Hinds County, Mississippi v. Ronnie Burton

                IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

                       NO. 2014-CA-01004-SCT

HINDS COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI, CITY OF
JACKSON, MISSISSIPPI, BILLY JADE (JAY)
ALBRIGHT IN HIS INDIVIDUAL CAPACITY AND
MISSISSIPPI BUREAU OF NARCOTICS

v.

RONNIE BURTON

DATE OF JUDGMENT:              01/14/2014
TRIAL JUDGE:                   HON. WINSTON L. KIDD
TRIAL COURT ATTORNEYS:         CARLOS E. MOORE
                               TANGALA L. HOLLIS
                               AAFRAM Y. SELLERS
                               LARA E. GILL
                               PIETER TEEUWISSEN
                               MARK D. RAY
COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED:     HINDS COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANTS:      JASON E. DARE
                               J. LAWSON HESTER
                               LASHUNDRA JACKSON-WINTERS
                               MONICA JOINER
                               LARA E. GILL
                               THOMAS E. WHITFIELD, JR.
                               JOHN T. KITCHENS
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE:        TANGALA L. HOLLIS
                               CARLOS E. MOORE
                               DARRYL A. WILSON
NATURE OF THE CASE:            CIVIL - PERSONAL INJURY
DISPOSITION:                   REVERSED AND RENDERED - 03/31/2016
MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
MANDATE ISSUED:

     EN BANC.

     LAMAR, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:
¶1.    A drug task force was attempting to execute a search warrant on a suspected drug

house when gunfire broke out. Several men were standing in front of the house as the task-

force convoy arrived, and, according to the officers, at least one of those men started

shooting at the officers and their vehicles. One of the police officers, who was riding in the

bed of a convoy pickup truck, stood and returned fire. Ronnie Burton was standing with the

man or men who allegedly were shooting at the police, but he did not fire the shots. Instead,

he began to run before the shooting started.

¶2.    At some point a bullet struck Burton. The bullet passed through his right shoulder and

was never found. Burton did not actually see anyone shoot, and he admits that he cannot

identify exactly when he was shot, where he was when he got shot, what caliber of bullet hit

him, or who shot him. He conceded that it was possible that one of his armed companions

at the house could have fired the shot that hit him, but Burton believes the police shot him.

The police officer who returned fire testified that the one person he shot at was not Burton

but a man shooting at the police vehicles. Burton did not produce any witnesses or other

evidence to contradict the testimony of the officers.

¶3.    Because he was caught fleeing the scene and in possession of a weapon, Burton was

arrested. He was released shortly thereafter, when it was determined that he was not the

shooter. Burton sued—under the Mississippi Tort Claims Act (MTCA)—the law-

enforcement entities that make up the task force as well as the officer who fired his weapon.

The Hinds County Circuit Court, First Judicial District, rejected the defendants’ claims of

MTCA immunity, and found in favor of Burton on most of his claims, awarding him



                                               2
$350,000 for his injuries. Because we find the defendants are immune under the MTCA, we

reverse the judgment of the circuit court and render judgment in their favor.

                              Facts and Procedural History

¶4.    The Jackson Enforcement Team (JET) is a joint drug-enforcement effort led by the

Mississippi Department of Public Safety Bureau of Narcotics (MBN). The team is made up

of MBN agents as well as members from Hinds County Sheriff’s Office (HCSO), Jackson

Police Department (JPD), and Mississippi Department of Corrections (MDOC).

¶5.    On Friday, September 12, 2008, an eight-vehicle JET convey drove to a house in

Jackson to execute a no-knock search warrant. The task force had obtained the warrant after

purchasing several thousand dollars’ worth of marijuana and prescription drugs from an

individual doing business from that address.

¶6.    Burton and several other men were in the carport of the house when the JET convoy

approached. According to the JET members’ testimony, an individual at the house began

firing shots from the carport area as the first convoy vehicle arrived. One officer, Billy Jade

Albright, was in the bed of a pickup truck in the convoy. When the convoy began taking fire,

he testified, he returned fire at the shooter, aiming at the one man he could identify who was

shooting at the officers. Albright testified that he located the man by the muzzle flashes of

the pistol the man was shooting and fired back to protect the convoy and allow the rest of the

team to exit their vehicles in safety. He acknowledged that other people were near the shooter

when the shots were exchanged. It is undisputed that Albright was the only JET member who

fired a weapon that night.



                                               3
¶7.    Burton testified that he ran away from the carport before the shooting started because

he thought the JET convoy was actually a drive-by shooting. He did not see anyone shoot.

He admitted that he and others with him that night were armed. The defendants presented

ballistic evidence from the scene that indicated someone fired several shots from the carport

and at least one shot hit a JET vehicle. The slug found embedded in the body of the vehicle

was fired, according to the crime-lab report, from a weapon that was found near the carport.

Investigators also found several spent shell casings matching the slug and the gun. They also

found shell casings at the scene that were from a gun that was not recovered. Burton did not

challenge any of this evidence.1

¶8.    At some point during the exchange, Burton was shot. The projectile went all the way

through his right shoulder. The bullet was never recovered, and he admitted there was no

ballistic evidence indicating that Albright’s weapon fired the shot that caused the injury.

Burton claims he first noticed he was shot as he was running around the side of the house,

but he does not know where the shot came from or who fired it. In his deposition, about

which he was questioned at trial, he admitted it was possible that one of his companions fired

the shot. No other witness testified as to who shot Burton or where he was when the bullet

struck him. Burton testified that after he ran around the house, he attempted to load his own

gun but dropped the magazine and was unable to do so.




       1
         On appeal, the defendants argue that Burton has failed to prove causation, pointing
out that Burton offered nothing other than his speculation that it was Albright who shot him.
Because we find the defendants are immune, we do not address causation.

                                              4
¶9.    Some JET members found Burton hiding under a car at a nearby house and called an

ambulance for him. After he was treated at University of Mississippi Medical Center

(UMMC), JPD officers arrested Burton and transported him to the Raymond Detention

Center. He was charged with five counts of aggravated assault on a law enforcement officer

and one count of shooting into an occupied vehicle. When Burton appeared in Jackson

Municipal Court two days after the shooting, these charges were remanded to the file because

of a lack of evidence. The defendants do not claim that Burton was the shooter. Burton was

released upon return to the Raymond Detention Center.

¶10.   Burton sued the City of Jackson, Hinds County, MBN, and Albright, claiming

negligent hiring/supervision,2 false arrest/false imprisonment, negligent/intentional infliction

of emotional distress, assault, battery, and malicious prosecution.3 The case was tried in

Hinds County Circuit Court in January 2012. The trial court entered its final judgment on

January 15, 2014, finding the following:

       1. That the Defendants are jointly and severally liable for the injuries of the
       Plaintiff;

       2. That the Defendants City of Jackson and MBN [are] vicariously liable for
       Defendant Officer Albright, who was acting within the scope and course of his
       employment;


       2
         Burton apparently did not pursue his negligent hiring/training, or intentional-
infliction-of-emotional-distress claims. He failed to include them in his proposed findings
of fact and conclusions of law, and he failed to raise them after trial, even though the trial
court did not address them in his opinion or judgment. Burton does not cross-appeal or
otherwise argue these issues before this Court. See Bannister v. State, 731 So. 2d 583, 588
(Miss. 1999) (holding that issues not argued on appeal are abandoned).
       3
       The trial court found the defendants not liable for Burton’s claim of malicious
prosecution. That finding is not at issue on appeal.

                                               5
       3. That Defendants City of Jackson, MBN, Hinds County, and Albright are
       liable for negligent infliction of emotional distress;

       4. That Defendant Albright is liable for civil assault and battery in his Official
       and Individual Capacities; [and]

       5. That Defendant Hinds County is liable for false imprisonment[.]

The trial court denied the defendants’ post-trial motions. All defendants appeal, raising a

total of seventeen issues. Because we find the defendants are immune under the MTCA, we

address only two issues:

       1. Whether MBN, the City of Jackson, and Hinds County are immune
       under the police-protection exemption found in Mississippi Code Section
       11-46-9(1)(c).

       2. Whether Hinds County is immune under the inmate exemption of the
       MTCA found in Mississippi Code Section 11-46-9(1)(m).

                                    Standard of Review

¶11.   “A circuit court judge sitting without a jury is accorded the same deference with

regard to his findings as a chancellor and his findings are safe on appeal where they are

supported by substantial, credible, and reasonable evidence.” City of Jackson v. Powell, 917

So. 2d 59, 68 (Miss. 2005) (quoting City of Jackson v. Perry, 764 So. 2d 373, 376 (Miss.

2000) (internal quotation marks omitted)). “However, this Court reviews errors of law de

novo, including the proper application of the Mississippi Tort Claims Act . . . .” Id.

       1. Albright, MBN, the City of Jackson, and Hinds County are immune
       under the police-protection exemption found in Mississippi Code Section
       11-46-9(1)(c).

¶12.   The trial court found Albright, the City of Jackson, and MBN liable for assault and

battery, and all the defendants liable for negligent infliction of emotional distress, based on


                                               6
a finding that Albright shot Burton as Burton was fleeing. Mississippi Code Section 11-46-

9(1)(c) provides that

       (1) A governmental entity and its employees acting within the course and
       scope of their employment or duties shall not be liable for any claim:
       ...
       (c) Arising out of any act or omission of any employee of a governmental
       entity engaged in the performance or execution of duties or activities relating
       to police or fire protection unless the employee acted in reckless disregard of
       the safety and well-being of any person not engaged in criminal activity at the
       time of injury.

Miss. Code Ann. § 11-46-9(1)(c) (Rev. 2012) Thus, to recover, Burton was required to prove

by a preponderance of the evidence that Albright acted with reckless disregard of Burton’s

safety and that Burton was not engaged in criminal activity.

       The trial court’s findings of fact were against the overwhelming weight of
       the evidence.

¶13.   “A trial judge’s findings of fact must be manifestly wrong and against the

overwhelming weight of the evidence for an appellate court to disturb them.” Richardson

v. Norfolk S. R.R. Co., 923 So. 2d 1002, 1009 (Miss. 2006). “A trial court’s finding of fact

is found to be manifestly wrong when ‘although there is evidence to support it, the reviewing

court on the entire evidence is left with the definite and firm conviction that a mistake has

been made.’” Melchiors v. Melchiors, 607 So. 2d 1237, 1239 (Miss. 1992) (quoting UHS-

Qualicare v. Gulf Coast Cmty. Hosp., 525 So. 2d 746, 755 (Miss. 1987)). Examining the

entire record, we are firmly convicted that a mistake has been made here.




                                             7
¶14.   The trial court found that the defendants were not immune under the MTCA because

Albright acted in reckless disregard of Burton’s safety and well-being.4 Specifically, the trial

court found that “Albright was acting with reckless disregard, as he fired his weapon toward

a group of individuals, at night, in a residential neighborhood, from a moving vehicle, with

no one posing an imminent threat to the officers or others present at the scene.” (Emphasis

added.) We see no basis in the record for the finding that no one posed an imminent threat

to the officers.

¶15.   In addition to Albright, three MBN agents and a Hinds County sheriff’s deputy all

testified that they either saw or heard someone shooting at the vehicles as they approached

the house. Kenneth Blandford, an MBN agent who was in the first convoy vehicle, testified

that he saw a man standing at the residence shooting at the vehicles as they drove up. Ronald

Rhodes, another MBN agent, saw the same thing, and was actually sitting on the side of the

vehicle that drew gunfire. Deputy Keith Burnett also testified that the team started taking fire

as it pulled up to the house. Finally, Geoff Still, the MBN agent in charge of the operation,

was sitting in the cab of the truck from which Albright fired and testified that he heard

gunshots from the house before he heard the report of Albright’s much-closer weapon.



       4
        Some defendants argue that Burton was involved in criminal activity because he was
carrying a concealed weapon without a permit to do so. But this Court has held that “[i]n
order to prove that a victim is engaged in criminal activity “‘it must be shown that the
criminal activity has some causal nexus to the wrongdoing of the tortfeasor.’” Powell, 917
So. 2d at 69 (quoting Perry, 764 So. 2d at 739). Since no defendant has argued, and the
record does not support, that there was a causal nexus between Burton having a concealed
weapon and his being shot, we focus on the reckless-disregard portion of Section 11-46-
9(1)(c). Furthermore, Burton does not argue that the defendants were not engaged in police-
protection activities.

                                               8
¶16.   On the other hand, Burton’s was the only testimony offered to support his claims. He

admitted that he was off the carport before the shooting started and only heard—never

saw—anyone shoot. He admitted at least one of the other men was armed, and he admitted

that it was possible one of them shot him. But he thought only the police shot. He offered no

reasons for thinking this or any evidence that contradicted the officers’ testimony or the

physical evidence indicating someone fired shots from the carport that hit a vehicle in the

police convoy. In fact, he testified twice—once in deposition and once at trial—that he had

no idea what happened behind him after he ran. Since Burton presented nothing which

contradicts or casts into doubt the testimony of the officers, we take it as true:

       The rule is that the testimony of a witness which is uncontradicted, and who
       is not impeached in some manner known to the law, where he is not
       contradicted by the circumstances, must be accepted as true. It is true that
       direct evidence of a witness may be contradicted by circumstances, but in such
       case the circumstances relied on for contradiction must be inconsistent with the
       truth of the testimony. When the testimony of a witness is not contradicted,
       either by direct evidence or by circumstances, it must be taken as true.

Hearin-Miller Transp., Inc. v. Currie, 248 So. 2d 451, 454 (Miss. 1971) (quoting Ryals v.

Douglas, 39 So. 2d 311, 317 (Miss. 1949)). Burton presented no evidence that contradicted

the officers’ testimony. As such, we conclude that the trial court’s finding that “no one

pos[ed] an imminent threat to the officers or others present at the scene” was manifestly

wrong.

       Burton failed to prove reckless disregard.

¶17.   “The plaintiff has the burden of proving ‘reckless disregard’ by a preponderance of

the evidence.” Titus v. Williams, 844 So. 2d 459, 468 (Miss. 2003) (citing Simpson v. City



                                              9
of Pickens, 761 So. 2d 855, 859 (Miss. 2000)). This Court has defined reckless disregard as

“a higher standard than gross negligence and ‘embraces willful or wanton conduct which

requires knowingly and intentionally doing a thing or wrongful act.’” Collins v. Tallahatchie

Cty., 876 So. 2d 284, 287 (Miss. 2004) (quoting Turner v. City of Ruleville, 735 So. 2d 226,

230 (Miss. 1999)). “It typically involves a conscious indifference to consequences, and

almost a willingness that harm should follow.” City of Jackson v. Shavers, 97 So. 3d 686,

688 (Miss. 2012) (citing Maye v. Pearl River Cty., 758 So. 2d 391, 394 (Miss. 1999)).

“Reckless disregard is found where there is a deliberate disregard of an unreasonable risk and

a high probability of harm.” Id. (citing City of Laurel v. Williams, 21 So. 3d 1170, 1175

(Miss. 2009)). In analyzing whether the actions of law enforcement officers amount to

reckless disregard of the safety and well-being of others, “[t]his Court has held that ‘the

nature of the officers’ actions is judged on an objective standard with all the factors that they

were confronted with, taking into account the fact that the officers must make split-second

decisions.” Phillips v. Miss. Dep’t of Pub. Safety, 978 So. 2d 656, 661 (Miss. 2008) (quoting

Powell, 917 So. 2d at 71). Also, “[t]he ‘reasonableness’ of a particular use of force must be

judged from the perspective of a reasonable officer on the scene, rather than with the 20/20

vision of hindsight.” Id. (quoting Graham v. Connor, 490 U.S. 386, 396, 109 S. Ct. 1865,

1872, 104 L. Ed. 2d 443 (1989)).

¶18.   We previously have held it to be objectively reasonable for an officer to use deadly

force when his life and the lives of others are in immediate danger. In Elkins v. McKenzie,

this Court held that an officer’s use of deadly force against a man who was retreating into his



                                               10
house was objectively reasonable, because the victim was aiming a loaded weapon at the

police officer and refused to lower it. Elkins v. McKenzie, 865 So. 2d 1065, 1088 (Miss.

2003). After the officer followed the victim into his house, the victim began firing at the

police officer. Id. at 1069. In that case, innocent bystanders were in the house, and the officer

testified that he did not know where they were when he was shooting the victim. Id. at 1081.

Nonetheless, this Court held that the officer’s use of deadly force was objectively reasonable

under the circumstances. Id. at 1088. This Court specifically noted that the officer was

receiving fire, and that the officer “believed that it was his duty to take the actions that he did

when confronted with a situation that placed other officers and himself in danger.” Id. at

1087.

¶19.    In a case more factually similar to this one, the Fifth Circuit found an officer’s actions

to be objectively reasonable even when the officer accidentally shot the unarmed victim of

a carjacking rather than the actual perpetrator. See Stroik v. Ponseti, 35 F. 3d 155, 156 (5th

Cir. 1994). There, Officer Wilbur Ponseti, along with several other police officers, was

chasing some armed-robbery suspects through New Orleans. Id. The suspects were driving

a van until the van came to a stop after hitting a curb. Id.

        As the van came to a stop, a black male opened the sliding, passenger-side
        door and fled on foot. Balancier [Ponseti’s partner] parked the police car in the
        middle of the intersection and, running past the open sliding door of the van,
        chased the suspect down the street. At the same time that Balancier ran past the
        van, Ponseti was running toward the van. As Ponseti came around the back of
        the van to its passenger side, he observed a second black male and a white
        female exiting the van through the sliding door. The black male was behind the
        white female with his left hand around her waist and was holding a handgun
        in his right hand. Ponseti immediately fired his gun seven to nine times, killing
        the black male and wounding the white female.

                                                11
Id. at 156. The injured woman was later identified as Monica Stroik, who had been carjacked

by the decedent and his accomplices. Id. at 156–57. In analyzing the facts under the

objectively reasonable standard, the Fifth Circuit found that “the only question is whether

Ponseti’s use of force was ‘‘objectively reasonable’ in light of the facts and circumstances

confronting [him], without regard to [his] underlying intent or motivation.’” Id. at 158

(quoting Graham, 490 U.S. at 396).

¶20.   The Fifth Circuit concluded that Ponseti’s actions were objectively reasonable because

of the threat the suspect posed, notwithstanding the fact that Ponseti also shot an innocent

bystander:

       When Ponseti and Balancier arrived at the scene of the shooting, all of the
       information they possessed indicated that there were both black and white
       suspects in the van, that they were armed, and that they had all been involved
       in the robberies of pedestrians. The van had just come to an abrupt stop after
       a high speed chase during which the van had struck a pedestrian. One suspect
       had begun to flee on foot and two others were exiting the van. Finally, the
       crucial fact in this case is that at the time Ponseti came around the rear of the
       van, he testified, and there is no evidence contradicting this testimony, that
       Johnson [the decedent] was pointing a gun at him. Hence . . . Ponseti’s life was
       actually in jeopardy when he shot. Given these facts, Ponseti had “probable
       cause to believe that the suspect[s] pose[d] a threat of serious physical harm,”
       [Tennessee v.] Garner, 471 U.S. [1], 11, 105 S. Ct. [1694], 1701[, 85 L. Ed.
       2d 1 (1985)], to Ponseti, or to others if the suspects were allowed to flee.
       Because Ponseti could have reasonably believed that the suspects posed an
       imminent, deadly threat, we conclude that he was justified in using deadly
       force.

Id. at 159 (footnotes omitted). Here, Albright and the other JET members were in immediate

danger from an assailant firing a weapon at their vehicles. Albright aimed at the shooter and

fired. Thus, considering the factors with which Albright was confronted—namely someone

shooting at him and his fellow officers—and taking into account the fact that he had to make

                                              12
a split-second decision, we find that Albright’s actions were objectively reasonable. We

further find that Burton failed to prove that Albright acted with reckless disregard. As such,

the police-protection exemption affords the defendants immunity from Burton’s claims, and

the trial court erred when it ruled otherwise.

         The violation of an internal policy is not dispositive of reckless disregard.

¶21.     The trial court found Albright acted in reckless disregard in part because it found that

Albright’s actions violated JPD’s and MBN’s internal policies governing the use of deadly

force.

¶22.     While the parties dispute which use-of-force policy applied to Albright—a JPD officer

on special contract to the MBN-led JET task force—the trial court did not decide this issue;

it simply found that Albright had violated both policies. Neither do we make such a finding,

because regardless of which use-of-force policy applied to Albright that night, and assuming

a violation occurred, “the violation of a police policy is not dispositive of reckless disregard

. . . .” City of Jackson v. Lewis, 153 So. 3d 689, 696 (Miss. 2014). In this Court’s police-

chase jurisprudence, it is just one of ten factors courts must consider when determining if a

given pursuit constitutes reckless disregard. Id.

¶23.     For these reasons, the trial court erred when it determined that the defendants were

not entitled to MTCA immunity under the police-protection exemption.

         2. Hinds County is immune under the inmate exemption of the MTCA
         found in Mississippi Code Section 11-46-9(1)(m).

¶24.     Without addressing immunity, the trial court found that Hinds County falsely

imprisoned Burton in its Raymond Detention Facility. It is undisputed that JPD officers


                                               13
arrested Burton, and that no Hinds County employee was involved in the arrest. It also is

undisputed that the false-imprisonment claims against Hinds County all stem from the time

Burton was at the Raymond Detention Facility.

¶25.   Hinds County argues that Burton’s false-imprisonment claims against it arose when

Burton was an inmate, and therefore it is entitled to immunity under Section 11-46-9(1)(m),

which provides immunity from the claims “[o]f any claimant who at the time the claim arises

is an inmate of any detention center, jail, workhouse, penal farm, penitentiary or other such

institution . . . .” Miss. Code Ann. § 11-46-9(1)(m) (Rev. 2012).While the MTCA does not

define “inmate,” this Court has defined the term broadly, to include pretrial detainees, such

as Burton. See, e.g., Liggans v. Coahoma Cty. Sheriff’s Dep’t, 823 So. 3d 1152, 1156

(Miss. 2002).

¶26.   Burton’s only argument on appeal is that his claim accrued before he was detained but

after he was “accepted” by Hinds County at its Raymond Detention Center. Burton’s

position is essentially that his claims arose at a time when he was not an inmate but was in

the process of being booked. We previously have rejected a similar argument. See Love v.

Sunflower Cty. Sheriff’s Dep’t, 860 So. 2d 797, 800 (Miss. 2003) (holding that plaintiff in

the process of bonding out was an “inmate,” notwithstanding plaintiff’s claim that he was a

“civilian detainee in the process of being released.”). As it relates to false-imprisonment

claims against Hinds County, we find that Burton is a “claimant who at the time the claim

ar[ose] [wa]s an inmate.” Miss. Code Ann. § 11-46-9(1)(m). Therefore, Hinds County is

immune and the trial court erred by not dismissing those claims.



                                             14
                                        Conclusion

¶27.   The City of Jackson, Hinds County, MBN, and Albright are immune under either the

police-protection exemption or the inmate exemption found in the MTCA. As such, we

reverse the judgment of the Circuit Court of the First Judicial District of Hinds County and

render judgment in favor of the defendants.

¶28.   REVERSED AND RENDERED.

    WALLER, C.J., DICKINSON AND RANDOLPH, P.JJ., KITCHENS,
COLEMAN, MAXWELL AND BEAM, JJ., CONCUR. KING, J., SPECIALLY
CONCURS WITH SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION JOINED BY KITCHENS, J.

       KING, JUSTICE, SPECIALLY CONCURRING:

¶29.   While I agree with the majority that, under the specific facts of this case, Hinds

County is entitled to immunity pursuant to the inmate exception, I write separately to express

my concerns about adopting such a broad interpretation of the term “inmate.”

¶30.   Section 11-46-9(1)(m) provides:

       (1) A governmental entity and its employees acting within the course and
       scope of their employment or duties shall not be liable for any claim:
       ....
       (m) Of any claimant who at the time the claim arises is an inmate of any
       detention center, jail, workhouse, penal farm, penitentiary or other such
       institution . . . .

Miss. Code Ann. § 11-46-9(1)(m) (Rev. 2012). I believe that inherent in this exemption is

the presumption that an inmate has been properly and lawfully detained.5 The majority states

that this Court has broadly defined the term “inmate” to include pretrial detainees such as

       5
       “ The tort of false arrest, in both its common law and constitutional variants, protects
and vindicates the individual’s interest in freedom from unwarranted interference with his
personal liberty.” Phillips v. D.C., 458 A.2d 722, 725 (D.C. App. 1983).

                                              15
Burton. Yet, if Burton had proven that he was not lawfully arrested or detained, the label of

“inmate” would surely not be applicable. To embrace such a broad definition of this term

would mean that the government could arrest anyone at any time for any reason, lock him/her

up, and allow hm/her to suffer abuse, injury, and misuse, for which there would be no legal

redress.

¶31.   Where the detention is improper and unlawful, there should be no immunity. The

definition of false imprisonment is “the confinement of the plaintiff within boundaries fixed

by the defendant, without legal justification, by an act or the breach of a duty intended to

result in such confinement.” State for Use of Powell v. Moore, 174 So. 2d 352, 355 (Miss.

1965) (emphasis added). A person who is held without legal justification should not be

thought of as an inmate, but instead as a citizen who has been wrongfully deprived of his

liberty.

¶32.   Under the specific facts of this case, I agree with the majority that Burton has failed

to prove his false imprisonment claim. However, I am unwilling to adopt an interpretation

of the term “inmate” as used in Section 11-46-9(1)(m) that would include individuals whose

detention and incarceration is improper and/or unlawful.

       KITCHENS, J., JOINS THIS OPINION.




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