Phillip C. Penny, Kurtis Schilk, and Robert Tebbetts v. The City of Memphis and City of Memphis Civil Service Commission

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 12, 2008
DocketW2007-00861-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Phillip C. Penny, Kurtis Schilk, and Robert Tebbetts v. The City of Memphis and City of Memphis Civil Service Commission (Phillip C. Penny, Kurtis Schilk, and Robert Tebbetts v. The City of Memphis and City of Memphis Civil Service Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Phillip C. Penny, Kurtis Schilk, and Robert Tebbetts v. The City of Memphis and City of Memphis Civil Service Commission, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON October 12, 2007 Session

PHILLIP C. PENNY, KURTIS SCHILK, AND ROBERT TEBBETTS v. THE CITY OF MEMPHIS AND CITY OF MEMPHIS CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION

An Appeal from the Chancery Court for Shelby County No. CH-06-0108-2 Arnold Goldin, Chancellor

No. W2007-00861-COA-R3-CV - Filed March 12, 2008

This case involves the termination of a municipal police officer. The police department received a report on an attempted suicide by a mental patient. The appellant officer and other officers responded. When the officers arrived at the scene, the suicide victim was sitting on his front porch, bleeding from self-inflicted wounds. As the officers approached the individual, he tried to flee. Attempting to gain control over the individual, the officers repeatedly struck him with their police batons. The individual ran from the police and fell in the street. The officers again struck him with batons and handcuffed him while he was on the ground. The appellant officer held him on the ground by placing his baton across the back of his shoulders. Shortly afterward, the individual stopped breathing and died of a heart attack. After an investigation, three of the officers, including the appellant, were terminated for using excessive force in this incident. The terminations were upheld by the municipal civil service commission. The three officers then filed a petition for writ of certiorari, claiming that the commission’s decision was arbitrary and unsupported by substantial and material evidence. The trial court granted the petition as to two officers and reversed their terminations. However, it denied the petition as to the appellant officer because his termination was based on his disciplinary history as well as his conduct during the incident in question. The terminated officer now appeals. We affirm, finding that the commission’s decision to uphold the officer’s termination was supported by substantial and material evidence in the record.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court is Affirmed

HOLLY M. KIRBY , J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which DAVID R. FARMER , J., and JOHN EVERETT WILLIAMS, SP . J., joined.

Thomas E. Hansom and Leigh H. Thomas, Memphis, Tennessee, for the Appellant, Kurtis Schilk.

Elbert Jefferson, Jr., City Attorney, and Gerald L. Thornton, Senior Assistant Attorney, Memphis, Tennessee, for the Appellee, City of Memphis. OPINION

On April 19, 2003, Petitioner Phillip Penny (“Officer Penny”), Petitioner Robert Tebbetts (“Officer Tebbetts”), and Petitioner/Appellant Kurtis Schilk (“Officer Schilk”) were on duty as uniformed police patrol officers for the City of Memphis Police Department. Early that evening, a total of five officers, including Officers Schilk, Penny, and Tebbetts, were dispatched to a residence at 1115 South Rembert, Memphis, Shelby County, Tennessee, in response to an attempted suicide by a citizen identified as having a mental condition. When the first officers arrived at the home, they encountered Denvey Buckley (“Buckley”) on the front porch of the home. Buckley was bleeding from multiple self-inflicted cuts about his arms and neck. It was later discovered that Buckley had also ingested liquid bleach and had been vomiting.

At some point, Buckley went back into his home. The second patrol car arrived, and all of the officers conferred and put on latex gloves. Buckley, unarmed, came back out onto the porch. The officers, fearing that Buckley would obtain a weapon in the house or take other adverse action, decided not to allow Buckley to re-enter the house.

As the officers approached the house, Buckley apparently realized that they intended to restrain him and tried to flee into his home. The officers tried to prevent Buckley from going back into the home, and Buckley resisted. This resulted in a struggle on the porch between Buckley and the officers. In order to gain control of Buckley, several of the officers, including Officer Schilk, began to hit him with their police batons, also called “night sticks,” telling him to stay calm and that they were trying to help him. One officer sprayed Buckley with chemical spray. These efforts proved fruitless, and Buckley broke away from the officers. He jumped over a wall along the porch and headed toward the street. In doing so, Buckley fell in the street in front of his home.

After Buckley fell in the street, the officers caught up with him and again hit him with their batons and attempted to handcuff him. While Buckley was down on the road in a “push-up” position, Officer Schilk tried to keep Buckley on the ground by putting his baton across Buckley’s shoulder blade and neck area. Soon after Buckley was subdued, the officers noticed that he had stopped breathing. They immediately alerted the emergency medical technicians (“EMTs”) who were already present. The EMTs were unable to resuscitate Buckley, and he died on the scene.

Afterward, the Police Department conducted an internal investigation of the incident.1 As part of the investigation, statements were taken from the officers involved, and an autopsy was performed. The autopsy showed that Buckley sustained five wounds to his upper torso that were consistent with baton strikes. The medical examiner was of the opinion that Buckley had an enlarged heart, that he had suffered a heart attack during the incident, and that he died as a result of his heart problem and not from either his self-inflicted wounds or the police officers’ actions.

1 The Attorney General’s office conducted an investigation as well. It concluded that the force used did not constitute criminal conduct and, therefore, did not indict these officers for Buckley’s death.

-2- Subsequently, the City of Memphis (“City”) charged Officers Penny, Schilk, and Tebbetts (collectively, “Petitioners”) with use of excessive force in violation of police department DR-301.2 No charges were brought against the other officers. In addition, Officer Schilk was charged with inappropriate personal conduct in violation of DR-104 for shouting profanities at bystanders.3 On December 18, 2003, an administrative hearing was conducted by Deputy Chief Janice C. Pilot (“Chief Pilot”). After this hearing, all three officers were terminated from their employment with the City for the use of excessive force. In addition, Officer Schilk was given a five (5)-day suspension for violation of DR-104. The officers timely appealed to the Civil Service Commission Board (“the Commission”).

The Commission’s hearing was held on August 5, 2005. At the hearing, the City sought to prove that Officers Penny, Schilk, and Tebbetts used excessive force to restrain Buckley. The Commission first heard testimony from Sergeant Vincent Beasley (“Sergeant Beasley”), an officer at the police training academy. In his work at the training academy, Beasley said, he trained officers on the “deadly force continuum,” that is the degree of force required in various situations. Sergeant Beasley said that verbal communications were to be used first; if they do not yield compliance from a suspect, then chemical spray or the baton may be used. He indicated that the baton was considered a defensive weapon, “used to keep people off of you.” Deadly force is authorized only when a suspect threatens bodily harm to the officer or someone else, including themselves. In using the baton, Sergeant Beasley said, officers are trained to strike with the baton on five “motor points” near the joints on the suspect’s arms and legs; this causes sufficient pain to be effective but results in the least amount of permanent damage. He acknowledged that, although officers are not trained to use the baton on the torso, there may be situations when this might occur. He also conceded that a strike

2 DR 301 Excessive Force states:

A.

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Phillip C. Penny, Kurtis Schilk, and Robert Tebbetts v. The City of Memphis and City of Memphis Civil Service Commission, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillip-c-penny-kurtis-schilk-and-robert-tebbetts--tennctapp-2008.