Raymond Davis, Sr. v. City of Clarksville

492 F. App'x 572
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJuly 13, 2012
Docket11-5040
StatusUnpublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 492 F. App'x 572 (Raymond Davis, Sr. v. City of Clarksville) 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
Raymond Davis, Sr. v. City of Clarksville, 492 F. App'x 572 (6th Cir. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION

KAREN NELSON MOORE, Circuit Judge.

When Raymond Davis, a domestic-violence investigator for the City of Clarks-ville (“City”), first sued his employer in 2006 for racial discrimination in the workplace, the City settled the case. Two years later, Davis was terminated for allegedly making false statements in an incident report. Davis again sued the City raising claims of unlawful employment discrimination and retaliation under federal and state law. This time the district court granted summary judgment to the City on all claims, and Davis now appeals. For the following reasons, we AFFIRM.

I. BACKGROUND

Davis, an African American male, worked for the City of Clarksville Police Department from 1993 until his termination in March 2009. From 2000 until the time of his termination, Davis was employed as a domestic-violence investigator. On January 13, 2006, Davis sued the City of Clarksville alleging racial discrimination and a racially hostile work environment. Davis and the City settled in March 2007, and Davis continued his employment with the City. Alonzo Ansley was appointed as the interim Chief of Police on February 1, 2007, and was eventually ap-polated Chief of Police on September 25, 2007. R. 17-3 (Ansley Aff. at ¶ 2) (Page ID # 94).

Davis claims that since he settled his 2006 lawsuit, the racially hostile work environment has continued. Both on appeal and below he provides a litany of racial epithets and derogatory comments overheard within the Clarksville Police Department. Appellant Br. at 5-9; R. 27 (Pl.’s Opp. to Summ. J. at 3^4) (Page ID # 591-92). Davis does not dispute, however, that these incidents are the same ones that he identified in his initial lawsuit and that virtually all of them occurred before or during 2006. Since Ansley became Chief, Davis identifies only two instances of offensive remarks at work that he claims went unpunished: a racist text message that circulated in the department and a racially derogatory remark by Mike Parr, a member of the command staff. See Appellant Br. at 10-11; R. 27 (PL’s Opp. to Summ. J. at 5) (Page ID # 593). 1

Davis also claims that his work was overly scrutinized on three separate occasions since the settlement: (1) in February 2008 he inquired why officers did not arrest the primary aggressor in a domestic-violence report and was told no action would be taken; (2) in July 2008 he waited an extra day to complete an investigation and was accused of not doing his job, and he was questioned regarding why he used an incorrect case number on his report; and (3) in January 2009 he investigated a rape but ultimately determined one had not occurred and was then questioned about his decision. R. 17-1 (Resps. to *575 Interrogs. at 2-3) (Page ID # 71-72). He admits, however, that he received no discipline or adverse employment action as a result of any of these incidents, including when he provided an incorrect case number. When Davis explained that he was just using the number given to him by a fellow officer, his explanation of the mistake was accepted and no disciplinary action was taken. R. 29 (Pl.’s Stmt. Facts at 3) (Page ID # 669).

The main fact dispute, however, arises over an attempted traffic stop on December 17, 2008. Davis was driving northbound on Highway 41A in an unmarked police vehicle when he observed a white Caravan, driving at a high rate of speed, run the traffic light at the intersection with Cunningham Lane. R. 34-1 (Davis Dep. at 62-66) (Page ID #696-97). Davis attempted to conduct a traffic stop of the vehicle, including flashing his blue lights and at one point exiting his vehicle and approaching the van in an effort to get the driver to stop. See R. 17-1 (Resps. to Interrogs. at 17) (Page ID # 86). When the vehicle instead ran through another light, Davis testified at his deposition that he got back in his vehicle, activated his sirens, and radioed the police dispatch. R. 34-1 (Davis Dep. at 77-80) (Page ID # 700). Dispatch instructed him to “back off’ and notify the Oak Grove police department, which Davis did. R. 17-1 (Resps. to Inter-rogs. at 17) (Page ID # 86).

During the incident, a civilian driver named Lisa Hendrickson called 911 at approximately the same time as Davis was on the phone with dispatch. Compare R. 17-11 (Davis Call Log) (Page ID # 182) with id. (Hendrickson Call Log) (Page ID # 183). In the call, she indicates that an undercover officer had just tried to stop a vehicle at an intersection on Fort Campbell Boulevard (another name for Highway 41A) near the military base and had pulled a gun on the subject at the light. R. 17-11 (Hendrickson Call Log) (Page ID # 183). She later identified the location as the light near a Mapco Express and one of the gates to Fort Campbell, which she agreed was Jack Miller Boulevard. R. 17-10 (Pre-Decision Hr’g Tr. at 147-48) (Page ID # 176). Davis maintains that he was not near Jack Miller Boulevard during the incident and that this witness must have observed a different white Caravan or a different officer exit his vehicle and draw his weapon. See R. 32 (PL’s Stmt. Facts at 6) (Page ID # 672) (“The witness identified an officer other than Plaintiff.”).

Davis prepared several incident reports and arrest-warrant affidavits relating to this incident. In these reports, he explicitly states that “[a]t no time did I unholster my weapon.” R. 17-11 (Internal Report) (Page ID # 181). He also provides inconsistent accounts of when he exited his vehicle. Compare id. (“At 41A/Quinn I exited my vehicle.”) with id. (Incident Report) (Page ID # 187) (“[W]hen vehicle reached 41A/Pkwy affiant notified dispatchers of situation and exited vehicle.”). And the list of which traffic lights the white van ran through also varies from report to report. Compare id. (Internal Report) (Page ID # 181) (citing “Cunningham,” “Quinn,” and “Parkway”) and id. (Incident Report) (Page ID # 187) (same) with id. (12/17/08 Probable Cause Aff.) (Page ID # 192) (citing “Cunningham,” “Quinn,” “Parkway,” and “Ringgold”) and id. (12/18/08 Probable Cause Aff.) (Page ID # 198) (citing “Cunningham,” “Quinn,” “Parkway,” “Ringgold,” and “Lady Marion”); see also R. 34-1 (Davis Dep. at 87) (Page ID # 702) (testifying that he lost visual sight of van “between Ringgold Road and Lady Marion”).

Davis agrees that any time an officer unsuccessfully attempts to stop a vehicle, called a “nonpursuit,” 2 the police investi *576 gate the incident. R. 32 (Pi’s Stmt. Facts at 8) (Page ID # 674). Chief Ansley testified that the incident first went to Internal Affairs, which then sent the incident to the command staff for review. 3 R. 17-4 (Ans-ley Dep. at 26) (Page ID # 105). Because the command staff believed this was in fact a pursuit and had some concerns about the discrepancies in Davis’s reports, Chief Ansley initiated an internal investigation. Id. at 27 (Page ID # 106). He assigned the case to Lieutenant Ward, who in turn assigned it to Sergeant Timothy Saunders in the Professional Integrity Unit for investigation. Id.; see also R. 17-12 (Saunders Aff.

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492 F. App'x 572, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/raymond-davis-sr-v-city-of-clarksville-ca6-2012.