Naef v. County of New Hanover

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. North Carolina
DecidedAugust 31, 2023
Docket7:22-cv-00179
StatusUnknown

This text of Naef v. County of New Hanover (Naef v. County of New Hanover) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Naef v. County of New Hanover, (E.D.N.C. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF NORTH CAROLINA . SOUTHERN DIVISION No. 7:22-CV-179-D

CHRISTIAN NAEF, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) Vv. ) : ORDER ) ' COUNTY OF NEW HANOVER; ) DR, LESHONDA WALLACE, individually ) and in her official capacity as Chair at Large ) of NEW HANOVER COUNTY HEALTH _ ) AND HUMAN SERVICES; EDWARD J. +) MCMAHON, individually and in his ) official capacity as SHERIFF OF NEW ) HANOVER COUNTY; KENNETH W. ) SARVIS, individually and in his official ) capacity as DEPUTY SHERIFF; ) E.D. LONG, individually and in his official ) capacity as DEPUTY SHERIFF; and ) JEFFREY ROHENA, individually and in ) his official capacity as DEPUTY SHERIFF, ) ) Defendants. )

On October 21, 2022, Christian Naef (“Naef” or “plaintiff’), then proceeding pro se, filed a motion to proceed in forma pauperis and proposed complaint asserting claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 [D.E. 1]. On November 21, 2022, after the court denied Naef’s application to proceed in forma pauperis [D.E. 4], Naef paid the filing fee. On January 30, 2023, defendants moved to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted [D.E. 19] and filed a memorandum in support [D.E. 20]. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6).! On March 27, 2023, Naef, now

1 The court declines to dismiss defendants E.D. Long, Leshonda Wallace, and New Hanover County based on Naef’s alleged failure to perfect service on these defendants. See Mem. Supp. Mot. Dismiss [D.E. 20] 28-30; cf. Gelin v. Shuman, 35 F.4th 212, 219-20 (4th Cir. 2022).

represented by counsel [D.E. 22], responded in opposition [D.E. 24]. On April 6, 2023, defendants replied [D.E. 26]. As explained below, the court grants in part the motion to dismiss, but allows Naef to file an amended complaint. I. Naefis a citizen and resident of New Hanover County, North Carolina (“NHC”). See Compl. [D.E. 1-1] J 1. Naef’s complaint concerns a policy which required anyone attending a public : meeting in an NHC building to wear a face mask during the COVID-19 pandemic. See id. at f] 6~7. Defendant Wallace was an NHC employee and instrumental in “the formation of the policy enforcing the mask requirement in her official capacity as Chair at Large for NHC HHS.” Id. at ff 3, 8. Wallace also presided over several public hearings Naef attended, where she established and enforced “the level of decorum under which the hearings would proceed, and she alone decided if and when an individual attending a hearing would be removed and the reasons therefore.” Id. at 411. Naef alleges that Wallace “poth personally and as Chair, favored the mask requirement in public buildings,” and allowed supporters of the mask requirement to exceed their allotted speaking time and not to wear a face mask properly at all times, while “repeatedly disfavor[ing]” opponents of the mask requirement “by instructing deputies to remove such individuals from the hearings for failure to wear a mask, failure to wear a mask in a manner she deemed proper, or for speaking beyond the time limits provided for comment.” Id. at ff 11-13, 16, 23, 25, 27. Defendants Sarvis, Long, and Rohena are NHC deputy sheriffs, and defendant McMahon is the NHC Sheriff. See id. at {| 4-5. McMahon “assigned or otherwise directed” Sarvis, Long, Rohena, and “other un-named Deputy Sheriffs” to provide security at the public hearings, and “instruct[ed] them to not allow any individual into the NHC HHS Building who was not wearing a mask, to remove (upon the instruction of defendant Wallace) those individuals attending the hearings

whom she desired to be removed, and/or to remove any attendee who the deputies otherwise singled out for failure to either wear a mask or to wear a mask properly.” Id. at { 9. On August 31, 2021, Naef attended a public hearing at the NHC HHS building “regarding, among other things, the revision, implementation and enforcement of rules governing mask requirements in public buildings in New Hanover County.” Id. at | 8. Naef “was clearly among those expressing opposition to the mask requirement.” Id. at { 15. Naef was scheduled to speak at the hearing. “[W]ithout warning, defendant Wallace directed deputies to remove Mr. Naef from the hearing by saying, ‘Get that man out of here; his mask slipped below his nose.’” Id. at Jf 16, 19. At Wallace’s direction, “several un-named deputies seized him, pulled his arm violently and dragged him to the ground.” Id. at § 17. Naef did not resist, but “the deputies pulled him up forcefully from the ground and roughly ushered him from the hearing, using excessive and unwarranted force, bruising plaintiff and injuring his shoulder in doing so.” Id. Naef alleges that Wallace “calculated” Naef’s removal to prevent him from speaking, “in keeping with defendant Wallace’s general policy in favor of the mask requirement and her general inclination against those in opposition to it.” Id. at J 19. On October 6, 2021, Naef was entering an NHC Board of Education public meeting when defendant Sarvis confronted Naef for not wearing a mask and told Naef “not to ‘make any trouble.” Id. at □□□ Before Naef could comply with the mask mandate, Sarvis “physically picked plaintiff up to the point that his feet were literally off the ground and carried him forcefully out of the building where the BOE hearing was being held, preventing plaintiff from attending it altogether, and making it clear in the process that defendant Sarvis disapproved of plaintiff's opposition to the mask requirement and that plaintiff was being prevented from attending the hearing because of his opposition to the mask requirement.” Id. at { 22.

On November 12, 2021, Naef “spoke in opposition to the mask requirement” at an NHC HHS public hearing. Defendant Wallace instructed deputies to remove Naef for exceeding his allotted speaking time. Id. at€27. Wallace, however, did not tell deputies to remove “several other people who spoke in favor of the mask requirement.” Id. ‘Defendants Sarvis, Long and Rohena were all present and directly involved in plaintiff s violent removal from the hearing . . . and his injuries . . . [and] deprived plaintiff of personal property (paperwork and a personally much valued chaplain’s hat) which were never returned to him.” Id. 928. Wallace filed a criminal complaint for trespass against Naef. See id. at] 29. At Naef’s trial, Rohena testified “that plaintiff was arrested to make an example of him.” Id. at 30. Ultimately, “the charge against plaintiff was dismissed . . . on grounds that no warning had been given to plaintiff prior to his arrest that he was trespassing upon state property during a hearing at which he was scheduled to speak.” Id. Count one of Naef’s complaint asserts a claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against Wallace for violating his First Amendment right to freedom of speech when she ordered him removed from the public hearings, and against NHC for failing to train Wallace and for acquiescing “to defendant Wallace’s repeated violation of the constitutional rights of those opposing the mask requirement so often that they became emblematic or a reflection of its general policy.” Id. at {J 33-40. Count two asserts a claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against Sarvis, Long, and Rohena for violating the Fourth Amendment by removing Naef from the October 6 and November 12 hearings and using excessive force in arresting him on November 12, 2021, and against Sheriff McMahon as their supervisor. See id. at {] 41-47.

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Bluebook (online)
Naef v. County of New Hanover, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/naef-v-county-of-new-hanover-nced-2023.