Source: s3://data.kl3m.ai/documents/govinfo/USCOURTS/USCOURTS-cand-3_09-cv-01016/USCOURTS-cand-3_09-cv-01016-16/pdf.json

Nature of Suit Code: 440
Nature of Suit: Other Civil Rights
Cause of Action: 42:1983 Civil Rights Act

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United States District Court

For the Northern District of California

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IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA

FREDERICK JACKSON, ASHLEY NICOLE

JACKSON, a minor, BRIANA FREDRANIQUE

ANNETTE JACKSON, a minor, and SHAWN

YVETTE MARTIN, 

Plaintiffs,

 v.

CITY OF PITTSBURG, AARON L. BAKER,

individually and in his official capacity as Chief of

Police of the City of Pittsburg Police Department,

G. LOMBARDI, individually and as an officer of the

City of Pittsburg Police Department (Badge # 275),

C. SMITH, individually and as an officer of the City

of Pittsburg Police Department (Badge # 285),

P. DUMPA, individually and as an officer of

the City of Pittsburg Police Department (Bade # 291),

WILLIAM BLAKE HATCHER, individually and as

an officer of the City of Pittsburg Police Department

(Badge # 274), and DOES 1–100, inclusive,

Defendants. /

No. C 09-01016 WHA

ORDER DENYING

PLAINTIFFS’ MOTION

FOR SANCTIONS

INTRODUCTION

In this civil rights action, plaintiffs move for monetary sanctions pursuant to Rule 11. 

For the reasons stated below, plaintiffs’ motion is DENIED. 

STATEMENT

Plaintiffs’ complaint arises out of a police action that took place at the adjacent residences

of plaintiffs Frederick Jackson and Shawn Yvette Martin. A party was held at the residences,

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United States District Court

For the Northern District of California

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and plaintiffs Ashley Jackson and Briana Jackson, both minors and daughters of plaintiff

Mr. Jackson, were present. An altercation between partygoers broke out. One partygoer was

knocked unconscious, and a neighborhood visitor called the police. A police dispatcher from the

City of Pittsburg Police Department informed the responding officers that there was a “man

down” and that a shirtless African-American male at the scene might have been in possession of a

knife.

Two officers arrived at the scene with weapons drawn. Five more officers arrived shortly

thereafter. At least nine people were in the vicinity of the Jackson and Martin residences at the

time of the officers’ arrival, and it is uncontroverted that Mr. Jackson was the only shirtless

African-American male on the scene. Plaintiffs allege that one of the officers used harsh

language directed at Ashley Jackson. Mr. Jackson is said to have reacted with harsh language,

and officers responded by attempting to frisk and handcuff him. At that point, the officers

contend that Mr. Jackson battered one of the officers while Mr. Jackson was being handcuffed. 

Mr. Jackson said that he might have inadvertently nudged the officer. It is undisputed that

three officers fired their tasers at Mr. Jackson and that he fell to the ground. Six seconds later,

one of the officers fired his taser at Mr. Jackson a second time.

The officers proceeded to order the crowd of people present to be calm and quiet. 

Ms. Martin and Ashley Jackson, according to the testimony of many on the scene, did not heed

the officers’ order. Ms. Martin was handcuffed and placed into a police car, and plaintiffs allege

that Ashley Jackson and Mr. Jackson were slammed into police cars by the officers before being

restrained. Mr. Jackson was arrested and Ashley Jackson was handcuffed and detained.

Plaintiffs’ first amended complaint, the extant pleading, contains twelve claims against

five of the responding police officers, the chief of police of the City of Pittsburg Police

Department, and the City of Pittsburg. Defendants moved for summary judgment which was

granted in part and denied in part in an order filed on June 8, 2010. Nine of plaintiffs’ twelve

claims survived, including battery and false imprisonment. Prior to the June 8 order, but after

defendants had moved for summary judgment, plaintiffs noticed the instant motion for monetary

sanctions in the form of attorney’s fees pursuant to Rule 11.

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Plaintiffs’ motion contends that defendants’ motion for summary judgement was (1) not

warranted by existing law, (2) presented only to harass plaintiffs, and (3) resulted in unnecessary

delay and an increase in the costs of litigation. Plaintiffs suggest that defendants sought summary

judgment knowing that their motion would fail, because they willfully ignored the existence of

genuine issues of material fact and premised the motion on misleading factual and legal

statements. Additionally, Attorney Lagos wrote a letter and an email to defendants’ counsel,

prior to filing the instant motion, specifically warning that plaintiffs would move for sanctions

under Rule 11 if any attempt to move for summary judgment based on qualified immunity was

made by defendants.

Defendants included qualified immunity arguments in their motion, and Attorney Lagos

proceeded to write to counsel for defendants again, this time to offer to drop the Rule 11 motion

if defendants could provide a reasonable basis for including such an argument in their motion. 

Counsel for defendants replied, noting that qualified immunity is granted where the proof

considered during summary judgment suggests error on the part of a police officer, and is not

dependant on whether or not the facts surrounding the error are disputed. Plaintiffs decided not

to withdraw the instant motion. Defendants then filed an opposition, stating that their motion for

summary judgment was brought in good faith, and that Rule 11 sanctions are not warranted in this

matter.

ANALYSIS

Rule 11 sanctions are not warranted in this matter. Defendants made good faith arguments

based on a reasonable inquiry into the law and facts asserted in support of their motion for

summary judgment. Plaintiffs allege that defendants have violated Rule 11 by filing a motion

for summary judgment with an improper purpose, namely to drive up the cost of litigation in this

proceeding. Plaintiffs suggest that defendants knew of genuine issues of material fact that existed

with respect to plaintiffs’ claims, and that defendants improperly sought dismissal via summary

judgment despite that knowledge. The existence of genuine issues of material fact, plaintiffs

contend, rendered defendants’ motion frivolous and “doomed to fail” because: (1) defendants

knew of the factual disputes prior to moving for summary judgment; (2) a reasonable inquiry into

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the facts and law should have indicated to defendants that a motion for summary judgement

founded upon qualified immunity would be fruitless; and (3) defendants should have known that

their motion would fail in this proceeding, since they made a similar motion for summary

judgment that failed in another suit to which they were a party.

1. DEFENDANTS MOVED FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT 

DESPITE FACTUAL DISPUTES.

Plaintiffs broadly state that any reasonable inquiry into the facts would have revealed to

defendants that they could not prevail on a motion for summary judgment, and that the lack of

such an inquiry constitutes a violation of Rule 11. The June 8 order, however, revealed that

defendants’ inquiry into the facts was indeed reasonable, and granted defendants’ motion, in part. 

For example, plaintiff Briana Jackson’s battery and civil rights claims were dismissed because

plaintiffs provided no evidence that she was ever touched by defendant police officers. 

Similarly, plaintiff Martin’s claim of false imprisonment was dismissed because Ms. Martin’s

deposition showed that she did not contest her detention by defendant officers. Defendants made

reasonable inquiries into the facts before moving for summary judgment.

2. DEFENDANTS’ QUALIFIED IMMUNITY ARGUMENT.

Defendants’ inclusion of qualified immunity arguments in their motion for summary

judgment did not violate Rule 11. A violation of Rule 11 occurs when a person files a paper

without first making a reasonable or competent inquiry into the facts or law asserted in the paper. 

Zaldivar v. City of Los Angeles, 780 F.2d 823, 830–31 (9th Cir. 1986) (overruled on other

grounds by Cooter & Gell v. Hartmarx Corp., 496 U.S. 384 (1990)). In their motion for summary

judgment, defendants relied on a bevy of relevant case law and statutory authority to substantiate

their qualified immunity arguments — a strong showing that defendants’ counsel made a

“reasonable inquiry” into the facts and law before moving for summary judgment.

True, defendants’ qualified immunity arguments were rejected in the June 8 order. 

That order distinguished the case law supporting defendants’ motion, Mattos v. Agarano,

590 F.3d 1082 (9th Cir. 2010), on several grounds, including that in Mattos, only one taser was

fired at the plaintiff. Here, Mr. Jackson was shot with a taser four times and the June 8 order

found that a reasonable jury could find that such taser use was excessive, despite an assertion of

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* In Fischer, the plaintiff evaded a routine traffic stop in a motor vehicle, and attempted to hide from

the defendant police officer who pursued and eventually apprehended him. Id. at *5. The plaintiff alleged that

he was beaten and kicked repeatedly before being handcuffed and put into a police car that resulted in severe

facial wounds that lasted for more than ten days. Id. at *2. The present proceeding is dependant on an entirely

distinct set of facts. Here, defendant police officers were dispatched to a residence where they were told that

there was a “man down” and another man who may have a knife. Plaintiffs do not allege that they were

punched or kicked. The plaintiff in Fischer was not subject to being tased once, let alone four times. 

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qualified immunity. A similar finding was made with respect to plaintiff Ashley Jackson’s

excessive force claim. A rejection of defendants’ qualified immunity argument, however, cannot

be equated with a finding that the argument was brought in bad faith or that it was made without a

reasonable inquiry into the facts or law.

3. DEFENDANTS HAVE MADE A SIMILARLY FLAWED MOTION 

IN ANOTHER SUIT.

Plaintiffs’ final argument in support of sanctions is founded upon the fact that defendants

made arguments similar to those made here in a partially unsuccessful motion for summary

judgement in another suit, Fischer v. City of Pittsburg, 2008 WL 4369986 (N.D. Cal. Sept. 24,

2008). The fact pattern there was too different to support this argument and this argument is

rejected.*

CONCLUSION

For the reasons stated above, plaintiffs’ motion for sanctions under Rule 11 is DENIED.

IT IS SO ORDERED.

Dated: July 8, 2010. WILLIAM ALSUP

UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE

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