Patricia Siders v. City of Eastpointe

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJuly 24, 2020
Docket19-1331
StatusUnpublished

This text of Patricia Siders v. City of Eastpointe (Patricia Siders v. City of Eastpointe) 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
Patricia Siders v. City of Eastpointe, (6th Cir. 2020).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION

File Name: 20a0429n.06

Case No. 19-1331

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT FILED Jul 24, 2020 PATRICIA SIDERS, ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk ) Plaintiff-Appellee, ) ) ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED v. ) STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR ) THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF CITY of EASTPOINTE, et al., ) MICHIGAN ) Defendants-Appellants. )

BATCHELDER, J., delivered the opinion of the court in which NALBANDIAN, J., joined. STRANCH, J. (pp. 16–25), delivered a separate dissenting opinion.

Before: BATCHELDER, STRANCH, and NALBANDIAN, Circuit Judges.

ALICE M. BATCHELDER, Circuit Judge. In this interlocutory appeal, two police

officers, in their individual capacities, appeal the denial of qualified immunity from claims of

excessive force, failure to intervene, and deliberate indifference to serious medical needs.

The main question in this case is whether a police officer dispatched to the night-time scene

of an alleged domestic-violence assault must permit the suspect: (1) to withdraw into a dark

minivan and close the door, then (2) to resist physical restraint by kicking the officer and clinging

to a seat, and finally (3) to expressly refuse the officer’s commands to submit to handcuffing. To

be more specific, the plaintiff contends that the officer used excessive force, in violation of her

clearly established constitutional rights, by: (1) seizing her bodily and physically removing her

from the minivan—rather than allowing her to remain in the minivan and close the door;

(2) overwhelming her resistance by brute force—rather than relenting when she kicked him and

clung to the seat; and (3) tasing her when she physically and verbally refused to comply after six No. 19-1331, Siders v. City of Eastpointe

orders to place her hands behind her back—rather than permitting her to remain un-handcuffed.

The officer claimed qualified immunity, meaning that he is immune from suit if his actions did not

violate the suspect’s constitutional rights, or if those rights were not clearly established, or if his

decisions, even if mistaken, were not wholly unreasonable under the circumstances.

To deny qualified immunity here would be to hold that a suspected domestic-violence

perpetrator has a clearly established constitutional right to thwart the responding officer by getting

into a car and closing the door, to resist restraint by kicking the officer and clinging to the car’s

seat, and to refuse the officer’s orders for handcuffing. There are no such rights. To be sure, a

reasonable person viewing the video of this incident could characterize the officer’s actions as

impatient, overzealous, and perhaps unnecessary. But whether we personally condone or condemn

the officer’s conduct is immaterial; the question is whether our constitutional precedent so clearly

forbids it that we cannot even construe the officer’s actions as a reasonable mistake. Even if we

were to agree that the officer was impatient or overzealous, his actions were not wholly

unreasonable under the circumstances, and those actions did not violate the suspect’s clearly-

established constitutional rights. Therefore, he is entitled to qualified immunity.

The plaintiff’s other accusations, that the other officer violated her constitutional rights by

failing to intervene and deliberately disregarding her serious medical needs, are so clearly refuted

by the video evidence as to render them specious. No reasonable juror viewing the videos could

conclude otherwise and, therefore, that officer is also entitled to qualified immunity.

We REVERSE and REMAND for issuance of a judgment consistent with this opinion.

I.

At about 10:45 p.m., on March 18, 2015, Melvin Siders called 911 on his estranged wife,

Patricia Siders. The City of Eastpointe police dispatcher broadcasted a call for officers to respond,

reporting: 911-caller and wife “are physically fighting” in the driveway, can hear wife “screaming

2 No. 19-1331, Siders v. City of Eastpointe

in the background,” caller says wife hit him, weapons unknown. R. 35-3 (police broadcast report).

A dashcam video from a responding officer’s cruiser recorded the events that follow.

A female officer, Rene Deladurantaye, was the first to respond. The area was dark, lighted

only by streetlamps and the lights from the police cruisers. Officer Deladurantaye encountered a

minivan, parallel parked at the curb. Melvin, a 30-year-old, 5’5”, 190 lb. African-American man

in a suit and tie, was standing in front of it. Patricia, a 28-year-old, 5’5”, 200 lb. African-American

woman in a tank top and jeans, was in the minivan but leaning out of the open driver-side rear

door. Three children (ages eight, five, and three) were seated inside the minvan.1 Melvin was

disheveled and holding a “club” by its center, in a non-threatening manner. A “club” is a

tradename for a metal bar that locks onto a car’s steering wheel to prevent or discourage theft of

that car. Officer Deladurantaye told him to put it down and he tossed it aside, claiming that Patricia

had attacked him with it. Officer Deladurantaye could see that Melvin had been struck in the face.2

While Melvin was calm and cooperative, explaining why he called 911 for help, Patricia was

yelling and antagonistic.

The second officer on scene was a male officer, Joseph Piro, who arrived almost

immediately after Officer Deladurantaye and, because of where he parked his cruiser, it was his

dashcam that recorded the on-scene events.3 Officer Deladurantaye directed Officer Piro to talk

with Patricia while she talked with Melvin. As Officer Piro approached Patricia, she withdrew

1 Certain physical characteristics that are not evident from the video were taken from the arrest report. They are included here for frame of reference but are not material to the case or this appeal. Nor are they disputed. 2 There is no dispute that Patricia had struck Melvin in the face before the officers arrived, or that Officer Deladurantaye could and did recognize that Melvin had been struck in the face. Patricia denied hitting him with the club. To avoid any disputes of potentially material facts, we will accept that she did not hit him with the club. 3 Officer Deladurantaye’s field mic recorded her conversations.

3 No. 19-1331, Siders v. City of Eastpointe

inside the minivan and tried to close the door.4 Officer Piro stopped approximately two-to-three

feet away from the minivan’s open side door, but extended his left leg straight out and put his left

foot in the door jamb to keep the door from sliding closed, and asked, conversationally, why she

was closing the door on him. Patricia snapped back, defiantly, “because I don’t want you to walk

up on me,” and appeared to kick his foot out of the door jamb as she tried again to close the door.5

Officer Piro immediately moved nearer to the open door and threatened: “Well, I’m gonna f***ing

walk up on you, okay? Close the door on me and you’re gonna get ripped out of this car.” At this

point, Officer Piro was standing with both feet on the street as close to the open door as possible;

he was standing fully upright (not leaning into the van) with his hands at waist level, slightly inside

the van, but not extended in front of him. It is possible that he attempted to touch, actually touched,

or even grabbed ahold of Patricia by her nearest extremity (arm, leg, etc.), if it was in his immediate

grasp, but it is clear from the video, and beyond question, that he did not bend, extend, or reach

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