SHULLAW v. MCMULLEN

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Florida
DecidedMarch 31, 2025
Docket3:23-cv-13317
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
SHULLAW v. MCMULLEN, (N.D. Fla. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF FLORIDA PENSACOLA DIVISION

TOM SHULLAW,

Plaintiff,

v. Case No. 3:23-cv-13317-MCR-ZCB

GRANT MCMULLEN, et al.,

Defendants. /

ORDER

This is a civil rights action raising Fourth Amendment claims of false arrest, unreasonable search and seizure, and excessive force under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Defendants, Escambia County Sheriff’s Deputies Jonathan Hill and Grant McMullen (“Deputies”), who were sued in their individual capacities, have filed a Joint Motion for Summary Judgment, raising qualified immunity. ECF No. 24. Plaintiff Tom Shullaw opposes. ECF Nos. 28 & 29.1 For the following reasons, the Joint Motion for Summary Judgment is due to be denied.2

1 ECF Nos. 28 and 29, and exhibits thereto, appear to be identical, duplicate entries. Only ECF No. 29 will be cited herein. 2 For the limited purpose of this summary judgment proceeding, the Court views “the evidence and all reasonable inferences drawn from it in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party”—here, Plaintiff. Martin v. Brevard Cnty. Pub. Sch., 543 F.3d 1261, 1265 (11th Cir. 2008) (quoting Battle v. Bd. of Regents, 468 F.3d 755, 759 (11th Cir. 2006)). On the evening of April 11, 2020, around 10:20 pm, a dispatcher with Escambia County Sheriff’s Office (“ECSO”) received a request from a caller, David Smith, to conduct a welfare check on his child, C.S., an 8-year-old minor, at a residence on Chiquita Drive in Pensacola, Florida.3 At 10:23 pm, the Deputies were

dispatched for the welfare check requested by Smith to the Chiquita Drive address, which turned out to be the Shullaw’s home where Plaintiff, Tom Shullaw, lived with his wife, Barbara Shullaw (hereinafter “Barbara,” to avoid confusion with her

husband).4 As it turns out, Barbara is the grandmother of C.S., who is the child of Barbara’s daughter and Smith. When dispatched, the Deputies were informed that the welfare check related to an “open missing person case in [Missouri].”5 Both

Deputies described a welfare check as “checking on” a person who may be in

3 Smith did not make reference to a “kidnapping” in the course of his call to the Sheriff’s Office. 4 Defendants have also provided a recording of the original call to the Sheriff’s Office; however, that call apparently was not played for the officers, who received instead the ECSO Call History Report (“CAD”) notes and what dispatch stated over the radio. ECF No. 23-2 at 15:25– 16:6; see also ECF No. 23-1 at 63:16–20, 23:17–20. Accordingly, the Court focuses its recitation of the facts on those known to the Deputies based on the CAD notes and their testimony. 5 The CAD also reflected that this was a “Priority 3” call. Hill explained that the Priority rating translates to the anticipated danger of a situation, and indicated that Priority 1 would be most dangerous while Priority 4 would be least. ECF No. 23-1 at 62:5–21, 76:3–6. The CAD did not mention a “kidnapping.” danger.6 Dispatch did not include in the call notes the names of the Shullaws or that this was their home. The Shullaws were asleep in their bedroom, located in the back of the home,

when McMullen and Hill arrived at the home at 10:32 pm. Shullaw’s stepdaughter (and aunt of C.S.), Elizabeth Sitler, was also at the Chiquita Drive home, in her own room toward the front of the house. When McMullen and Hill arrived, they walked to the residence, which had a lighted front porch, and knocked on the front door.

Shullaw and Barbara have testified that they awoke to “loud banging” at the front door, and Shullaw retrieved his .380 Ruger handgun from the nightstand and approached the front door while Barbara initially stayed in bed. Shullaw testified

that he heard a banging noise three times before he reached the front door. As Shullaw was walking down the hallway, he yelled out, “who’s out there,” but he did not hear a response. Shullaw also chambered ammunition as he approached the front door, creating

a “racking” noise that both McMullen and Hill heard from outside.7 For purposes

6 ECF No. 23-1 at 44:21–45:2; ECF No. 23-2 at 40:15–18; see also Ermini v. Scott, 249 F. Supp. 3d 1253, 1266 (M.D. Fla. 2017) (“Florida, as many jurisdictions, ‘expect[s] [police officers] to take those steps that are necessary to ensure the safety and welfare of the citizenry at large.”’ (citation omitted) (second alteration in original)). 7 McMullen and Hill contend that Hill announced that they were with the “Sheriff’s Office” just before hearing this racking of the gun. Shullaw, though, disputes this, testifying no one announced themselves. ECF No. 23-7 at 48:23–49:6, 54:5–7. The Parties agree for summary judgment purposes, though, that Shullaw did not hear McMullen and Hill announce themselves as of summary judgment, it is undisputed that Shullaw did not know the Deputies were law enforcement officers before he racked his gun. On hearing the noise, Hill said there was a gun, and the officers stepped back for cover. When Shullaw made it to

the front door, he first looked out through a peephole and did not see McMullen or Hill. He then opened the door inward with his gun pointed at the ground in his left hand. Hill and McMullen saw Shullaw open the door with the gun in his hand. Likewise, with the door open, Shullaw first saw McMullen and Hill’s firearms,

before realizing they were law enforcement officers. McMullen and Hill yelled commands at Shullaw to “put the gun down” while Shullaw stood in the home about four to five feet inside the door. ECF No. 23-7 at 54:11–55:4. It is undisputed that

Shullaw did not lift the gun or otherwise threaten the officers with his gun. With the door still open, Shullaw kneeled down, placed the gun on the tile floor, and slid it away from him.8 There is no question that Shullaw complied with the Deputies’ commands by putting the gun down.

With the gun on the ground, the Deputies instructed Shullaw to then walk out of the house. Shullaw testified that the front door was “open less than half way” at

law enforcement from the outside before he chambered a round in his weapon. ECF No. 30 at 3– 4. 8 The Parties dispute whether Shullaw put the gun down immediately: the Deputies contend that the verbal command to put the gun down had to be given several times, while Shullaw testified that “as soon as I saw who they were, I started dropping down to put the gun on the floor, and that’s when they started yelling, ‘Put the gun down, put the gun down.”’ Compare ECF No. 23-7 at 54:10–16 with ECF No. 23-1 at 18:5–10 (“I think we had to tell him at least several times, like the time the Deputies made their demands that he come outside. ECF No. 23-7 at 57:3–9. Shullaw complied by walking toward the door and away from the gun: Shullaw testified that when he reached the door frame, he was about ten feet away

from the gun still on the floor in the home. At that point, “one deputy was saying get on the ground” while the “other deputy kept saying walk outside.” Id. at 58:9– 12. The Deputies also threatened to fatally shoot Shullaw. Shullaw lowered himself to his knees “in the doorway,” with his body facing sideways toward the garage. Id.

at 59:4–7, 60:8–12. According to Shullaw, McMullen, with his weapon re-holstered, then ran from where he was located near a window outside the home toward Shullaw, leaped into the air, and came down with his knees on Shullaw’s back while Shullaw was in the process of getting his hands to the ground.9 Shullaw’s chin bounced off

of the concrete of the front porch when McMullen landed on him.

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