Zirlin v. Village of Scarsdale

365 F. Supp. 2d 477, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6551, 2005 WL 885170
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMarch 31, 2005
Docket03CIV.9903(CLB)
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 365 F. Supp. 2d 477 (Zirlin v. Village of Scarsdale) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zirlin v. Village of Scarsdale, 365 F. Supp. 2d 477, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6551, 2005 WL 885170 (S.D.N.Y. 2005).

Opinion

Memorandum and Order

BRIEANT, District Judge.

By motion filed in this civil rights action on February 23, 2005 (Doc. # 34), Plaintiff Harry Zirlin moves, following an adverse jury verdict, for Judgment as a Matter of Law under Fed.R.Civ.P. 50(b), or in the alternative for a new trial under Fed.R.Civ.P. 59(a). Opposition papers were filed on March 10, 2005.

The following facts, viewed most favorably to the jury’s verdict, were developed in the course of a two day jury trial in which three police officer defendants, Plaintiff and his psychiatrist, all testified. The issues submitted to and answered by the jury by Special Interrogatory, were whether Plaintiff was seized by the police, whether the seizure was reasonable, whether he was arrested without probable cause, and whether unreasonable force was used. It was Defendants’ position they conducted a valid Terry stop; that they did not arrest Plaintiff, nor did they use unreasonable force. The jury agreed with Defendants’ position.

According to the testimony at trial, viewed, as it must be, most favorably to the verdict, the relevant events all took place in the woods adjacent to Heathcote Bypass in Scarsdale, New York within a span of no more than three minutes and five seconds between the arrival of the officers at the scene, by automobile, the stop and later release of Mr. Zirlin, and the return on foot of all participants from the woods to the Bypass.

Plaintiff, Mr. Harry Zirlin, age 51 at the time of trial, resides in Scarsdale, New York. He is an attorney specializing in corporate law, with a prestigious New York law firm. He is the paradigm of a reputable citizen. In addition to his work as a practicing lawyer, Mr. Zirlin is a recognized authority who has studied, lectured and published concerning Coleoptera (beetles) and related matters. On the fateful morning of December 21, 2002, which was a fine warm day with no snow on the ground, Mr. Zirlin left his home and walked about four or five minutes to the “Heathcote Bypass” in Scarsdale.

As its name implies, the Heathcote Bypass is a traffic diverting road between Palmer Avenue and Wilmot Road, constructed on the abandoned right of way of the New York, Westchester and Boston Railway, which once ran from New York City to White Plains. There are no houses *482 fronting on-the Bypass. The only structure on it is the Village of Searsdale Sanitation Facility (Transfer Station). The area along the bypass is wooded (Pop-ham’s Woods), and extends to the back of residential parcels on parallel streets and the Fenway Country Club Golf Course.

Mr. Zirlin’s purpose on entering the Bypass on foot, was to look in the woods for a specific beetle specimen,' found in dead trees or tree stumps. In aid of this purpose, he was carrying a hand bag with plastic ziploc bags and other beetle collecting paraphernalia and a pocket knife with a five inch blade to pry specimens from the deadwood. He was dressed in a coat, shirt and jeans. On December 21, 2002, while operating their three separate radio motor patrol cars (RMP) each Defendant, Sergeant David Pobereskin, and Officers Steven Zappolo and Robert Raysor heard on the police radio a direction to go to Heath-cote Bypass to investigate a civilian report of a man in the woods carrying a knife in his hand. That report had been telephoned in to the police desk by Mr. Roger Lowden, a civilian employee of the Village of Searsdale Sanitation Department (Transfer Station) the only structure located on the Bypass, who had made the call because a civilian woman motorist in a silver or brown Toyota had stopped there, and asked him to do so. All three RMPs converged on the Sanitation Department where they found the woman, at her automobile, in the street with Mr. Lowden.

The officers, in the haste of the moment, failed to record the woman’s license plate or to cheek her identification. Instead, they told her to await their return from apprehending the armed man in the woods. She did not wait around. However, the officers had the opportunity to speak with her, observe her, and assess her reliability. Sergeant Pobereskin did so. To characterize her information as an “anonymous tip”, as Plaintiff now does is not a fair description.

Defendant Sergeant David Pobereskin was the first officer to arrive at the scene, at 10:19:33 A.M. He spoke with the woman and with Mr. Lowden. The woman told Pobereskin and Lowden that she had seen a man with a knife in his hand walking on the. Heathcote Bypass. She then pointed into the woods, said “There he is!’ and she pointed at Zirlin.

The officers all ran into the woods. When they came within “50 or 75 feet” (Pobereskin, Tr. at 141), Raysor called out and asked the man to come towards them (a distance of 50 feet) which he did. At 40 feet, two officers drew their service firearms. Raysor directed the man to' remove his jacket, which he did, and had him turn around. As Mr. Zirlin came closer, he was ordered to drop to the ground. Poberes-kin asked him if he had a knife. He answered that he did. Once he was on the ground, he was handcuffed face down, and the guns’were put away. ■ The knife was found open, sticking partly out of the bag, and was seized by Pobereskin,- while Ray-sor patted him down for possible weapons.

Then for the first time, Defendants engaged Mr. Zirlin in conversation, and then, for the first time, except for responding affirmatively to the question of whether he had a knife, Zirlin spoke.

Pobereskin asked what he was doing, and Zirlin explained he was collecting beetles and needed the knife to “peel bark off trees and overturn rocks, etc.” (Tr. at 145) At that point, concluding that Zirlin’s statement “made some sense” and was corroborated by dirt found on the knife, Defendants “unhandcuffed” Plaintiff, released him and offered him a ride home. All parties walked out of the woods and, when Sgt. Godshall arrived at 10:23:30 *483 A.M., were standing on the shoulder of the Heathcote Bypass. 1

At the time, the police were aware of recent threats of violence arising out of an employee altercation at the Village Sanitation Department.

On February 9, 2005, a jury, after deliberation, decided that Mr. Zirlin had been seized by the Defendant police officers, but decided that this seizure had been reasonable. The jury decided further that Mr. Zirlin had not been arrested, and that the Defendants had not used excessive force in their interactions with Mr. Zirlin.

Mr. Zirlin now argues that the jury verdict is unsupportable as a matter of law, that the case should not have been submitted to the jury at all, except with respect to damages, and that the issue of whether Mr. Zirlin’s seizure was reasonable was an issue of law for the Court. Mr. Zirlin argues further that his detention was so intrusive that, as a matter of law, it constituted an arrest unsupported by probable cause, and that no fair minded juror could have held that the Defendants’ use of force was reasonable under the circumstances. Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
365 F. Supp. 2d 477, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6551, 2005 WL 885170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zirlin-v-village-of-scarsdale-nysd-2005.