Soto v. City of Sacramento

567 F. Supp. 662
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. California
DecidedAugust 24, 1983
DocketCiv. S-79-680 LKK
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 567 F. Supp. 662 (Soto v. City of Sacramento) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Soto v. City of Sacramento, 567 F. Supp. 662 (E.D. Cal. 1983).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

KARLTON, Chief Judge.

Plaintiff, JOSEPH SOTO, JR., has brought this action against defendants 1 seeking damages under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for the deprivation of his constitutional rights. Additionally, as pendant state claims, he alleges both the intentional and negligent infliction of emotional distress. Under both his federal and state causes of action he seeks to hold defendants liable for the damages he sustained as a result of his attempted suicide. Plaintiff, IMELDA SOTO, brings this action charging the, infringement of her constitutional right to a marital relationship. 2 The action is before me now on cross motions for summary judgment as to plaintiff JOSEPH SOTO’s section 1983 claim. 3

I

STATEMENT OF FACTS 4

On March 14,1978, one Ralph Talpas was attacked and robbed by three males and one female as he was crossing Plaza Park, in downtown Sacramento. Immediately after the attack, he located a telephone booth across the street from the park and called the police, giving them a description of his assailants.

*666 Defendant Sergeant LaChapelle, of the Sacramento City Police Force, responded to this call approximately five minutes later; he arrived on the scene with a police dog. LaChapelle entered Plaza Park and commenced a search for Mr. Talpas’ assailants. Upon doing so he saw three males and one female who appeared to match the description given by Mr. Talpas. One of them was the plaintiff. Plaintiff asserts, and Sergeant LaChapelle does not deny, that Sergeant LaChapelle was acquainted with him from prior contacts. The events which transpired thereafter are disputed..

At a preliminary hearing regarding the robbery LaChapelle testified that as he approached the four suspects they started to leave, whereupon he ordered them all to stop and lie face down on the ground. After he had done so he observed plaintiff JOSEPH SOTO crouching on his haunches as though to run or jump. According to Sergeant LaChapelle, he could not see Mr. SOTO’s hands and thus determine if he was armed. Accordingly, defendant testified, plaintiff was again ordered to lie down so that his hands could be seen; he was told this two more times but failed to comply.

At about this time defendant Officer Brewer arrived on the scene with his police dog. Sergeant LaChapelle asserts that he walked over to plaintiff and told him to lie down. When plaintiff remained in his crouching position, Sergeant LaChapelle pushed him down with his boot. At about the same time Officer Brewer released his dog which bit plaintiff. Once bitten, LaChapelle testified, plaintiff laid down on the ground as instructed. In due course the suspects were arrested and taken to Sacramento County Jail. Plaintiff’s version of what happened in the park, as related to his brother, Frank Soto, is decidedly different. 5 He alleges he was hiding behind some bushes when a policeman and his dog found him. He told the policeman that he was unable to get up whereupon he was ordered to stay down on the ground and to put his hands apart. Plaintiff claims he complied and was willing to give himself up; he asserts that despite these facts, the policeman released his dog and he was bitten. As noted, a preliminary hearing occurred and plaintiff was bound over for trial.

On April 20,1978, approximately a month after the arrest, the incidents at the jail for which plaintiff also seeks compensation occurred. Plaintiff at this time was housed in Cell 3, North 1, a “tank” cell in which other detainees were present. Defendant Wayne Fidler, a commissary deputy and two trustees were making commissary rounds with a cart, containing candy and other things for sale. Here again the facts are in dispute. Defendant Fidler’s version of the ensuing incident is that he saw Joseph’s hand and the hand of another person (whom he could not identify) reaching through the bars of the cell for something in the tray. A trustee named Butner came up to the cell and looked at Joseph whereupon Joseph spat at Butner. Another inmate then hit Butner in the hand; another inmate was reaching for Butner, and a further disturbance ensued. Defendant Fidler removed himself, the trustees, and the commissary cart from the area and called for help.

Defendants Deputy Sheriff Waters, Deputy Sheriff Thomas, and Deputy Sheriff Hasapis responded to the call. Plaintiff alleges that there was a threat made by one of the County defendants to the effect that, if he continued acting in a disruptive man *667 ner, he would be killed. 6 Plaintiff claims that after restoring order, the defendants intended to and did move him to an “isolation” cell as punishment for the disruption they believed he had caused; defendants assert that they intended to move him to another tank cell only for the calming effect it would have on him. In any event, plaintiff was told to gather his personal belongings and to accompany the defendants; it is undisputed that he complied in a quiet and cooperative manner.

It is also undisputed that after leaving the cell, plaintiff’s person and belongings were searched. The County defendants claim he was searched pursuant to a standard procedure requiring that an “inmate” and his belongings are searched whenever he is moved from one cell to another. (The jailers apparently do not distinguish between pretrial detainees and convicted prisoners in this regard.) It is undisputed that defendant Hasapis and defendant Waters conducted the body search while defendant Thomas searched plaintiff’s property. Defendant Thomas claims that he found a red toy balloon containing a white powdery substance which was tested and later identified as an opium derivative. Plaintiff contends that this substance was planted in his belongings by the County defendants as a “frame-up.” (See n. 5) He was given his Miranda rights and arrested for possession of drugs.

Defendants claim that upon discovery of the contraband, they determined that plaintiff posed a security threat to the jail and decided to house him on the 5th floor in a single cell. Plaintiff claims this cell amounted to solitary confinement and that his confinement there was intended to punish him for his behavior.

Plaintiff discussed these incidents with his brother, Frank Soto, the evening of April 20,1978. He expressed to Frank both anger and frustration about the drug arrest. Apparently, he thought that pending charges based on the attack of Ralph Talpas were going to be dropped. His frustration stemmed in part from his belief that the subsequent drug possession arrest would interfere with the dismissal of those charges. He also stated to his brother that he believed that County defendants had planted the drugs on him and that he had been set up. ' The County defendants, on the other hand, have a different view of plaintiff’s emotional state.

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Bluebook (online)
567 F. Supp. 662, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/soto-v-city-of-sacramento-caed-1983.