Simons v. County of Marin

682 F. Supp. 1463, 1987 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13250, 1987 WL 45125
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedNovember 19, 1987
DocketC-86-5234 MHP
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 682 F. Supp. 1463 (Simons v. County of Marin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Simons v. County of Marin, 682 F. Supp. 1463, 1987 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13250, 1987 WL 45125 (N.D. Cal. 1987).

Opinion

OPINION

PATEL, District Judge.

Around midnight on April 2, 1986, plaintiff Fred Martin Simons was mistakenly arrested pursuant to a seventeen month old warrant. Plaintiff, his wife, Cheryl Si-mons, and the couple’s three children were removed from their home and the police searched the Simons home without benefit of a warrant. Plaintiffs brought this action for damages under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 on behalf of themselves and their three minor children for violation of the rights secured to them under the fourteenth and fourth amendments to the Constitution, also asserting pendent state law claims. The action is now before the court on defendants’ motions for summary judgment. Having considered the declarations, excerpts from depositions, documents, memoranda and arguments submitted by the parties, 1 for the reasons set forth below, the court grants the motions in part and denies them in part. Defendant Marin’s motion for summary judgment is continued pending further discovery. FACTS

The series of events leading to the mistaken arrest of Fred Martin Simons (“Fred”), the removal of his wife Cheryl and their children from their home and the warrantless search of their house began in southern California, where deputy sheriff Robert John Minty, a warrant investigator for Orange County, was updating outstanding warrants for residents of Midway City on the county’s computer system. This was done by entering street addresses into the computer, which would respond with the names of persons residing in (or whose last known address was in) that area and for whom there were outstanding warrants. On March 18, Minty randomly entered a block of addresses on Van Burén Street and came up with, among others, an outstanding warrant for one Fred Michael Simons. On that day, Minty did nothing further, as the time allotted for updating warrants had expired.

Minty returned to the results of the March 18 search on April 2. The warrant for the arrest of Fred Michael Simons, which listed the charge of attempted murder and warned that the suspect was to be considered armed and dangerous, had been issued in southern California by a Huntington Beach judge on November 11, 1984, seventeen months before. On April 2, Minty ran the warrant again and ascertained that it was still valid. Because the warrant showed an address for the suspect different from that on Van Burén Street in Midway (and also different from the plaintiffs’ Greenbrae address), Minty decided to run the name “Fred M. Simons” for a driver’s record through the California Department of Motor Vehicles (“DMV”) computer in an effort to update the information from the warrant computer. Minty ran the name “Fred M. Simons” rather than “Fred Michael Simons” because the DMV computer will not accept more than a middle initial. The DMV computer responded with driver’s record information on only one Fred M. Simons and gave the Van Burén Street address in Midway. Undaunted in his *1466 search for more current information, Minty ran the name Fred M. Simons through the DMV database again, this time looking for vehicle registrations, and came up with one Fred M. Simons who was driving a 1977 Poráche automobile, was married to Cheryl L. Simons and was living hundreds of miles to the north, in Marin County at 124 Paseo Way, Greenbrae, California. There was nothing in the records Minty received that placed Fred Michael Simons in northern California at any time.

What happened next is the subject of dispute. Minty testified in deposition that after obtaining the information from the DMV computer, without further investigation, he called the Huntington Beach police department and asked for the warrant bureau. Lynda Stacy, a warrant clerk, answered his noontime call. Minty testified that he told Stacy that he wanted to speak to an investigator and that Stacy told him there was none available, but that she would take a message. Minty says that he then left a message that he had come across a Huntington Beach warrant on Fred Michael Simons, he had done a DMV check that showed a 1977 Porsche, a wife’s name Cheryl L., and the Greenbrae address. Stacy replied that she was familiar with the warrant, that service previously had been attempted but that she saw no mention of Cheryl L. or a 1977 Porsche. Stacy asked where he had obtained the information, and Minty told her about the DMV check, that it had turned up only one Fred M. Simons, and that the registration was recent. Minty inferred that Stacy was a secretary and relied on her statement that she would refer the information to a Huntington Beach investigator.

Stacy’s version of Minty’s phone call is significantly different. On April 2, Stacy had been a civilian clerk in sole charge of the Huntington Beach police warrants division for about one month. She had previously been a police records clerk. Stacy testified at deposition that when Minty called, she pulled the worksheet on the Fred Michael Simons warrant from the file and wrote on it the information which Minty provided, including the 124 Paseo Way address, Cheryl’s name, the Porsche and its license plate number. Stacy testified that she did not ask, and Minty did not tell her, where he had obtained this information. According to Stacy, Minty said he had contacted Marin County to request service of the warrant but Marin had asked him to contact Huntington Beach to have them issue to Marin an “attempt service,” that is, a request that the warrant be served, so that Marin could take action.

Having been instructed by a peace officer to send an attempt service, and without further investigation or consultation with a police officer, Stacy hung up the phone, went to the teletype machine and sent an attempt service teletype including the 124 Paseo Way address and the vehicle information on the 1977 Porsche to the Marin County Sheriff. Lying ignored in the Huntington Beach warrant file were two copies of the DMV information on Fred M. and Cheryl Simons which Huntington Beach had received on December 28, 1984 and August 6, 1985, respectively, and had apparently rejected as a basis on which to cause service of the Fred Michael Simons warrant in Marin.

On receiving Stacy’s teletype, Marin forwarded the request to the Twin Cities Police Department, which had Greenbrae within its jurisdiction.

At about 2:45 p.m. on the afternoon of April 2, Twin Cities received the attempt service and began to prepare to serve the warrant. First, a detective McDuffee was dispatched to stake out the house at 124 Paseo Way. He reported back that the Porsche was not present, but surveilled the house until sometime late in the afternoon, after which the beat officer kept an irregular watch. In addition, a dispatcher called the house and asked Cheryl Simons whether “Fred Simons” lived at that address. Cheryl responded affirmatively and the dispatcher hung up.

Also, by about 3 p.m., Twin Cities officers had contacted Huntington Beach to obtain more information about the suspect. They were told Fred Michael Simons was rumoured to be a Mafia hit man, that he was wanted for shooting his own brother, that he would be desperate and try to shoot *1467 it out with police and that he was known to use aliases and disguises.

Between 7:30 and 8 p.m., Twin Cities officer Captain James A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
682 F. Supp. 1463, 1987 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13250, 1987 WL 45125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simons-v-county-of-marin-cand-1987.