Sylvia Mahach-Watkins v. Larry Depee

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 1, 2010
Docket08-15694
StatusPublished

This text of Sylvia Mahach-Watkins v. Larry Depee (Sylvia Mahach-Watkins v. Larry Depee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sylvia Mahach-Watkins v. Larry Depee, (9th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT

SYLVIA MAHACH-WATKINS,  Individually & as the Successor in Interest to the Estate of John Joseph Wayne Watkins; PATRICIA No. 08-15694 ANN WATKINS, Plaintiffs-Appellees,  D.C. No. 3:05-cv-01143-SI v. OPINION LARRY DEPEE, a California Highway Patrol Officer; STATE OF CALIFORNIA, Defendants-Appellants.  Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of California Susan Illston, United States District Judge, Presiding

Argued and Submitted July 14, 2009—San Francisco, California

Filed February 1, 2010

Before: Dorothy W. Nelson, William A. Fletcher and Richard A. Paez, Circuit Judges.

Opinion by Judge William A. Fletcher

1823 1826 MAHACH-WATKINS v. DEPEE

COUNSEL

David Warren Hamilton, S. Michelle Inan, OFFICE OF THE CALIFORNIA ATTORNEY GENERAL, Oakland, Califor- nia, for the appellants.

Tory M. Pankopf, LAW OFFICES OF TORY M. PANKOPF, Reno, Nevada, Mary Helen Beatificato, BEATIFICATO & ASSOCIATES, Rancho Santa Margarita, California, for the appellees.

OPINION

W. FLETCHER, Circuit Judge:

California Highway Patrol (“CHP”) Officer Larry Depee (“Depee”) shot and killed John Watkins (“Watkins”) while on MAHACH-WATKINS v. DEPEE 1827 duty in Crescent City, California. Watkins’s mother, Sylvia Mahach-Watkins (“Mahach-Watkins”), filed suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and various provisions of state law on her own behalf and on behalf of her son’s estate. A number of Mahach-Watkins’s claims were dismissed before trial. Two § 1983 claims and a state-law wrongful death claim went to trial. The jury returned a favorable verdict on one of the two § 1983 claims and on the wrongful death claim. The jury awarded nominal damages of one dollar on each of these two claims.

Mahach-Watkins thereafter sought almost $700,000 in attorney’s fees under 42 U.S.C. § 1988. The district court awarded $136,687.35. The court reduced the amount of attor- ney’s fees because of the limited success achieved in Mahach- Watkins’s § 1983 claim. Depee appeals the award of attor- ney’s fees. He contends under Farrar v. Hobby, 506 U.S. 103 (1992), that because of her limited success Mahach-Watkins is entitled to no attorney’s fees at all.

For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

I. Background

CHP Officer Larry Depee shot and killed John Watkins during a struggle on the night of December 9, 2003. Watkins was unemployed and had a long history of schizophrenia, accompanied by drug and alcohol abuse. He survived on Social Security payments and support from his mother.

In its order denying defendants’ motion for summary judg- ment on the § 1983 and wrongful death claims, the district court wrote:

The parties essentially agree that, Watkins, a forty-year old American Yurok Indian man, was rid- ing his bicycle down U.S. Highway 101 southbound in the northbound lane. Defendant Depee observed 1828 MAHACH-WATKINS v. DEPEE Watkins and saw that he was riding his bicycle with- out any lights. Depee tried to initiate a traffic stop of Watkins twice that evening but could not do so because Watkins rode away before defendant could position his patrol car for the stop.

Later that evening, Depee saw Watkins a third time, riding southbound on the sidewalk next to the northbound lane of Highway 101. The parties agree that Depee parked his patrol car directly in front of Watkins. Plaintiff claims that Watkins collided with the patrol car and fell from his bicycle onto the ground, while defendants maintain that Watkins stopped, straddled his bicycle and after Depee told Watkins he could not ride the wrong way in the roadway without lights, that Watkins either shoved or threw the bicycle at Depee and started running. The parties agree that at some point after Depee stopped Watkins, Watkins ran away to a wooded area behind a nearby Super 8 Motel, and Depee chased him. According to Depee, he and Watkins struggled, and at some point during the fight, Wat- kins began yelling that he needed to go home to take his medications, and also told Depee he had a gun. Also according to Depee, Watkins wrested Depee’s flashlight away from him and swung at him twice with the flashlight. After the second swing, Depee drew his gun and shot Watkins several times, killing him.

Based upon, inter alia, the declaration of forensic pathologist John Cooper, plaintiff maintains that at the time Depee shot Watkins, Watkins was lying on his left side with his right arm raised up in a “ward- ing off” gesture, and that Watkins could not have been swinging the flashlight at the time of his death. Plaintiff also emphasizes the fact that a fingerprint analysis of Depee’s flashlight only revealed one of MAHACH-WATKINS v. DEPEE 1829 Watkins’ fingerprints on the head area of the flash- light; plaintiff asserts that if Depee’s version of events was true, there would be more of Watkins’ fingerprints on the flashlight, and that those finger- prints would be on the shaft of the flashlight.

The evidence at trial was largely consistent with this narra- tive. Depee testified at trial that he fired two shots and that he was probably two or three feet away from Watkins when he fired. When asked why he shot Watkins, Depee replied:

A. Well, in the end [I] shot him because he was try- ing to hit me with the flashlight and I definitely felt like he was trying to kill me. He said he had a gun. I don’t know why else he would tell anybody you have a gun you wanted the kill them or what-have- you. The whole circumstances fighting, running, assaulting my — and then ultimately the flashlight is when I shot.

Q. Why did you believe, maybe it’s obvious, but tell the jury why did you believe he was trying to kill you?

A. That flashlight is no doubt, to me that’s a deadly weapon when you[‘re] swinging that flashlight somebody, to me it’s painfully obvious he was trying to kill me.

After Watkins’s death, Mahach-Watkins filed suit against Depee and several other defendants in state court under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and various provisions of California law. Defendants removed to federal court. Mahach-Watkins filed an amended complaint in federal court, pleading a number of federal and state-law claims. Mahach-Watkins’s § 1983 claims were contained in her Sixth Cause of Action which contained two “counts.” Count 1 included an allegation of excessive force in violation of the Fourth Amendment, as well 1830 MAHACH-WATKINS v. DEPEE as allegations of First, Fifth, and Fourteenth Amendment vio- lations, on behalf of Mahach-Watkins and Watkins’s estate. Count 2 was an allegation of a conspiracy to violate Wat- kins’s constitutional rights. In addition, in her Seventh Cause of Action Mahach-Watkins brought a claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1985(3) alleging a failure to prevent civil rights violations and a conspiracy to cover up such violations. Mahach- Watkins’s state-law claims included wrongful death, assault and battery, intentional infliction of emotional distress, negli- gence, and negligent hiring, training and retention.

After motions to dismiss, to strike, and for summary judg- ment, only three claims survived, as to which Depee was the sole defendant. The claims were a § 1983 Fourth Amendment claim by Mahach-Watkins, a § 1983 Fourth Amendment claim by Watkins’s estate, and a state-law wrongful death claim by Mahach-Watkins.

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