Steven D. Santhuff v. Steve Seitz

385 F. App'x 939
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedJuly 6, 2010
Docket09-12821, 09-13714
StatusUnpublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 385 F. App'x 939 (Steven D. Santhuff v. Steve Seitz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steven D. Santhuff v. Steve Seitz, 385 F. App'x 939 (11th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

Steven and Diane Santhuff brought this 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action against Steve Seitz, an officer of the Georgia Department of Natural Resources (“the Department”), alleging violations of their Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment rights. The district court, upon reconsideration, granted Seitz’s motion for summary judgment. The Santhuffs appeal that decision as well as the district court’s award of costs and attorneys fees to Seitz.

I.

A.

In 2003 the United States Fish and Wildlife Service invited the Department to participate in Operation Snapper, a joint investigation into misconduct involving freshwater turtles. The Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources also participated in the cooperative effort. Seitz served as lead agent for the operation in Georgia. During Operation Snapper, Seitz worked with two agents of the Fish and Wildlife Service, Garry Phillips and Hal Hamrick. He also worked with Michael Bloxom, an officer with the Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources.

Seitz learned that Steve Santhuff was a turtle enthusiast and dealer in turtles. On July 10, 2003, a concerned citizen informed Seitz that Santhuff possessed at his residence species of turtles protected by state and federal law. At that point, Santhuff became the focus of a joint federal and state criminal investigation.

The events at the heart of this case occurred on July 14, 2005. The parties agree that no warrant authorizing the search of the Santhuffs’ property had been issued at that point and that Phillips and Bloxom visited the Santhuffs’ Georgia residence that day. Hamrick might have accompanied Phillips and Bloxom. The officers posed as city utility workers. They drove a utility truck and wore hard hats and green reflective vests.

The parties also agree that officers photographed the Santhuffs’ backyard on July 14, 2005. Some of those photographs show stock tanks covered with wire lids. Two of the photographs focus on an individual tank. In one of those single-tank photographs, two sticks are poking through the wire lid of a tank near the Santhuffs’ neighbor’s fence line. In the other, alliga *941 tor snapping turtles can be seen below the water’s surface in the tank. The parties’ consensus on the facts ends there.

Santhuff contends that the agents trespassed onto his property on July 14, 2005 in order to gather evidence to help secure a search warrant. He believes that the photographs taken of his property on July 14 show that the officers trespassed in his backyard. Later, Santhuffs friend Lance Fisher executed three affidavits attesting that on July 14 he saw officers take turtles from the Santhuffs’ property and that he saw Seitz personally participating in that warrantless search and seizure.

Seitz asserts that he did not personally investigate the Santhuffs’ residence on July 14. Instead, Phillips and Bloxom informed him that, while standing on the outside of the fence surrounding the San-thuffs’ backyard, they had seen a stock tank containing an alligator snapping turtle, which is a protected species under Georgia law. Ga. Comp. R. & Regs. 391— 4-10-.09(3)(n). According to Seitz, Phillips and Bloxom also told him that they had seen more than twenty stock tanks in the Santhuffs’ backyard and that about nine of them were partitioned off in what looked like a breeding area. Bloxom and Phillips showed Seitz the photographs they took on July 14, including a picture of alligator snapping turtles. The agents told Seitz that they had made all of their observations and had taken all of their photographs from the backyard of the Santhuffs’ neighbors.

On July 15, 2005, Seitz contacted the Department’s special permits unit and asked if Santhuff had a license to possess alligator snapping turtles. The Department said he did not. Three days later, Seitz prepared an affidavit requesting a warrant to search the Santhuffs’ home and property. In support of the search warrant application, Seitz showed to a Georgia Superior Court Judge some of the July 14 photographs of the Santhuffs’ backyard. The judge issued the search warrant that same day.

On July 21, 2005, Seitz, along with state and federal officers, executed the search warrant. The officers seized some of the Santhuffs’ property, including some turtles.

B.

The Santhuffs filed a lawsuit against Seitz in his individual capacity under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The Santhuffs make four arguments alleging that their Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment rights were violated. First, they allege that in June 2005 or on July 14, 2005, Seitz, or someone at his direction, trespassed onto their property and illegally obtained evidence that was later used to obtain a search warrant. Second, they claim that Seitz knowingly misstated or omitted material information when he applied for a warrant to search their property. Third, the Santhuffs argue that there was insufficient probable cause for the issuance of a warrant. Finally, they claim that the warrant was so broad that it constituted an impermissible general warrant.

After the Santhuffs filed their lawsuit against Seitz, in February 2006 Steve San-thuff was charged with twenty-one counts of violating various provisions of Title 27 of the Official Code of Georgia, which deals with wildlife. The criminal charges against Santhuff related to the possession of protected species of animals. Meanwhile the district court stayed the San-thuffs’ civil suit pending the outcome of the criminal proceedings.

A jury acquitted Santhuff of all criminal charges, and the district court lifted the stay of the Santhuffs’ § 1983 suit. Near the end of the discovery period, Santhuff was deposed. He testified that he did not “have any evidence ... that Steve Seitz *942 walked on [my] property and took turtles from me before the search warrant.”

Seitz moved for summary judgment. Suddenly, the Santhuffs did have evidence that Seitz had unlawfully entered their property and had taken turtles from them before the search warrant was issued. The new evidence came in the form of an unexpected recollection by their friend, Lance Fisher. 1 The Santhuffs’ opposition to summary judgment included Fisher’s affidavit dated about a month after San-thuffs deposition was taken. This was the first of Fisher’s affidavits. Fisher had never been identified before as a witness who could support the Santhuffs’ allegation that their property had been unlawfully entered or searched.

In Fisher’s first affidavit he swore that he drove past the Santhuffs’ home on the afternoon of July 14, 2005 and saw two men standing by a white utility vehicle across the street from the Santhuffs’ residence. He saw two other men carrying a metal wash tub across the street toward the utility vehicle. According to Fisher, all of the men wore tool belts and hard hats, and the two men carrying the metal tub were Hamrick and Seitz. Fisher attested that he “did not realize who Mr. Seitz was until [he] saw him in photos available after Mr. Santhuffs deposition.” Fisher attached to his affidavit the photo he claimed jogged his memory.

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Bluebook (online)
385 F. App'x 939, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steven-d-santhuff-v-steve-seitz-ca11-2010.