Reardon v. State of Mississippi

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Mississippi
DecidedJanuary 17, 2023
Docket3:22-cv-00050
StatusUnknown

This text of Reardon v. State of Mississippi (Reardon v. State of Mississippi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reardon v. State of Mississippi, (N.D. Miss. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF MISSISSIPPI OXFORD DIVISION

MATTHEW OLIVER REARDON

V. CAUSE NO. 3:22-CV-50-SA-JMV

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI, et al.

ORDER AND MEMORANDUM OPINION On April 6, 2022, Matthew Oliver Reardon initiated this civil action by filing his pro se Complaint [1]. On July 19, 2022, Reardon filed his First Amended Complaint [30], wherein he named the following Defendants: the State of Mississippi; Lafayette County, Mississippi; Lafayette County Chancery Court; Communicare; Mississippi Department of Mental Health; Lafayette County Sheriff’s Department; Joseph B. East; Dr. Sandy Rogers; Rachel Alcorn; Susan Beard; Sherry Wall; Jeff Busby; and David O’Donnell. The State of Mississippi and the Mississippi Department of Mental Health have each filed Motions to Dismiss [38, 43]. Reardon has not responded to the Motions [38, 43], but his deadline to do so has long passed. The Court is prepared to rule. Relevant Background Including the attachments, Reardon’s pro se Complaint [30] is 74 pages in length. It includes various allegations against the Defendants and, at times, is difficult to follow. Nevertheless, with that caveat, the Court will provide a brief background. According to his Amended Complaint [30], Reardon was prosecuted in state court for disorderly conduct and resisting arrest in November 2021. The charges arose from an incident between Reardon and his ex-wife, Phyllis Liz Crowder. The case proceeded to trial, and Reardon was convicted. Although the theory is not completely clear, Reardon seemingly believes that the charges were the result of a conspiracy against him. He then apparently began appearing at the Lafayette County Clerk’s Office on multiple occasions, seeking documents and becoming agitated with Clerk’s Office employees. This allegedly occurred on multiple occasions—so much so that the Lafayette County Board Attorney, David O’Donnell, emailed Reardon regarding the issue. O’Donnell’s email, dated December 3, 2021, provided in pertinent part:

Finally, the clerks report that you have been verbally abusive toward them and that the behavior seems to be increasing in frequency and intensity. There is no need for behavior that disrupts court business and decorum and, if it continues, the judges of the court may pursue their options to address the behavior.

[30] at p. 21. Reardon’s confrontation with the Clerk’s Office staff apparently reached a tipping point on December 6, 2021. Reardon alleges that, on that date, he “discovered a ‘mysterious’ altering of court records regarding assignment of judge in both of his filed and active matters in Lafayette County Circuit Court.” Id. Reardon’s allegations continue: 75. Plaintiff proceeded to the Lafayette County Circuit Court Circuit Clerk’s Office and began asking questions in to how this could have happened and who would have been able to change it, normal questions that should be expected of any concerned citizen. Plaintiffs feels he exhibited a calm, non- confrontational approach to the questions he was asking, fully documenting his interaction.

76. Circuit Court Clerk, Jeff Busby, got highly defensive when plaintiff began asking questions and advised the other clerks to not answer any of plaintiff’s questions.

77. After admitting he had never seen or heard of the such happening, Busby gets on his cellphone and presumably calls the Lafayette County Sheriff, Joey East, to report Plaintiffs’ presence at Lafayette County Circuit Court.

78. At that point Plaintiff leaves the Circuit Clerks Office and continues outside toward[] his vehicle. Around the same time that Plaintiff got situated in his vehicle, Defendant East pulls up initially blocking Plaintiff from reversing. Then East parks next to plaintiff, and their conversation ensues[.]

79. Defendant East orders Plaintiff not to go back into Circuit Court unless he has something to file because he was “Disrupting their business”.

Id. at 22. The following day, a Uniform Commitment Affidavit was filed against Reardon in the Chancery Court of Lafayette County. The affidavit was completed by Rachel Alcorn, a “relative and/or interested person, residing at Communicare.” Id. at 73. The affidavit marked the following options as applicable to Reardon: “a recent attempt or threat to physically harm themselves or others;” and “a failure and inability to provide necessary medical care to themselves as a result of the impairment.” Id. Alcorn provided the following factual description regarding Reardon: Go into public places recording people, parinoid [sic] and dellusional [sic] provoking people with his minor child, not taking meds and not getting medical help.

Id. According to Reardon, after the affidavit was filed, “a writ to take plaintiff into custody was immediately signed off on by Chancellor Lawrence Little.” Id. at p. 28. Reardon was in fact taken into custody and contends that he was “sent to the Tupelo Crisis Center just up the hill from the North Mississippi State Hospital where he sat deprived of his liberty from December 9, 2021 until December 23, 2021.” Id. at p. 23. He contends that the civil commitment proceedings against him were unlawful. Reardon then began appearing at the Lafayette County Circuit Court and making calls to the Lafayette County Sheriff’s Department. Next, Reardon explains that an additional affidavit was filed against him on February 9, 2022, by Susan Beard, another Communicare employee. According to Reardon, that affidavit falsely claimed that he had “refused to attend a scheduled appointment.” Id. at p. 30. He was apparently involuntarily committed to a mental institution for a period of 30 days. Reardon contends that “[t]he fact that listed Defendants utilized involuntary commitment TWICE over a span of approximately two months’ time when he never posed as a danger or threat to himself of others further demonstrates an intentional, deliberate indifference show to Plaintiff’s Constitutional Rights far above and beyond that of plain negligence.” Id. at p. 35. He then asserts

a total of 17 different claims—some based on federal law and some based on state law—against the multiple above-listed Defendants. The claims span from allegations of false arrest, unlawful detention, violation of the right to free speech to tortious interference with business and wrongful interference with familial relationships. As noted above, the present Motions [38, 43] have been filed by the State of Mississippi and the Mississippi Department of Mental Health. The State and the Department are represented by the same counsel, and the Motions [38, 43] are based upon the same theory—that Reardon’s claims against them run afoul of the Eleventh Amendment. The State’s Motion [38] was filed on August 8, 2022, and the Department’s Motion [43] was filed on October 20, 2022. But Reardon

has not responded to the filings. For the sake of clarity, the Court notes that Reardon previously, on July 14, 2022, filed a Motion to Stay Proceedings [33], requesting that the Court stay all proceedings “due to Plaintiff currently being incarcerated at the Lafayette County Detention Center in Oxford, MS.” [33] at p. 1. On August 16, 2022, the Court entered an Order [40] which, among other things, denied Reardon’s request to stay proceedings. However, the Court did extend his deadlines to make certain filings. The Court also directed the Clerk of Court to mail a copy of its Order [40] to the Lafayette County Detention Center, as well as Reardon’s address listed on the docket, which he provided when he initiated this lawsuit. Reardon has been provided ample opportunity to respond to the present Motion [38, 43], and, despite his failure to do so, the Court will no longer delay. Analysis and Discussion Reardon’s claims against the State and the Department arise under both federal law and state law.

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Bluebook (online)
Reardon v. State of Mississippi, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reardon-v-state-of-mississippi-msnd-2023.