Simon v. City of N.Y.
This text of 893 F.3d 83 (Simon v. City of N.Y.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Katzmann, Chief Judge:
*88This case takes us to the intersection of an allegedly wrongful arrest and detention on a material witness warrant, the Fourth Amendment, and qualified immunity. Plaintiff Alexina Simon brought this action in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York (Vitaliano, J .) under
We conclude that, with the facts taken in the light most favorable to Simon, the defendants violated the Fourth Amendment. A warrant must be executed in conformity with its terms. See, e.g. , Miller v. Kennebec Cty. ,
We further conclude that the unlawfulness of the defendants' conduct was clearly established when they acted. This is an uncommon " 'obvious case' " in which "the unlawfulness of the [defendants'] conduct is sufficiently clear even though existing precedent does not address similar circumstances." District of Columbia v. Wesby , --- U.S. ----,
We are also unpersuaded by the defendants' contention that they are entitled to qualified immunity from claims arising out of the second day's events because reasonable officers could disagree about whether Simon consented to accompany them. A long line of cases holds that securing someone's presence at a police station using coercive tactics like those employed by the defendants here-including entering Simon's home and telling her that her attendance is mandatory-is constitutionally indistinguishable from a traditional arrest.
Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is VACATED and this case is REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this decision.
*89BACKGROUND
New York State's material witness statute provides that a court, upon an appropriate application, may order that a person who has information material to a criminal proceeding be detained to secure her attendance at the proceeding. See
First, the applicant-here, the government-must apply for a "material witness order," which is "a court order (a) adjudging a person a material witness in a pending criminal action and (b) fixing bail to secure his future attendance thereat."
Once the prospective material witness has been brought before the court, the judge "must inform him of the nature and purpose of the proceeding, and that he is entitled to a prompt hearing upon the issue of whether he should be adjudged a material witness."
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Katzmann, Chief Judge:
*88This case takes us to the intersection of an allegedly wrongful arrest and detention on a material witness warrant, the Fourth Amendment, and qualified immunity. Plaintiff Alexina Simon brought this action in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York (Vitaliano, J .) under
We conclude that, with the facts taken in the light most favorable to Simon, the defendants violated the Fourth Amendment. A warrant must be executed in conformity with its terms. See, e.g. , Miller v. Kennebec Cty. ,
We further conclude that the unlawfulness of the defendants' conduct was clearly established when they acted. This is an uncommon " 'obvious case' " in which "the unlawfulness of the [defendants'] conduct is sufficiently clear even though existing precedent does not address similar circumstances." District of Columbia v. Wesby , --- U.S. ----,
We are also unpersuaded by the defendants' contention that they are entitled to qualified immunity from claims arising out of the second day's events because reasonable officers could disagree about whether Simon consented to accompany them. A long line of cases holds that securing someone's presence at a police station using coercive tactics like those employed by the defendants here-including entering Simon's home and telling her that her attendance is mandatory-is constitutionally indistinguishable from a traditional arrest.
Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is VACATED and this case is REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this decision.
*89BACKGROUND
New York State's material witness statute provides that a court, upon an appropriate application, may order that a person who has information material to a criminal proceeding be detained to secure her attendance at the proceeding. See
First, the applicant-here, the government-must apply for a "material witness order," which is "a court order (a) adjudging a person a material witness in a pending criminal action and (b) fixing bail to secure his future attendance thereat."
Once the prospective material witness has been brought before the court, the judge "must inform him of the nature and purpose of the proceeding, and that he is entitled to a prompt hearing upon the issue of whether he should be adjudged a material witness."
In 2008, Shantell McKinnies, an officer of the New York Police Department (NYPD), was under investigation for potential insurance fraud.1 McKinnies' car, which she had reported stolen, had turned up in a "chop shop" covertly run by the NYPD. According to McKinnies, her friend "Alexandra Griffin" was the last person to drive her car. But "Alexandra Griffin" told an NYPD officer that she had never been given the vehicle, was not the last person to drive it, and did not even have a driver's license, raising suspicions that McKinnies had filed a false report. "Alexandra Griffin" also told the officer that her surname was not Griffin, but Simon. It would eventually become clear that her real name is Alexandra Dormoy, and that Dormoy is the daughter of plaintiff Alexina Simon.
*90The McKinnies investigation was assigned to defendant Francis Longobardi, who was at the time an Assistant District Attorney in the Public Integrity Bureau of Queens County District Attorney's Office. By June 2008, Longobardi, who wanted to speak with Dormoy about the investigation, had come to believe that her name was not Alexandra Simon or Alexandra Griffin, but Alexina Simon. Longobardi sent Dormoy several subpoenas that went unanswered and spoke with Dormoy a handful of times by telephone. On August 8, 2008, Longobardi and Dormoy had a telephone conversation during which Longobardi stated, "I'm trying to reach Alexina Simon" and asked, "Is this Alexina Simon?" J. App'x 351. Dormoy did not answer the question but continued to speak as though she were Simon. Dormoy refused to appear for an interview or say anything about the case and told Longobardi that the subpoenas were harassing.
Left with few options, Longobardi sought to compel Dormoy to disclose what she knew. On August 8, 2008, he applied to Queens County Supreme Court for a hearing on August 11, 2008, at 10:00 a.m. "for the purpose of adjudging Alexina Simon a material witness" and an arrest warrant to secure Alexina Simon's attendance at the hearing. J. App'x 31. Justice Kenneth C. Holder entered an order convening such a hearing at the requested date and time. Justice Holder also issued a warrant for Simon's arrest. In relevant part, the warrant recited that "an order having been granted ... directing ... ALEXINA SIMON to appear at a hearing at the Queens County Courthouse in the City of New York on August 11, 2008 at 10:00 in the forenoon to determine whether ALEXINA SIMON should be adjudged a material witness," police officers were "commanded forthwith to take the above-named ALEXINA SIMON into custody ... and bring her before this Court in order that a proceeding may be conducted to determine whether she is to be adjudged a material witness."
On the morning of August 11, 2008, Simon was working her housekeeping shift at the Millennium Broadway Hotel. A little after 10:00 a.m., a coworker told her that Lee and Alegre wanted to see her. The detectives told Simon they had a warrant for her arrest, threatened to handcuff her and use force if she did not voluntarily come with them, and said that she would learn the reason for her arrest later. Lee and Alegre drove Simon to the precinct, occasionally asking Simon about McKinnies' car. Simon knew McKinnies from her neighborhood and guessed that McKinnies was in trouble, but Simon didn't know why.
At the precinct, the detectives brought Simon to a small room, told her to wait there, and closed the door. Simon remained there for most of the day by herself. At some point, Lee gave her some coffee, but she was never given any food. Many hours later, after dark, Lee took Simon to a courthouse. Seated outside a courtroom, Simon briefly met with Longobardi, who questioned her about McKinnies' car. At some point during the day, Simon told Lee that the defendants were interested in Dormoy, but Simon did not recall whether she also mentioned her daughter to Longobardi. Longobardi, for his part, realized that Simon was the wrong person as soon as he met her.
After the courthouse discussion, the detectives brought Simon back to the small room and told her she could leave, but that she must return the next day to answer more questions. To drive the point home, they reminded Simon that they had a warrant for her arrest. The detectives also *91told Simon that they wanted to speak to Dormoy and that Simon should bring her in, too. Alegre and Lee drove Simon to her Brooklyn residence. Lee was polite, but Alegre accused Simon of hiding the truth about McKinnies' car. Simon arrived at her home (where Dormoy also sometimes lived) after 8:00 p.m. Simon told her daughter that the police wanted to speak with her, but Dormoy said she didn't know why.
Alegre and Lee arrived at Simon's home at around 9:00 a.m. the following morning. Alegre went inside to get Simon. She told Simon that she had to go back to the precinct to answer more questions and again mentioned the warrant. Alegre asked Dormoy to go with them, but she refused. The detectives drove Simon back to the precinct and put her in a small room. For about three hours, people came in and out and asked her questions about McKinnies' car. Simon then stayed in the room by herself for another two hours, when Alegre returned. Lee again brought Simon coffee but no food. Simon did not speak to Longobardi that day. Eventually Simon was told she could leave. She left the police station at 5:00 p.m., took the train to Brooklyn, and arrived home at around 6:30 p.m. All told, the defendants held Simon against her will for 18 hours over two days.
Although we must consider the facts in the light most favorable to Simon for purposes of this appeal, see Dufort , 874 F.3d at 343, we note that the defendants describe both days very differently. As they would have it, on the morning of August 11, Simon was taken directly from the hotel to the courthouse, where she told the defendants that they were after her daughter and agreed to persuade Dormoy to cooperate. Simon was returned home by midafternoon. On August 12, Simon told the detectives that Dormoy refused to help and asked to be taken to the precinct, where she spoke briefly with Longobardi again before Lee drove her home. By the defendants' telling, Simon spent around nine hours in all with them, nearly all of it voluntarily.
On March 27, 2009, Simon commenced this action under
DISCUSSION
I. Standard of Review
"We review a district court's grant of summary judgment de novo , 'resolving all ambiguities and drawing all reasonable factual inferences in favor of the party against whom summary judgment is sought.' " Nick's Garage, Inc. v. Progressive Cas. Ins. Co. ,
II. Qualified Immunity
State executive officials "are entitled to qualified immunity under § 1983 unless (1) they violated a federal statutory or constitutional right, and (2) the unlawfulness of their conduct was 'clearly established at the time.' " Wesby ,
"The 'clearly established' standard ... requires that the legal principle clearly prohibit the officer's conduct in the particular circumstances before him." Wesby ,
III. Qualified Immunity for the Detention on the August 11, 2008
We have "discretion to decide which of the two prongs of qualified-immunity analysis to tackle first." al-Kidd ,
A. Whether the August 11 Detention Violated the Fourth Amendment
Simon, joined by amici , argues that the defendants violated the Fourth Amendment by detaining her for ten hours on August 11, 2008, in violation of the material witness warrant that required them to produce her to court that morning at 10:00 a.m. We agree.
Our analysis rests on two principles. First, courts analyze the constitutionality of material witness seizures under the Fourth Amendment. See
A person who is subjected to conditions that would constitute a seizure if she *93had been arrested for a crime is still seized even though she is not a criminal suspect but a material witness. She has been arrested and deprived of liberty for precisely the same purpose as a pre-trial detainee in a criminal case: to ensure that she shows up in court as required by the state. The Fourth Amendment therefore governs [the] inquiry into the constitutionality of [a prospective material witness's] detention.
Schneyder v. Smith ,
Second, a person detained as a material witness enjoys any Fourth Amendment protection that is extended to criminal suspects. After all, the Fourth Amendment protects "[t]he right of the people to be secure in their persons," U.S. Const. amend. IV (emphasis added), not merely the rights of those suspected of crimes. See Schneyder ,
Among these protections is the rule that "a seizure conducted pursuant to an arrest warrant must conform to the terms of that warrant." Miller ,
Some courts have explained that the reason for this rule is that a warrant's execution instructions are coextensive with the authorizing official's determination of reasonableness for a particular search or seizure. See O'Rourke ,
We agree with this reasoning and would add that it is based on two fundamental Fourth Amendment precepts. First, "the reasonableness requirement of the Fourth Amendment applies not only to prevent searches and seizures that would be unreasonable if conducted at all, but also to ensure reasonableness in the manner and scope of searches and seizures that are carried out." Lauro v. Charles ,
Second, because a warrant generally authorizes no more than what it expressly provides, to act unreasonably beyond the terms of a warrant is akin to acting without a warrant at all. See Horton v. California ,
Together, these principles yield the commonsense rule that police officers must abide by the limitations set forth on the face of a warrant they are executing. A warrant must be executed reasonably; a warrant generally authorizes only what its terms expressly provide; and a warrant's execution terms represent the magistrate's neutral determination of how a warrant is to be executed. A seizure that flouts the plain terms of its authorizing instrument is therefore unreasonable.3
The defendants' arguments to the contrary are unpersuasive. They first point out that a constitutional claim cannot be premised on a violation of state statutory rights. See Powers v. Coe ,
In this case, the question is whether the warrant required that Simon be brought to court for the scheduled material witness hearing. We conclude that it did. The warrant directed police officers to arrest Simon "forthwith" and to "bring her before this Court in order that a proceeding may be conducted to determine whether she is to be adjudged a material witness," and it stated that that proceeding was to take place on August 11, 2008, at 10:00 a.m. J. App'x 27. Viewed in its entirety, this warrant must be understood to command police officers to arrest Simon and deliver her to court for the hearing at the appointed date and time. We recognized *96as much in our prior decision in this case. See Simon ,
If the plain text of the warrant were not enough, the statutory backdrop against which the defendants acted confirms that the warrant required Simon's production to court at the scheduled time. As explained above, New York law requires a full-dress hearing before someone can be adjudged and detained as a material witness, and a material witness warrant is issued expressly to secure the prospective witness's attendance at the hearing. See
On Simon's version of the facts, the defendants then proceeded to flout the warrant, "actively avoiding the court-ordered material witness hearing," Simon ,
It is important, however, to recognize the limits of our ruling. We do not hold that, where a warrant requires officers to produce a prospective material witness to court at a fixed date and time, it would violate the Fourth Amendment merely to bring the prospective witness late. Some delays are unavoidable. And we do not mean to suggest that police officers and prosecutors executing such a warrant are necessarily forbidden to solicit a prospective material witness's consent to proceed in some other fashion. Nor do we address whether the procedural protections that New York affords to prospective material witnesses are constitutionally required. We hold only that the defendants, who were executing a warrant requiring Simon's production to court at an appointed time and date for a hearing on whether she should be adjudged and detained as a material witness, violated the Fourth Amendment by subjecting her to a daylong detention instead.
B. Whether the August 11 Detention Violated Clearly Established Law
Our second inquiry is whether "the unlawfulness of the [defendants'] conduct was clearly established" in August 2008. Wesby ,
Our first task is to define with specificity the constitutional right at issue. See
Were Miller a decision of this Court, it alone would clearly establish the unlawfulness of the defendants' conduct. As noted above, in that case the First Circuit concluded that a police officer violated the Fourth Amendment where, after arresting someone on a warrant reading "this warrant to be executed by bringing defendant immediately before a sitting Judge," he instead had her jailed over a long weekend. See Miller , 219 F.3d at 10-11. We need not belabor the parallels to this case. As it is, Miller , O'Rourke , and Yanez-Marquez , when considered in light of this Court's decisions explaining that an officer executing a warrant must generally comply with its terms, see, e.g. , United States v. Matias ,
But we need not decide whether these out-of-circuit authorities clearly foreshadow today's decision. This is one of the uncommon " 'obvious case[s]' " in which "the unlawfulness of the [defendants'] conduct is sufficiently clear even though existing precedent does not address similar circumstances." Wesby ,
The defendants argue that any violation cannot be deemed clearly established because no cases have applied this rule to a material witness warrant and, more broadly, because so few cases address such warrants at all. We acknowledge that few decisions have examined the constitutional limits of material witness seizures and detentions and that none of them involved a factual scenario quite like this one.4 But more than that is needed for qualified immunity. See Hope ,
Relatedly, the defendants contend that any violation cannot be considered clearly established in light of the uncertainty surrounding whether a material witness warrant, which issues on a standard other than probable cause to believe a crime has been committed, is a true "Warrant" under the Warrant Clause of the Fourth Amendment. See al-Kidd ,
Accordingly, resolving factual ambiguities and drawing reasonable inferences in Simon's favor, we conclude that defendants' daylong detention of Simon on August 11, 2008, violated clearly established law. At this stage of the litigation, the defendants are therefore not entitled to qualified immunity from claims arising from the detention on August 11, 2008.6
IV. Qualified Immunity for the Seizure and Detention on August 12, 2008
Finally, we consider whether defendants' conduct on August 12 violated the Fourth Amendment and whether any violation was clearly established as of August 2008. For the reasons stated above, and taking the facts in the light most favorable to Simon, we hold that, to the extent the material witness warrant is claimed to justify the defendants' conduct on August 12, the seizure and detention violated Simon's clearly established Fourth Amendment rights.
*99That conclusion does not end our inquiry, however. The defendants press the alternative argument, not passed on by the district court, that the events of August 12 are justified by their allegedly reasonable belief that Simon consented to return to the precinct for questioning. We exercise our discretion to address in the first instance the "purely legal questions" this argument raises. J.C. v. Reg'l Sch. Dist. 10, Bd. of Educ .,
A. Whether the August 12 Seizure and Detention Violated the Fourth Amendment
Although the defendants focus their efforts on the second half of the qualified immunity doctrine, we first decide whether they violated Simon's constitutional rights. The defendants argue that Simon was neither seized nor detained on August 12 because she willingly returned to the precinct for another day's worth of questioning. Our basic inquiry is whether Simon consented or was coerced.
"[T]he police can be said to have seized an individual 'only if, in view of all of the circumstances surrounding the incident, a reasonable person would have believed that he was not free to leave.' " Michigan v. Chesternut ,
The defendants seized Simon. The evidence, with the facts taken in the light most favorable to Simon, shows that at the end of Simon's ten-hour detention on August 11, the defendants reminded her that they had a warrant for her arrest and ordered her to return the next day. The following morning, Lee and Alegre arrived at Simon's residence, where Alegre entered Simon's home, mentioned the warrant for Simon's arrest, and told Simon she had to come answer more questions. No reasonable person in Simon's position would believe that she was free to refuse to accompany the detectives to the precinct, even though the defendants did not use (or threaten to use) force or handcuffs. Because this was a seizure and not a consensual encounter when the facts are considered in the light most favorable to Simon, the defendants violated Simon's Fourth Amendment rights on August 12.
B. Whether the August 12 Seizure and Detention Violated Clearly Established Law
The defendants argue that they are entitled to qualified immunity from the claims arising out of the events of August 12 because "reasonable officials could disagree" on whether Simon consented to return to the station for questioning. Br. of Appellees at 44. The defendants, who by this time had realized that Simon was not their intended witness, suggest that an official reasonably could have believed that Simon agreed to return to the station because she wanted to help them persuade Dormoy to cooperate. They also stress that, when they collected Simon, there was *100no "display of badges, guns, force, or authority." United States v. Adegbite ,
We are not persuaded. As above, our basic inquiry is whether, in light of the relevant body of law, the unlawfulness of the defendants' actions was clearly established when they acted. See Wesby ,
In this case, Simon, like the suspect in Kaupp , was taken from within her home, where Fourth Amendment protections are at their apex. See Florida v. Jardines ,
Accordingly, we conclude on this summary judgment record that the defendants violated Simon's clearly established Fourth Amendment right to be free of suspicionless arrests (and, as we previously explained, her right to have a warrant for her arrest executed in conformity with its terms). The defendants are therefore not entitled to qualified immunity from claims arising out of the August 12 seizure and detention.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the defendants are not entitled to qualified immunity from Simon's claims at the summary judgment stage. We emphasize, however, that we do not determine as a matter of law that the defendants' actions violated Simon's clearly established Fourth Amendment rights. That question will ultimately turn on a factfinder's resolution of disputes of material fact concerning the defendants'
*101execution of the warrant, the clarification of the mistaken identity, and the degree to which Simon was a willing participant in the days' events, among others. We think that the legal analysis might look different if a factfinder determines that the defendants hewed to the terms of the material witness warrant, promptly learned of the mistaken identity, and obtained Simon's consent for all further interactions. But at this stage of the litigation, we must view the facts in the light most favorable to Simon, and on those facts, the defendants are not entitled to qualified immunity.
The judgment of the district court is VACATED and the case is REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.7
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