Susan Wallingford v. Jeff Olson

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 25, 2010
Docket09-1271
StatusPublished

This text of Susan Wallingford v. Jeff Olson (Susan Wallingford v. Jeff Olson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Susan Wallingford v. Jeff Olson, (8th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT ___________

No. 09-1271 ___________

Susan L. Wallingford; Greg E. Hajek, * * Appellees, * * Appeal from the United States v. * District Court for the * District of Nebraska. Jeff Olson, In Individual * and Official Capacities, * * Appellant. * __________

Submitted: November 17, 2009 Filed: January 25, 2010 ___________

Before WOLLMAN, RILEY, and SHEPHERD, Circuit Judges. ___________

RILEY, Circuit Judge.

Susan L. Wallingford (Wallingford) and her boyfriend, Greg E. Hajek (Hajek), filed a civil action in federal district court under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 alleging, among other claims, excessive force against Jeff Olson (Deputy Olson), a deputy with the Colfax County, Nebraska, Sheriff’s Department. Deputy Olson and several other named defendants filed joint motions for summary judgment, based, in part, on qualified immunity. The district court granted Deputy Olson’s motion for summary judgment, in part, but denied the motion as to Wallingford’s excessive force claim against Deputy Olson in his individual capacity. Deputy Olson appeals the district court’s denial of qualified immunity. We reverse.

I. BACKGROUND On July 30, 2006, Wallingford and Hajek were each driving motorized Pagsta scooters near the Colfax County Courthouse in Schuyler, Nebraska. Deputy Olson was standing in front of the courthouse speaking with Jerome Stewart (Officer Stewart), a police officer for the Schuyler Police Department. Deputy Olson asserts he heard a loud muffler and observed two individuals driving motorized scooters and wearing improper helmets. The individuals stopped at a nearby stop sign and, according to Deputy Olson, excessively revved their engines. Wallingford acknowledged she was wearing an improper helmet and claims she told Deputy Olson she had a proper helmet at home. Wallingford also asserted she revved her scooter engine to keep it from stalling. Officer Stewart pulled over both scooters, and Deputy Olson arrived shortly thereafter.

Officer Stewart and Officer Scott Wimer (Officer Wimer) made contact with Hajek while Deputy Olson spoke with Wallingford.1 During the traffic stop, Deputy Olson issued Wallingford a citation for driving a motorized vehicle with a muffler defect and for wearing an improper helmet. Deputy Olson asked Wallingford to step over to his patrol car, and Wallingford complied. Deputy Olson then explained the citation to Wallingford. When Deputy Olson asked Wallingford to sign the citation, Wallingford refused and stated her lawyer had advised her not to sign citations. Deputy Olson informed Wallingford that she needed to sign the citation to show Wallingford intended to appear in court on the date specified on the citation. Deputy Olson further explained that if Wallingford refused to sign the citation, she could be

1 Because this appeal arises out of Wallingford’s claim against Deputy Olson, only the facts pertaining to Wallingford are relevant for purposes of this appeal.

-2- taken to jail. Wallingford admits Deputy Olson provided her with this information, and she repeatedly refused to sign the citation.

The parties dispute the events which took place after Wallingford refused to sign her citation. Deputy Olson’s patrol car contained a video camera which recorded much of the altercation between Deputy Olson and Wallingford. However, the recording did not capture the oral statements made by Wallingford and Deputy Olson during the incident.

Wallingford charges Deputy Olson grabbed her by the breast and threw her face down on the patrol car with enough force to cause bruising. Wallingford states that when she was “forced face down against the police car, Wallingford felt a burning sensation in her chest and immediately and instinctively turned around to slap” Deputy Olson. Wallingford maintains Deputy Olson responded by throwing her onto the street and, as a result, she fractured her foot and struck her head on the pavement, instantly causing blurred vision.

Deputy Olson relates he told Wallingford she was under arrest and instructed Wallingford to turn around. Deputy Olson says Wallingford began to back away from him, so he “grabbed . . . Wallingford’s left arm to place it behind her back in order to handcuff her.” Deputy Olson maintains Wallingford began to pull away and resist, so he placed Wallingford against the hood of his patrol car “to gain control of her.” Deputy Olson then “handcuffed [Wallingford’s] left hand and was trying to get her right hand which she had under her chest.” Deputy Olson claims he asked Wallingford for her right hand, but Wallingford refused, and declared “that if she was going to jail, it [would] be for something.” Wallingford then turned around and struck Deputy Olson on the left side of his face with her right hand. Deputy Olson contends Wallingford’s momentum continued, and Wallingford fell to the ground. Deputy Olson “placed [himself] on top of . . . Wallingford and attempted to get her right hand cuffed.” Deputy Olson stated Wallingford refused to give him her right hand, even

-3- after the fall, but he “was finally able to get a hold of Wallingford’s right arm and then brought it behind her back and placed it into the handcuffs.”

Following the arrest, Wallingford was transported to the hospital, but Wallingford refused treatment. Deputy Olson then drove Wallingford to the Colfax County correctional facility and issued Wallingford a citation for assault on a police officer, resisting arrest, and failure to sign a citation. Wallingford claimed, by affidavit, that she saw a doctor the day after the incident and learned her foot was fractured.

On May 28, 2008, Wallingford and Hajek filed an amended complaint against Colfax County, the Colfax County Sheriff, and Deputy Olson (collectively, county defendants), as well as Officer Stewart, Officer Wimer, the City of Schuyler, and the Schuyler Chief of Police (collectively, city defendants). Wallingford and Hajek alleged various civil rights violations under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, including: (1) excessive force against Deputy Olson, Officer Stewart, and Officer Wimer in their individual and official capacities; (2) failure to train and supervise against the Schuyler Chief of Police, the Colfax County Sheriff, the City of Schuyler, and the County of Colfax; and (3) negligent hiring against the Schuyler Chief of Police, the Colfax County Sheriff, the City of Schuyler, and the County of Colfax.

The county defendants filed a joint motion for summary judgment, and the city defendants thereafter filed a joint motion for summary judgment. The district court granted the defendants’ motions for summary judgment, in part, leaving only three claims for trial: Wallingford’s claim of excessive force against Deputy Olson in his individual capacity, and Hajek’s claims of excessive force against Officers Stewart and Wimer in their individual capacities. This appeal relates only to the district court’s denial of qualified immunity as to Wallingford’s claim of excessive force against Deputy Olson in his individual capacity.

-4- II. DISCUSSION Deputy Olson asserts the district court erred by denying Deputy Olson qualified immunity and in failing to conduct a sufficient analysis of the facts to determine whether Deputy Olson was entitled to qualified immunity. We agree. “[A]n order denying qualified immunity is immediately appealable even though it is interlocutory; otherwise, it would be ‘effectively unreviewable.’” Scott v. Harris, 550 U.S. 372, 376 n.2 (2007) (quoting Mitchell v.

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Bluebook (online)
Susan Wallingford v. Jeff Olson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/susan-wallingford-v-jeff-olson-ca8-2010.