Nault v. Bazarewsky

CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedFebruary 26, 2018
Docket1:16-cv-11555
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Nault v. Bazarewsky, (D. Mass. 2018).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

__________________________________________ ) DONNAKAY NAULT, ) Civil Action No. ) 16-11555-FDS Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) ) TODD BAZAREWSKY, RICHARD ) HARVEY, ROBERT FERREIRA, ) and TOWN OF MIDDLEBOROUGH, ) ) Defendants. ) __________________________________________)

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER ON DEFENDANTS’ MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

SAYLOR, J. This is a civil rights action arising out of a confrontation between police officers and a grandmother in a grocery store parking lot. Plaintiff Donnakay Nault was at a Hannaford’s Supermarket in Middleborough, Massachusetts, with her daughter and four grandchildren. Nault disciplined one of the children in the store by pulling on his ear. Another shopper witnessed the episode and called the police to report suspected child abuse. Officers Todd Bazarewsky and Richard Harvey were dispatched to the store. Bazarewsky arrived first and found Nault in the parking lot attempting to load her groceries into her car. Bazarewsky approached her and began asking questions. Nault responded by expressing doubt that he was in fact a police officer. She initially declined to provide her license and registration and asked that Bazarewsky provide the name of his supervisor. After Bazarewsky threatened to arrest Nault for refusing to provide her license and registration, she relented. Nault then attempted to close the driver’s side of the door, allegedly hitting Bazarewsky in the shoulder. Eventually, Harvey pulled up in his marked police cruiser, and Bazarewsky went to speak with him while Nault remained inside her vehicle with the doors closed. Nault was not arrested that day. However, she later received a summons and a copy of a

criminal complaint filed in the Wareham District Court for assault and battery on a police officer and assault and battery with a dangerous weapon. At the district attorney’s request, the charges were eventually dismissed. Nault has now filed a complaint asserting claims for civil rights and constitutional violations and intentional infliction of emotional distress. Defendants have moved for summary judgment. For the following reasons, the motion will be granted in part and denied in part. I. Background Unless otherwise noted, the following facts are as set forth in the record and are undisputed.1 A. Factual Background

Donnakay Nault is a resident of Carver, Massachusetts. (Pl. SMF ¶ 1; Def. Resp. ¶ 1). On July 28, 2013, she was shopping with her adult daughter, Amanda, and her four grandchildren in the Hannaford’s Supermarket in Middleborough, Massachusetts. (Donnakay Nault Dep. at 16). Her grandchildren were “running up and down the aisles, playing with things, grabbing things, [and] screaming their brains out.” (Id. at 20-21). Nault attempted to speak with them, but they ignored her. (Id. at 18-19). Eventually, she “pulled on” a grandson’s ear “to get

1 Plaintiff disputes certain facts described in this section. However, to the extent that she has not offered any evidence in opposition, the Court will treat them as undisputed. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c)(1). him to pay attention and stop running up and down the aisles.” (Id. at 47).2 Another shopper, Renee Garbitt, witnessed the incident. She approached Nault after the grandson “began to scream and cry.” (Garbitt Dep. at 10-11). Garbitt told Nault, “[p]lease take your hands off that child.” (Id. at 11). Nault ignored Garbitt, who then said something along the lines of Nault being a “bad mother.” (Donnakay Nault Dep. at 21).3

Garbitt is a registered nurse and a licensed mental-health counselor. (Garbitt Dep. at 7). Because of her position, she is a “mandated reporter,” and is required to report suspected child abuse or neglect. (Id. at 17). Garbitt asked a Hannaford’s employee to use the store phone because her cell phone was not working. (Id. at 12). The store manager called 911 and handed the phone to Garbitt, who reported the incident as suspected child abuse. (Id.). Middleborough police officers Todd Bazarewsky and Richard Harvey were dispatched to the store for a well-being check. (Def. Ex. 4 at 1; Def. Ex. 5 at 4). Bazarewsky arrived first and entered the supermarket to speak with Garbitt, who gave a physical description of Nault. (Def. Ex. 4 at 1).

Meanwhile, Nault had finished shopping. (Donnakay Nault Dep. at 23). She began loading the groceries into the back of her car. (Id. at 27). She was “half in the car and half out of the car” when Bazarewsky pulled up in a cruiser. (Id. at 29). The parties dispute whether Bazarewsky’s cruiser was marked. (Id. at 30; Def. Ex. 4 at 1). Nault also contends that Bazarewsky “was in a uniform, but not one that I recognized as [belonging to] the Middleborough Police Department.” (Donnakay Nault Dep. at 28).

2 Earlier in her deposition, Nault denied pulling on that grandson’s ear. (Donnakay Nault Dep. at 19) (Question: Now, at any time during the shopping trip did you pull on [the grandson’s] ear at all? Answer: No.).

3 Later, Amanda “overheard a woman saying something about calling the police” and left the store with her four children. (Amanda Nault Dep. at 13-14). Bazarewsky approached Nault on the driver’s side of her car. He told her that there had been a complaint about her conduct with a child in the supermarket. (Def. Ex. 4 at 1). He first asked whether she had accompanied anyone else to the supermarket that day. (Donnakay Nault Dep. at 30). Nault replied that she had shopped with her grandchildren and daughter, but that

they had left earlier. (Id. at 31). Bazarewsky then asked whether there had been an incident in the supermarket. (Id.). Nault responded that she “wished to remain silent” and asked who Bazarewsky’s supervisor was. (Id. at 32). Nault contends that she “was not sure that he was a police officer” at that point; she recited the names of persons she believed to be Middleborough police officers, such as Lieutenant Dave Mackiewicz and Police Chief Bruce Gates, to test whether Bazarewsky was in fact an officer. (Id. at 32-33, 38). Bazarewsky stated that his supervisor’s name was not relevant and asked Nault to provide her driver’s license and vehicle registration. (Def. Ex. 4 at 1). Nault refused to produce either document and reiterated her request that Bazarewsky provide his supervisor’s name. (Id.). Bazarewsky replied that she would be arrested unless she provided her

license and registration, at which point she relented. (Id.; Donnakay Nault Dep. at 35). Bazarewsky then asked the name of her daughter, which she declined to provide. (Def. Ex. 4 at 1). Nault then attempted to close the driver’s side door of her car. (Id.; Donnakay Nault Dep. at 39). The parties dispute whether the car door struck Bazarewsky in the left shoulder. Defendants contend that Bazarewsky advised Nault that she could be arrested for assault for intentionally striking him with the door. (Def. Ex. 4 at 1). Officer Richard Harvey then pulled up in a marked police cruiser behind Bazarewsky’s car. (Donnakay Nault Dep. at 41). Bazarewsky walked away from Nault’s car to speak with Harvey while Nault locked herself in her car. (Id.). The two officers later returned to Nault’s car, and Harvey knocked on her window and asked her to roll it down so he could speak with her. (Id. at 42). Nault declined and stated that she “could hear him just fine as things were.” (Id.). She then asked for the names of the officers and their supervisor. (Id. at 43). Harvey

identified himself and Bazarewsky and stated that the officer in charge that day was Lieutenant Robert Ferreira, who was not on the scene. (Id. at 43-44). Harvey stated that he wanted to speak with Nault because the police had received a phone call concerning her behavior inside the supermarket. (Id. at 46).

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