Skipper v. Phipps

483 F. Supp. 1213, 1980 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11117
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Florida
DecidedJanuary 24, 1980
Docket79-0847
StatusPublished

This text of 483 F. Supp. 1213 (Skipper v. Phipps) 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
Skipper v. Phipps, 483 F. Supp. 1213, 1980 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11117 (N.D. Fla. 1980).

Opinion

ORDER

HIGBY, District Judge.

This is a suit for money damages and injunction brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 wherein Plaintiffs urge causes of action arising from the First and Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution and have added a state claim of malicious defamation of reputation. Plaintiffs, Skipper and Andrews, are suing John E. Phipps; John H. Phipps Broadcasting Stations, Inc.; P. L. Taylor, individually and as a Deputy Sheriff of Leon County; and Ken Katsaris, individually and as Sheriff of Leon County. The suit arises from a series of incidents in which Plaintiffs, while duck hunting, carried their boat over a strip of land and were confronted by Defendant Taylor and told that they were trespassing. Plaintiffs were charged with five counts of trespassing in violation of Section 810.09, Florida Statutes, and in April, 1979, were tried to a jury and found not guilty. Defendant Taylor is a former Leon County Sheriff’s Officer and a former employee of the Game and Fish Commission who was employed by Phipps Broadcasting during the incidents comprising the present case to protect their property from vandalism and other damage. Taylor received, pursuant to this private employment, a commission from the Leon County Sheriff’s Office which gave him the powers of a Deputy Sheriff. Plaintiffs allege that they were “arrested” by Taylor five different times for trespassing over a part of the Phipps’ property. These “arrests,” however, consisted of Taylor stopping the men and asking for identification or warning them that they were trespassing. At some later time, Taylor filed an affidavit with the State Attorney’s Office which resulted in charges of five counts of criminal trespass against the Plaintiffs.

The basis of Plaintiffs’ 1983 Complaint is that the area on which they trespassed is actually public land to which the United States Constitution and laws guarantee a right of access. Specifically, they allege that Lake Jackson is navigable water, owned and held in trust by the State of Florida, and that the land on which they trespassed was actually below the ordinary high water mark of the lake (and therefore a part of the lake open to the public). Following this line of thought, Plaintiffs allege that they were unlawfully arrested and that Defendant Taylor was deputized by Defendant Katsaris, Sheriff of Leon County, for the express purpose of using color of law to carry out the purpose of the Defendant, Phipps Broadcasting, which was to interfere with the Plaintiffs’ lawful uses of the waters and lands beneath Lake Jackson.

Presently before the court are: Plaintiffs’ Motion to Join the State of Florida Board of Trustees of the Internal Improvement Fund as party plaintiffs, the Motion for Summary Judgment of Defendant John Phipps Broadcasting Stations, the Motion for Rehearing on Motion for Summary Judgment of Defendants Taylor and Kat *1215 saris, and Defendant Phipps Broadcasting’s Objection to Interrogatories. Having considered the exhibits of record, affidavits, and evidence adduced at the December 18, 1979, hearing, the court finds the following facts to appear without substantial controversy:

1. The five alleged arrests all occurred in late 1978 at the same location, which was a strip of land 50 to 75 yards wide separating Carr Lake from Mallard Pond. Plaintiffs had either launched their boat on Carr Lake and were attempting to reach Mallard Pond by dragging the boat over the above strip of land, or were attempting to leave Mallard Pond by that route.

2. An alternate route exists which allows access to Mallard Pond from Carr Lake by water.

3. No trespass charges were ever filed against Plaintiffs as to the first instance of overhauling which occurred on the opening day of hunting season in November, 1978. During this first incident, Plaintiffs received warning from Deputy Taylor and also saw two different signs which warned against trespassing.

4. Prom the depositions of Plaintiffs Skipper and Andrews, it appears that the alleged arrests, in each case, consisted of no more than Deputy Taylor stopping the Plaintiffs, asking for identification, and warning the Plaintiffs that they would be arrested for crossing the land in question. The Plaintiffs were told that the land they were crossing belonged to the Phipps Broadcasting Stations.

5. The Plaintiffs’ depositions also show that they were never taken into custody, were never detained unreasonably, and in fact were never prevented from crossing the strip of land in question or from continuing to hunt. The Plaintiffs were merely told repeatedly that they would be arrested.

6. The affidavits of State Attorney Harry Morrison and Assistant State Attorneys Charles Warren Goodwin and Robert L. Cummings show that the State Attorney’s Office received written complaints executed by Defendant Taylor stating that Skipper and Andrews had on several dates trespassed after notice on the lands of Phipps Broadcasting Stations.

7. On or about December 12, 1978, Harry Morrison, acting as State Attorney for the Second Judicial Circuit of Florida, filed an information charging the Plaintiffs with five counts of criminal trespass in violation of Section 810.09, Florida Statutes.

8. Prior to filing the above information, members of Mr. Morrison’s staff investigated the complaints against the Plaintiffs to determine if an adequate basis existed for filing of an information.

9. In April, 1979, the charges against Plaintiffs were tried to a jury, and the Plaintiffs were found not guilty. During the course of the trial and at the conclusion of the evidence for the State, counsel for Skipper and Andrews moved for a judgment of acquittal which was denied by the court.

10. The affidavit of P. L. Taylor recites that, to his knowledge, the land over which Plaintiffs crossed has belonged to the Phipps family or corporation for as long as he can remember.

11. P. L. Taylor is a former deputy of the Leon County Sheriff’s Office and a former wildlife officer with the Florida Game and Fish Commission. At the time the incidents disputed in this case occurred, Mr. Taylor held a commission from Sheriff Ken Katsaris of the Leon County Sheriff’s Office and was in the full time employ of the Phipps Broadcasting Corporation. To be eligible to receive a deputy’s commission, Mr. Taylor had to meet the same educational and experiential requirements as a full time sworn officer working for the Sheriff’s Department.

12. Defendant Phipps Broadcasting Stations has established a clear chain of title to the property disputed in this case, and no evidence has been presented to show any existing challenge to the validity of that title.

Plaintiffs in this case attempt to extract from the above facts a cause of action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. They allege that they *1216 were arrested without cause in deprivation of that liberty guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment. They allege that the Defendants wrongfully interfered with their right to use the public lands and waters of Lake Jackson, in deprivation of some unspecified First Amendment right and of the Fourteenth Amendment right to property.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
483 F. Supp. 1213, 1980 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/skipper-v-phipps-flnd-1980.