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Bluebook (online)
335 So. 2d 538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/malone-v-fields-lactapp-1976.