Marietta Robinson v. Sarah Pezzat

818 F.3d 1, 422 U.S. App. D.C. 35, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 5965, 2016 WL 1274044
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedApril 1, 2016
Docket15-7040
StatusPublished
Cited by125 cases

This text of 818 F.3d 1 (Marietta Robinson v. Sarah Pezzat) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marietta Robinson v. Sarah Pezzat, 818 F.3d 1, 422 U.S. App. D.C. 35, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 5965, 2016 WL 1274044 (D.C. Cir. 2016).

Opinion

Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge TATEL.

TATEL, Circuit Judge:

We return once again to the familiar yet significant issue of the proper role of the district court at summary judgment. In this section 1983 action, plaintiff sought to hold police officers liable for unlawfully seizing her property in violation of the Fourth Amendment when the officers shot and killed her dog while executing a search warrant. The district court granted summary judgment to the officer who first shpt the dog on the grounds that plaintiffs eyewitness account of the shooting was uncorroborated and contradicted by other evidence. Because the district court im *4 properly assumed the “jury functions” of making “[credibility determinations, ... weighing ... the evidence, and ... drawing ... legitimate inferences from the facts,” Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 255, 106 S.Ct. 2505, 91 L.Ed.2d 202 (1986), we reverse this portion of the judgment. We affirm the grant of summary judgment to another officer, who shot the dog, as well as to the District of Columbia.

I.

In the summer of 2010, the Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) obtained a warrant to search appellant Marietta Robinson’s home after her grandson was arrested while in possession, of marijuana. Around 9 p.m. on the evening of June 15, a police squad consisting of nine officers arrived at Robinson’s house to execute the warrant. In her deposition, Robinson testified that when she heard' someone “knocking very hard” on the door, her dog Wrinkles, a thirteen-year-old female pit bull/German shepherd mix, “barked to let [her] know that somebody was there.” Robinson Dep. at 15, 24. Having owned Wrinkles since she was a puppy, Robinson acknowledged that the dog would sometimes bark and growl when “stranger[s] [came] in the house.” Id. at 16-17.

Robinson testified that after the police identified themselves, she opened the inner’ door to her home, leaving the screen door in place. Wrinkles barked again, then “sat down and [was] quiet.” Id. at 23. According to several officers, however, Wrinkles “lunge[d] out,” “showing [her] teeth” in an aggressive manner. McLeod Dep. at 42; see also Selby Dep. at 94; Boteler Dep. at 112. Both Robinson and the officers agree about what happened next: Robinson asked the lead officer, appellee Sergeant James Boteler, if she could put Wrinkles “in the back yard or ... in the bathroom” while the police executed the warrant and, in response, Boteler instructed her to place the dog in the bathroom, which was immediately adjacent to and visible from the front door. Robinson Dep. at 26, 31.

Boteler testified that he “yelled pretty loud” to the officers behind him to warn them that there was a “dog in the bathroom.” Boteler Dep. at 73-74. Officer Sarah Pezzat, another appellee, testified that although she never heard a warning, she knew that a dog was in the house because she “could easily, hear the dog barking .and growling.” Pezzat Dep. at 69. Pezzat also testified that she heard Boteler and Robinson discussing where to put the dog and “something about the dog being in a backroom.” Id.

When Robinson opened the front door after securing Wrinkles, the officers rushed inside. ’ Pezzat, with gun drawn, was at least the fifth officer to enter the home. After several others bypassed the bathroom, Pezzat opened the door, which Boteler testified violated police protocol. Typically, Boteler explained, the first officer to encounter a door would “stop, clear that area, and then move to the next area,” unless there was a reason not. to do so, such as the presence of a dog, which was “why several officers passed that door and did not open that door.” Boteler Dep. at 100-02. Other officers warned that there was a “[d]og on the left” as the search team entered, Ledesma Dep. at 23, 46-47, and heard Wrinkles barking. Pezzat recalled hearing no such warnings.

Robinson testified that while standing near the entryway, she saw Pezzat open the bathroom door, “sho[o]t once, and then Wrinkles comes running put, got up and ran out the bathroom. Then [Pezzat] shot again. Then she backed out my door.” Robinson Dep. at 44. Repeating the point, Robinson testified that “[w]hen [Pezzat] shot the first time, Wrinkles got up. And *5 when Wrinkles got up to come towards her, then she shot again,” Id. at 45-46. When the District of Columbia’s attorney asked whether it was Robinson’s testimony “that Wrinkles was on the-floor — lying on the floor” in the bathroom, Robinson replied, ‘Yes.” Id. at 46. Asked how she knew that, Robinson explained, “Because when she first opened the door — when she had the gun in her hand, at first -I thought she was going to shoot me. But then when she ... turned the [k]nob- and pushed the door, ,. it wasn’t pointed towards me no more.” Id. Robinson then testified — for the third time — that “the first shot, Wrinkles got up____The second shot, Wrinkles ran out the bathroom.” Id. at 47.

After Wrinkles made it out of the bathroom, Robinson testified, the dog ran to her and collapsed on the ground.' Although Robinson never saw Wrinkles bite Pezzat, she acknowledged that Wrinkles would have bitten the officer “[i]n defense of herself, after being shot at____[I]f you shoot a dog, most likely they’re going to attack you.” Id. at 55.

Officer Pezzat had a very different view of what happened. She testified that after opening the bathroom door; she “saw that there was a dog inside of the room. I tried to close the door, but it-was too late. The dog was already coming out of the room at me. And I picked up my leg to protect myself, and the. dog bit down on my foot” once “the dog was already most of the way out of the room.” Pezzat Dep. at 73, 81. According to Pezzat, it was at that point — after the dog bit her — that she shot the animal. Echoing Pezzat, another officer, appellee Christian Glynn, testified that before Pezzat fired, Wrinkles “was barking, very angry and charged at Officer Pezzat,” then “latched on and bit Officer Pezzat’s foot and started shaking her” and “pulling her down and into the bathroom.” Glynn Dep. at 58-59. Sergeant Boteler testified that before hearing any gunfire, he too saw Wrinkles biting Pezzat “just outside the bathroom in the hallway.”- Bo-teler Dep. at 104.

Although Robirison testified that Wrinkles collapsed next to her feet after the shooting, Officer Richard McLeod, also an appellee, testified that Wrinkles began “coming towards” him, deepér into the house; McLéod Dep. at 43. Another offi-cér testified that McLeod fired-at least á half-dozen shots at Wrinkles, toward the front'of the house. According to Robinson, Wrinkles fled up the stairs to get away from the shots, but McLeod kept firing. In the end, officers blocked Wrinkles from climbing the stairs, and she died on the landing.'

According to Robinson, officers .then took her clean laundry from the top of the washing machine and “cover[ed] the dog Up and the blood up with my clean clothes.” Robinson Dep. at 77-78. Officer Adrian Ledesma testified that they -covered'Wrinkles “with like a white sheet or something like that,” Ledesma Dep.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
818 F.3d 1, 422 U.S. App. D.C. 35, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 5965, 2016 WL 1274044, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marietta-robinson-v-sarah-pezzat-cadc-2016.