Snider v. Lincoln County Board of County Commissioners

313 F. App'x 85
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedJune 5, 2008
Docket07-6196
StatusUnpublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 313 F. App'x 85 (Snider v. Lincoln County Board of County Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Snider v. Lincoln County Board of County Commissioners, 313 F. App'x 85 (10th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

ORDER AND JUDGMENT *

JOHN C. PORFILIO, Circuit Judge.

Earl Lee Snider and Carmen Noel Snider filed claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, *86 alleging that David Neal and Chris Evans, both officers with the Lincoln County Sheriffs ' Department, violated their Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment rights when, without a warrant, they entered the Sniders’ home, seized Mr. and Mrs. Snider, and seized Mr. Snider’s concealed weapon permit (CWP) and fifteen guns. The Sniders also alleged state-law claims for trespass, false arrest, false imprisonment, conversion, and replevin against the Lincoln County Board of County Commissioners (County) and respondeat superior claims against A.T. Brixey, the Sheriff of Lincoln County. Plaintiffs appeal the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the defendants on all claims. Exercising jurisdiction under 28 . U.S.C. § 1291, we affirm.

Background

The Sniders’ claims relate to events that occurred on June 2, 2005, culminating in the removal of Mr. Snider’s CWP and numerous firearms from their home by Sergeant Neal and Deputy Evans. There is no dispute that Mr. Snider had several peculiar encounters with the sheriff’s department in the weeks leading up to June 2. He first reported to Neal that jewelry was missing from his house, but there was no sign of a forced entry. He ultimately had Mrs. Snider submit to a polygraph examination on June 1 regarding her involvement in the missing jewelry. 1 Mr. Snider also reported his suspicions that Mrs. Snider was drugging him and having an affair. He reported that someone was playing a trick on him by playing recordings of exotic birds outside of his house. He installed surveillance cameras and informed a deputy that he had a tape showing prowlers on his property. He reported finding footprints near the house, which he later claimed were Sergeant Neal’s boot prints. He accused certain officers, including Neal, of being involved in a conspiracy with government agencies. And he told another deputy that the CIA was watching him and was in his attic.

As a result of Mr. Snider’s various reports, a Captain in the sheriff’s office asked Sergeant Neal to do a welfare check at the Sniders’ residence on June 2. Neal explained that an officer may be asked to check on a person’s well-being if there are possible physical or mental concerns. Before leaving the station, Neal conferred with other deputies who had taken reports from Mr. Snider. In addition to obtaining information about Mr. Snider’s various reports, he learned that Mr. Snider had previously told another deputy that he had a CWP. Neal ran a database check on Mr. Snider that indicated he had no criminal history, but confirmed that he did have a CWP.

Deputy Evans accompanied Sergeant Neal to the Sniders’ property. It is undisputed that they had no arrest or search warrant. They arrived about 5:00 p.m. and drove up the driveway through an open gate. Neal testified that they saw a shotgun inside of a shop building on the *87 property through the open door to that building. The Sniders dispute that the door to the shop building was open. The officers knocked at the front door of the house. No one answered after several minutes and they were preparing to leave, when Mr. Snider tapped on a window to get their attention. He unlocked the door and stepped outside onto the porch at the officers’ request. Sergeant Neal showed Mr. Snider his badge and introduced himself and.Deputy Evans.

Neal testified that he asked Mr. Snider if he had his surveillance tapes and suggested that the officers come inside the house to view them. He said that he explained to Mr. Snider that they would need to secure his handgun for their own safety while inside the house. He testified that Mr. Snider consented to the officers entering the house and securing his handgun. But according to Mr. Snider’s testimony, when Neal asked him for his surveillance tapes, he responded only that the tapes were not at the house and that he could make a phone call to have them returned. He denies that Neal ever asked for, or that he ever gave, permission for the officers to enter the house.

While they were on the porch, Neal asked to see Mr. Snider’s driver’s license and his CWP. He went inside the house, came back outside, and handed these items to Neal, who examined them for a minute. Neal also asked if Mrs. Snider could come outside too. Mr. Snider returned inside and then both he and Mrs. Snider came out onto the porch. At this point, Neal asked Mrs. Snider to step away from the porch with him and Deputy Evans and he told Mr. Snider to stay where he was. Neal asked Mrs. Snider what was going on with her husband and she responded that, for various reasons, he was under a lot of stress. She told the officers that she was not in fear for her life or safety. Sergeant Neal told her that Mr. Snider “couldn’t be calling around to different law enforcement agencies saying crazy stuff.” Aplt. App., Vol. 2 at 329. She testified that Neal also told her “that he was there to get my husband’s concealed weapons license and his concealed carry, or that he was going to — if he resisted in any type of way he was going to take him to jail and have a mental evaluation done on him.” Id. at 329-30. Neal asked lier if there were any more weapons other than the shotgun in the shop. At that point, she began crying because she saw that the shop door had been opened. When Mrs. Snider told Neal that there were more weapons, he said, “We’re going to go in and you’re going to point out where the weapons are, and you’re not going to touch them and Mr. Evans is going to go with you and he’s going to gather them up.” Id. at 336 (quotation omitted).

According to Mr. Snider, when Mrs. Snider and the officers moved back toward the porch they told him that they were going to come into his house, take every firearm in his possession and his CWP, and if he did not cooperate he would be arrested and evaluated and his daughter would be taken away by the Department of Human Services (DHS). Mr. Snider testified that when he asked Neal what was the reason for this, Neal told him a neighbor had made a complaint, but did not identify which neighbor.

Mr. Snider testified that Sergeant Neal then escorted him and Mrs. Snider into the house. The officers immediately noticed two rifles on the kitchen table. Neal had Mr. Snider sit at the table and told him not to move. He told Mrs. Snider to go with Deputy Evans and point out all the firearms and not to reach for or grab any of them. Evans collected a total of fifteen guns, including two rifles and three handguns from the kitchen, several guns from *88 the bedrooms located in a closet, laying on the beds, or in cases underneath the beds, and the shotgun from the shop building. All of the firearms but the shotgun were loaded and chambered. The officers filled out a sheriffs department form listing the items seized and had Mr. Snider sign it. At the Sniders’ request, they provided and signed a second, itemized property receipt. Mrs. Snider assisted Deputy Evans in putting the guns into the trunk of the squad car. She testified that a neighbor witnessed her doing so.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
313 F. App'x 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snider-v-lincoln-county-board-of-county-commissioners-ca10-2008.