Williams v. Lee County Sheriff's Dept.

744 So. 2d 286, 1999 WL 549457
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 29, 1999
Docket98-CA-00184-SCT
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 744 So. 2d 286 (Williams v. Lee County Sheriff's Dept.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Lee County Sheriff's Dept., 744 So. 2d 286, 1999 WL 549457 (Mich. 1999).

Opinion

744 So.2d 286 (1999)

James Joseph WILLIAMS, Individually; Jettie Williams, Individually; and Jettie Williams, Conservator of the Estate of James Joseph Williams
v.
LEE COUNTY SHERIFF'S DEPARTMENT; Terry Jones, Individually and Officially; Danny Dillard, Individually and Officially; and John Hall, Individually and Officially.

No. 98-CA-00184-SCT.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

July 29, 1999.

*289 John Forrest Martin, Tupelo, Kim T. Chaze, Hattiesburg, Attorneys for Appellants.

William M. Beasley, Gregory M. Hunsucker, Tupelo, Attorneys for Appellees.

BEFORE PRATHER, C.J., WALLER AND COBB, JJ.

WALLER, Justice, for the Court:

STATEMENT OF THE CASE

¶ 1. On January 26, 1995, three officers of the Lee County Sheriff's Department drove to James Joseph Williams' residence and arrested him pursuant to information received from a detective of the Hollywood Homicide Division of the Los Angeles, California, Police Department. Detective McDonagh of the Hollywood Homicide Division informed Lieutenant Terry Jones of the Lee County Sheriff's Office that James Williams, for whom there was an outstanding warrant for murder in California, was thought to be in Lee County. McDonagh requested that Williams be apprehended and held. Subsequent investigation revealed that James Joseph Williams was not the man wanted in California, and he was released. Approximately a month after he was released, Williams suffered several strokes which he alleges are attributable to stress related to this incident and to the use of excessive force by Lee County Sheriff's deputies during the arrest. Williams and his mother filed a complaint on June 5, 1995, pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging negligent and intentional violations of their constitutional rights. On January 6, 1998, the Circuit Court of Lee County, Mississippi, granted summary judgment to all defendants. Aggrieved, the Williamses appeal the order of that court and list the following issues:

I. THE CIRCUIT COURT'S FINDINGS OF FACT WERE MANIFESTLY WRONG AND CLEARLY ERRONEOUS.
II. IT WAS REVERSIBLE ERROR FOR THE CIRCUIT COURT TO GRANT THE DEFENDANTS' MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT.

STATEMENT OF THE FACTS

¶ 2. On Thursday, January 26, 1995, Detective McDonagh of the Hollywood Homicide Division of the Los Angeles, California, Police Department spoke by telephone with Lieutenant Terry Jones of the Lee County Sheriff's Department and requested assistance in apprehending James Williams, Jr., for whom an arrest warrant for murder was outstanding in California, and who was believed to be in Lee County, Mississippi. He described Williams' physical *290 appearance, gave his social security number, and informed Jones of two tattoos and one scar on Williams' body which would be useful in identifying Williams. Additionally, McDonagh gave Jones an address in Nettleton where Williams was thought to be. Deputy John Hall ran a National Crime Information Center ("NCIC") check on the social security/driver's license number provided by McDonagh and was able to confirm that the number corresponded to information received from McDonagh. Specifically, Hall confirmed that a driver's license for that number had been issued to James J. Williams, that Williams and the California suspect had similar physical characteristics, and that Williams lived in Nettleton.

¶ 3. Based on the information received from Detective McDonagh and on information gained from the NCIC search, deputies Jones, Hall and Danny Dillard of the Lee County Sheriffs Department drove to Williams' mother's home in Nettleton to arrest him. As they neared the residence, Deputy Hall realized that he had been there before. He informed his fellow officers that he had previously been called to the Williams home on a domestic disturbance call. On that occasion, when he and another deputy arrived, Williams had threatened his mother with a knife. Thus, Hall and the other deputies felt that Williams might be dangerous.

¶ 4. When they arrived at Williams' home, the deputies spoke with his mother, Jettie Williams, who was working in the front yard with her son, Tommy. Deputy Jones asked Mrs. Williams if "James Junior Williams" lived there. She responded that he did not, but that "James Joseph Williams" did live there. At that point, Jones directed the other deputies to proceed. The officers went into the house, and Jones entered Williams' bedroom and slapped and shook him until he woke up. All testimony, including that of his mother, indicated that this way of rousing Williams from sleep did not hurt him. Lieutenant Jones advised Williams to put his shoes on because he was going with the officers. As Williams was exiting his bedroom, Jones shoved him toward the kitchen. Jones then handcuffed Williams and shoved him by the shoulder toward the door. According to Jettie Williams, once they were outside, Jones pushed or threw Williams into the back of the police car and then straightened him up in the seat. Mrs. Williams claimed that the thrust from the officer was so great that Williams hit his head on the door on the opposite side of the car. In Officer Jones' version of the events, he placed his hand on Williams' head to shield his head as he put Williams in the back seat of the car. The parties dispute whether the officers informed him that he was under arrest or told him why he was being detained. Los Angeles Police Department detectives arrived in Tupelo, Mississippi, on the day following Williams' arrest. They interviewed Mrs. Williams and James Williams in the Lee County Jail and concluded that Williams was not the man for whom they were looking. Williams was held in the custody of the Lee County Sheriffs Department until Saturday, January 28, 1995, at which point the Los Angeles police concluded that he was not their man and released him to his mother, Jettie Williams. Williams spent almost 48 hours in the Lee County jail. According to Jettie Williams, James Williams informed her on the way home from the jail that his head was hurting and that Officer Jones had slapped him in the head several times in an attempt to make him admit that he had been to California.

¶ 5. The parties have ascertained that the reason for the false identification of Williams was that while he was incarcerated in the Fulton, Mississippi, jail many years earlier, David Paul Gooch, a fellow inmate, stole Williams' driver's license. Gooch was the actual murderer, but had presented Williams' driver's license to the authorities in California when he was first arrested on the murder charge. It was due to Gooch's misrepresentation of his *291 own identity and his subsequent flight from the State of California that California issued a warrant for the arrest of James Williams, Jr.

¶ 6. Williams suffered several strokes on or around February 25, 1995. He alleges that the strokes were the result of the arrest, detention, and excessive force used in making the arrest and during the detention. James Williams and Jettie Williams filed their complaint with the Lee County Circuit Court on June 5, 1995, naming as defendants the Lee County Sheriff's Department and Deputies Jones, Dillard, and Hall, both individually and officially. In the complaint, Williams alleged multiple deprivations of his constitutional rights and sought damages pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983.

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Bluebook (online)
744 So. 2d 286, 1999 WL 549457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-lee-county-sheriffs-dept-miss-1999.