Smith v. City of Plantation

19 F. Supp. 2d 1323, 1998 WL 643504
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Florida
DecidedAugust 11, 1998
Docket97-6878-CIV, 97-6879-CIV
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 19 F. Supp. 2d 1323 (Smith v. City of Plantation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. City of Plantation, 19 F. Supp. 2d 1323, 1998 WL 643504 (S.D. Fla. 1998).

Opinion

ORDER

GRAHAM, District Judge.

THIS CAUSE comes before the Court upon (1) Defendants’, CITY OF PLANTATION (the “City”) and JOSEPH ALU (“Officer Alu”), Motions to Dismiss and/or Alternative Motions for Summary Judgment, both filed on March 9,1998, for Plaintiffs, ANGELA SMITH (“Smith”), Second Amended Complaint; and (2) Defendants’, the City and Officer Alu, Motions for Summary Judgment, filed on February 23, 1998, and March 9, 1998, respectively, for Plaintiffs, ANGELA SMITH as the personal representative of the Estates of HIDEKO SMITH and ANNE MARIE SMITH, Amended Complaint.

I. BACKGROUND

On July 25, 1995, Smith requested police assistance after her former boyfriend, Steve Joseph (“Joseph”), forcibly entered her house with a machete, gasoline, and a lighter, threatening to kill Smith, her three daughters (ages eleven, fourteen, and fifteen), and himself. 1 Smith contacted the police by pressing the panic button to activate her silent home alarm system.

Officer Alu visited the house twice on the morning of July 25, in response to calls received from Smith’s security company. At 11:13 am, the security company first contacted the 911 operator to send police assistance to Smith’s home. The City’s police dispatcher dispatched Officer Alu to investigate Smith’s residence at 11:15 am. Officer Alu promptly arrived at Smith’s house, circled the home, and had the dispatcher call Smith, who did not answer the phone. Officer Alu was unaware that Joseph was holding Smith’s daughters hostage inside the home. Officer Alu requested the police department to run a check on the tags of the automobiles parked in Smith’s driveway and wrote an alarm notice. He then left the premises, after finding no visible signs of criminal activity.

*1326 At 11:41 am, the security company contacted the 911 operator again, stating, “I just called her to follow-up ... Somebody is in that house with her. She needs you back out there.” Trans, of Dispatch Communication, p. 5. At 11:43 am, Officer Alu returned to Smith’s residence and, at 11:46 am, the 911 operator again telephoned Smith. Despite the 911 operator’s persistent questioning, Smith did not reveal to the police the conditions in her home. The operator then asked Smith to come outside with a cordless telephone in order to show the police that she was alright. The second conversation began as follows:

911: Hi. This, is Plantation Police Department. Is everything okay there?
SMITH: Yes, Officer, everything is okay.
911: Okay. What was the problem? The alarm company said that you said somebody was in there with you.
SMITH: Um, no. I think she must have misunderstood. Everything’s okay.
911: Okay. Well, I have a couple of officers there. Can you go outside and meet with them?
SMITH: If they’re outside-
911: Yes, they—
SMITH: — I’ll meet with them.
911: Okay. What are you—
SMITH: Do you want me to go outside and tell them everything’s okay?
911: Okay, yeah., Well, like I said, the officers are there and they’re under the impression that something’s a problem in there. There’s nobody there with you?
SMITH: No.
911: Are — are you sure?
SMITH: Yes.
911: Okay. You sound a little distressed. ■‘Cause the officers are there and they’re ready to help you if anything’s —
SMITH: I understand that. Everything’s okay.

Id. at 9-10.

At 11:49:50 am, Smith walked out her front door and declared into the telephone, “the kids got to get out ... the kids got to get out.” Id. at 13. She told Officer Alu that her former boyfriend was going to kill everyone in her home and that he had gasoline and a machete. At that point, 11:50:10 am, Officer Alu exclaimed to the dispatcher:

Get me some more units here now. I need some around the back. We got a guy inside with gasoline threatening to kill the kids ... He’s got a knife, gasoline. He’s threatening to blow up the house.

Id. at 13-14.

After one of Smith’s daughters came running out of the house screaming, Officer Alu, along with Officers O’Hara and Massey, entered the residence to retrieve the other children. After searching the house, the officers found the bedroom where Joseph was holding the children hostage. Officer Massey recalls smelling gasoline as they walked through the home. Officer Alu recalls that Joseph splashed a substance on the officers. Within seconds, at 11:51:30 am, there was an explosion. The door to the bedroom immediately shut after the explosion. Officers Alu and O’Hara, Joseph, and the two children were all trapped in the fire. Officer Massey was thrown to the floor in the hallway outside the bedroom.

Officer Massey eventually opened the bedroom door and pulled Officer Alu out of the room by his shirt. She then went back to the room and pulled out Officer O’Hara. Officer Massey returned to the room with a water hose to rescue the others, but could not reach the children due to the smoke. Both Officers Alu and O’Hara were severely burned. Officer Massey suffered injuries from smoke inhalation.

Smith, who remained outside the house, alleges that Officer Alu caused the explosion with his firearm. She claims that she heard a gunshot prior to the explosion. However, Officer Alu has testified that while in the bedroom, prior to the blast, his gun was pointed towards the ground. Officer Massey testified that she did not hear gunshots until after the explosion. The testimonies of Officers Alu and Massey reveal that, prior to the explosion, Officer O’Hara said, . “don’t do that.” Officer Alu has testified that Officer O’Hara was speaking to Joseph, but that despite O’Hara’s warning, Joseph ignited the gasoline, causing the explosion.

*1327 II.DISCUSSION

This case involves two consolidated cases brought against the City and Officer Alu. The first ease was brought by Smith in her personal capacity, seeking compensatory damages for the destruction of her property in the fire that occurred on July 25, 1995. The second case was brought by Smith as the personal representative of the estates of her deceased daughters, Hideko and Anne Marie Smith, seeking both compensatory and punitive damage for the destruction of her property in the fire, as well as for wrongful death.

In the first case, 97-6878-CIV-GRAHAM (“SMITH I”), Count I of Smith’s Second Amended Complaint seeks damages against both Defendants under Florida negligence law.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 F. Supp. 2d 1323, 1998 WL 643504, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-city-of-plantation-flsd-1998.