Massey v. Prince George's County

907 F. Supp. 138, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 18509, 1995 WL 736805
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedDecember 8, 1995
DocketCiv. PJM 95-185
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 907 F. Supp. 138 (Massey v. Prince George's County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Massey v. Prince George's County, 907 F. Supp. 138, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 18509, 1995 WL 736805 (D. Md. 1995).

Opinion

OPINION

MESSITTE, District Judge.

I.

The Court takes this occasion to address the matter of counsel’s responsibility for bringing legal authority to its attention in appropriate fashion.

What the Court sua sponte decides is to reverse its earlier decision dismissing certain causes of action in this case and to keep the matter in federal court; the manner in which this reversal has come about, however, merits discussion in its own right.

II.

Plaintiff Willie Massey alleges that in the early morning hours of November 4, 1992 he was sleeping in a vacant or abandoned building in Cheverly, Maryland. He contends that all of a sudden he was awakened by Prince George’s County police officers who, without warning, set their police dog upon him. Massey says that although he offered no resistance, the animal proceeded to bite him and inflict painful and permanent injury all over his body. In his Third Amended Complaint before the Court, Massey has sued the individual officers for assault and *140 battery under Maryland law and for deprivation of his Fourth Amendment rights, i.e. for use of excessive force, under 42 U.S.C. § 198S. 1 The officers have denied liability, claiming that Massey was warned about the dog in a loud voice and that he resisted their efforts to arrest him.

Earlier in these proceedings, Defendants filed a fifteen page Motion for Summary Judgment to which excerpts from depositions of Plaintiff and various officers were appended. With regard to the Section 1988 claims, Defendants argued that their seizure of Plaintiff and the force used by them were reasonable as a matter of law. After citing general Supreme Court law regarding such claims, 2 defense counsel invited the Court’s attention to the case of Robinette v. Barnes, 854 F.2d 909 (6th Cir.1988), in which the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit concluded that the use of a trained police dog in circumstances comparable to those in the case at bar was reasonable as a matter of law. Among other things, the Sixth Circuit Court observed:

“... that the circumstances warranted the use of deadly force. The facts indicate that Barnes had probable cause to believe that Briggs, a suspected felon hidden inside a darkened building in the middle of the night, threatened his safety and the safety of the other officers present. As the district court succinctly put it: ‘a reasonably competent officer would believe that a nighttime burglary suspect, who, the officers had good reason to believe, knew the building was surrounded, who had been warned ... that a dog would be used, and who gave every indication of unwillingness to surrender, posed a threat to the safety of the officers’.... [T]his is a case where an officer was forced to explore an enclosed unfamiliar area in which he knew a man was hiding. Under the totality of the circumstances, Barnes was justified in using whatever force was necessary, even deadly force, to protect himself and the other officers to apprehend the suspect.’ ”

854 F.2d at 913-914

Accordingly, the district court’s summary judgment in favor of defendants was affirmed.

In the present case, Plaintiff’s Response to Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment consisted of a single page, his Statement of Material Facts in Dispute barely more than two. In these, Plaintiffs counsel cited one case and one alone, namely the Robinette case already cited by defense counsel, which Plaintiffs counsel did no more than attempt to distinguish on its facts.

When the matter came on for oral argument, defense counsel again argued the applicability of Robinette to the present case, while Plaintiffs counsel again tried to distinguish Robinette on its facts, offering no further citation to authority.

At the conclusion of oral argument, largely on the strength of Robinette, the Court announced its decision to dismiss the two counts of excessive force, finding the officers’ actions reasonable as a matter of law. What remained open, however, was the issue of whether Plaintiffs state law cause of action for assault and battery could survive in the face of the Court’s ruling with regard to the two federal constitutional torts. The parties were invited to submit supplemental statements with regard to that limited issue.

III.

Defense counsel has now submitted a one-page letter brief in conformity with the Court’s request. Plaintiff’s counsel has submitted a six-page letter which, while it comports with the Court’s directive in part, in effect invites the Court to reconsider its dismissal of the two federal constitutional counts. Plaintiff seems to understand that his request for reconsideration is out of order at this time, 3 but there is a feature of coun *141 sel’s letter that cannot go unremarked even now. The critical feature is that for the first time Plaintiffs counsel cites legal authority directly on point to the case at bar. The case, Kopf v. Wing, 942 F.2d 265 (4th Cir.1991), is not only an excessive force case involving a police dog, but is the controlling law in this Circuit. As the Court will discuss presently, that ease clearly mandates denial of Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment, which is to say reinstatement of the excessive force claims the Court recently dismissed. But the fact that Kopf has been cited for the first time by Plaintiffs counsel in a supplemental letter — well after the filing of his threadbare initial response to Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment and his equally scant oral argument on the motion — is a cause for considerable concern. At the same time, the fact that this case has never been cited by defense counsel in his initial pleadings, in oral argument or indeed to this day, gives cause for even greater concern.

IV.

In Kopf, a member of the bench in this district granted summary judgment on the following facts:

City police received a report of an armed robbery of a carry-out pizza shop in Hyatts-ville, Maryland, in which an individual with a handgun stole $100.00. Witnesses had recorded the license plate of the perpetrator’s van and within minutes county police officers spotted the van and gave chase. Two of the occupants jumped from the vehicle and attempted to hide behind a shed in the backyard of a house in a residential neighborhood. One of the officers was accompanied by a canine unit dog which, the officer testified he warned in an extremely loud voice, would be released if the suspects did not come out. On deposition the suspects testified that they never heard any warning, although other police officers indicated that it was given. When the dog was released, it began to bite one of the suspects who responded by kicking at it.

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Bluebook (online)
907 F. Supp. 138, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 18509, 1995 WL 736805, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/massey-v-prince-georges-county-mdd-1995.