Potts v. City of Philadelphia

224 F. Supp. 2d 919, 2002 WL 2003056
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 29, 2002
Docket01 CV 3247
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 224 F. Supp. 2d 919 (Potts v. City of Philadelphia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Potts v. City of Philadelphia, 224 F. Supp. 2d 919, 2002 WL 2003056 (E.D. Pa. 2002).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

ANITA B. BRODY, District Judge.

On June 28, 2001, plaintiff, Robert Potts ( “plaintiff’ or “Potts”), instituted this action against the City of Philadelphia, former Philadelphia Police Commissioner John Timoney, and numerous police officers, both known and unknown (collectively, “defendants”), asserting multiple claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for violations of his rights under the Second, Fourth, Fifth and Fourteenth Anendments of the United States Constitution, and for various related state law claims. Potts’ claims stem from his arrest on November 18, 1999 by Philadelphia police officers for allegedly shooting a gun out of the window of his house.

On January 24, 2002, defendants moved for summary judgment on all claims. On January 29, 2002, Potts filed a motion for leave to file an amended complaint replacing the “unknown police officers” with two individually named officers, Jaison Potts and Stephen Blocker (“Officer Potts” and “Officer Blocker”) pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 15. These motions are now before me. I will grant plaintiffs motion to amend. 1 I find, however, that even with the amendment to the complaint, Potts cannot survive summary judgment on his claims.

1. Factual Background 2

Robert Potts is a 64 year old African American veteran who has been on Social Security Disability since 1978 due to multi- *927 pie medical conditions. At approximately 6:45 pm on November 18, 1999, Potts was sitting in a room on the first floor of his house at 5225 West Diamond Street in Philadelphia when he heard a loud bang. He went upstairs to the second floor of his house to investigate. He looked out the window and did not see anything unusual. Potts went back downstairs and decided to sit on the front porch of his house to smoke a cigar. (Dep. of Robert Potts, 33).

At this same time, Edna Laughinghouse (“Laughinghouse”), who lives two houses down from Potts, was standing outside her house, near the front steps. (Laughing-house Investigation Interview Record). According to Laughinghouse, she observed Potts fire a gun out of the second floor window of his house. 3 (11/18/99 Incident Report). She told her daughter to call the police to report that Potts had fired a gun out of his window. (11/18/99 Incident Report; Laughinghouse Investigation Interview Record). Based on this report, the police dispatcher put out a radio call to Philadelphia police officers in the area. (Dep. of Officer Potts, 16). Eight to ten officers responded to the radio call, arriving at 5225 West Diamond Street soon thereafter. Among the responding officers were Officers Potts and Blocker who eventually arrested plaintiff. (See id; Incident Report).

Laughinghouse was outside her house when the officers arrived on the scene. Officers Potts and Blocker spoke with Laughinghouse. She informed them that she had seen Potts firing a gun out of his window. (Dep. of Officer Potts, 21-23; Dep. of Officer Blocker, 74). Officer Potts and Blocker also talked to Justin Foster, a teenager who lived across the street from Potts. Foster reported to the officers that someone had fired a gun out of the window of Potts’ house. (Dep. of Officer Potts, 23, 51; Dep. of Officer Blocker, 74; 11/19/99 Incident Report).

After talking to Laughinghouse and Foster, several police officers, including Officers Potts and Blocker, walked up plaintiffs driveway and approached plaintiff who was still sitting on the front porch of his house. (Dep. of Potts, at 33-34). The officers asked Potts if he had fired a gun out of his window. (Plaintiffs Answer to Interrogatories, # 9). Potts responded, “No.” (See id).

Potts offers slightly conflicting statements about what happened next. In his answers to interrogatories, Potts stated that:

I was sitting on my porch when approximately 8-10 police officers walked onto my porch and asked if I had been shooting out my window. I told the policemen that I had not. I told the police they could go into my house.

(See id). At deposition, taken after he provided answers to interrogatories, Potts testified that:

[The] officers came up and said somebody called and said I was firing out a window. They asked me had I been firing a gun out the window, I told them no, they told me go in the house ...

(Dep. of Plaintiff, 33-34). When counsel for defendants questioned Potts further about whether or not he told the police they could enter his house, Potts stated:

[The police] told me to go in the house and, you know, when they told me to go in, I had nothing to hide so I, you know, *928 did not complain about, you know, going in the house and them coming in there.

(Dep. of Plaintiff, 41).

The officers entered Potts’ house. They did not have a search warrant. Officer Potts believed that the officers “had permission from Mr. Potts to go inside the house.” (See id). When asked at deposition what gave him that impression, Officer Potts responded, “[Plaintiff] wasn’t— he wasn’t very combative. He wasn’t evasive. He was very cooperative.” (See id).

Once inside, the officers asked plaintiff if he owned a gun. (Plaintiffs Answer to Interrogatories, # 9; Dep. of Officer Potts, 25). Plaintiff answered “yes” and told them that he had a permit for it. (See ,id). He retrieved the permit and showed it to Officer Potts who took the permit. (11/18/99 Incident Report). The officers asked plaintiff where he kept his gun, and he explained that it was upstairs. (See id.; Dep. of Plaintiff, 33-34). Plaintiff then went upstairs to the second floor of his house with several officers, including Officer Potts, and retrieved' the gun from a trash can at the end of his bed. (Plaintiffs Answer to Interrogatories, # 9; Dep. of Plaintiff, 33-34; Dep. of Officer Potts, 27). The gun was in a box along with a box of bullets. (Dep. of Plaintiff, 33-34). Officer Potts seized the gun and the bullets which he later turned over to the Property Department of the Philadelphia Police Department. (See id.; Property Receipt). One of the police officers also seized a hunting knife that plaintiff kept on a belt. (Dep. of Plaintiff, 34).

The officers told Po.tts to get his coat and then handcuffed him. (Dep. of Plaintiff, 35). They asked him if he took medication. Potts responded “yes.” The officers put his medication in a bag and brought it with them to the police station. (See id). The medication was to be taken every four to six hours. (Medication Schedule of Robert Potts). The officers were not violent in handcuffing Potts, nor in escorting him to the patrol car. (Dep. of Plaintiff, 44-45). Potts did not resist. (See id).

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Bluebook (online)
224 F. Supp. 2d 919, 2002 WL 2003056, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/potts-v-city-of-philadelphia-paed-2002.