Sandra Williams v. James Nice

652 F. App'x 365
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 16, 2016
Docket14-4066
StatusUnpublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 652 F. App'x 365 (Sandra Williams v. James Nice) 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
Sandra Williams v. James Nice, 652 F. App'x 365 (6th Cir. 2016).

Opinions

ALICE M. BATCHELDER, Circuit Judge.

In this interlocutory appeal from a denial of a motion for summary judgment, the defendant police officer, Jon Morgan, argues that the plaintiffs evidence did not create a genuine dispute of material fact so as to overcome his assertion of qualified immunity. We establish our appellate jurisdiction and AFFIRM.

[367]*367i.

The defendant-appellant in this appeal, Officer Jon Morgan, is an Akron (Ohio) Police Officer, assigned as the School Resource Officer (SRO) at the Jennings Community Learning. Center (CLC), a public middle school. The plaintiff-appellee, Sandra Williams, is the mother of a female minor, T.W., who claims that Officer Morgan used excessive force when physically restraining and bodily seizing T.W. in response to T.W.’s misbehavior at the school. At the time of the incident, October 26, 2012, T.W. was a 13-year-old, eighth grade student, who had just transferred to Jennings CLC the day before, due to disciplinary problems at her prior school. Officer Morgan had been an SRO at the Jennings CLC since 2010. Two additional facts bear mention: (1) during this incident, Officer Morgan broke T.W.’s arm; and (2) much of the incident was captured by video surveillance, albeit without sound, and that video was properly before the district court and is before us here. This appeal concerns Officer Morgan’s claim of qualified immunity in response to T.W.’s accusations of unlawful use of excessive force.

On the morning of Friday, October 26, 2012, T.W. and a classmate got into an argument sufficiently serious that their teacher sent them both to the principal’s office. The principal met with each of them and suspended T.W. from school for five days, but did not discipline the other student. T.W. was admittedly upset, apparently enraged, by this outcome and, after leaving the principal’s office, tore several paper posters from the school’s walls. Officer Morgan characterized this tantrum as having “crossed the line to criminal disorderly conduct” and later that day confronted T.W. in a school stairwell. Deciding that T.W. was being defiant (by putting one foot behind her and her hands on her hips), Officer Morgan decided to seize her physically by pushing her up against the hallway lockers, bending her left arm behind her back, and eventually compelling her submission via this restraint. According to T.W., during this time, Officer Morgan was, making threatening comments, whereas T.W. was pleading to be let go due to the pain in her arm. Eventually, still holding her by that arm, Officer Morgan escorted her to the principal’s office. According to T.W., while they were waiting in the principal’s office, Officer Morgan continued to hold her by that arm and to threaten her verbally.

The video captured the activity in the hallway, and though it lacks sound, the picture is reasonably clear. The stationary camera is affixed near the ceiling, recording the length of a hallway with lockers along the left and barren wall along the right, both interrupted by the occasional doorway or hallway. The video time stamp depicts the recording as beginning at 12:16 p.m., which appears to coincide with a class change as there are numerous students walking up or down the hallway (toward or away from the camera). Immediately to the right of the camera, mostly out of view, is a doorway which apparently opens to the stairwell where the confrontation began. Before T.W. and Officer Morgan enter the view, the stream of students entering this doorway can be seen pausing and gawking, though they all continue on their way.

About 15 seconds into the video, T.W. and Officer Morgan enter the picture from this doorway (right side of the frame), as T.W. retreats backward and Officer Morgan pursues with his hands either on or reaching for her neck or upper chest. Officer Morgan is wearing a police uniform, including firearm, and he is significantly larger than T.W. As T.W. retreats into the middle of the hall (center of the frame) apparently attempting to fend off his [368]*368hands with her own, Officer Morgan gets his hands on her enough to push her sharply against the lockers on the far side of the hall (left side of the frame). As she bounces off the lockers, he takes hold of her and turns her face-first into the lockers, leaning his weight against her and then taking hold of her left arm and bending it behind her back. Students continue to walk past and gawk, but none stop.

At this point, about 24 seconds into the recording, as Officer Morgan has T.W.’s left arm bent severely behind her back, both of her feet come up off the floor. T.W. is squirming for relief while Officer Morgan is leaning in with his face and mouth close to her ear and appears to be talking to her. For the next 15 seconds, Officer Morgan holds her there, her face against the lockers and left arm pinned behind her, apparently talking in her ear. Then he begins to walk her roughly down the hall (away from the camera), still holding her arm behind her as she squirms.

Officer Morgan directs her into the first doorway on the left, presumably the principal’s office, and stands in that doorway for the next 60 seconds. He disappears fully into the doorway for about 45 seconds and reemerges without T.W. The video concludes with Officer Morgan walking up the hallway, toward the camera, until eventually passing beneath the camera.

T.W.’s sister took T.W. to the hospital a short time later where a doctor diagnosed her as having a broken arm (proximal humerus fracture). T.W. claims that Officer Morgan broke her arm when he applied such force that he physically lifted her off of the ground. Ultimately, Officer Morgan did not actually arrest T.W. nor were criminal charges ever filed against her.

In March 2013, Sandra Williams, as T.W.’s Next Friend, filed suit in federal court, pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, claiming that Officer Morgan used excessive force during his physical seizure, restraint, and manipulation of T.W.1 Specifically, T.W. accused Officer Morgan of needlessly accosting T.W. physically (ultimately breaking her arm) when she had offered no resistance, was not fleeing, and posed no threat to him or anyone else on the scene. Officer Morgan moved for summary judgment on grounds of qualified immunity, asserting that his use of force was appropriate under the circumstances, not excessive, because the technique he used was a low-level force, compliance tactic taught by the Akron Police Department.

The district court denied the motion based on its assessment of the record and its identification of genuine disputes of material fact for determination by a jury, concluding:

Under the facts as viewed in a light most favorable to T.W., the [cjourt cannot find that Morgan’s conduct, as a matter of law, falls into this ‘hazy border’ [between excessive and acceptable force]. Herein, Morgan was confronted in a school setting with an unruly student — a situation handled by teachers on a routine basis without the use of any force. At the' time of their encounter, T.W. posed no threat to the safety of Morgan or any other students. Accordingly, a reasonable jury could conclude that Morgan did not use reasonable force to bring T.W. under control. First, Morgan did not simply use an arm-bar to restrain T.W. He forced T.W. up [369]*369against a stationary object — the metal lockers — to add to the force used.

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652 F. App'x 365, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sandra-williams-v-james-nice-ca6-2016.