Tammy Murray v. Scott Atkinson

332 F. App'x 241
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMay 28, 2009
Docket08-1342
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 332 F. App'x 241 (Tammy Murray v. Scott Atkinson) 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
Tammy Murray v. Scott Atkinson, 332 F. App'x 241 (6th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

SUTTON, Circuit Judge.

Tammy and James Murray challenge a final judgment rejecting their speech-retaliation and state law public-records claims as a matter of law. We affirm.

I.

Just after midnight on February 5, 2006, Tammy Murray made a right-hand turn without stopping her ear for a red traffic light, almost colliding with a City of Taylor police car. After pulling her over, the officer noticed alcohol on her breath, and a breath test confirmed the officer’s suspicions: Her blood-alcohol level was 0.22 percent. The officer arrested her and took her to jail.

At the jail, Tammy Murray began to cry, demanding to be taken to the hospital because of a panic attack; she also, the defendants maintain, threatened to kill herself. The officers declined to take her to a hospital, but they did place her in a suicide-prevention gown — a tear-resistant garment designed to prevent a prisoner from trying to hang herself. Tammy Murray was released from jail the following day.

While the drunk-driving charge against her was pending, Murray filed a state-law freedom of information request, seeking, among other things, “any and all files, ... incident reports, ... prisoner/jail records, ..., and anything tangible in your possession pertaining to the arrest, booking or incarceration of Tammy L. Murray.” ROA 281. In response, the City gave her a number of documents. Murray pleaded no contest to the charge.

Tammy Murray and her husband, James Murray, sued a group of police officers involved in the incident as well as the City of Taylor in Michigan state court, bringing (among other claims) a speech-retaliation claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and a state- *243 law FOIA claim. The defendants jointly-removed the case to federal court and moved for summary judgment on the Mur-rays’ claims. The district court granted summary judgment to the defendants on all counts.

II.

The Murrays first challenge the district court’s rejection of their speech-retaliation claims against Cadet Cowell and Sergeant Cullen. To establish a prima facie First Amendment speech-retaliation claim against government officials under § 1983, a claimant must present sufficient evidence that (1) she “engaged in constitutionally protected speech,” (2) the defendants took “adverse action” against her of a sort “that would deter a person of ordinary firmness from continuing to engage in that conduct” and (3) “there is a causal connection” between the speech and the adverse action. Scarbrough v. Morgan County Bd. of Educ., 470 F.3d 250, 255 (6th Cir.2006).

A.

Tammy Muir ay’s retaliation claim. When Tammy Murray arrived at the police station at about one in the morning, Cadet Cowell booked her and gave her a breath-alzyer test, confirming that she was still drunk. Although initially cooperative, she became irritated as the booking process continued. After Cowell told her that she would need to remain in jail until 11:00 a.m. the next morning so that she could sober up, she asked if she would need to stay longer if she threw a “hissy fit” and acted like a “stupid bitch.” Audio Ex., Booking 031, at 1:40. When Cowell conducted an inventory of the items in her purse, she became annoyed and asked if he “want[ed] to search [her] pants, [her] socks, [or her] bra,” or if he “want[ed] to give [her] an anal search.” Audio Ex., Booking 033, at 5:50.

Cowell placed Tammy in a holding cell around 2:00 a.m. that morning. At some point later that morning, she “started [her] period,” ROA 118, and an officer provided her with tampons and sanitary napkins. Later, she claims, her “stomach started hurting,” and she “didn’t know if [she] was going to [get sick] or not,” so she asked to be taken to a hospital. ROA 121. Her request was relayed to Cowell’s superior, Sergeant Cullen, who decided to keep her at the jail.

After Sergeant Cullen refused to transport her to the hospital, she had “a panic attack” and became “really, really nervous,” ROA 126, and eventually began “crying,” ROA 127. Female officers took her out of her cell and ordered her to remove her clothing and don a suicide-prevention gown — essentially a sleeveless, calf-length brown dress — at just after six in the morning. While putting on the gown, Tammy denied being suicidal. She was allowed to call James Murray to request that he bring her medicine to the station. During the phone call, she complained that the officers had not allowed her to go to the hospital despite the fact that she was suffering from stomach and tooth pain, asked her husband to bring Motrin to the station and told him to call a lawyer.

This sequence of events fails as a matter of law to state a speech-retaliation claim under the First (and Fourteenth) Amendment. Granting for the sake of argument that her complaints to the officers and to her husband were protected by the First Amendment and that the officers engaged in adverse action against her when they ordered her to wear a suicide-prevention gown, she has failed to establish causation as a matter of law. The key problem is that Tammy Murray’s undisputed actions gave the officers ample rea *244 son — indeed good cause — to ask her to don the suicide gown. By her own admission, she felt “really, really nervous” and “started crying” when the officers would not take her to the hospital. ROA 126-27. The recorded evidence confirms that she told Cadet Cowell that she “was having ... a panic attack” and began to cry loudly, Audio Ex., Booking 059, at 13:25; Audio Ex., Booking 060, at 0:00, and she repeatedly insisted, while crying, that she “want[ed] to go to the hospital now,” Audio Ex., Booking 065, at 0:18. Add to all of this that she was quite drunk and otherwise behaving oddly, and the officers had reasonable grounds as a matter of law for placing the suicide gown on her.

That Tammy did not say that she intended to harm herself does not change matters. Prison officials need not wait that long — so long that it is potentially too late — to deal with a inmate who may be a threat to herself. No doubt, there is a disputed issue of fact as to whether Tammy said that she would hurt herself: The officers testified that she made the threat, and she denied it. But, in view of the other undisputed evidence of Tammy’s unstable mental status, the officers acted well within their rights in putting the gown on her.

Bloch v. Ribar, 156 F.3d 673 (6th Cir.1998), does not help Tammy. The decision merely addressed the standard for pleading a retaliation claim in a complaint, not the amount of evidence needed to take a claim past summary judgment. Id. at 681-82. A plaintiffs burden in a retaliation case is to show that the “protected activity” — here, her complaints to the officers — “was the likely reason for the adverse action.” Mickey v. Zeidler Tool & Die Co., 516 F.3d 516, 527-28 (6th Cir.2008). In view of her admitted behavior that night, Tammy Murray cannot meet that burden.

B.

James Murray’s speech-retaliation claim.

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Bluebook (online)
332 F. App'x 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tammy-murray-v-scott-atkinson-ca6-2009.