Nathaniel Hatchett v. City of Detroit

495 F. App'x 567
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 17, 2012
Docket10-1718
StatusUnpublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 495 F. App'x 567 (Nathaniel Hatchett v. City of Detroit) 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
Nathaniel Hatchett v. City of Detroit, 495 F. App'x 567 (6th Cir. 2012).

Opinions

KETHLEDGE, Circuit Judge.

In 1998, a Michigan court convicted Nathaniel Hatchett of carjacking, armed robbery, kidnaping, and first degree criminal sexual conduct. Ten years later, the Innocence Project at Thomas M. Cooley Law School uncovered a DNA report, potentially favorable to the defense, that the prose[569]*569cution had not disclosed to Hatchett. Hatchett was thereafter- released from prison. He later filed suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 in federal district court, alleging that the city of Detroit, the city of Sterling Heights, Macomb County, various individual officers and supervisors, and the assistant prosecutor had each violated his due-process rights. The district court granted summary judgment to the defendants on all of Hatchett’s claims. We affirm.

I.

In November 1996, a young man attacked a woman as she was getting into her car in Sterling Heights, Michigan. He threatened her life, drove her to a side street, raped her, and left her as he drove off in her car. The victim called the police and went to the hospital, where the staff collected semen from her underwear.

Three days later, Officer Kenneth Williams of the Detroit Police Department spotted Nathaniel Hatchett, along with four passengers, driving the victim’s car. Officer Williams stopped Hatchett and questioned him at Detroit police headquarters, where supervisor Hilton Napoleon was present. Williams then turned Hatchett over to Sterling Heights police officers Richard Van Sice and Jeffrey Plaunt, who questioned Hatchett for several hours. Finally, Hatchett confessed to the rape.

Before Hatchett’s trial, DNA testing showed that the semen collected from the victim did not originate from Hatchett or the victim’s husband. Hatchett alleges that Officer Van Sice and Eric Kaiser, the assistant prosecutor handling his trial, each received the results from the husband’s DNA test. Neither Hatchett nor his attorney, however, received notice that the husband was excluded. Despite these results, Kaiser minimized the significance of Hatchett’s DNA exclusion during his closing argument, saying, “we can’t speculate whether another person, her husband, the Lone Ranger created vaginal deposits that were eventually testedf.]” [Trial Tr. at 250-51.]

Hatchett was convicted after a bench trial and sentenced to 25 to 40 years in prison. On appeal, the State argued that the semen might have originated from the victim’s husband. The Michigan Court of Appeals affirmed Hatchett’s conviction.

Ten years later, the Innocence Project at Thomas M. Cooley Law School uncovered the report excluding the victim’s husband. The court granted Hatchett’s motion for a new trial, and the State dropped the charges. Hatchett then brought a § 1983 action in federal district court, basing his claims on two primary allegations of misconduct: first, that Assistant Prosecutor Kaiser and Officer Van Sice deliberately withheld the results of the husband’s DNA test; and, second, that Hatchett’s confession was coerced by Sterling Heights officers and Officer Williams. The defendants fall into four groups: the City of Detroit defendants, including the City of Detroit, Officer Williams, and Lieutenant Napoleon; the Sterling Heights defendants, including the City of Sterling Heights, Officers Van Sice and Plaunt, and police sergeants Michael Reece and Scott Lucas; the Macomb County defendants, including Macomb County and Macomb County Prosecutor Carl Marlinga; and finally, former Assistant Prosecutor Eric Kaiser. The district court granted summary judgment on all counts to all defendants. Hatchett appeals.

II.

A.

Hatchett argues that the district court erred in granting summary judgment on his claims surrounding his confession. He alleges that Van Sice, Plaunt, and Williams [570]*570fed him details of the crime and coerced him to confess falsely, in violation of his due-process rights. Hatchett also says that Officer Napoleon approved the Detroit interrogation and that Napoleon was deliberately indifferent in his supervision and training of the officers who conducted it. Similarly, Hatchett alleges that Sergeants Reece and Lucas were deliberately indifferent regarding the Sterling Heights interrogation. Finally, Hatchett asserts claims of municipal liability against Detroit and Sterling Heights for their alleged practices of coercing false confessions.

But we are not the first court to hear Hatchett’s claim that his confession was coerced. At a hearing before his criminal trial (known as a “Walker ” hearing), Hatchett claimed that his confession was coerced and therefore should be suppressed. See generally People v. Walker, 374 Mich. 331, 132 N.W.2d 87 (1965). Williams and Van Sice testified at the hearing. Hatchett chose not to, even though the judge explained to him that his testimony could not be used against him at trial. After considering the evidence, the court found that Hatchett’s confession was voluntary. Hatchett could have appealed the ruling, but did not.

In this case, the district court held that collateral estoppel barred Hatchett from contesting the voluntariness of his confession. We review the district court’s application of collateral estoppel de novo. See Wolfe v. Perry, 412 F.3d 707, 716 (6th Cir.2005). In doing so we apply Michigan law, since “[fjederal courts must give the same preclusive effect to a state-court judgment as that judgment receives in the rendering state.” Buck v. Thomas M. Cooley Law School, 597 F.3d 812, 816-17 (6th Cir.2010) (citing 28 U.S.C. § 1738).

In Michigan, collateral estoppel has normally three elements: (1) a question of fact essential to the judgment was actually litigated and determined by a valid and final judgment; (2) the parties must have had a full and fair opportunity to litigate the issue; and (3) there must be mutuality of estoppel. See Storey v. Meijer, Inc., 431 Mich. 368, 429 N.W.2d 169, 171 n. 3 (1988). But the last element — mutuality— is inapposite to the question whether a determination in a criminal case has pre-clusive effect in a civil case. See Monat v. State Farm Ins. Co., 469 Mich. 679, 677 N.W.2d 843, 850 (2004). So we consider whether the first two requirements are met here.

Michigan courts treat a factual finding as to voluntariness pursuant to a Walker hearing as a final determination on the merits. See People v. Mann, 89 Mich. App. 511, 280 N.W.2d 577, 578 (1979); People v. Gray, 393 Mich. 1, 222 N.W.2d 515, 517 (1974). There was such a factual finding here, and the issue was actually litigated in the Walker hearing. Thus, the first element of collateral estoppel is met.

But Hachett argues the second element is not, because he did not have the husband’s DNA-test results at the Walker hearing.

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