Vanessa Enoch v. Hamilton Cty. Sheriff's Office

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 11, 2020
Docket19-3428
StatusUnpublished

This text of Vanessa Enoch v. Hamilton Cty. Sheriff's Office (Vanessa Enoch v. Hamilton Cty. Sheriff's Office) 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
Vanessa Enoch v. Hamilton Cty. Sheriff's Office, (6th Cir. 2020).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 20a0343n.06

Case No. 19-3428

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

VANESSA ENOCH, et al., ) FILED Jun 11, 2020 Plaintiffs-Appellees, ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk ) v. ) ) HAMILTON COUNTY SHERIFF’S ) ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED OFFICE, et al., ) STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE Defendants-Appellants. ) SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO ) OPINION

Before: SUHRHEINRICH, BUSH, and MURPHY, Circuit Judges.

JOHN K. BUSH, Circuit Judge. This case arises from arrests of Vanessa Enoch and

Avery Corbin for taking videos and photos in a hallway of a courthouse in Hamilton County, Ohio,

ostensibly in violation of a judge’s order prohibiting courtroom pictures and videos. Enoch and

Corbin claim that the arrests violated their rights under the First and Fourth Amendments as

incorporated by the Fourteenth Amendment, and also raise state-law claims. At the pleadings

stage the district court denied qualified immunity for the arresting officers, Sheriff’s Deputies

Gene Nobles and Brian Hogan (together, “the Deputies”), and a panel of this court affirmed.

Enoch v. Hogan, 728 F. App’x 448 (6th Cir. 2018) (Enoch I). At summary judgment the district

court again denied qualified immunity to the Deputies on the First and Fourth Amendment claims,

granted summary judgment to Enoch and Corbin on three of those claims (Counts I, II and II), and

denied summary judgment on the remaining claims. For the reasons stated below, we REVERSE

the district court’s denial of qualified immunity, AFFIRM the district court’s denial of state-law Case No. 19-3428 Enoch v. Hamilton Cty. Sheriff’s Office

immunity to all Defendants-Appellants, DISMISS the interlocutory appeal of the Hamilton

County Sheriff’s Office, and REMAND for proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I.

In 2014, Enoch and Corbin visited the county courthouse in Hamilton County, Ohio to

attend a pretrial hearing in the criminal prosecution of Tracie Hunter, a local juvenile court judge.

Corbin was a bailiff for Judge Hunter before she was removed from the bench. Enoch was in court

that day conducting a case study of the prosecution of Judge Hunter. At the conclusion of the

day’s proceedings, Enoch and Corbin exited the courtroom and, using their iPads, began taking

videos and photos in the hallway.

Enoch and Corbin stood with others congregated outside the courtroom. When Kimball

Perry, a reporter for the Cincinnati Enquirer, exited the courtroom, Corbin pointed the iPad

towards Perry. As Perry walked down the hallway and turned down a different hallway, Corbin

followed, taking pictures of and video recording the reporter. Perry then called out to the

Deputies—here, acting as court security officers—that Corbin was taking pictures in the hallway.

All the while, Enoch was also taking pictures on her iPad. The Deputies responded to the

commotion. Deputy Hogan ordered Corbin and Enoch to stop recording and to turn off their

devices, insisting that a local court rule prohibited photography or video recording anywhere in

the courthouse. The Deputies also demanded that Corbin and Enoch provide photo identification.

After Corbin did so, he argued with the Deputies that he was permitted to take pictures and record

videos in the hallway because the judge only prohibited photography inside the courtroom, not in

the hallways.

While the Deputies were discussing Corbin’s conduct that had led to the commotion,

Corbin took out his iPad again to take a picture of the courtroom door. On the door was posted a

2 Case No. 19-3428 Enoch v. Hamilton Cty. Sheriff’s Office

notice stating that “use of cell phones, pagers, cameras, electronic devices are prohibited without

permission of the Court.” R. 84-11 at PageID 1236.

Local Rule 33(D)(6) prohibits recording “in any courtroom or hearing room, jury room,

judge’s chambers or ancillary area (to be determined in the sole discretion of the Court) without

the express permission of the Court.” Hamilton Cty. Common Pleas Court R. 33(D)(6).1 Judge

Nadel, who presided at the Hunter trial, gave an instruction in his courtroom pursuant to Rule

33(D)(6), but did not reference “hallways” in those instructions. However, when deposed in this

case, Judge Nadel testified that he understood that “the hallway” was an “adjacent area[]” that was

“ancillary to the courtroom” and that he thought that this understanding was implicit in his order.

Neither Hogan nor Nobles had seen an order from Judge Nadel defining “ancillary areas” to

include the hallways of the courthouse.

The Deputies charged both Corbin and Enoch for disorderly conduct under Ohio Rev. Code

§ 2917.11. Enoch also was charged with failure to disclose information under Ohio Rev. Code §

2921.29, on the basis that she had refused to identify herself. The Deputies later testified that they

arrested the pair for taking photographs in violation of Local Rule 33(D)(6). All charges were

subsequently dismissed.

Enoch and Corbin filed this suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 alleging First and Fourth

Amendment claims and pendent state-law claims against Deputies Hogan and Nobles, the

Hamilton County Sheriff’s Office, and County Sheriff Jim Neil, along with four other employees

of the Sheriff’s Office who have since been dismissed. As part of their claims, Enoch and Corbin

maintained that they were singled out and arrested because they were African American. Although

several other individuals—most of them white—were using cameras and other recording devices

1 The full text of the Rule can be found at https://hamiltoncountycourts.org/wp- content/uploads/2017/07/RULE-33.pdf.

3 Case No. 19-3428 Enoch v. Hamilton Cty. Sheriff’s Office

in the hallways, they were not prohibited from doing so by the Deputies, and none of them were

arrested.

The Deputies moved for judgment on the pleadings for the federal-law claims on the basis

of qualified immunity. The district court granted the motion as to Enoch and Corbin’s excessive-

force claims (Count IV), but concluded that they were not entitled to qualified immunity on the

remaining claims at the pleading stage. The district court also granted the motion as to Enoch and

Corbin’s state-law malicious-prosecution claim (Count VII), state-law false-imprisonment claim

(Count IX), and state-law assault and battery claim (Count XI). We affirmed in Enoch I, 728

F. App’x at 457, holding that Enoch and Corbin had plausibly alleged violations of their First and

Fourth Amendment rights, and remanded to the district court for further proceedings on Counts I–

III, V, VI, VIII, and X.

After the close of discovery, both sides moved for partial summary judgment. The district

court again denied the Deputies qualified immunity on the First and Fourth Amendment claims,

denied summary judgment to Sheriff Neil and the Sheriff’s Office on a claim of supervisory

liability under the First and Fourth Amendments, and granted summary judgment to Enoch and

Corbin on certain First and Fourth Amendment claims (Counts I, II and III), reserving for trial a

Fourth Amendment malicious-prosecution claim (Count V), the supervisory-liability claim (Count

VI), and state-law claims of negligent and intentional infliction of emotional distress (Count VIII)

and invasion of privacy (Count X). The district court held that Defendants-Appellants were not

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Vanessa Enoch v. Hamilton Cty. Sheriff's Office, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vanessa-enoch-v-hamilton-cty-sheriffs-office-ca6-2020.