Michael Cantrell v. City of Murphy

666 F.3d 911, 2012 WL 19377, 2012 U.S. App. LEXIS 63
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 4, 2012
Docket10-41138
StatusPublished
Cited by63 cases

This text of 666 F.3d 911 (Michael Cantrell v. City of Murphy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Michael Cantrell v. City of Murphy, 666 F.3d 911, 2012 WL 19377, 2012 U.S. App. LEXIS 63 (5th Cir. 2012).

Opinion

CARL E. STEWART, Circuit Judge:

After the accidental death of her son, Matthew, Ave Marie Cantrell, along with her husband, Michael, and son, Creighton, filed suit against the City of Murphy and several of its officers. In their complaint, the Cantrells alleged violations of the federal constitution and liability under state common law arising out of the officers’ behavior on the day of Matthew’s accident. While the district court subsequently dismissed parts of the Cantrells’ complaint, it denied certain officers qualified immunity on two claims. This is an interlocutory appeal from the denial of qualified immunity. For the reasons stated below, we reverse the district court’s judgment.

I.

A.

During the early evening of October 2, 2007, Ave Marie Cantrell was in the master bedroom of her Murphy, Texas home with her two young sons, Creighton and Matthew. While she and Creighton watched a movie on her bed, twenty-one-month-old Matthew entertained himself by playing with a newly purchased toy. Although she did not intend to fall asleep, Ave dozed off during the movie. At the movie’s conclusion, Creighton, who was four years old at the time, woke Ave up and asked her a question regarding Matthew’s whereabouts. Ave then got off her bed, walked towards a nearby doorway, and, upon looking in the direction of an open door leading to her backyard, saw Matthew entangled in an outdoor soccer net. She then raced out to the backyard where she saw Matthew lying on the ground twitching with his neck and arm caught in the net. Upon making this discovery, Ave asked Creighton to retrieve a pair of scissors from the kitchen. When Creighton returned with the scissors, Ave used them to cut Matthew from the soccer net. She then carried Matthew back into the house and laid him on a sofa.

Before arriving to the sofa, Ave dialed 911. Ave’s call was received by Stephen Williamson, a Communications Officer with the Murphy Police Department, at 7:26 p.m. After receiving Ave’s address and attempting to obtain other information, Williamson dispatched police officers and paramedics to her home at 7:27 p.m. During her conversation with Williamson, Ave stated that Matthew’s eyes were dilated and glazed, his skin was pale, and that he was not breathing. She also told him that Matthew was strangled by a soccer net. Williamson unsuccessfully tried to get Ave to calm down so that he could transfer her call to East Texas Medical Center, which at the time provided the City of Murphy with pre-arrival instructions for emergency calls.

*915 After approximately two minutes on the phone with Ave, Williamson transferred her call to East Texas Medical Center employee Michael Sexton. Like Williamson, Sexton unsuccessfully attempted to calm Ave down. During their conversation, Sexton asked Ave how long Matthew “was down for”; she told him “probably for about ten, fifteen minutes.” Once the Murphy Police Department arrived at the Cantrell home, Ave was disconnected from the 911 line.

Murphy police officers Clayton Dacey and Kevin McGee arrived at the Cantrell home just before 7:30 p.m. Upon arriving at the scene, they entered the house through the front door and could hear Ave screaming in the living room. The two officers then proceeded to the living room where they saw Ave crouched down near the sofa upon which she had previously placed Matthew. Dacey and McGee then pulled Ave away from Matthew in order to check for vital signs and had her wait in an adjacent bedroom. 1

Once near Matthew, Dacey saw the strangulation marks around Matthew’s throat and chest; he also observed that Matthew was not breathing and did not have a pulse. According to McGee, Matthew “appeared to be deceased at the scene.” After concluding that “foul play” may have been the source of Matthew’s injuries, McGee designated the home a crime scene.

Upon making this designation, McGee, along with Dacey, initiated an investigation. During their investigation, Ave exited the bedroom and began screaming at them. McGee then instructed Dacey to take Ave back into the master bedroom and to stay with her. He also asked Dacey to make sure that Ave did not enter the living room and touch anything. Dacey and McGee also placed Creighton in the bedroom. While in the bedroom, Ave continued screaming and started making suicidal statements. During their time in the bedroom, Dacey allowed Ave to call her husband, Michael Cantrell, who was on his way home from work.

According to computer records, paramedics arrived on the scene at 7:32 p.m.; firefighters arrived approximately two minutes later. When the ambulance arrived at the scene, Dacey and McGee emerged from the Cantrell home; while doing so, one of them was making a hand gesture indicating that the patient was deceased. The two paramedics, Brentan Ulch and Randy Armstrong, then exited the ambulance and moved towards the front door. As they were walking towards the front door, the police officers advised them that the house was a crime scene and that Matthew appeared to be deceased. 2

As the paramedics entered the house, Ulch asked one of the police officers to hold the arriving fire engine to “preserve the scene if it was a crime scene.” When the paramedics encountered Matthew on the couch, he did not have any signs of life, nor did he have a pulse or any spontaneous respiration. While his extremities were cold, his head and torso were very warm. After making these observations and deciding that there were no signs incompati *916 ble with life, Armstrong and Ulch concluded that Matthew was still a viable patient. They then picked him up, earned him to the ambulance, and began life-saving procedures. Once Matthew was stabilized, Armstrong and Ulch transported Matthew to a hospital in Dallas. While transporting Matthew to the hospital, the paramedics continued providing life-saving procedures. Despite these efforts, Matthew remained pulseless when he arrived at the emergency room.

Lieutenant Adana Barber arrived on the scene at 7:39 p.m. When she arrived, the ambulance was still outside of the Cantrell home. After having a conversation with McGee, Barber walked into the home and met Dacey inside the master bedroom. While in the bedroom, both Barber and Dacey attempted to comfort Ave. For example, they asked her to call “people that could come for [her]” and allowed her to speak with her parents over the phone. During Barber’s time in the Cantrell home, Ave continued making suicidal statements. 3 After hearing these statements, Barber stated: “She apparently wants to kill herself, so-yeah, why don’t we transport her down to the station.” Barber ordered McGee to follow the ambulance before it left the Cantrell home.

When Michael arrived on the scene, Barber took Creighton outside to him. Barber then told Michael that they “would be taking [Ave] out of the residence and to the station to try and interview her and because of all the suicidal statements she was making.” According to Barber, Michael agreed to this course of action.

Because it was considered a crime scene, Michael was not allowed to enter his home immediately, but he was subsequently allowed to go in to be with his wife. When Michael entered his home, Ave was still making suicidal statements.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
666 F.3d 911, 2012 WL 19377, 2012 U.S. App. LEXIS 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michael-cantrell-v-city-of-murphy-ca5-2012.