Melanie Briner v. City of Ontario

370 F. App'x 682
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMarch 26, 2010
Docket08-3731
StatusUnpublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 370 F. App'x 682 (Melanie Briner v. City of Ontario) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Melanie Briner v. City of Ontario, 370 F. App'x 682 (6th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

ALICE M. BATCHELDER, Chief Judge.

The plaintiffs appeal the grant of summary judgment to the defendants in this action for retaliation and related claims arising from the removal of their business from a municipal towing list. For the reasons that follow, we AFFIRM in part, REVERSE in part, and REMAND for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

BACKGROUND

This case arises out of a series of disputes between Appellants Tom and Melanie Briner and certain officials of the City of Ontario, Ohio (the “City”), where the Briners reside. In early 2004, the Briners purchased a towing company, F & W Towing (“F & W”), which, among other things, towed vehicles for the City and other nearby municipalities as a participant on the towing “rotational call list” maintained by the police departments of the various municipalities. 1

*684 On December 20, 2004, the F & W office was burglarized and $2,000 was stolen from the cash drawer. The office was not ransacked and nothing else was taken or disturbed. The Briners reported the theft to the Ontario City Police Department (the “Department”), and stated that they believed that Billy Hamm, a former F & W employee, had committed the crime. After an initial investigation by other officers, the case was turned over to Detective Riley Snavely. Det. Snavely left the crime scene and drove to the Hamms’ house. Mr. Hamm was not at home, but was waiting at the police station when Det. Snavely returned there.

Det. Snavely interviewed Mr. Hamm and his wife at the police station, but did not record the conversation in any way. Det. Snavely interviewed an F & W employee named Tim (who, according to Det. Snavely, vouched for Hamm), and attempted to contact other F & W employees, but was unable to convince any other employees to come to the police station to be interviewed. At his deposition, Det. Snavely indicated that one F & W employee, Debra Hissong, refused to come to the police station because she wished to remain with her husband, who was recovering from open-heart surgery. 2

Det. Snavely never solved the investigation into the F & W burglary. He apparently concluded that Mr. Hamm had not done it and then closed the ease, explaining that F & W employees would not come to the police station to give statements.

There is some evidence that Det. Snavely closed the case because he thought the Briners had staged the robbery themselves. Melanie Briner recounted her final discussion with Det. Snavely this way:

[Det. Snavely] started to say things like, well, Mrs. Briner, Billy Ham[m] told me you’re in financial trouble^] and I said, no, I would not discuss my finances with my employees, and [Det. Snavely] said— he looked around the building and he said, you must have a pretty big loan on this building and everything, and I said, what does that have to do with anything? [Det. Snavely] was, in my mind, the other officer was there, [but Det. Snavely] was insinuating that maybe we had robbed ourselves.

The Briners expressed some dissatisfaction with what they perceived as Det. Snavely’s failure to adequately investigate the case.

Shortly after the burglary and curtailed investigation, on or about December 27, 2004, Officer Don Wallace accompanied Mr. Hamm to F & W to obtain a copy of some pay records from F & W, relevant to Mr. Hamm’s former employment with F & W. Upset that the Department would send an officer to assist the person who they believed was responsible for a burglary the Department allegedly refused to solve, the Briners went to the police station on December 28, 2004, to complain.

Although they had no appointment, Ontario Police Chief Timothy MeClaren agreed to speak with the Briners, but did so in the lobby of the police station, rather than in the privacy of his office. The Briners indicated that they were upset but Chief McClaran responded that Officer *685 Wallace had merely performed a “civil standby,” to keep a potentially volatile situation under control. The Briners complained that this was an insult and an improper use of tax payer funds, that Det. Snavely had been “rude and disrespectful to them,” and that the burglary of their business was not receiving the attention it deserved. The Briners alleged that Chief McClaran “took a tone” with them, an attitude of impatience and intimidation, made it clear that they were annoying him, and walked away without saying goodbye. McClaran apparently wrote them a letter (not in the record), informing them that their complaint had no merit and that the investigation of their burglary was closed. The evidence before the district court indicates that this was their first complaint ever about the Department.

During the same time period (circa December 2004 3 ), the Briners had agreed to trade two of their old tow trucks to an employee, Larry Paone, for a 1993 GMC pick-up truck. On December 1, 2004, the parties exchanged the trucks — the Briners gave Larry the two tow trucks, transferred their titles to Larry, and took physical possession of the GMC pick-up. This is not disputed. The Briners parked the GMC pick-up in their driveway in front of their house for the following two months. At the time of the exchange, Larry did not provide the title to the GMC pick-up truck, 4 claiming that he could not find the title but promising to provide it when found.

On December 12, 2004, the Briners allegedly learned that Larry had been misusing company assets for personal gain and fired him. On December 16, 2004, Larry came to the F & W office to discuss this termination. He was unable to convince the Briners to reconsider his termination, but Ms. Briner again reminded him that he still needed to bring the title to the GMC. truck. The Briners claimed that Larry next came to the office on December 30, 2004, to deliver the title to the GMC pick-up truck, and that Larry signed the title in the F & W office and Melanie Briner notarized it on that day. Larry claimed that he had not gone to F & W that day, but had been with his father, Dave Paone, all day. The Briners eventually pursued (and won) a civil suit against Larry on a conversion claim regarding the truck. At the trial in that ease, Larry testified that he couldn’t recall where he was on December 30 and recanted his earlier assertions. The court made an express finding: “14. Larry delivered the title for the '93 [GMC pick-up truck] to [the Briners] on December 30, 2004. The Court finds that [Larry] did in fact sign the title in front of Melanie Briner, a notary.” F & W Towing v. Larry Paone, Case N0.2005-CVH-1263, *3 (Mansfield Municipal Court, Judgment dated May 4, 2006).

After the exchange of possession of the vehicles, a dispute arose between Larry and the Briners over their agreement. Larry claimed that the Briners had promised to make some repairs to one of the tow trucks that Larry received. Allegedly, the Briners failed to do so, and Larry proceeded to take action.

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Bluebook (online)
370 F. App'x 682, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/melanie-briner-v-city-of-ontario-ca6-2010.