Phyllis May, Administratrix of the Estate of Deborah Kirk, Deceased v. Franklin County Commissioners

437 F.3d 579, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 3528, 2006 WL 335471
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 15, 2006
Docket05-3188
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 437 F.3d 579 (Phyllis May, Administratrix of the Estate of Deborah Kirk, Deceased v. Franklin County Commissioners) 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
Phyllis May, Administratrix of the Estate of Deborah Kirk, Deceased v. Franklin County Commissioners, 437 F.3d 579, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 3528, 2006 WL 335471 (6th Cir. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

MOORE, Circuit Judge.

Deborah Kirk (“Kirk”) was murdered by her boyfriend Marvin Moss (“Moss”) in the early morning hours of August 14, 1998. During the conflict with Moss that culminated in her death, Kirk telephoned 911 three times, each time reaching one of the appellees in the Franklin County Communication Center (“Comm Center”). After Kirk’s second call, appellees dispatched a police cruiser to her residence. The police officer who arrived at the scene did not hear any signs of a dispute within Kirk’s apartment. When neighbors told the officer that they were not aware of any conflict inside the apartment, the officer cleared the call and left the scene. Unbeknownst to the officer, Moss was restraining Kirk inside the apartment, and their conflict continued after the officer left, with Moss eventually killing Kirk.

Appellant Phyllis May, the administra-trix of Kirk’s estate, filed suit in state court against, among others, appellees Franklin County, Franklin County Board of Commissioners, Sheriff Jim Karnes, Sgt. Earl Taylor, and Communications Technician (“Comm Tech”) Marino A. Susi (referred to collectively as “Franklin County”). May’s suit alleged a violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1983 as well as a wrongful death claim under Ohio law, and the case was removed to federal court. Advancing the “state-created danger” theory of state liability for private violence, May argued that the arrival and departure of the police without intervening in the conflict increased the risk of harm to Kirk, thereby violating her substantive due process rights. After discovery, appellees moved for summary judgment on all claims. The district court granted summary judgment *581 on the federal claim, and remanded May’s state-law claim to Ohio state court. Because we conclude that May has not produced evidence to show that Franklin County created or increased the risk that Kirk would be harmed, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.

I. BACKGROUND

Unless specifically noted, the following facts are not in dispute. Deborah Kirk’s relationship with Marvin Moss dated back to at least 1997. For much of their relationship, including early 1998, they lived together in Alabama, which was Moss’s home state. In April 1998, the couple came to Columbus because Kirk’s mother was sick with cancer. The couple lived with Brenda Sturgill, who was Kirk’s aunt, for part of their time in Columbus. Stur-gill reports that, although the couple argued, she did not see them physically fight. After Kirk got her own apartment in Columbus in late July 1998, the couple traveled back to Alabama to collect Kirk’s things and return them to Columbus. While in Alabama, Kirk asked Moss to wait behind for a few days before rejoining her in Columbus. During his police interview after he turned himself in, Moss stated that he and Kirk had been having problems at that time because of his drug addiction. Moss hitchhiked his way back to Columbus on August 9,1998, and stayed with Kirk in her Columbus apartment until he fled Columbus on August 14,1998. Between August 9 and August 18, Moss and Kirk spent time alone but also with Kirk’s friends and family.

Sometime on the night of August 13, 1998, Kirk and Moss began fighting while at Kirk’s apartment. Kirk placed three calls to 911 during the altercation. The Franklin County Comm Center received the first call at 11:06 p.m., but after the call was answered Kirk’s end of the line disconnected. Sgt. Taylor immediately called back Kirk’s apartment. Kirk told Taylor that there was a domestic problem, but she thought that the situation was under control. In this call, Taylor did not ask Kirk any of the eight questions required by the Franklin County protocol for handling domestic violence calls. Kirk’s conversation with appellees ended after Sgt. Taylor asked Kirk if the situation was “all taken care of,” to which Kirk responded, “Yes sir. I hope so.” Joint Appendix (“J.A.”) at 1761-62 (Dispatch Tr. at 1-2).

At approximately 11:23 p.m., the Comm Center received a second call from Kirk’s address. Comm Tech Susi, who was at that time unaware of the first call between Kirk and Taylor, answered Kirk’s second call, which lasted approximately one minute and thirty-eight seconds. The call indicated to Susi that an altercation was in progress at the residence. May argues that “[i]t is obvious from the tape recording of this phone call that Kirk was being violently assaulted,” Appellant Br. at 11, but appellees dispute that Susi was able clearly to discern what was happening. Appellees Br. at 6. Upon review, the transcript of the call clearly indicates that Kirk was being assaulted, that Moss was threatening to harm her further, and that Kirk was crying and was fearful. Susi testified at his deposition that during the actual call, however, all he could hear was a male voice and a female voice having a verbal argument. J.A. at 1506 (Susi Dep. at 29).

Susi filled out a cruiser “run card” after the second call, coding it as a “possible 20” (possible domestic disturbance) and assigning it a Priority 3, which is a mid-level priority used for domestic disputes where no violence is used or threatened. Susi took the run card to Dispatcher Lisa Birk-head Clark, who dispatched a Franklin Township police cruiser to the scene on a “possible code 20” within seven minutes of *582 receiving the run card. J.A. at 1764 (Dispatch Tr. at 4). At 11:31 p.m., the Comm Center received the third and final call from Kirk’s residence, which Susi answered. During the nineteen-second call, Susi heard a low voice that he could not understand, and people yelling. Susi thought the call suggested the-dispute was escalating, and so he stood up and got Clark’s attention, and told her that the call was going to be a “good domestic” disturbance call fitting all the criteria. J.A. at 1511 (Susi Dep. at 34). Clark then relayed to Franklin Township Officer Ratliff, the officer in the dispatched police cruiser, that the Comm Center had received an additional call from Kirk’s residence, and that the call was now “a good 20.” J.A. at 1765 (Dispatch Tr. at 5). Ratliff acknowledged the dispatch and verified that he was en route to the scene. Susi did not change the call’s priority code because the call had already been dispatched.

Officer Ratliff arrived at the scene at 11:37 p.m., six minutes after Kirk’s third 911 call. Accompanied by a worker from the apartment complex, Ratliff went to Kirk’s apartment and listened at the door, but he did not see or hear any signs of a struggle within the apartment. Ratliff knocked on Kirk’s door but received no answer. After verifying with the dispatcher that he had the correct address, he knocked on nearby apartment doors, and was told by a neighbor one floor up that no sound of any disturbances had come from Kirk’s apartment. After hearing nothing else from Kirk’s apartment, Ratliff cleared the call with the Comm Center about ten minutes after his arrival.

The following day Deborah Kirk’s body was discovered inside her apartment. The coroner later- determined that Kirk died of “blunt trauma to neck.” J.A. at 1813 (Coroner’s Report). Moss fled Kirk’s apartment the afternoon of August 14 and drove back to Alabama, where he turned himself in to police a few days later. He confessed to killing Kirk, and was transported back to Columbus.

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437 F.3d 579, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 3528, 2006 WL 335471, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phyllis-may-administratrix-of-the-estate-of-deborah-kirk-deceased-v-ca6-2006.