Summerland v. County of Livingston

240 F. App'x 70
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 27, 2007
Docket06-1975
StatusUnpublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 240 F. App'x 70 (Summerland v. County of Livingston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Summerland v. County of Livingston, 240 F. App'x 70 (6th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

KEITH, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff, Diana Summerland (personal representative of the estate of Dwaine Rinesmith), appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment on the basis of qualified immunity in favor of Defendants (County of Livingston and several of its officers). Because we find, inter alia, that the officers did not violate Rinesmith’s constitutional rights, we AFFIRM the district court’s grant of qualified immunity.

I.

This case arises out of the shooting death of Dwaine Rinesmith, a mentally disturbed man. At approximately 6:30 p.m. on October 5, 2002, Livingston County Sheriff Deputies Carl Smyth and Raymond Marino each responded to a 911 call that a man placed a large sign in his front yard that read “no police you be shot.” (JA 395.) Deputy Smyth initially refused to respond to the call because “he did not think it was a police matter,” (JA 373), but Smyth’s commanding officer, Sergeant Fred Williams, informed him that there was a mentally disturbed individual living on the property where the sign was located and that “they would need to go and check the status of the individual and find out his mental condition, as well as what his intentions were.” (JA 373).

When Deputy Smyth and Deputy Mari-no each arrived at the scene, they encountered Dwaine Rinesmith in the window of a mobile home located on the property with the sign. Marino asked Rinesmith to exit his residence, but he refused. Deputy *72 Smyth attempted to enter Rinesmith’s property through a chained gate, but, as Smyth was unwinding the chain, Rinesmith began yelling from his window for the officers to stay out of his yard. Smyth backed off as a result.

After Marino made phone contact with Rinesmith, Rinesmith started to complain about how he was a Vietnam veteran and that “nobody appreciates him, [and] what he did for the country[.]” (JA 99.) Rinesmith also spoke of an incident that purportedly occurred two weeks prior, in which two Livingston County deputies had “beat[en] him up” in the process of transporting him to the University of Michigan Hospital for psychiatric treatment. (JA 100.) (According to Deputy Marino, Rinesmith claimed he received psychiatric treatment because “he wanted to die and he still want[ed] to die.” (JA 99.)) Deputy Marino convinced Rinesmith to throw his psychiatrist’s business card out of his window and to permit Marino onto the property to retrieve it. After Marino retrieved the card, he passed it to Smyth, who then attempted to contact Rinesmith’s psychiatrist, while Marino continued to speak with Rinesmith.

Around this time (approximately 6:50 p.m.), Livingston County Sheriff Deputy Curt Novara arrived on the scene, positioning himself behind a bush in front of Rinesmith’s mobile home. About a half hour later, Livingston County Sheriff Deputy Marc King arrived at Rinesmith’s residence — whose presence profoundly agitated Rinesmith. (Apparently, Rinesmith thought that Deputy King was the deputy who had allegedly handcuffed him too tightly during his transportation to the hospital two weeks earlier.) Upset, Rinesmith threw his cell phone out the window and terminated communication with Deputy Marino. Rinesmith then moved away from the window, causing Marino to lose sight of him.

According to Deputy Marino, Rinesmith returned to the window a short while later with an object that appeared to be a gun. Deputy Marino took cover behind his patrol car — though Marino does not say (nor does anyone else) that Rinesmith actually aimed the gun at anyone. 1 (JA 104.) One of Rinesmith’s neighbors, Robert A. Rodriguez, videotaped this, (JA 426) (DVD), and later testified in his deposition that he saw what he believed to be the barrel of a rifle in Rinesmith’s possession. Deputy Novara agreed with this perception: “From observing behind the pine trees[,] I [saw] Mr. Rinesmith in the front of his mobile home holding an object horizontally[;] it appeared to be in a tube-like manner, that resembled the barrel of a long gun.” (JA 159.)

Around 7:30 p.m., Rinesmith emerged from his mobile home and, according to Deputy Novara, appeared to have a handgun in his left hand. Deputy Novara yelled, “Gun!” and Rinesmith began to head north on his property — in the opposite direction of the deputies, who were positioned on the south side of the property. Deputy King, who was positioned to the southwest of Rinesmith’s property at the gate of a neighboring mobile home, spotted Rinesmith and announced his presence by yelling “Livingston County Sheriffs Department.” (JA 195.) Rinesmith responded by “turning in [King’s] direction *73 and [taking] up ... a kneeling stanee[.] ... [I]t was a shooting position and [he] pointed [something] in [King’s] direction.” (JA 195.) Deputy King later described the object as “something that appeared to be black and then something either attached to the back of it or the front of it that had a light.... It would be equated to a sight on a gun.” (JA 195.) One of Rinesmith’s neighbors, Bernardine Cusumano, also testified that she believed that Rinesmith was holding a gun. (JA 273-74.)

King then yelled for Rinesmith to “drop the object,” (JA 195), and Rinesmith responded by yelling, “Shoot me, Shoot me[,]” (JA 195). Deputy King repeated his command, and, within a matter of “three [to] five seconds,” Rinesmith “sat down and leaned against [a] shed [on the property], with the unknown object [on] the ground.” (JA 195.) At this point, King “ ‘noticed that [Rinesmith] had a small wooden handle shovel with a orange end next to him.’” (JA 196.) But, in response to the question, “Is the object he was pointing at you the same object that you identify as a shovel?,” King responded, “No.” (JA 196.) (Deputy King testified that he did not identify the object that Rinesmith was pointing at him until after the day of the incident. (JA 196.))

Around this time, Deputy Smyth finally located Rinesmith’s psychiatrist, Dr. Lee Wang, and tried to get Rinesmith to speak with Dr. Wang on the phone. Defendants contend that Rinesmith did not respond to Deputy Smyth’s calls, choosing instead to quickly move toward the front portion of his mobile home. 2 At this point, Deputy Marino was positioned at the northeast corner of the shed, and Deputy Novara was stationed at the southeast corner. When Rinesmith came closer to Deputy Marino’s position, Marino moved around the shed toward a gas meter in front of Rinesmith’s mobile home. Novara was now stationed five feet south and five feet east of Deputy Marino.

A witness, Patrick Gibson, testified in his deposition that he witnessed “[Rinesmith] running around the corner of the shed toward the officers.” (JA 236.) According to Plaintiff, another witness, David Grissom, testified that Deputy Smyth was chasing Rinesmith toward this direction. (Appellant’s Br. 31; JA 388-389.) As Rinesmith ran toward Deputy Marino and Deputy Novara, Gibson testified that “[Rinesmith] had his arms straight out in front of him as he was running. His hands were together as if he were holding a gun.” (JA 236.) It appeared, according to Gibson, that Rinesmith was going to “shoot the officers[.]” (JA 236.)

Deputy Marino and Deputy Novara tell a slightly different story. They testified in their depositions that Rinesmith began charging them with “what appeared to be an axe in his right hand[,]” not a gun.

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Bluebook (online)
240 F. App'x 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/summerland-v-county-of-livingston-ca6-2007.