Patton v. Self

952 So. 2d 874, 2007 WL 675721
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 7, 2007
Docket06-1029
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 952 So. 2d 874 (Patton v. Self) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patton v. Self, 952 So. 2d 874, 2007 WL 675721 (La. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

952 So.2d 874 (2007)

Mary Smith PATTON
v.
David SELF and William Hadlock.

No. 06-1029.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

March 7, 2007.

*875 Anselm N. Nwokorie, Brian G. Smith, Tikisha Y. Smith, Smith & Nwokorie, Bastrop, LA, for Plaintiff/Appellee, Mary Smith Patton.

Ronald J. Fiorenza, H. Bradford Calvit, Provosty, Sadler, deLaunay, Fiorenza & Sobel, Alexandria, LA, for Defendant/Appellant, David Self and William Hadlock.

Court composed of ULYSSES GENE THIBODEAUX, Chief Judge, SYLVIA R. COOKS, and OSWALD A. DECUIR, Judges.

COOKS, Judge.

The Defendants, David Self and William Hadlock, appeal the trial court's judgment which found the rights of Plaintiff, Mary Smith Patton, were violated during the arrest of Plaintiff for traffic infractions. The trial court awarded Plaintiff $20,000.00 for the violation of her civil liberties and any other damages suffered. For the following reasons, we affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On September 29, 2001 at approximately 2:30 a.m., the Plaintiff, Mary Smith Patton, was driving her pick-up truck west on San Antonio Avenue in Many, Louisiana. Officers David Self and William Hadlock of the Many Police Department stated they observed Plaintiff driving off the right edge of the roadway and then crossing the centerline. Officer Hadlock had been alerted that a sedan-type automobile was being driven in an improper manner, and was dispatched to that immediate area when he saw Plaintiff's alleged traffic infractions. Officer Self was driving east on San Antonio Avenue to meet with Officer Hadlock when he observed Plaintiff's vehicle.

Officer Self made a U-turn in the parking lot where Officer Hadlock's police unit was sitting and began following Plaintiff's mid-sized red pick-up truck, with Officer Hadlock following behind. The Officers observed Plaintiff make a right at the intersection of Church Street and San Antonio Avenue[1], continue down San Antonio Avenue and cross the center line again. At that point, Officer Self activated his lights to signal to Plaintiff to pull over. Plaintiff slowed and pulled over onto the right parking lane and curb of San Antonio Avenue immediately before Sorelle Street. She then slowly turned off of San Antonio Avenue onto Sorelle Street and stopped her vehicle when it became parallel with the curb of Sorelle Street.

Both officers then approached the vehicle and instructed Plaintiff to exit the *876 truck. Both officers stated that as they approached the vehicle they detected the odor of alcohol coming from the cabin of the truck. They also stated Plaintiff had slurred speech and bloodshot eyes. Plaintiff remained in the vehicle and repeatedly asked through her rolled down window why she had been stopped. The officers continued to verbally instruct the Plaintiff to exit the vehicle. Plaintiff rolled her window back up to a gap of about three inches, locked the doors and remained inside. The officers became more aggressive in their demands for Plaintiff to exit the vehicle. Officer Self then shouted at Plaintiff to "look at me!" When Plaintiff looked toward him, Officer Self quickly sprayed pepper spray through the gap in the window. Eventually, Plaintiff unlocked the door and was quickly grabbed by the officers. She continued to ask the officers why she was being stopped, but did verbally assert that she would exit the vehicle. Before being allowed to exit, Plaintiff was physically removed by the officers and forced to the ground, face down, and arrested for driving while intoxicated, failure to drive on the right side of the road, resisting an officer, and for running a red light.[2] No field sobriety test was executed and Plaintiff refused to submit to a breathalyzer test at the Many Police Department.

The stop and arrest was recorded by video camera mounted on the dashboard of Officer Self's vehicle. However, the alleged traffic violations giving rise to the stop were not on video tape. Plaintiff did not admit to the alleged traffic violations and chose to go to court to oppose them.

A few days prior to her criminal trial on the traffic violations, Plaintiff complained to the district attorney over the actions of the defendants during the arrest. No action was taken.

On January 23, 2002, the various traffic offenses were tried and heard in the district court. The district court judge found plaintiff guilty of crossing the center line, but found her not guilty of the other offenses. As there was no video of the alleged driving infraction, the conviction was based on the testimony of the arresting officers.

The following day, the Louisiana Department of Public Safety, Office of State Police, began investigating plaintiff's allegations of police misconduct. A report was issued finding the complaint was unfounded and that the officers were left with "no option other than physical force to effect the arrest."

On September 20, 2002, Plaintiff filed a suit for damages suffered as a result of the actions of Officers Self and Hadlock, who were named as defendants. Plaintiff argued that "during the arrest process, petitioner was sprayed with a chemical, forcibly removed from her vehicle and thrown to the ground." All of these actions, Plaintiff contended, were "unwarranted and excessive." The petition alleged Plaintiff suffered "personal injuries including to her neck, back, hip, thigh, knee and eye."

The suit went to trial on May 4, 2006. The trial court gave extensive, written reasons for finding in favor of Plaintiff. It held that the Defendants did not have probable cause to stop Plaintiff, and then used excessive force to effectuate the arrest. After determining that there was no probable cause to stop Plaintiff, the trial court addressed the excessive force claim:

*877 These findings render baseless, and heighten to a more egregious degree, the excessive use of force by the Defendants as spraying Plaintiff with pepper spray, pulling her out of the vehicle against her will and throwing her to the ground to be handcuffed. Curiously, the other officers in the video did not seem to share the same measure of concern over the Plaintiff. In the Court's opinion, spraying her with pepper spray while she was locked in a truck was void of logic. To do so to a suspect under these conditions does not pop locks on the vehicle doors or morph car windows into rice paper. Plaintiff posed no physical threat whatsoever to the officers necessitating deployment of pepper spray and by doing so did they abuse their police power given to them to protect the City of Many while its residents slept. The pepper spray also doomed their opportunity to conduct a field sobriety test before the impartial eye of the camera giving their allegations of intoxication a chance at credibility. After Plaintiff unlocked the door and was still blinded and at the height of the burning effects of the spray upon her eyes, nose and throat, she resisted further because, in this Court's view, she was disoriented under the circumstances and unable to maneuver herself out of the truck. The Defendants, while trying to pull her from the vehicle, continued their directives to exit, to which she responded, "OK, I need a minute . . ." Plaintiff consented by this point, but the officers, likely influenced by anger, chose to throw the Plaintiff to the ground, face down, absent any sign of threat to officer safety. Defendants claim she began "reaching to her right . . ." when locked inside the vehicle, but this Court finds this allegation untruthful so as to account for their use of force.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
952 So. 2d 874, 2007 WL 675721, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patton-v-self-lactapp-2007.