Okin v. Village of Cornwall-On-Hudson Police Department

577 F.3d 415, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 18422, 2009 WL 2500197
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedAugust 18, 2009
DocketDocket 06-5142-cv
StatusPublished
Cited by337 cases

This text of 577 F.3d 415 (Okin v. Village of Cornwall-On-Hudson Police Department) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Okin v. Village of Cornwall-On-Hudson Police Department, 577 F.3d 415, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 18422, 2009 WL 2500197 (2d Cir. 2009).

Opinion

POOLER, Circuit Judge:

Michele Okin appeals from a decision and order of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Colleen McMahon, Judge), entered October 26, 2006, granting defendants’ motion for summary judgment. The district court dismissed, as to all moving defendants, Okin’s claims that her Fourteenth Amendment rights to due process and equal protection had been violated.

We affirm the grant of summary judgment as to defendants Town of Cornwall, 1 Rusty O’Dell, and Edward Manion. As to Thomas Douglas IV, Michael Lug, Paul Weber, and Charles Williams, we affirm the grant of summary judgment on Okin’s equal protection claims. But, with regard to her due process claims, we hold that the conduct of Douglas, Lug, Weber, and Williams raises a genuine issue of material fact as to whether they implicitly but affirmatively sanctioned abuse of Okin by Roy Sears, and that those defendants, if found liable, would not be entitled to qualified immunity. We therefore reverse the grant of summary judgment on the due process claims. Moreover, we reverse the district court’s dismissal of Okin’s municipal liability claims against the Village of Cornwall-on-Hudson, as Okin raises a genuine issue of material fact as to whether the Village’s failure to train its police officers adequately, or the policies and customs that it has sanctioned, caused the individual defendants to violate Okin’s due process rights.

BACKGROUND

Plaintiff-appellant Michele Okin began a relationship with Roy Charles Sears in 1999. 2 Okin and Sears moved in together, *420 living in a house owned by Sears at 11 Taft Place, in the Village of Cornwall-on-Hudson, New York. They are the parents of twin children, born in May 2001. In the same year, according to Okin, Sears began to abuse her physically. Okin alleges that Sears was well known to local police officers with whom he socialized at a tavern of which he was part owner, the Leprechaun Inn, and she claims that Sears often bragged that he could get away with what he wanted in Cornwall.

According to Okin, Sears injured both her hands in October 2001, fracturing bones in her left hand and right index finger. She did not report this incident to the police and, according to her Affidavit in Opposition to Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment, she begged her primary care physician “not [to] tell anyone or record this on her records” because she “was in fear of [her] life and felt Sears was beyond the law.”

Thereafter, however, Okin repeatedly called for police assistance. Nevertheless, neither the Village of Cornwall-on-Hudson Police Department nor the Town of Cornwall Police Department 3 arrested Sears or interviewed him at any length regarding Okin’s allegations of abuse. Only one domestic incident report was filed.

The first reported violence occurred on December 23, 2001. Okin called 911 following an incident in which, according to Okin, Sears grabbed her neck and started to choke her. Okin testified at a deposition that she placed three calls to the dispatcher before Village of Cornwall-on-Hudson Police arrived at 11 Taft Place. Okin said to defendant Thomas Douglas IV, a Village of Cornwall-on-Hudson Police officer, “Can you please tell Roy to stop beating me. That is all I want.” In her bedroom, Okin showed Douglas bruises on her legs, which, according to Douglas’s incident report, “looked very old and in the process of healing.” At her deposition, Okin could not recall exactly when she sustained the leg injuries, but testified that Sears was at that time “hitting [her] every single day.”

According to Douglas’s incident report, Okin said that Sears had told her that he had had a conversation with defendant Charles Williams, the Village of Cornwall-on-Hudson Police Chief, in which Sears told Williams that he could not “help it sometimes when he smacks Michele Okin around” and that Okin was “a terrible mother and should have an order of protection against her own kids.” According to Douglas, Okin said that she then tried to call the police, but that Sears stopped her by grabbing her neck. Douglas added that he did not “observe any redness nor markings around her neck.” He also added that Okin “couldn’t keep still and her mental status was very awkward,” and that she told him she was “a manic depressant [sic] and also has panic attacks, and sees a psychiatrist.” According to Douglas, Okin repeatedly said she did not want to press charges and left the bedroom despite his request that she stay in the bedroom while he spoke separately with Sears.

Defendant Edward Manion, a Town of Cornwall police officer, arrived in a backup capacity. Okin also showed him the bruises on her legs. According to Manion, Sears denied inflicting the bruises. At his deposition, Manion testified that he too believed they were “old” bruises, and that this was the reason he did not arrest Sears, suggesting that he believed that *421 immediate arrest was mandatory only if the injury was very recent. He and Douglas did not discuss the bruises or the possibility of arresting Sears.

Holding one of the infants, Okin said “I better stop the kid from crying or I am going to get beat.” According to Douglas, he and Manion told Okin that “if she is being assaulted she needs to call the police then, not days or weeks later.” Okin, however, recalls that she retorted that Sears had that very day thrown a baby’s bottle at her and one of their children and had tried to choke her.

Douglas further reported that, when Okin heard Sears getting ready to leave the house with the children, she said, “Roy is going to take the kids and never come home” and that she wanted to press charges. According to Douglas, Manion told Okin “what she needed to do in order to press charges,” but “in the middle of describing the procedure to Michele, she just walked away” and joined Sears outside, before coming back inside and saying she did not want to press charges. Okin was “given a domestic incident report, and advised about [a telephone] help number to call for counseling.” Meanwhile, Sears announced that Okin was on medication that made her sleep and that she therefore could not take care of the children. Douglas concluded that no offense had been committed.

Douglas prepared a domestic incident report, which Okin signed. The domestic incident report indicates by check-mark that the “[circumstances of [t]his [c]ase” included “[fjorcible [restraint,” “[grabbing” and “[t]hrowing [i]tems.” The report states, among other things, that Okin alleged that she had been beaten by Sears and was afraid that her children would be too, that Okin was “on medication,” and that she “refused to sign charges.” Okin claims that, at the time she signed the report, it did not indicate that she did not want to press charges. Douglas wrote “[b]ruises” next to the box for “[i]njuries” on the domestic incident report, but he did not interview Sears about the bruises. Indeed, Okin, disturbingly, alleges that, to the extent that the officers talked with Sears, it was about football. Moreover, according to Okin, the officers were “very derogatory” toward her when she said she wanted to press charges, and this was why she walked away from them. 4

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
577 F.3d 415, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 18422, 2009 WL 2500197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/okin-v-village-of-cornwall-on-hudson-police-department-ca2-2009.