Perry v. City of Kinloch
This text of 680 F. Supp. 1339 (Perry v. City of Kinloch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Lawrence PERRY, and Terrance Benham, Plaintiffs,
v.
CITY OF KINLOCH, Missouri, Bernard L. Turner, Individually and in his capacity as Mayor, Steven Haynes, Individually and in his capacity as Chief of Police, Willie Ealy, Individually and in his capacity as a Sergeant with the Kinloch Police Department, and Leroy Noah, Johnnie Mae Bryant, William Whitley, and Beverly Noldon, Individually and in their capacities as members of the Board of Aldermen, Defendants.
United States District Court, E.D. Missouri, E.D.
Richard A. Barry, III, Rothman, Sokol & Adler, St. Louis, Mo., for plaintiffs.
Lawrence Perry, pro se.
Lloyd J. Jordan, Bussey and Jordan, St. Louis, Mo., for defendants.
MEMORANDUM
FILIPPINE, District Judge.
This matter is before the Court for a decision on the merits. The evidence was presented to a jury which then answered special interrogatories under Fed.R.Civ.P. 49. The Court adopts this entire memorandum and order as its findings of fact and conclusions of law pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 52 and 49.
Plaintiffs' claims arise from their discharge as police officers with the City of Kinloch after a dispute concerning the reporting of an automobile accident. Plaintiffs sued the City of Kinloch, the Mayor, Chief of Police, a sergeant in the Kinloch Police Department, and the Kinloch Board of Aldermen. Sergeant Willie Ealy and Alderman William Whitley were dismissed *1340 as defendants at trial. The city officials are sued in their individual and official capacities. Plaintiffs initially asserted that their discharges violated their first amendment and fourteenth amendment rights. They withdrew the fourteenth amendment claims during the jury instruction conference.
I.
At approximately midnight on January 17, 1985, plaintiff Benham was dispatched to investigate an automobile accident reported by William Whitley, a member of the Board of Aldermen. Whitley stated that he had parked his car in front of a friend's house and when he returned to the car, it had been damaged.
Benham filed his police report on January 18, 1985.
Owner of vehicle # 2, identified as:
Whitley, William B/M 5532 King Kinloch, Mo. 63140 HPN 524-2651stated he was at a friend's residence and when he return to his vehicle he found the front end damaged. Driver stated he not heard or seen anything.
Investigation at scene revealed the front end of vehicle # 2 to be moved approximately 7" to the left. Vehicle was apparently struck on the right front corner. Further investigation revealed no tire marks or skid marks on lawn of residence that vehicle was parked in front of. No parts of either vehicle could be located at scene, nor could any paint transfer be detected on vehicle # 2.
A utility pole, # K1-4, located immediately north of the victim's vehicle, displayed no signs of damage, nor did a tree, located approximately 15' east of vehicle and 5' south of utility pole.
Although the diagram accompanying the report shows a utility pole directly in front of and very close to the front passenger corner of the automobile, Benham testified at trial that the utility pole was five feet in front and fifteen feet to the side of the car. Benham testified that the damage to the front passenger corner could not have happened as Whitley described because of the position of the utility pole. This inference, however, was questionable from the limited evidence before the Court.
About five days after Benham filed his report, he discovered that another report gave a less detailed account of the automobile accident.
The owner of vehicle # 2 states that he parked his vehicle in front of 5700 ... at about 11:30 P.M. and upon his return to same at about 12:20 A.M. he observed the vehicle damage. No witnesses found.
Vehicle # 2 is owned by William Whitley of 5532 King, Kinloch, Mo. 63140.
The second report was prepared by Willie Ealy, a sergeant in the Kinloch Police Department, who was on duty the night of the accident and saw the damaged car. Ealy's report is dated January 18, 1985, but Ealy testified that it was written sometime between January 18 and January 21.
Ealy prepared his report in response to questions by the Police Chief. The Chief apparently found Benham's report in the Chief's basket and asked Ealy if he reviewed the report in accordance with the usual procedure. The report had somehow gone to the Chief without Ealy's prior review, and Chief Haynes told Ealy to look at the report to see if he saw anything wrong. Ealy testified that Benham's report contained speculative narration concerning the lack of paint transfer and debris. Further, it was unusual to attach a full page diagram in this type of accident. The diagram inaccurately placed both the driveway, and the car, which was too far to the right so that it was half off the street.
Ealy discussed the accident with Benham, who stated that he would not "do [Alderman Whitley] any justice" unless Whitley publicly apologized for cursing Benham at the time of the investigation. Although both Benham and Whitley testified that they did not argue at the scene, Ealy's testimony is corroborated by a report submitted by Benham, plaintiff's exhibit 10, which quotes Ealy as telling Benham that Whitley was sorry for the way he had treated Benham at the time of the *1341 investigation. These facts are further corroborated by the testimony of the records room officer, Michael Abernathy, that Benham said he was angry at defendant Whitley for cursing at Benham. The Court credits Ealy's testimony.
Michael Abernathy, who is now with the Pagedale Police Department, was in charge of the Kinloch records room at the time the reports relevant to this case were prepared. Abernathy was a credible witness for defendants, although he was disciplined by Chief Haynes several times during his employment with Kinloch. Abernathy testified that it is ordinary procedure to review police reports and not uncommon for police reports to be "kicked-back" because of errors. Final reports are mailed to the Missouri Highway Patrol.
Abernathy stated that Benham's report was irregular because it contained a full page diagram and because it contained speculative narration about the car being shifted seven inches to the left and having "apparently" been struck on the right corner.
Abernathy was confronted by plaintiffs several times about the reports. Benham threatened to hurt Abernathy if he sided with the Chief, and Perry repeatedly contacted Abernathy to urge him to join sides with plaintiffs in their dispute with the Chief. Plaintiffs urged Abernathy to mail the Ealy report to the Missouri Highway Patrol. When Abernathy refused, Benham mailed the Ealy report, with which Benham disagreed, to the Missouri Highway Patrol.
Once plaintiffs discovered the Ealy report they prepared yet another report, plaintiff's exhibit 10, which listed the incident as "forgery/Filing a False Report/Tampering with a Public Record" and listed Abernathy as the person who discovered the crime. The report chronicles the events leading to the two reports and implicates Chief Haynes and Alderman Whitley in a scheme to substitute the Ealy report for the Benham report. Plaintiff's exhibit 10 was signed by plaintiffs, Abernathy, and patrolman James Jones.
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680 F. Supp. 1339, 1988 WL 16120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perry-v-city-of-kinloch-moed-1988.