MILLS v. CITY OF PHILADELPHIA

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 5, 2023
Docket2:14-cv-00593
StatusUnknown

This text of MILLS v. CITY OF PHILADELPHIA (MILLS v. CITY OF PHILADELPHIA) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MILLS v. CITY OF PHILADELPHIA, (E.D. Pa. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

BRITTNEY MILLS, : Plaintiff, : CIVIL ACTION : No. 14-593 v. : : CITY OF PHILADELPHIA, et al., : Defendants. :

MEMORANDUM

Schiller, J. October 5, 2023

Plaintiff Brittney Mills sues Defendants the City of Philadelphia, Michael Alice, Timothy Dunne, Thomas Liciardello, John Speiser, and Jeffrey Walker1 for various alleged constitutional violations and corresponding state law torts arising from her arrest in 2011. Mills’ lawsuit is one of “hundreds of civil rights lawsuits arising from allegedly criminal acts committed by members of the Philadelphia Police Department's Narcotics Field Unit.” McIntyre v. Liciardello, No. 13- 2773, 2020 WL 605717, at *1 (E.D. Pa. Feb. 7, 2020). Alice, Dunne, Liciardello and Speiser—all former or current Philadelphia Police officers (collectively, the “Officers”)—each move for summary judgment on Mills’ claims against them. (ECF 66 (Alice), 68 (Dunne)2, 69 (Liciardello

1 After Mills filed her Amended Complaint, all Defendants but Walker filed Answers. (ECF 23, 27.) Mills’ counsel repeatedly represents that Mills has a default judgment against Walker. (See, e.g., ECF 74 ¶ 39.) She does not. Her July 9, 2014 Motion for a Default Judgment against him (ECF 9) was premature and was never granted. Rather, after Judge Diamond remanded this case to this Court for further proceedings, Mills requested an entry of default against Walker since he had not answered the Amended Complaint. (ECF 39.) The Clerk’s office entered a default against him on March 29, 2021, consistent with Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 55(a), but Mills has not moved for a default judgment as required by Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 55(b).

2 The City moves for summary judgment along with Dunne (ECF 68) but the Court reserves the question of whether summary judgment is warranted in the City’s favor for a subsequent decision. and Speiser).) For the reasons set forth below, the Court grants the Officers’ Motions. I. BACKGROUND A. Procedural History Mills filed a Complaint against the City and Walker in January 2014. (ECF 1.) Judge

Stewart Dalzell, to whom this case was originally assigned, subsequently placed it in suspense pending resolution of consolidated cases involving the Narcotics Field Unit that were then-pending before Judge Paul Diamond. (ECF 15.) The next day, Mills filed an Amended Complaint—the operative complaint—naming the City and Alice, Dunne, Liciardello, Speiser, and Walker as Defendants. (ECF 16.) Shortly thereafter, Judge Dalzell consolidated this case with the cases pending before Judge Diamond upon agreement of the parties. (ECF 17.) Mills’ case was eventually selected as a bellwether case, and in March 2021, Judge Diamond remanded it to this Court for further pretrial proceedings and trial. (ECF 37.) Thereafter, the Officers and the City moved for summary judgment. B. Evidence Relevant to the Officer’s Motions

Before considering the Officers’ summary judgment motions, it is first necessary to explain how the Court determined what evidence it considers in deciding them because of Mills’ counsel’s failure to fully comply with the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and the Court’s Orders. The Court’s routine scheduling order identified the parties’ obligations when moving for summary judgment. (ECF 45 ¶¶ 5(a)-(d).) It required the movant to file a statement of undisputed material facts in numbered paragraphs (ECF 45 ¶ 5(a)), and the respondent to file a “separate Statement of Disputed facts, responding to the numbered paragraphs set forth in the movant’s Statement of Undisputed Facts” and “any additional facts which the respondent contends preclude

2 summary judgment” in separate numbered paragraphs. (ECF 45 ¶ 5(b).) The movant and respondent were also directed to cite “specific and not general references to the parts of the record which support each of the statements . . . including the title, page, and line of the document supporting the statement.” (ECF 45 ¶ 5(d).) The Court warned that all facts set forth by the movant

would be “admitted unless controverted by the opposing party” and that failure of the respondent to follow these requirements “may result in the Court’s considering the motion [for summary judgment] as uncontested.” (ECF 45 ¶¶ 5(c)-(d).) Alice independently moved for summary judgment. (ECF 66.) Liciardello and Speiser filed a joint motion for summary judgment (ECF 69) and the City and Dunne filed a separate joint motion for summary judgment. (ECF 68.) Mills’ initial responses to their motions were disorganized, at best. She responded to Alice and Dunne’s arguments in a single filing. (ECF 74.) She then responded to Liciardello and Speiser’s joint motion with multiple filings. (See ECF 84, 85, 88.) And she filed a legally baseless motion seeking to dismiss the City and Liciardello’s motions. (ECF 71.)

The Court denied Mills’ Motion to Dismiss Defendants’ summary judgment motions as procedurally improper and struck her separate responses to Liciardello and Speiser’s joint motion, but gave her leave to file appropriate responses. (ECF 91.) Specifically, Mills was directed to file one response to the City’s arguments and one response to Liciardello and Speiser’s motion. (ECF 91 ¶¶ 3(a)-(b).) The Court also explicitly required Mills to comply with Paragraph 5 of its May 20, 2021 Order. (ECF 91 ¶ 3(c).) And it again warned that, if she did not, the Court might strike her responses and consider Defendants’ summary judgment motions as unopposed. (Id. ¶ 3(d).) Unfortunately, Mills’ subsequent filings largely fail to comply with the Court’s Orders or the

3 Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. See, e.g., Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c), (e). Alice submits sixty-four paragraphs of undisputed, material facts (ECF 66 at 1-13) and the City and Dunne (who move together) submit forty-nine paragraphs of facts. (ECF 68-2.) In Mills’ single response to Alice and Dunne’s separate motions, she responds with thirty-nine paragraphs

of facts—many of which do not respond to the movants’ statements of facts—and she presents seven additional pages of facts in narrative form with some citations to the record. (ECF 74, 74-1 at 1-7.) Even where Mills provides specific citations to the record, her submission does not include the appropriate exhibits. For example, she cites to Exhibit E as Defendant Walker’s deposition, but she only provides Exhibits A-B, J, and M to the Court. (ECF 74-2 through 74-9.) Mills also responded separately to the City with a narrative recitation of the facts (not in numbered paragraphs), sparing citations to the record, and approximately 800 pages of attached exhibits. (ECF 95.) Mills’ combined responses to the facts that Alice and Dunne present in their motions leaves the Court in an untenable position. The Court has had to comb through the record to locate exhibits she sloppily cites and missing transcript pages that can only be found in exhibits she submitted after her initial response to their motions.3

Liciardello and Speiser present thirty-six undisputed, material facts. (ECF 69 at 4-8.) Mills responds to them with twenty paragraphs—none of which respond to Liciardello and Speiser’s

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MILLS v. CITY OF PHILADELPHIA, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mills-v-city-of-philadelphia-paed-2023.