Wheeler v. City of Lansing

660 F.3d 931, 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 22531, 2011 WL 5345402
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedNovember 8, 2011
Docket10-1128, 10-1160
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 660 F.3d 931 (Wheeler v. City of Lansing) 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
Wheeler v. City of Lansing, 660 F.3d 931, 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 22531, 2011 WL 5345402 (6th Cir. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

ROGERS, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff Stella Wheeler appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment for defendant, Officer Dennis Wirth, on her 42 U.S.C. § 1983 claim that he violated her constitutional rights in obtaining a search warrant for, and executing a no-knock search of, her apartment. Wheeler alleges that Wirth infringed on her Fourth Amendment rights by relying on a warrant that was not supported by probable cause as to some of the items to be seized and that failed to describe with particularity some of the items to be seized. The district court found that Wirth had violated the Fourth Amendment, but that he was entitled to qualified immunity because this violation would not have been apparent to the reasonable officer. Wirth cross-appeals the district court’s finding of a constitutional violation.

A reasonable officer would have believed that probable cause for the warrant existed and therefore the district court did not err in granting Wirth qualified immunity as to this aspect of Wheeler’s Fourth Amendment claim. We need not determine whether the warrant affidavit was sufficient to establish probable cause for the warrant in the first place; moreover, Wirth’s cross-appeal, which raises that issue, must be dismissed because the district court ordered no relief adverse to Wirth.

However, because it would have been apparent to a reasonable officer that the warrant Wirth obtained lacked the required specificity in its description of the items to be seized, he is not entitled to *934 qualified immunity from this aspect of Wheeler’s Fourth Amendment claim. The district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Wirth must therefore be reversed in part.

I.

This suit revolves around the execution of a search warrant on Stella Wheeler’s apartment in Lansing, Michigan, on January 31, 2008. Officer Dennis Wirth from the City of Lansing Police Department and Officer Douglas Sharp from the Eaton County Sheriffs Department began working together in January 2008 to investigate a number of home invasions that had taken place in the City of Lansing (in Ingham County) and in Eaton County. 1 As a result of these investigations, Wirth apprehended Tywone Brown, and Brown provided information in regard to two home invasions in Lansing in which he had been involved. Brown identified Wheeler’s boyfriend, Michael Adams, as a participant in these home invasions and told Wirth that property stolen during these home invasions was in Wheeler’s apartment. Because Wheeler’s apartment was located in Eaton County, Wirth employed Sharp’s assistance in following this lead.

Wirth, Sharp, and Brown drove to Wheeler’s apartment complex at Brown’s direction, and while there Brown pointed out Wheeler’s unit to the officers, explaining that it was where he had taken the stolen property. Wirth indicated that the address on the building was 1036 and the apartment number was 4; he also noticed a green-bladed snow shovel sitting in front of the apartment. Sharp recorded this information, and, after looking up and seeing a street sign, he wrote down the street name as Mapletree Court. Wirth and Sharp then dropped Brown off at a township substation in Eaton County and proceeded to the Eaton County prosecutor’s office to obtain a search warrant for Wheeler’s apartment.

In the meantime, Detective Daniel Prueter was conducting surveillance on the apartment complex in an attempt to locate a gold-colored Pontiac Grand Prix that had been connected to three of the home invasions in Eaton County. A witness to one of the home invasions had recorded the vehicle’s license plate number, and the plate was registered to Wheeler. Wirth had previously contacted Wheeler to speak with her about the fact that her car had been seen during these invasions, but Wheeler denied any knowledge of wrongdoing. During his surveillance, Prueter spoke with the manager of Wheeler’s apartment complex and learned that Wheeler lived at 1036. Prueter passed this information along to Wirth and Sharp before they headed to the prosecutor’s office. In addition, after the complex manager told Prueter what Wheeler’s address was, Prueter told the manager that officers were obtaining a warrant to search Wheeler’s apartment and asked for a key to gain entry. The manager agreed to provide a key, and contacted a maintenance man to bring the key to Prueter.

Sharp and Wirth met with the assistant prosecutor, who typed up the affidavit requesting a warrant to search Wheeler’s apartment. Both Sharp and Wirth provided the assistant prosecutor with information for the warrant affidavit, but only Sharp signed the affidavit. Wirth described the information given to the assistant prosecutor as follows:

*935 Conversation with the prosecutor with Eaton County, Detective Sharp provided her with his information reference to home invasions he had, and I provided her also with the information I had, specifically reference my home invasions, and Tywone Brown’s statement to me pointing out the address, the drive-by, exactly what we were looking for, the people involved, and that’s how she ended up getting the information to draw up the Affidavit there.

The warrant affidavit stated in a paragraph entitled “The PROPERTY to be searched for and seized, if found” that officers were looking for personal property, specifically listed in various categories and “taken in approximately nineteen home invasions.” However, the paragraph entitled “The FACTS establishing probable cause or the grounds for the search” described only two home invasions, the two invasions in the City of Lansing to which Brown admitted being a participant. Despite this apparent discrepancy, Sharp and Wirth obtained a search warrant and returned to Wheeler’s apartment, the unit Brown pointed out, with the warrant and a SWAT team.

After the SWAT team gained entry into Wheeler’s apartment, 2 various other officers began searching the apartment and seizing certain items. The warrant listed the property to be “searched for and seized” as:

Proof of ownership and/or occupancy, evidence of home invasions that have occurred in Eaton and Ingham counties in November 2007-January 2008, including but not limited to personal property (shotguns, long guns, computer and stereo equipment, cameras, DVD players, video game systems, big screen televisions, necklaces, rings, other jewelry, coin collections, music equipment, car stereo equipment) taken in approximately nineteen [sic: list ends abruptly]

Both Wirth and Sharp contend that they did not physically seize any of the personal property in the apartment, but Sharp does acknowledge that he filled out the “Return and Tabulation,” listing the property seized by other officers. While logging this property, Sharp learned that the correct address for the residence was 1036 Endicott Court, not 1036 Mapletree Court as it was listed in the warrant. City of Lansing officers took the confiscated property to the Lansing Police Department and logged it in the department’s property room.

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Bluebook (online)
660 F.3d 931, 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 22531, 2011 WL 5345402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wheeler-v-city-of-lansing-ca6-2011.