Morreale v. Criple Creek, City

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedMay 27, 1997
Docket96-1220
StatusUnpublished

This text of Morreale v. Criple Creek, City (Morreale v. Criple Creek, City) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morreale v. Criple Creek, City, (10th Cir. 1997).

Opinion

F I L E D United States Court of Appeals Tenth Circuit UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS MAY 27 1997 TENTH CIRCUIT PATRICK FISHER Clerk

CYNTHIA MORTON MORREALE,

Plaintiff - Appellant, No. 96-1220 v. (D. Colorado) CRIPPLE CREEK, CITY OF, a (D.C. No. 94-Z-737) municipality; PAUL MATTYS, Officer, in his capacity as an Officer for the City of Cripple Creek and individually; and EDWARD STAUFFER, in his official capacity as an Officer for the City of Cripple Creek,

Defendants - Appellees.

ORDER AND JUDGMENT*

Before ANDERSON, LUCERO, and MURPHY, Circuit Judges.

Cynthia Morton Morreale appeals the district court’s dismissal of her 42 U.S.C.

§ 1983 action against the City of Cripple Creek, Colorado, and certain members of its

police department. She contends that the district court erred by 1) dismissing officers

Evelyn Stauffer and Beth Caddy for failure to obtain service; and 2) granting summary

* This order and judgment is not binding precedent, except under the doctrines of law of the case, res judicata, and collateral estoppel. The court generally disfavors the citation of orders and judgments; nevertheless, an order and judgment may be cited under the terms and conditions of 10th Cir. R. 36.3. judgment to the remaining defendants. For the reasons stated below, we affirm the

district court’s dismissal of officers Evelyn Stauffer and Beth Caddy, although on

different grounds than those stated by the district court, and we affirm its summary

judgment in favor of the remaining defendants.

BACKGROUND

According to her deposition, on May 19, 1993, Morreale was a casual tourist

driving with a friend through the mountain town of Cripple Creek, Colorado, when she

entered law enforcement purgatory. Her descent began when police officer Mattys

stopped her for running a stop sign. A standard computer check of Morreale’s current

Florida license revealed that her previous Colorado license had been suspended.1 Mattys

ordered Morreale out of her car, placed her under arrest, and advised her that he would

take her to post bond. Appellee’s App., Tab R at 19. Mattys then asked his assisting

officer Caddy to pat Morreale down and to search her pouch according to standard policy.

1 Morreale had moved from Colorado to Florida in 1992. While driving in Florida on her Colorado license, she received a moving violation citation. A few weeks later, she surrendered her Colorado license when she obtained a Florida license, and she paid the Florida ticket and a late penalty. However, in the interval, Colorado received notice of the unpaid ticket from Florida and entered a license suspension pursuant to the Interstate Compact. Although Morreale states that the Colorado suspension was outdated, she does not contend that Mattys lacked probable cause to arrest her. See Arizona v. Evans, ___ U.S. ___, 115 S. Ct. 1185, 1193-94 (1995) (noting that an officer does not violate the Fourth Amendment when he makes an arrest in reliance on erroneous computer information).

-2- The pat down and search revealed no contraband or weapons. Mattys then handcuffed

Morreale with her hands behind her back according to standard procedure, despite

Morreale’s request that she be handcuffed with her hands in front to avoid aggravating a

prior shoulder injury. As part of the handcuffing procedure, Mattys verified that two

fingers’ space remained inside the handcuffs so that blood circulation would not be cut

off, and he double locked the handcuffs so that they would not tighten down. He then

ordered Morreale to get in the back seat of the police car for the fifteen to twenty minutes

it took to verify that her passenger would be able to drive her car. Because the handcuffs

hurt her wrists, Morreale asked to be allowed to stand outside until Mattys was ready to

transport her, but Mattys refused. Mattys then drove Morreale two blocks to the Cripple

Creek police department.

During the time she was handcuffed, Morreale complained that the handcuffs were

digging into her wrists, but she complied with all Mattys’s orders. She does not assert

that Mattys pushed, shoved, or treated her roughly in any way.2 However, due to the

cramped positioning in the back seat, Morreale had to sit on her hands, which caused the

handcuffs to press into and scratch her wrists and to bruise her buttocks. She alleges that

she continued to complain of the pain in her wrists on the way to the police department,

In fact, the record indicates that Mattys had very little physical or verbal contact 2

with Morreale.

-3- and Mattys’ response was that she should not move around so much.3 Appellee’s App.,

Tab V at 78. She further states that she complained about the handcuffs’s being too tight

when she first arrived at the police department. Id. at 92. Apparently, however, she did

not complain of shoulder pain while she was handcuffed. Id. at 77-78. As soon as they

arrived at the police department, Mattys took Morreale to a holding cell and took off the

handcuffs. Approximately twenty minutes elapsed from the time Morreale was first

handcuffed until the time the handcuffs were removed.

Morreale, who is a pianist, complains that as a result of being handcuffed and

awkwardly positioned in the car, she suffered damage to her shoulder and to her radial

nerve at the wrist. That damage has prevented her from pursuing her professional and

recreational piano playing. Morreale makes no claim for any other physical damage or

injury due to any other police conduct related to her arrest and detention.

According to standard booking procedure, Mattys ordered that Morreale be

photographed and fingerprinted. Mattys also required Morreale to empty her pockets and

to give him the contents, together with her jewelry, her belt, and the shoelaces from her

tennis shoes, and he informed her that she could post bail at the sheriff’s department in

Divide, Colorado. Mattys denies Morreale informed him of her shoulder injury prior to

the handcuffing, although he concedes that she asked to be handcuffed in front and told

him that the handcuffs were uncomfortable. Appellee’s App., Tab R at 22, 37. He

Morreale states that she was not moving around. 3

-4- further concedes that after they arrived at the police department, she complained of a

prior injury, and somewhat later she complained of arm pain. At that time, he asked if

she wanted medical attention, and she refused. Id. at 36.

Before transporting Morreale to Divide, the transport officer, Evelyn Stauffer,

directed Morreale to the bathroom where, consistent with department policy, she ordered

Morreale to change into a jail jumpsuit. Stauffer testified that she ordered Morreale to

take off her outer clothes. Morreale’s version is that Stauffer’s actual order was “to take

my clothes off.” In any event, as it turned out, Morreale was not wearing undergarments,

so her compliance left her naked to Stauffer’s view as she waited to receive Morreale’s

clothes. Appellee’s App., Tab V at 89. Stauffer allegedly then ordered Morreale to turn

around, and looked her “up and down and all over,” but she did not touch Morreale or

conduct any other inspection. Id. at 89, 143. Stauffer gave Morreale the jumpsuit to put

on. Once Morreale put on the jumpsuit, in accordance with written policy governing the

transport of arrestees, Stauffer shackled her in a belly belt with handcuffs and also in

separate leg irons. By that time, Morreale had been detained at the Cripple Creek police

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