Shannon Conklin and Texas Department of Public Safety v. Janice Garrett

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 31, 2005
Docket12-04-00344-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Shannon Conklin and Texas Department of Public Safety v. Janice Garrett (Shannon Conklin and Texas Department of Public Safety v. Janice Garrett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shannon Conklin and Texas Department of Public Safety v. Janice Garrett, (Tex. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

                     NO. 12-04-00344-CV

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS


TWELFTH COURT OF APPEALS DISTRICT


TYLER, TEXAS


SHANNON CONKLIN AND

TEXAS DEPARTMENT OF

PUBLIC SAFETY,                                             §     APPEAL FROM THE 145TH

APPELLANTS


V.                                                                         §     JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT OF



JANICE GARRETT,                                          §     NACOGDOCHES COUNTY, TEXAS

APPELLEE





OPINION

            Shannon Conklin and the Texas Department of Public Safety (“DPS”) (collectively “Appellants”) appeal the trial court’s order denying their motion for summary judgment in favor of Janice Garrett. Appellants raise one issue on appeal. We affirm.


Background

            On August 16, 2002, at approximately 2:00 p.m., DPS Officer Conklin initiated a traffic stop of a maroon GMC pickup truck on northbound U.S. Highway 59. The DPS videotape showed that Conklin approached the driver of the vehicle, Mike Arthur Jones, asked him for his driver’s license, and requested that he step to the rear of the vehicle. During the ensuing conversation, Jones explained to Conklin that he was traveling from Houston, Texas to Shreveport, Louisiana to visit his mother. After explaining to Jones that he had stopped him for speeding, Conklin, noting to himself that Jones appeared nervous, requested a background check using the radio in his patrol car. While he waited for the background check to be performed, Conklin proceeded to issue Jones a written warning for the speeding offense. Conklin returned to his patrol car, where the dispatch officer reported to him that Jones had twelve prior felony convictions. Conklin reemerged from the car, asked Jones if he was carrying any illegal contraband, and requested from Jones permission to search his vehicle. Jones gave Conklin permission to search his vehicle. Conklin then performed a pat-down search on Jones for weapons, during which he confirmed that Jones had his keys in the front pocket of his pants. Conklin, however, did not remove the keys from Jones’s pants pocket.

            Conklin proceeded to search Jones’s truck. During his search of the front and rear seating areas, Conklin remarked that he smelled both burnt and green marijuana. Jones shifted about nervously and informed Conklin that he needed to use the restroom. Conklin instructed Jones to remain at the rear of the truck and continued his search. After searching for approximately four minutes, Conklin withdrew from the vehicle with his gun drawn and ordered Jones to lie on the ground. Jones complied, but insisted repeatedly that he had done nothing wrong. Conklin responded that he could smell marijuana in the vehicle. Conklin straddled Jones and attempted to handcuff him. Jones, persisting that he had done nothing wrong, began to raise up, at which point Conklin struck Jones in the back of his head with his fist. Conklin continued in vain his attempt to handcuff Jones, who had, by then, turned over on his back. Conklin backed away and attempted to spray Jones with O.C. spray. Jones raised his hand and blocked the O.C. spray, while continuing his assertions that he had done exactly as Conklin had instructed.

            Conklin returned to the passenger compartment of his patrol vehicle to call for backup, leaving Jones unrestrained. While Conklin was in the patrol car, Jones leisurely walked to his vehicle, entered through the front passenger door, and drove off at a high rate of speed. Conklin attempted to stop Jones before he drove away, but could not reach him before the vehicle was underway. As he ran along side the truck, Conklin drew his gun and shot twice at Jones’s front tire as another vehicle was passing Jones in the left lane.

            Conklin rushed to the driver’s side of his patrol car, but then ran back around the front of the vehicle to the passenger side to retrieve his clipboard from the hood. Conklin returned to the driver’s seat of the patrol car and began to pursue Jones, who was by this time nowhere in sight. Conklin took the next exit off Highway 59 and made a fortuitous right turn on Industrial Boulevard. Jones was still nowhere in sight. Conklin accelerated along Industrial Boulevard but had not regained visual contact with Jones by the time he reached the intersection of Industrial Boulevard and North Street. At the intersection, Conklin shouted to another motorist to roll down his window and asked if he had seen which way the maroon pickup truck had turned. The motorist, who had apparently seen Jones, directed Conklin to the right, which was southbound on North Street.

            Conklin accelerated southward on North Street at a high rate of speed. Prior to reaching North Loop 224, Conklin activated the siren on his patrol vehicle. Soon thereafter, Conklin regained visual contact with Jones’s vehicle, which was traveling in the right lane behind another vehicle. As Conklin closed the distance between his vehicle and Jones’s, Jones drove his truck into the left lane and accelerated. Conklin accelerated as well and continued in his pursuit of Jones. Jones disregarded stop lights and intersections, often driving down the center turn lane on North Street at high rates of speed. Conklin continued after Jones, also driving in the center turn lane and even driving briefly in the adjacent northbound lane. By this time, other law enforcement officers began to block many of the cross streets along North Street. However, no other officers joined Conklin in his high speed pursuit of Jones. As the pursuit continued, Jones and Conklin passed in close proximity to more than two hundred other motorists, more than eighty retail businesses, and Stephen F. Austin University. The chase abruptly ended at the intersection of North Street and State Highway 21 when Jones’s vehicle collided with the vehicle being driven by Garrett. Jones was subsequently apprehended after attempting to dispose of a portion of the large quantity of marijuana concealed in his truck.

            Garrett sued Appellants under the Texas Tort Claims Act alleging negligence on Conklin’s part.

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Shannon Conklin and Texas Department of Public Safety v. Janice Garrett, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shannon-conklin-and-texas-department-of-public-saf-texapp-2005.