NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
File Name: 13a0649n.06
No. 12-4172 FILED
Jul 12, 2013
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
MIMI L. LEE; RICHARD D. LEE, )
)
Plaintiffs-Appellants, ) ON APPEAL FROM THE
) UNITED STATES DISTRICT
v. ) COURT FOR THE NORTHERN
) DISTRICT OF OHIO
CITY OF NORWALK, OHIO; JAMES L. )
MONTANA, Individually and in his official capacity )
as a Norwalk Police Officer; CHRISTOPHER HIPP, )
Individually and in his official capacity as a Norwalk )
Police Officer; THOMAS COOK, Sergeant, )
Individually and in his official capacity as a Norwalk )
Police Officer; DAVID LIGHT, Individually and in )
his official capacity as Chief of the Norwalk Police )
Department; JOHN DOE, No. 1, )
)
Defendants-Appellees. )
)
BEFORE: ROGERS and KETHLEDGE, Circuit Judges, and BORMAN, District Judge.*
ROGERS, Circuit Judge. Mimi and Richard Lee filed this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983,
alleging that Norwalk, Ohio police officers used excessive force in violation of Lee’s Fourth
Amendment rights by applying handcuffs to Mimi Lee too tightly for a prolonged period of time, and
by physically assaulting Lee and slamming her to the ground during the booking process at the police
station. The district court granted summary judgment for the officers on the basis of qualified
*
The Honorable Paul D. Borman, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of
Michigan, sitting by designation.
No. 12-4172
Lee v. City of Norwalk
immunity. Because plaintiffs do not raise a genuine issue of material fact to show that any officer
used excessive force in violation of Lee’s constitutional rights, or that a reasonable officer would
have known that the conduct at issue was unlawful, the district court properly granted summary
judgment for defendants.
On May 7, 2009, Norwalk police officer James Montana responded to a call alerting the
police that a woman was seen urinating in a hospital parking lot. The hospital nurse who placed the
call informed Officer Montana that the woman was driving out of the parking lot in a pickup truck.
R. 26-2 at 2. Officer Montana followed the woman, Mimi Lee, across the street into a Burger King
parking lot, and conducted a traffic stop there. At that point, Officer Christan Hipp arrived to assist
Officer Montana. Lee admitted that she had urinated in the parking lot but offered the explanation
that she was on medication that made it difficult for her to control her bladder. Id. Officer Montana
smelled alcohol on Lee’s breath and observed that her eyes were glassy and bloodshot. Suspecting
that Lee was inebriated, Officer Montana asked Lee to perform field sobriety tests. Officer Montana
conducted a horizontal gaze nystagmus test and found that Lee exhibited multiple signs of
impairment. Id. Officer Montana then asked Lee to take a portable breath test, and Lee registered
a 0.185 percent blood alcohol content, which is more than twice the legal limit in Ohio. Id. Officer
Montana arrested Lee and handcuffed her.
The two officers observed cans of beer—one opened and several unopened—in Lee’s truck.
Lee was placed in Officer Montana’s cruiser to be driven to the police station for booking. Id. Lee
alleges that en route to the police station, she complained to Officers Montana and Hipp that the
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Lee v. City of Norwalk
handcuffs were too tight. R. 30-2 at 2. Lee claims that the allegedly too-tight handcuffing caused
her injury requiring medical treatment. Id. at 3.
Lee also claims that after she arrived at the police station, the officers removed her handcuffs
and sat her down in a chair. Lee alleges that while Officer Montana prepared the arrest paperwork,
she continued complaining about swelling and red marks on her wrists. She became agitated and
threw a paper on the ground. When she asked to use the bathroom, she was denied permission. R.
30-2 at 2. Lee claims that she then rose to move towards the door, which was blocked by Officer
Hipp. As she moved towards Officer Hipp, Lee says he pushed her and Officer Montana grabbed
her from behind. Lee alleges that Officer Montana grabbed her arms and pulled her to the left, then
swung her around to face him and shoved her onto a table, put his right arm across her neck and
choked her while maintaining a firm grip on her shoulder with his other hand. Lee claims that she
did not resist and that Officer Montana continued to choke her with his arm across her neck for about
thirteen seconds. Officer Thomas Cook allegedly checked on Montana’s choke hold but did not
intervene to stop it. R. 30-2 at 2.
Lee claims that Officer Montana pulled her up into a sitting position and then onto her feet,
and then threw her to the booking room floor, causing Lee to hit her head on the ground. She alleges
that Officer Montana then straddled her and continued to choke her with his forearm across her neck.
Officer Montana allegedly shouted, “Spray the bitch,” which prompted Officer Hipp to reach for his
pepper spray—though Lee does not claim to have been pepper sprayed. R. 30-2 at 2. Officers Hipp
and Cook then allegedly helped Officer Montana roll her onto her stomach and handcuff her behind
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No. 12-4172
Lee v. City of Norwalk
her back while Officer Timothy Skinner came in to assist them by holding Lee’s ankles. Lee alleges
that she was then allowed to sit on a chair in the booking room once again and that the booking
process was completed without further incident.
Lee claims that she suffered injury to her wrists as a result of the handcuffing, which required
her to undergo medical treatment. After being released from police custody, she apparently went to
the emergency room complaining of wrist pain and other injuries, and was diagnosed with a wrist
contusion. She received medication and a wrist splint, and eventually, after consultation with an
orthopedic surgeon, underwent carpal tunnel release surgery in both wrists. R. 1 at 6; R. 30-2 at 3.
The Lees subsequently filed this suit under § 1983, alleging that Lee’s constitutional rights
were violated by the officers’ use of excessive force, and further raising state-law claims for assault
and battery and intentional infliction of emotional distress. Plaintiffs also raised municipal liability
claims against the City of Norwalk. See Complaint, R. 1 at 7–11. The defendants moved to dismiss
the state-law claims on the grounds that those claims were barred by a one-year Ohio statute of
limitations, and the district court granted that motion. The defendants then moved for summary
judgment on the remaining claims. The district court found each officer entitled to qualified
immunity and granted summary judgment for the officers on all claims. Lee v. City of Norwalk, No.
3:11-CV-897, 2012 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 123631 (N.D. Ohio Aug. 30, 2012).
On the handcuffing claim, the district court held that Lee could not prove that her wrist
injuries resulted from the allegedly too-tight handcuffing rather than her own actions. The district
court also held that the Fourth Amendment prohibits unduly tight or excessively forceful
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No. 12-4172
Lee v. City of Norwalk
handcuffing, but that even assuming Lee complained to the arresting officers and the officers failed
to respond, the officers’ failure to address the issue during the less-than-ten-minute ride to the police
station did not constitute excessive force. Id. at *16–17. The district court concluded that Sixth
Circuit precedent effectively foreclosed the notion that Lee’s constitutional rights could have been
violated in so short a period, and held that the officers were therefore entitled to qualified immunity.
Id. at *18.
On the police-station-assault claims, the district court noted that the video recording of the
booking process contradicted Lee’s allegations and showed that each officer acted reasonably under
the circumstances. The court concluded that Officer Montana’s actions did not constitute a “vicious
assault” as Lee contended, and were instead reasonable police procedures for handling a belligerent
and aggressively resistant arrestee. Id. at *20–25. The district court likewise held that the other
officers’ physical actions against Lee did not amount to excessive force, and that the Lees’
bystander-liability claims against the other officers for failing to intervene were meritless both
because Officer Montana did not violate Lee’s constitutional rights and because none of the officers
could have known that Officer Montana would have acted as he did in time for them to intervene.
Id. at *27–34. The district court held that the officers were therefore entitled to qualified immunity.
The district court also granted summary judgment for the defendants (1) as to plaintiffs’
official-capacity claims because § 1983 does not permit recovery against a municipality for injuries
caused by its employees or agents, id. at *11–12; (2) as to the municipal-liability claim because
plaintiffs offered no evidence of inadequate training or causation, id. at *33; (3) as to the loss-of-
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consortium claim because a spouse cannot state such a claim under § 1983, id. at *36; and (4) as to
the punitive-damages claim because there was no evidence that any officer acted with the requisite
malicious intent. Id. at *38.
The Lees appeal the district court’s grant of summary judgment on the excessive-force claims
under § 1983, but they do not appeal the grant of summary judgment on the claims against the
officers in their official capacity, the municipal-liability claim against the City of Norwalk, the loss-
of-consortium claim, or the claim for punitive damages. The Lees also do not appeal the Rule
12(b)(6) dismissal of their state-law claims for assault and battery and intentional infliction of
emotional distress. We review the district court’s judgment de novo, viewing the facts in the light
most favorable to the Lees as the nonmovants and giving them the benefit of all reasonable
inferences. See King v. Taylor, 694 F.3d 650, 661 (6th Cir. 2012).
The officers are entitled to qualified immunity on both the handcuffing claim and the police-
station-assault claim. Qualified immunity shields government officials performing discretionary
functions from liability for civil damages “insofar as their conduct does not violate clearly
established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.”
Harlow v. Fitzgerald, 457 U.S. 800, 818 (1982). Qualified immunity applies unless it would be
obvious to a reasonably competent official that the actions taken were unlawful, and the plaintiffs
bear the burden of showing that the defendants are not entitled to qualified immunity. Chappell v.
City of Cleveland, 585 F.3d 901, 907 (6th Cir. 2009) (citing Pearson v. Callahan, 555 U.S. 223, 231
(2009)).
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Officers Montana and Hipp are entitled to qualified immunity on the handcuffing claim
because the Lees have not raised a genuine issue of material fact as to whether any reasonable officer
would have known that this conduct violated Lee’s constitutional rights. To defeat qualified
immunity, the Lees must show “that a reasonable official would understand that what he is doing
violates that right. The relevant, dispositive inquiry . . . is whether it would be clear to a reasonable
officer that his conduct was unlawful in the situation he confronted.” Saucier v. Katz, 533 U.S. 194,
202 (2001). No reasonable officer would have concluded, in the situation that Officers Montana and
Hipp confronted, that Lee’s constitutional rights were being violated.
Even if we assume that Lee complained that the handcuffs were too tight, that Officers
Montana and Hipp ignored those complaints, and that an injury to Lee’s wrists resulted from the
handcuffing, no reasonable officer would have known that ignoring Lee’s complaints during the
short drive to the police station was unlawful. Lee was handcuffed shortly before and during the
drive from the Burger King parking lot to the Norwalk police station, a distance of 1.5 miles that can
be driven in less than five minutes. See Lee, 2012 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 123631, at *18 n.1. In a similar
situation, where an arrestee was handcuffed during a ten-minute ride to the police station, this court
held that “a reasonable officer would not know that the failure to respond to a complaint about tight
handcuffs during a ten-minute ride to the police station violates the Constitution.” Fettes v.
Hendershot, 375 F. App’x 528, 533 (6th Cir. 2010). We emphasized in Fettes that there is no clearly
established “constitutional requirement obligating officers to stop and investigate each and every
utterance of discomfort.” Id. Plaintiffs dispute how long Lee was handcuffed, but even if we assume
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that she was handcuffed for more than five minutes, the record indicates that she was not handcuffed
for very much longer—certainly not long enough for the duration of her handcuffing to cause any
reasonable officer to know that his conduct violated the arrestee’s rights.
Morrison v. Board of Trustees, 583 F.3d 394, 401 (6th Cir. 2009) does not compel a different
conclusion. In Morrison, the officer allegedly handcuffed the plaintiff too tightly, did not loosen the
handcuffs when asked to do so, told the plaintiff that he could place the handcuffs on “as tight as he
wanted to and that’s how they were staying,” id. at 402, and kept the plaintiff handcuffed for forty
to fifty minutes. These facts distinguish Morrison from Lee’s case.
The defendants are also entitled to qualified immunity on the Lees’ claims arising from the
booking at the police station, because the Lees have not raised a triable fact issue as to whether any
officer violated Lee’s constitutional rights. Mimi Lee alleges that she was viciously assaulted by
Officer Montana at the police station, and that the other officers present are liable for failing to
intervene or for assisting in Officer Montana’s assault. But Lee’s allegations are contradicted by the
video evidence in the record. Although ordinarily the plaintiffs’ version of the facts must be
accepted as true when deciding the defendant’s motion for summary judgment, a video that
contradicts a nonmovant’s version of the facts can support a grant of summary judgment. See Scott
v. Harris, 550 U.S. 372, 381 (2007); Marvin v. City of Taylor, 509 F.3d 234, 249 (6th Cir. 2007).
The video evidence establishes that Officer Montana did not use constitutionally excessive
force against Lee. The video shows that Mimi Lee was belligerent and confrontational throughout
her time in the booking area. See R. 28, Exhibit 1 (DVD), segment ending in 678 at 2:50–5:30. The
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Lees’ characterization of the officers’ actions as a “vicious assault” is not accurate. The video shows
that Officer Hipp only shoved Lee’s shoulder mildly and gestured for her to sit back down in the
chair. Id. at 3:44. The Lees contend that Officer Montana then “grabbed her” and “shoved her onto
the table” before he “choked her” with his right forearm. The video shows that Officer Montana
took hold of the sleeves of Lee’s sweatshirt in an effort to guide her back to the chair she had been
sitting in, then applied force to her neck with his forearm after she flailed and appeared to start to
swing at him. Id. at 3:46–3:48.
The Lees’ allegation that Officer Montana continued to choke Mimi Lee on the table is
overstated. Although the video shows that Officer Montana maintained the choke hold for a period,
it is clear that Lee was kicking and struggling during that time; she was not “limp” and compliant
as she claims. See id. at 3:50–4:05. The Lees also claim that Officer Montana then threw Lee to the
ground and landed on top of her, continuing to choke her with his forearm across her neck. The
video shows that while Lee was taken to the ground and handcuffed again by Officer Montana and
other officers, the entire process took a matter of seconds and, once Lee was handcuffed again, the
officers refrained from using further force against her. See id. at 4:05–5:05. Although plaintiffs
claim that Officer Montana shouted “Spray the bitch,” they do not claim that Lee was ever pepper
sprayed. While Officer Montana may not have used the minimum amount of force necessary to
subdue Lee, the video shows that the force Officer Montana used was not constitutionally excessive.
At the summary judgment stage, video evidence contradicting a plaintiff’s claims is sufficient
to affirm a grant of summary judgment. In Griffin v. Hardrick, 604 F.3d 949 (6th Cir. 2010), this
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court found, based on video evidence, that officers did not use excessive force in restraining the
plaintiff because the plaintiff’s aggressive resistance and noncompliance, including a “loud, lengthy,
and animated conversation” with a nearby nurse, “gave [the defendant officer] a reasonable basis to
believe that force would be necessary to control [the plaintiff].” Id. at 954–55. Although Griffin was
an Eighth Amendment excessive-force case involving a prisoner, its reasoning is persuasive in the
Fourth Amendment context. The Lees’ entire claim rests on the false premise that Officer Montana’s
actions were unreasonable because Mimi Lee “did not pose a threat at the police station.” The video
recording, however, makes clear that Officer Montana had a reasonable basis to believe that Lee
posed a sufficient threat that force was necessary to subdue her. In light of the video evidence in the
record, plaintiffs have not met their burden of raising a triable fact issue and Officer Montana is
therefore entitled to qualified immunity.
The video also makes clear that Officers Hipp, Cook, and Light had very minimal physical
contact with Lee, such that no rational juror could find that any of these officers applied excessive
force. See R. 28, Exhibit 1 (DVD), segment ending in 678 at 3:00–5:30. Moreover, plaintiffs’
bystander claims against these officers fail to raise a triable fact issue because Officer Montana did
not use excessive force against Lee, as detailed above. Officers Hipp, Cook, and Light were
therefore entitled to qualified immunity.
The district court’s judgment is affirmed.
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