William Bond v. Phillip Asiala

704 F.2d 309, 1983 U.S. App. LEXIS 29048
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedApril 6, 1983
Docket79-1677
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 704 F.2d 309 (William Bond v. Phillip Asiala) 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
William Bond v. Phillip Asiala, 704 F.2d 309, 1983 U.S. App. LEXIS 29048 (6th Cir. 1983).

Opinion

*310 PER CURIAM.

Appellants, William and Mabel Bond, are a married couple who commenced this action for damages under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, on behalf of themselves and their two children, against the City of Ypsilanti, Michigan, two members of the Ypsilanti Police Department (YPD) (and three members of the Michigan State Police (MSP). The Bonds allege that their rights under the fourth and fourteenth amendments were violated when several police officers, seeking to apprehend a suspected drug dealer for whom a valid arrest warrant had been issued, and acting upon erroneous information conveyed to them, unverified from its source, conducted a search of appellants’ apartment without a search warrant. The district court, characterizing the case as “a negligence matter pure and simple ...,” 1 not rising to the level of a constitutional tort, granted summary judgment in favor of all defendants.

I. Background

A. Facts

In May, 1975, William and Mabel Bond were residing with their two children in apartment # 201 of a multi-unit apartment building (Southview Apts.) located at 167 South Grove Street, in Ypsilanti, Michigan. The following is a summary of the events which culminated in, what all parties agree was, a mistaken entry and search of appellants’ apartment on or about May 15, 1975, by several police officers, acting without a search warrant.

On three occasions in April and May, 1975, an informant, working with the Washtenaw Area Narcotics Team (W.A.N. T.), 2 entered the Southview Apts, for the purpose of making contact with, and purchasing drugs from a suspected drug dealer named Alex Cole. Prior to each visit, the informant was wired for sound. He was also kept under visual surveillance while entering and departing the apartment building by several police officers, including appellees, Det. Sgt. William Burns of the MSP, a member of W.A.N.T. and Officer Marilyn Horace of the YPD, assigned to, but apparently not a member of W.A.N.T. None of the officers involved in the surveillance were stationed within the building and thus, none of them personally observed which of the apartment units was entered or approached by the informant.

On the informant’s first visit to the building, Cole was not there. A female in one of the apartments directed the informant to a different location, where he could find Cole. The informant proceeded to the second location, where he did meet with, and purchase a quantity of drugs from Cole. On his second and third visits to Southview Apts., the informant returned to the same apartment, found Cole therein and made two additional drug purchases.

After each of the three drug transactions, the informant made handwritten notes of the incident. Therein, he recorded # 201, that is, the apartment in which the Bonds resided, as the unit he had entered. From these notes, Officer Horace then prepared type-written complaint reports. The reports prepared in connection with the first two drug transactions stated that Cole was “believed to reside at 167 Grove, Apt. # 201 ....” 3 The supplemental complaint report, prepared after the final transaction, simply listed Cole’s address as “167 Grove, Apt. # 201.” 4

On or about May 15, 1975, Det. Sgt. Burns signed some 30 complaints for suspected drug dealers and users. A corresponding number of arrest warrants were issued, including one for Alex Cole. On that same day, a meeting was held at the Ypsilanti State Police Post for the purpose *311 of briefing the police officers who were to be involved in the area-wide sweep to execute the arrest warrants. In all, some 50 police officers were present at this briefing, including: appellee, Dept. Lt. Phillip Asiala of the MSP, Office Commander and coordinator of W.A.N.T. activities; appellee, Det. Sgt. Burns; and appellee, Det. Sgt. (now Captain) Daniel Heliker of the YPD, assigned to assist W.A.N.T. in apprehending Cole, and the officer in charge of the police who entered and searched appellants’ apartment. The record does not reveal whether appellee, Officer Horace, was in attendance. However, the final, individually-named appellee, Det. Lt. James Henderson of the MSP, Officer Supervisor of W.A.N.T., was not in attendance.

During the briefing, Det. Sgt. Burns gave verbal instructions regarding Cole’s possible whereabouts. When questioned on this point, Burns testified:

My instructions in this particular case was that we had made the buys in Apartment 201 at 167 Grove Street and it was our belief that possibly Alex Cole was there and also he had a home address of Tuttle Road — Tuttle Hill Road in Washtenaw County but he had been to 167 Grove Street on three occasions.

(Depo. of Burns, at 40). Burns further testified that the source of this information had been the W.A.N.T. investigation and the informant’s notes. Id.

After the briefing, the police officers assigned to apprehend Cole went to the Southview Apts. Acting upon the information conveyed to them by Burns, and without making any attempt to verify the accuracy of this information, for example, by consulting the apartment mailboxes or by contacting the building manager, the officers proceeded to unit # 201, the Bonds’ apartment, and knocked on the door. The officers, holding a valid arrest warrant for Cole, did not have a search warrant for apartment # 201, or for any other unit in the building.

When William Bond finally opened the door in response to repeated loud knocking, the officers, with guns poised, pushed past him, entered the apartment and ordered everyone not to move. In the apartment at that time were William and Mabel Bond, their two children, and a third adult, who was apparently a neighbor.

Several of the officers began to search the apartment for Cole, despite Bond’s protestation that there must be some mistake. When the search, which included the bedrooms and the closets failed to yield the suspect, the officers, themselves, realized that a mistake had been made. Before leaving the apartment, Det. Sgt. Heliker acknowledged the mistake to appellants, apologized for the intrusion, and then left with the other officers.

Cole was arrested later the same day in a parking lot in another part of the City of Ypsilanti as he was returning to his automobile. The supplementary complaint report, prepared after Cole’s arrest, lists his address as “8509 Talladay, Ypsilanti, Michigan.” 5

The error, which lead the police officers to enter and search the Bonds’ apartment, was subsequently traced back to the handwritten notes of the informant. Apparently due to an innocent transposition of numbers, the informant had consistently recorded # 201 as the unit he had entered when, in reality, he had, on all three occasions, entered unit # 102, occupied at the time by one of Cole’s female friends.

There is absolutely no dispute in this case with respect to the following facts.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Melson v. Kroger Co.
578 F. Supp. 691 (S.D. Ohio, 1983)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
704 F.2d 309, 1983 U.S. App. LEXIS 29048, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/william-bond-v-phillip-asiala-ca6-1983.