Swofford v. Eslinger

671 F. Supp. 2d 1274, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 111064, 2009 WL 3818593
CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Florida
DecidedSeptember 28, 2009
Docket8:08-cv-00066
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 671 F. Supp. 2d 1274 (Swofford v. Eslinger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Swofford v. Eslinger, 671 F. Supp. 2d 1274, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 111064, 2009 WL 3818593 (M.D. Fla. 2009).

Opinion

ORDER

MARY S. SCRIVEN, District Judge.

THIS CAUSE comes before the Court for consideration of Plaintiffs’ Motion for Spoliation Sanctions (Doc. No. 44)(the “Motion”). 1 Plaintiffs’ Motion seeks sanctions against all Defendants for bad faith spoliation of various pieces of evidence. During the Court’s evidentiary hearing on the Motion on June 11, 2009, the Court granted Plaintiffs’ Motion, leaving only the determination of appropriate sanctions to be imposed remaining for the Court’s consideration. The imposition of sanctions against Defendants pursuant to the Motion is discussed herein.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Case Summary

This case arises from the shooting of Plaintiff Robert Swofford (“Swofford”) on April 20, 2006, by Defendants William Morris, Jr. (“Morris”) and/or Ronald Remus (“Remus”). Morris and Remus, Deputies for Seminole County Sheriffs Office (“SCSO”), were pursuing what they believed to be two car burglary suspects when they encountered an armed Mr. Swofford on Swofford’s property and fired upon him. Donald Eslinger is a third defendant in this case, being sued in his official capacity as the Sheriff of Seminole County, State of Florida. Mr. Swofford brings a § 1983 claim against Defendants for the use of excessive force and unlawful entry onto the Swoffords’ property, in violation of Mr. Swofford’s Fourth Amendment rights. Mr. Swofford also brings state law claims of battery, gross negligence, simple negligence, and negligent training and supervision. Mrs. Swofford brings a claim for loss of consortium. (Doc. No. 2.)

Summarily, the facts giving rise to Plaintiffs’ claims are as follows: While Remus was on bicycle patrol at an apartment complex near Swofford’s property during the early morning hours of April 20, 2006, Remus observed and pursued two burglary suspects. After pursuing persons away from the location in question, Remus returned to the location at which he first observed the suspects to continue his investigation. When Morris arrived with his K-9 to assist, Remus and Morris searched along the fence dividing the apartment complex from Swofford’s property. Remus, Morris, (the “Deputies”) and the K-9 entered Swofford’s property through a space Morris created in the fence. At some point during this melee, Swofford, asleep inside his house, was awoken by his dog barking and went outside, armed, to check his property. Upon hearing voices and seeing the beams of the Deputies’ flashlights enter his property, Swofford followed the beams as they crossed his property. The Deputies, encountering Swofford, opened fire, shooting him seven *1278 times. Swofford sustained serious injuries and spent six weeks in the hospital.

B. The Motion for Spoliation Sanctions

The Motion presently before the Court asserts that Defendants have destroyed or lost key evidence, despite the Defendants’ independent duty to preserve this evidence and the Plaintiffs’ specific requests that evidence be preserved. (Doc. No. 44 at 1-2.) The issues raised in the Motion pertain to the following pieces or categories of evidence: Deputy Remus’ laptop computer; all SCSO emails from April 20, 2006, to June 2007; and the Deputies’ radios, guns, and uniforms used on the night of April 20, 2006. 2

C. The Court’s Finding on Spoliation

That we are here on this issue is inexplicable and inexcusable. On August 24, 2006, Plaintiffs’ counsel sent a letter to the SCSO requesting that all evidence in the SCSO’s possession related to the shooting be maintained in its original order. (Doc. No. 44 at 3.) Plaintiffs’ counsel sent a second letter to the SCSO, dated February 6, 2007, also requesting that all evidence related to the shooting be preserved and listing specific types of evidence, including firearms, clips and ammunition, training records, and electronic evidence. (Doc. No. 44 at 3-4.) In addition to the preservation letters, on or about February 26, 2007, Plaintiffs’ counsel served on the SCSO a notice letter pursuant to § 768.28, Florida Statutes, informing the Sheriff that a claim would be filed against the Sheriff and Deputies Morris and Remus. (Doc. No. 44 at 5.) From March 2007 through August 2007, the SCSO also received public records requests from Plaintiffs’ counsel for particular information, including e-mail communications related to the shooting investigation. (Doc. No. 44 at 5-6.)

The SCSO acknowledges that it received both letters from Plaintiffs’ counsel and the other notices as well. (Doc. No. 50 at 3-4; Hr’g Tr. 11:9-10.). Additionally, Defendants were under an obligation to retain the evidence in question while the outcome of a law enforcement investigation was pending. Nevertheless, upon its receipt of the letters, the SCSO never issued any directives or “litigation hold memos” to suspend all orders, practices, or policies that could lead to the destruction of evidence relevant to this case. As admitted at the Hearing by David Lane, SCSO’s General Counsel since March 2006, the only action taken by anyone at the SCSO in response to the preservation letters was that Linda McDaniel, a paralegal in the General Counsel’s office, reviewed the letters and forwarded a copy of the letters to approximately six senior SCSO employees, including Sheriff Eslinger. 3 (Hr’g Tr. 171:24-172:1.) The second preservation letter, dated February 6, 2007, was also disseminated to Lieutenant Bill Morris, who is Captain of Professional Standards *1279 and also the father Defendant William Morris, Jr. 4 (Doc. No. 50 at 4.) According to Lane, by merely copying the preservation letter and distributing it to the list of senior employees, he believed that the SCSO “would cover the course and scope of the evidence requested in [the] first letter and in the second letter as well;” nothing further needed to be done. (Hr’g Tr. 171:2-9.) Deputies Morris and Remus, two of the three defendants in this case, allegedly did not receive a copy of the preservation letters and never received any instructions to preserve evidence pertaining to the shooting of Mr. Swofford.

Despite that the senior employees listed by Ms. McDaniel received copies of the preservation letters, including the Sheriff himself, not one of those individuals did anything to see that SCSO employees complied with SCSO’s legal obligations to preserve evidence relevant to Plaintiffs’ case. Even in the face of the Plaintiffs Motion for Spoliation Sanctions, filed on November 21, 2008, the SCSO’s Office of General Counsel still had not, as of the Hearing on June 11, 2009, done anything to ensure that SCSO employees were properly complying with the preservation letters. At the Hearing, Defendants attempted to avoid sanctions by presenting a number of subordinate employees as witnesses. Yet, none of these witnesses were on the list of persons to whom Ms. McDaniel circulated the preservation letters. Each testified predictably that, if they spoliated evidence, it was unintentional because they had not been made aware of the preservation letters or the impending lawsuit. (Hr’g Tr. 14:6-18.) However, as the Court explained in Turner v. Hudson Transit Lines, Inc.,

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Bluebook (online)
671 F. Supp. 2d 1274, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 111064, 2009 WL 3818593, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swofford-v-eslinger-flmd-2009.