Pinder v. Skero

375 F. Supp. 3d 725
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Texas
DecidedMarch 21, 2019
DocketCivil Action No. 4:16-CV-03479
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 375 F. Supp. 3d 725 (Pinder v. Skero) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pinder v. Skero, 375 F. Supp. 3d 725 (S.D. Tex. 2019).

Opinion

ANDREW S. HANEN, UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE

Before the Court is a motion for summary judgment filed by Defendants Brian Skero ("Skero") and Montgomery County, Texas ("the County") (together, "Defendants"). [Doc. 37]. Plaintiff Trevor Pinder ("Pinder") filed his opposition. [Doc. 41]. Pinder also filed a motion to strike an expert report attached to Defendants' motion [Doc. 40], to which no response was filed. Having considered the Parties' briefs, summary judgment evidence, and the relevant law, the Court GRANTS Plaintiff's Motion to Strike and GRANTS Defendants' Motion for Summary Judgment.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

On the night of November 29, 2014, Skero pulled over Pinder in a traffic stop that escalated into a physical conflict. Despite the inclusion of dash cam video evidence, this case involves highly disputed facts. How the escalation occurred and whether Skero's use of force was justified are both disputed.1

At approximately 12:40 a.m.2 on November 29, 2014, the video shows that Pinder was driving on Texas Farm to Market Road 1314 when Skero made a U-turn [Doc. 37-1 at 0:26] and pulled behind Pinder in his official patrol vehicle. [Id. at 1:30].3 The video shows Pinder made a right turn onto Texas State Highway 242 without using his turn signal, and Skero followed. [Id. at 1:34]. The video shows that Pinder rapidly accelerated, almost out of sight of Skero's dash cam, after which Skero struggled to catch up. [Id. at 1:41-2:14]. Pinder's vehicle drifted over the right lane stripe. [Id. at 2:13]. Pinder's car comes more clearly into view when he slowed down behind an eighteen-wheeler. [Id. at 2:15-25]. His car appeared to be tailgating the eighteen-wheeler, although Pinder alleges he was driving behind it at a safe distance. [Doc. 14 ¶ 18].

Pinder then made a left turn into a residential neighborhood as Skero engaged his vehicle's lights but not the sirens. [Doc. 37-1 at 2:25, 2:31]. Pinder stopped his vehicle on the side of the road. [Id. at 2:35-40]. Skero pulled over behind Pinder's car.

As Skero walked to Pinder's car, the audio indicates that Pinder initiated a call *731in his car.4 [Id. at 3:10]. Skero walked to the left side of the car and stopped at the driver's side, where he asked for Pinder's driver's license and insurance. [Id. at 3:17]. For approximately thirty seconds, Skero asked Pinder to hang up the phone four times. [Id. at 3:28-52]. Pinder did not do so. During one of these commands, Skero referred to Pinder by name. [Id. at 3:40]. Pinder alleges that Skero identified him without seeing his license or registration.5 [Doc. 14 ¶ 29]. Pinder finally hung up the phone when Skero told him to step out of the vehicle. [Doc. 37-1 at 3:59]. At that point, while still seated in the car, Pinder asks Skero what he did wrong. [Id. at 4:04, 4:06]. Skero responded, "For one thing you were doing 89 in a 60 and you were unable to stay in your lane." [Id. at 4:23]. Despite being asked to step out of the car, Pinder did not comply. Skero then asked Pinder to get out of the car two more times before he complied. [Id. at 4:07, 4:36]. As Pinder exited his vehicle, he continued to ask what he did wrong, to which Skero responded "I told you already" and that "when you come [sic] off 1314 and turned onto 242 and gunned it, then you caught up, got in behind that eighteen-wheeler, you were doing 89 miles an hour." [Id. at 4:43, 4:51].

Skero testified in his deposition that he also suspected Pinder of driving while intoxicated at this time and intended to conduct a field sobriety test: "[H]e's not listening to me, not listening to anything I'm asking him, other than give [sic] me his license. He did ask me why I stopped him. I told him. It's like he wasn't comprehending it. I could smell the alcohol. I could just look at him, he had red bloodshot eyes .... I had him walk to the back of his vehicle in front of my patrol car to do DWI field sobriety." [Skero Depo. Doc. 41-1 at 187:13-25]. Skero acknowledged that he did not tell Pinder he was planning to do a field sobriety test. [Id. at 188:1-3].

Pinder, upon exiting his car, walked behind the car. [Doc. 37-1 at 5:18-5:24]. Skero told him to keep his hands out of his pockets. [Id. at 5:24]. Skero then asked him to stand in a specific spot behind the vehicle and pointed to demonstrate where. [Id. at 5:27]. Pinder moved closer to the spot but not to the location indicated by Skero. [Id. at 5:31]. Skero pointed to the spot on the ground again and asked Pinder to stand there two more times. [Id. at 5:36, 5:42]. Pinder did not move from where he was standing, and instead took something out of his left jacket pocket and asked again what he had done wrong. [Id. at 5:42-45]. It is not apparent from the video what Pinder was taking out of his pocket, but their dialogue indicates it might have been a piece of candy.

P: What I do wrong, sir?
S: Don't be eating on that.
P: Question. Simple question.
S: Tired of having to tell you to stop eating on candy.

[Id. at 5:45-51]. Pinder attempted to put the substance in his mouth, and Skero grabbed Pinder's hand and pulled it away from his mouth, saying "stop." [Id. at 5:52]. Pinder alleges he was simply trying to eat candy. [Doc. 14 ¶¶ 53-55]. (Obviously, *732candy could be used to mask the smell of alcohol.) Skero later testified that he viewed this gesture as a potential threat, as he did not know whether it was actually candy or another substance, such as a narcotic or drug that could make Pinder more difficult to handle. [Doc. 41-1 at 196:17-197:25]. He did not voice any of these concerns during their interaction. After Skero initially grabbed Pinder's hand containing the substance, the video shows they began to struggle as Skero tried to gain control of both of Pinder's hands.

The two men can be seen struggling, and at one point Skero managed to grab both of Pinder's hands. [Doc. 37-1 at 5:52-53]. During the struggle, Skero told him "stop" and "don't do this" but Pinder continued to scuffle. [Id. at 5:52, 5:55]. At this point, Pinder managed to free his arm and pulled his right hand backwards. [Id. at 5:52]. The Parties dispute the significance of this arm movement. Pinder alleges, with no supporting evidence, that he pulled his hand away in a "reflexive action." [Doc. 14 ¶ 57]. Skero testified that he was trying to grab the object that Pinder was holding when he started to put it in his mouth, and "then he grab[bed] me and raise[d] his arm like he was going to punch me...." [Skero Depo. Doc. 41-1 at 188:21-24]. Skero avers that Pinder grabbed him and "brought his hand back up in a swinging motion," so Skero placed him in a chokehold. At this point they were still standing. [Id. at 189:20-23, 190:15-16]. Skero testifies that Pinder then grabbed the wire on his earpiece to his radio and elbowed Skero in the face, which is what led him to bring Pinder to the ground. [Id. at 189:20, 191:18-20, 192:5-8].

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Bluebook (online)
375 F. Supp. 3d 725, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pinder-v-skero-txsd-2019.