Court Opinion

ID: 3193561
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-04-13 15:01:14.373496+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:02:02.585242
License: Public Domain

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
                           FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

______________________________________
                                       )
MICHELE HALL,                          )
                                       )
                  Plaintiff,           )
                                       )
            v.                         )                     Civil Case No. 13-324 (RCL)
                                       )
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, et al.,          )
                                       )
                  Defendants.          )
                                       )
______________________________________ )

                                 MEMORANDUM OPINION

       This case comes before the Court upon Motions [43, 44] for Summary Judgment by

defendants Alice Lee, Seyhan Duru, and Cities, LLC. Upon consideration of plaintiff’s and

movants’ filings, the entire record in this case, and the applicable law, defendants’ Motions have

been GRANTED.

       The facts of this case are largely set forth in this Court’s Memorandum Opinion of

November 12, 2014, ECF No. 32, and the Court retreads them here only as needed. The applicable

standard is familiar—when “the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material

fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law,” a motion for summary judgment

must be granted. Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c); see also Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 322 (1986).

At this stage of litigation, the Court must “examine the facts in the record and all reasonable

inferences derived therefrom in a light most favorable to” the nonmoving party. DeGraff v. D.C.,

120 F.3d 298, 301 (D.C. Cir. 1997). In other words, “the district court must ‘believe[]’ [the

nonmovant’s testimony] and must not make ‘[c]redibility determinations.’” Robinson v. Pezzat,
No. 15-7040, at 13–14 (D.C. Cir. Apr. 1, 2016) (citing Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S.
242, 255 (1986)).

       Here, Lee has moved for summary judgment on Count III of Hall’s complaint (the common

law battery claim against Lee), and Duru and Cities, LLC have moved for summary judgment on

Counts IV (the intentional infliction of emotional distress claim against Duru), V (the negligent

infliction of emotional distress claim against Duru), VI (the common law negligence claim against

both Duru and Cities, LLC), VII (the common law conversion claim against Cities, LLC), and VIII

(the common law defamation claim against Duru and Cities, LLC).

       I.      Defendant Lee’s Motion

       With respect to Lee’s motion, the relevant issue is whether a reasonable jury could

conclude that Lee used “clearly excessive” force in arresting Hall. See Mem. Op. 6, ECF No. 32

(citing Jackson v. District of Columbia, 412 A.2d 948, 956 (D.C. Cir. 1980)). Hall has offered

evidence that Lee used force, testifying that Lee “grabbed and slammed [her] against the wall” of

the bathroom, handcuffed her behind her back, and dragged her out of the bathroom to the street.

Pl.’s Opp. 2. Then there is the testimony that once Lee had Hall out on the sidewalk, she lifted

Hall’s hands up to force her to kneel on the ground, after which Lee placed her knee on Hall’s

back and yet again pulled Hall’s hands up into the air. Finally, Hall has offered evidence that Lee

fractured her wrist in the course of arresting her.

       The Court, aware of Robinson v. Pezzat’s reminder that a district court considering whether

to grant summary judgment must be sure to credit the nonmovant’s evidence even where it is

seriously disputed, has taken care to examine the record in a light that is as favorable to Hall as

reasonably possible. No. 15-7040, 13–14 (D.C. Cir. Apr. 1, 2016). Nevertheless, there is sufficient
unrebutted and unequivocal evidence in the record to fatally undermine Hall’s claim that Lee used

“clearly excessive” force, evidence no amount of favorable inference or credit can dispel.

       For example, though Hall has previously claimed that Lee broke her wrist, she

conspicuously no longer does so. Instead, she emphasizes that Dr. Michael Pirri, a physician in

George Washington University Hospital’s (“GWUH’s”) emergency room, treated her “as if she

had a fractured wrist”; that, “at the very least, Dr. Pirri determined that the plaintiff suffered a

fractured wrist;” and that Dr. Kathy Brindle, the board-certified radiologist with fifteen years’

experience at GWUH who rejected Dr. Pirri’s diagnosis of fracture after examining Hall’s X-rays

and finding that “the bones and soft tissues [were] normal” and without swelling, conceded at her

deposition that some kinds of fractures were undetectable by X-ray. But this merely shows that it

is theoretically possible that Hall had a wrist fracture (one capable of hoodwinking the specialist

assigned to make that determination, no less), not that a factfinder could come to that conclusion.

Dr. Pirri’s records of Hall’s treatment are more equivocal than Hall lets on—they note that Hall’s

X-ray would “be officially read by an attending radiologist” (Dr. Brindle) the following day, that

the orthopedics and radiology residents disagreed with the fracture diagnosis, and that “[i]n the

meantime, we are treating you clinically as if you have a fracture based on your symptoms.” Dr.

Brindle’s diagnosis, on the other hand, is definitive, offered by someone with greater relevant

expertise than the initial diagnostician, and unrebutted by any evidence Hall has offered. The only

reasonable conclusion available to a jury would be that Dr. Pirri’s diagnosis of a fracture was, as

Dr. Pirri himself indicated, provisional and dependent upon confirmation by a doctor with greater

expertise, namely, Dr. Brindle.

       None of this is to diminish the pain or anxiety Hall may have suffered, even absent a broken

wrist, during and after her arrest. Every arrest does, however, require some amount of force. See
California v. Hodari D., 499 U.S. 621, 626 (1991). An officer must of course “have some

justification for the quantum of force he uses,” as “[f]orce without reason is unreasonable.”

Johnson v. District of Columbia, 528 F.3d 969, 977 (D.C. Cir. 2008). Hall’s argument that Lee

used “clearly excessive” force relies largely on testimony from Hall and her friend Gary Jones that

she did not resist arrest. Because the Court is considering this issue due to defendant’s motion for

summary judgment, Hall argues, the Court must credit the plaintiff’s proffered testimony (that she

did not resist) and discredit the defendant’s (that she did). But Hall’s own testimony about whether

she resisted is telling in ways she fails to appreciate. Consider the following excerpt, where Hall

is describing her behavior in the restroom immediately before getting arrested:

               I begin to pull down my points, well my underwear, and there’s a
               knock at the door. They just say, you know, let us in. You know, and
               we’re like, you know somebody is in here. You know, just say very
               simply, “Someone’s in here.” And then right away they bang much
               harder, you know. I mean significantly harder and they’re like you
               know, “Open up, it’s the police.” And we’re just thinking, you
               know, it’s some overzealous girl outside waiting to you know, pee,
               you know. And that happens, friends you know mess with you, like,
               open up, open up, it’s Louise you know. I’m thinking it’s a joke. So
               barely that I had a small giggle. I didn’t even get to finish the giggle,
               before the door is busted in, door broken.

Hall Dep. 47:8–48:6. While for the purposes of this motion the Court entirely credits Hall’s

professed belief that the knocks were from boisterous partygoers and not police officers, the fact

remains that Hall by her own admission ignored the officers’ demands once they had identified

themselves. Hall and the police actually agreed, though they did not know it, about what she was

doing: Not complying. Where they disagreed was on whether the police were in fact police, and

the officers cannot be faulted for not knowing that Hall was failing to comply because of her

private, unvoiced belief that they were not actually law enforcement. That the police reasonably

misunderstood Hall’s behavior (again, taking Hall’s proffered evidence as true) is evident
throughout Hall’s testimony about her interactions with Lee, including when she testified about

Lee’s conduct after she had taken Hall out onto the street:

                Q: Did [Lee] let you stand up?

                A: Yes. Well she forces me. She grabbed me by my elbows and
                yanked me up.

                Q: You were trying to stand up and she helped you stand up?

                A: No. She told me to stop resisting after I said I was—after I’m
                trying to stand up, she tells me to stop resisting. And I said why am
                I resisting? I’m trying to stand up. And then that’s when she yanks
                me up.

Hall Dep. 54:20–55:7. And once more shortly after the previous excerpt:

                Q: Okay. And now what happens?

                A: Well I, right as she’s lifting me off the ground. I swing around to
                look at her, you know, because she still hasn’t told me her name.

Hall Dep. 55:17–55:20. Again, though the Court accepts, for the purposes of this motion, that Hall

did not intend to resist arrest and did not believe herself to be resisting arrest, by her own admission

she moved and behaved in ways that a police officer could reasonably conclude were meant to

defy arrest. Hall’s undisclosed intentions to the contrary do not make Lee’s use of force clearly

excessive. Like any police officer, Lee had to determine the force necessary to make a justified

arrest based on all of the information she had available—information which included, according

to Hall herself, that Hall had ignored self-identified law enforcement demands to let them into the

bathroom stall, tried to stand after Lee had forced her to kneel, and moved abruptly, even

“swing[ing] around,” during the arrest, without having been told to. Given this record, no

reasonable factfinder could conclude that Lee used “clearly excessive” force in executing Hall’s

arrest.

          II.   Defendant Duru’s and Cities, LLC’s Motions
       With respect to Hall’s claims against Duru—intentional and negligent infliction of

emotional distress, common law negligence, and common law defamation—as Duru and Cities,

LLC point out, Hall offers no evidence whatsoever that Duru performed what she identifies as the

predicate act for those claims, namely, calling the police and falsely accusing Hall of being a thief,

which acts she says led to her arrest and handcuffing. At his deposition Duru denied either calling

the police or ordering that they be called, and the record suggests that the 911 caller was a Cities,

LLC employee named Carla Urquhart. To the extent that Hall is arguing that Duru’s actual

statements—“you’re going to pay this bill,” “this is why we don’t do urban parties,” and others in

that vein—were defamatory, Hall offers no evidence that these statements were false. Hall’s claims

against Duru therefore fail as a matter of law.

       Hall’s claims against Cities, LLC are common law negligence, conversion, and defamation.

Her negligence claim relies on the assertion that the defendants breached their duty of ordinary

care when they “misinformed the police about the true circumstances surrounding the payment”

of Hall’s bill. This fails, however, because Cities, LLC did not proximately cause her injuries.

Even viewing the evidence as favorably toward Hall as reasonably possible, it shows at most that

she paid the $935.04 she owed exclusive of tip. Cities, LLC has represented, without rebuttal from

Hall, that the $169.70 in tip was a required part of the bill, as is the policy at many establishments

for parties beyond a certain size. Hall offers no evidence that the tip was not a legitimate expense.

There is therefore no evidence in the record to support a conclusion that Cities, LLC lacked the

requisite basis to report Hall’s alleged theft of services. Additionally, even if Cities, LLC or one

of its employees had been negligent by calling the police without such basis, based on the record

Cities, LLC could not reasonably foresee that Hall would, as the Court concludes she did, behave

in a way that an officer could reasonably interpret as resisting arrest. Finally, with respect to the
fact that Lee testified that one of Cities, LLC’s employees told her that Hall’s credit card had been

declined, there is no evidence that that misrepresentation was the proximate cause of Hall’s arrest.

As already noted, Hall failed to pay the required tip, which was itself enough to justify calling the

police for theft of services. In addition, Hall’s argument that the misrepresentation made it more

likely she would be arrested defies common sense—telling Lee that the card was declined implies

that Hall had consented to have Cities, LLC charge it in the first place, which is a more favorable

story than the story Cities, LLC claims it actually presented (namely, that Hall was refusing to

have her card charged at all).

       Hall’s conversion claim requires her to show that Cities, LLC unlawfully exercised

“ownership, dominion or control” over her personal property “in denial or repudiation of [her]

rights thereto.” Busby v. Capital One, N.A., 932 F. Supp. 2d 114, 144 (D.D.C. 2013). Hall does

not dispute, however, that she purchased and consumed the goods and services for which she was

billed, nor does explain why she believes she did not owe a tip. While a tip is often at the

customer’s discretion, “tip” is sometimes automatically charged, and is in those cases no less

legitimately part of the bill than the food and drink from which the tip is calculated, and all the

evidence in the record suggests the tip owed on Hall’s bill was of the latter sort. Hall’s insistence

that she disputed the bill, or at least part of it, does nothing to demonstrate that her dispute was

valid. Not wanting to pay a disputed amount is quite different from having a right to that disputed

amount, and Hall’s failure to provide any evidence of her right to the disputed sum completely

undercuts her conversion claim.

       Finally, with respect to Hall’s defamation claim against Cities, LLC, even drawing every

possible favorable inference in her favor, Hall does not dispute that she failed to pay the tip on her

bill, which means that Cities’ call to the police informing them that she had failed to pay her bill
was substantially true. With respect to Hall’s allegation that a server at Cities told the police that

Hall’s card had been declined, Hall has failed to prove—and has even denied—that she suffered

any special harm as a result of the statements she deems defamatory. See Hall Dep. 37:11–37:18.

The only harm Hall attempts to tie to the statement that her card was declined is the arrest itself,

and as explained previously, the Court concludes that no reasonable factfinder could determine

based on this record that said statement caused her arrest.

CONCLUSION

       For the foregoing reasons, defendants’ Motions for Summary Judgment have been

GRANTED.

       Signed by Royce C. Lamberth, Judge, on April 12, 2016.