Jenkins v. District of Columbia

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            DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS

                                 No. 16-CV-841

                      RONALD JENKINS, et al., APPELLANTS,

                                        V.

                   DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, et al., APPELLEES.

                         Appeal from the Superior Court
                          of the District of Columbia
                                (CAB-5282-14)
                      (Hon. Thomas J. Motley, Trial Judge)
(Argued February 28, 2018                            Decided January 30, 2020)
      Gregory L. Lattimer for appellants.

      Mary L. Wilson, Senior Assistant Attorney General, with whom Karl A.
Racine, Attorney General for the District of Columbia, Todd S. Kim, Solicitor
General at the time the brief was filed, and Loren L. AliKhan, Deputy Solicitor
General at the time the brief was filed, were on the brief, for appellees.

      Before FISHER and THOMPSON, Associate Judges, and FERREN, Senior Judge.


      THOMPSON, Associate Judge:        Plaintiffs/appellants Ronald and Sharon

Jenkins appeal from an order of the Superior Court entering summary judgment in

favor of defendants/appellees, the District of Columbia (the “District”) and

Michael Davis, on plaintiffs’ claims brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, their
                                         2

common-law claims of assault and battery, and Mr. Jenkins’s common-law claims

of false arrest and negligent supervision. We affirm.



                                   I. Background



      The following facts are not in dispute. On the afternoon of September 2,

2013, the Jenkinses went to buy crabs at the Wharf, where Mr. Jenkins, who had

been driving the Jenkinses’ vehicle, got into a verbal altercation with another

driver (“the complainant”) in the parking lot. According to the Jenkinses, just

before the altercation, the other driver had “stolen” the parking space for which

Mr. Jenkins had been waiting. After the altercation, the Jenkinses, having found

another parking space, went to make their purchases. Before they returned to their

vehicle, a police radio run went out reporting “a traffic dispute that possibly

resulted in some type of assault” in which “a knife had been pulled.” In response

to the radio run, Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) Officer Michael Davis

responded to the scene, where he spoke with other officers who were already

present and, together with the other officers, began interviewing witnesses.



      At the scene, the police officers spoke with a number of individuals about

what had occurred. The complainant’s nephew, a minor child with the initials
                                           3

“S.M.,” told officers that Mr. Jenkins had argued with the complainant while

armed with a small, folding pocketknife that had a serrated blade. 1             The

complainant initially informed a detective that Mr. Jenkins was holding a set of

keys in his hand and that he (the complainant) never saw a knife, but, an hour later,

through an interpreter, the complainant told police that Mr. Jenkins had “angrily

approached him . . . [and] produced what appeared to be a small pocket knife . . . .”

An unidentified person told the police that he or she saw the complainant and Mr.

Jenkins arguing but did not see Mr. Jenkins with a weapon.2 (Officer Davis stated

later, in his deposition, that a woman who was passing by told him that she saw

Mr. Jenkins “pull a knife” on the complainant, but this was not mentioned in the

officer’s written report about the incident.)



      While the police were still on the scene, appellants returned to their car, put

their purchases in the trunk of their vehicle, and were about to drive off, when two

MPD officers stopped them and asked Mr. Jenkins whether he had a knife and


      1
         S.M. testified in his deposition that the woman who was with Mr. Jenkins
— i.e., Mrs. Jenkins — also “got out [of the car],” “wrote [the complainant’s] plate
number down[,]” and “said watch what’s going to happen because . . . she had her
cousin or somebody that was a cop.”
      2
          The vantage point and timing of the passerby are not disclosed in the
record.
                                          4

whether he had pulled a knife on the complainant. Mr. Jenkins denied having done

so and denied having a knife. Mrs. Jenkins corroborated his account, telling the

police that her husband “merely mentioned to the complainant that he was waiting

next in line for the parking space that the complainant took” and then “walked

within eyesight of the complainant to one of the fisherman boats and purchased

crabs.” The officer told Mr. Jenkins to “stay right there for a minute” while the

officer went back to speak with the complainant. When the officer returned, he

asked Mr. Jenkins to step out of the car, which he did. Mr. Jenkins then opened the

trunk of the car to allow the police to search for a knife. The officers also searched

the rest of the vehicle. Mrs. Jenkins stepped out of the vehicle during the vehicle

search, and the police looked through her purse as well. Officers also searched in

nearby trash cans and under cars in the immediate area, but found no knife.

Officer Davis approached Mr. Jenkins and arrested him for assault with a

dangerous weapon (ADW) before searching his person and taking all of his

personal items out of his pocket.



      At some point, an unnamed female police officer approached Mrs. Jenkins

and told her to get out of the car because “she was going to search [her].”3


      3
        The record is unclear as to the precise sequence of events — e.g., as to
whether the patdown search of Mrs. Jenkins took place before or after Mr. Jenkins
                                                                        (continued…)
                                          5

Mrs. Jenkins walked with the female officer to the police van, where she stood

spread-eagle while the female officer patted her down over her clothing and

checked her hair (which she was wearing in a braided hairstyle) for a weapon.4



      The police officers did not find a knife in the Jenkinses’ car or on the person

of either Mr. Jenkins or Mrs. Jenkins. Mr. Jenkins was transported to the First

District Station for booking and spent the night in jail. At an initial appearance the

next day, the government declined to prosecute Mr. Jenkins, and he was released

from custody.



      After the Jenkinses filed their lawsuit, the District of Columbia and Officer

Davis moved for summary judgment on all of the Jenkinses’ claims. Reviewing

the undisputed facts (and disregarding Officer Davis’s deposition testimony about

an unnamed woman who claimed to have seen Mr. Jenkins with a knife), the

(…continued)
was arrested, and whether the patdown search of Mrs. Jenkins and the arrest of Mr.
Jenkins took place before or after officers searched for a knife in trashcans and
under cars. The precise sequence is not material for purposes of our analysis.
      4
           Mrs. Jenkins testified that the female officer “went inside of my legs. She
went outside of my legs. She went down my arms. I think she like checked my
collar. . . . She checked my hair. . . . [T]hen she went under my bra, my bra
line. . . [S]he went along the sides [of my torso]. . . . She went along my arms.
Went in between my legs and down the side. I didn’t have on a belt and she
checked the back.”
                                         6

Superior Court concluded that “sufficient evidence existed for Officer Davis to

make a determination of probable cause to arrest Mr. Jenkins for [ADW].” The

court granted summary judgment in favor of the District and Officer Davis on all

of Mr. Jenkins’s claims (making no distinction between the § 1983 and common-

law claims).



      Addressing Mrs. Jenkins’s claims, the Superior Court reasoned that “the

combination of proximity and marriage [was] an insufficient basis” for probable

cause to search Mrs. Jenkins as “an aider and abettor of Mr. Jenkins’[s] alleged

criminal conduct” or as an accessory after the fact. The court also reasoned that

while the facts known to the officers supported a reasonable suspicion that Mrs.

Jenkins might be in possession of the knife, the facts were insufficient to support a

reasonable belief that Mrs. Jenkins was both armed and dangerous. Concluding,

however, that there was no clearly established law regarding whether an officer

may search “the accompanying passenger after a search of the arrestee driver and

the vehicle itself proved fruitless” and that “the right of an individual not to be

searched under the circumstances of the instant case is not clear,” the court

determined that “a clearly known right was not violated when a search was

performed on Mrs. Jenkins” and that “qualified immunity applies.” The court
                                         7

therefore granted summary judgment in favor of the defendants on Mrs. Jenkins’s

claims.



                                    II. Discussion



                              A. Mr. Jenkins’s claims



      Summary judgment is warranted “if 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.”    Super. Ct. Civ. R. 56(a).     Our review of an order granting

summary judgment is de novo[.]” Perkins v. District of Columbia, 146 A.3d 80, 84

(D.C. 2016).



      Mr. Jenkins asserts that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment

because there were “no undisputed facts indicating that Mr. Jenkins had a knife”

on the date of the alleged offense and “an abundance of evidence indicating that

[he] did not.” As to the first of these points, the short answer is that the issue in

this case is not whether Mr. Jenkins actually committed the offense of ADW or

possessed a pocketknife on the date in question. “[T]he relevant inquiry in a false

arrest defense is not what the actual facts may be but rather what the officers could
                                         8

reasonably conclude from what they were told and what they saw on the scene.”

Enders v. District of Columbia, 4 A.3d 457, 470-71 (D.C. 2010); see also Wright v.

City of Philadelphia, 409 F.3d 595, 602 (3d Cir. 2005) (“[T]he constitutional

validity of the arrest does not depend on whether the suspect actually committed

any crime.”). The issue in this case is whether, at the time of Mr. Jenkins’s arrest

and based on the facts (undisputedly) known to Officer Davis and the other officers

at the scene, there was probable cause to believe that Mr. Jenkins had committed a

criminal offense (specifically, ADW). See Bradshaw v. District of Columbia, 43

A.3d 318, 323 (D.C. 2012) (“A police officer may justify an arrest [and defeat a

wrongful arrest claim brought under §1983 and a common-law false arrest claim]

by showing that he or she had probable cause, in the constitutional sense, to make

the arrest.”).



       “Probable cause to arrest exists where the facts and circumstances within the

police officers’ knowledge and of which they had reasonably trustworthy

information are sufficient in themselves to warrant a man or woman of reasonable

caution in the belief that an offense has been or is being committed.” Butler v.

United States, 102 A.3d 736, 739 (D.C. 2014) (internal quotation marks omitted);

see also District of Columbia v. Wesby, 138 S. Ct. 577, 586 (2018) (explaining that

probable cause “requires only a probability or substantial chance of criminal
                                          9

activity, not an actual showing of such activity” (internal quotation marks

omitted)); Kaley v. United States, 571 U.S. 320, 338 (2014) (Probable cause

“requires only the kind of fair probability on which reasonable and prudent people

. . . act.”) (brackets and internal quotation marks omitted). “When facts support a

‘fair probability’ that a suspect has committed a crime, probable cause to arrest

exists.” Bridewell v. Eberle, 730 F.3d 672, 675 (7th Cir. 2013) (quoting Illinois v.

Gates, 462 U.S. 213, 238 (1983)); see also Crowe v. County of San Diego, 593

F.3d 841, 867 (9th Cir. 2010) (“In determining whether there was probable cause

to arrest, we look to the totality of circumstances known to the arresting officers, to

determine if a prudent person would have concluded there was a fair probability

that the defendant had committed a crime.”) (brackets and internal quotation marks

omitted); United States v. Denson, 775 F.3d 1214, 1217 (10th Cir. 2014)

(“Probable cause doesn’t require proof that something is more likely true than

false. It requires only a fair probability, a standard understood to mean something

more than a bare suspicion but less than a preponderance of the evidence at hand.”)

(internal quotation marks omitted).



      As to Mr. Jenkins’s point about the “abundance of evidence indicating that

[he] did not” display a knife during the encounter with the complainant, the short

answer is that probable cause may exist even when there are “statements and
                                         10

circumstantial indicators on both sides of the issue . . . .” Pendergrast v. United

States, 416 F.2d 776, 783 (D.C. Cir. 1969); see also id. at 783–84 (concluding that

the circumstances preceding arrest “amply possessed th[e] capability” of

“warrant[ing] a man of reasonable caution in the belief of [the suspect’s] guilt”

despite the facts that the complainant who identified the suspect-stranger as one of

his assailants “had recently been drinking,” and that the suspect gave an innocent

explanation for his presence on the street and “promptly denied complicity” when

confronted with the complainant’s accusation) (internal quotation marks and

footnote omitted). For probable cause to exist, “[t]he indicia of guilt need not be

absolute, or even fully consistent; they may leave some room for doubt, and even

for error.” Id. at 784 (footnotes omitted). “[T]he [probable cause] standard does

not require that officers correctly resolve conflicting evidence or that their

determinations of credibility, were, in retrospect, accurate.” Wright, 409 F.3d at

603. As one district court has observed, “[t]he inference of the suspect’s guilt need

not be the most likely scenario, or even more likely true than not, for a reasonable

officer to have probable cause to arrest.” Hyung Seok Koh v. Graf, 307 F. Supp. 3d

827, 848 (N.D. Ill. 2018) (citing Kaley and Wesby).



      The overarching issue before us is whether Mr. Jenkins was entitled to have

a jury decide whether there was probable cause for his arrest. It is clear under our
                                              11

case law that “where the facts that might establish probable cause are in dispute,

their existence is for the determination of the jury.” May Dep’t Stores Co. v.

Devercelli, 314 A.2d 767, 771 (D.C. 1973). Here, the material facts, recited above

are not in dispute; that is, there were no factual issues that precluded summary

judgment. This court has said, however, in a number of cases, that “[t]he issue of

probable cause in a [wrongful] arrest case is a mixed question of law and fact that

the trial court should ordinarily leave to the jury.” Bradshaw, 43 A.3d at 324;

Enders, 4 A.3d at 469; District of Columbia v. Murphy, 631 A.2d 34, 37 (D.C.

1993); see also, e.g., Dempsey v. Bucknell Univ., 834 F.3d 457, 468 (3d Cir. 2016)

(“[I]t will usually be appropriate for a jury to determine whether probable cause

existed.”); Booker v. Ward, 94 F.3d 1052, 1058 (7th Cir. 1996) (“[T]he issue of

probable cause in a damages suit . . . generally is a jury question[.]”). But we have

also   explained     that   “where      the        facts   are   undisputed   or   clearly

established . . . probable cause becomes a question of law for the court.” Enders, 4

A.3d at 469; Smith v. Tucker, 304 A.2d 303, 306 (D.C. 1973) (explaining that

“[w]here the facts are in dispute, the existence of the facts [is] for the jury, but their

effect, when found is a question for the determination of the court”) (internal

quotation marks omitted); Prieto v. May Dep’t Stores Co., 216 A.2d 577, 578

(D.C. 1966) (false arrest case stating that “[w]here the facts are not in dispute the

question of probable cause is one of law to be decided by the court.”); see Stewart
                                        12

v. Sonneborn, 98 U.S. 187, 194 (1878) (“Whether the circumstances alleged to

show [probable cause] are true, and existed, is a matter of fact; but whether,

supposing them to be true, they amount to a probable cause, is a question of law.”).



      In answering that question of law, we apply the standard that judgment as a

matter of law is appropriate in a wrongful arrest case if the evidence relevant to

probable cause is “so clear that reasonable men could reach but one conclusion.”

Bradshaw, 43 A.3d at 324 (internal quotation marks omitted); Enders, 4 A.3d at

469 (internal quotation marks omitted); accord Thacker v. City of Columbus, 328

F.3d 244, 255 (6th Cir. 2003) (“The existence of probable cause is a jury question,

unless there is only one reasonable determination that is possible.”); Booker, 94

F.3d at 1058 (“[T]he court appropriately may conclude that probable cause existed

as a matter of law ‘when there is no room for a difference of opinion concerning

the facts or the reasonable inferences to be drawn from them.’”) (quoting Sheik-

Abdi v. McClellan, 37 F.3d 1240, 1246 (7th Cir. 1994))5; DeLoach v. Bevers, 922


      5
         In Booker, the Seventh Circuit affirmed a grant of summary judgment in
favor of defendant police officers in a § 1983 unlawful arrest case, concluding that
the defendant officers had probable cause to arrest Booker for murder even though,
in the related criminal proceeding, the Illinois state appellate court had found no
probable cause to arrest Booker and reversed his conviction. See 94 F.3d at 1054,
1058.
       In Sheik-Abdi, the Seventh Circuit affirmed a grant of summary judgment in
favor of police officers in an unlawful arrest suit, concluding that where police
                                                                       (continued…)
                                          13

F.2d 618, 623 (10th Cir. 1990) (citing authority that “where the issue [of probable

cause] arises in a damage suit, it is . . . a proper issue for the jury if there is room

for a difference of opinion”).



      This is a case in which there may have been more than one reasonable

inference available to the police officers about what actually occurred in the Wharf

parking lot. We conclude, however, on the summary judgment record before us

that this is a case in which there is no room for a difference of opinion — and a

reasonable jury could reach but one conclusion — regarding probable cause: to

wit, that a prudent officer would have believed that there was at least a fair

probability that Mr. Jenkins committed the crime alleged, and therefore that

Officer Davis had probable cause to arrest Mr. Jenkins.              In reaching this


(…continued)
arrested Sheik-Abdi after a witness told them he saw Sheik-Abdi strike his wife,
“[t]he officers’ decision to arrest Sheik-Abdi for battery easily [fell] within the
zone of probable cause” even though his wife “denied that the striking had
occurred” and “bore no contemporary markings of bodily harm[.]” 37 F.3d at
1246–48. By contrast, in Maxwell v. City of Indianapolis, 998 F.2d 431, 434 (7th
Cir. 1993), the Seventh Circuit reversed a grant of summary judgment for the
defendants, explaining that there was “a substantial question as to whether a
prudent police officer would have probable cause to believe that [plaintiff]
Maxwell [who was six inches taller and almost 100 pounds heavier than indicated
in the description of fugitive Moore in an America’s Most Wanted notice and was
missing the tip of his left middle finger rather than, as indicated in the notice, the
tip of the left index finger] was Moore.”
                                         14

conclusion, we are instructed by the Supreme Court’s opinion in Wesby, which

concretely demonstrates that “[p]robable cause is not a high bar,” 138 S. Ct. at 586

(internal quotation marks omitted); that police are entitled to draw reasonable

inferences (which need not be the only possible inferences) when presented with

conflicting evidence, id. at 588; and that a suspect’s “innocent explanations . . . do

not have any automatic probable-cause-vitiating effect[,]” id. at 592.



      The facts of Wesby are that police officers responded to neighbors’

complaints about loud music and illegal activity in a house that had been vacant for

several months and found in the house a group of late-night partygoers. Id. at 583.

The officers smelled marijuana and saw beer bottles and cups of liquor on the

floor, and there was a “makeshift strip club” operating in the living room and

“debauchery” happening on a bare mattress that was on the floor of an upstairs

bedroom. Id. at 583. Each of the partygoers told police that someone had invited

them to the house (for a bachelor’s party, some said), and, at the officers’ request,

one of the partygoers made a phone call to “Peaches,” the putative host, who, the

partygoer said, had just started renting the house. Id. Peaches told the officers that

she was renting the house from the owner and that she had given the attendees

permission to have a party there. Id. Upon contacting the owner, police learned

that the putative host had not finalized a rental agreement for the home and
                                         15

therefore lacked the right to use the house or authorize the party, and Peaches

eventually admitted the same to the officers when they telephoned her again. Id. at

583–84. The officers arrested the partygoers for unlawful entry. Id. at 584. The

charges eventually were dropped, and the partygoers sued for wrongful arrest

under §1983 and District law. Ruling on cross-motions for summary judgment, a

divided panel of the United States Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit affirmed a

grant of summary judgment in favor of the partygoers on the issue of liability,

reasoning that “[a]ll of the information that the police had gathered by the time of

the arrest made clear that [p]laintiffs had every reason to think that [the plaintiff

partygoers] had entered the house with the express consent of someone they

believed to be the lawful occupant.” Wesby v. District of Columbia, 765 F.3d 13,

21 (D.C. Cir. 2014), rev’d, 138 S. Ct. 577 (2018) (footnote omitted). The D.C.

Circuit majority concluded that “there was no probable cause for the officers to

believe that the [p]laintiffs entered the house knowing that they did so against the

will of the owner or occupant.” Id.



      The Supreme Court reversed, reasoning that “the officers made ‘an entirely

reasonable inference’ that the partygoers [knew their party was not authorized and]

were knowingly taking advantage of a vacant house as a venue for their late-night

party”; that “the officers could have reasonably inferred that [in stating otherwise,
                                         16

the partygoers] were lying” and that Peaches was lying when she said she had

invited them to the house; and that the officers could even have “inferred that [the

putative host] “told the partygoers . . . that she was not actually renting the

house[.]” Wesby, 138 S. Ct. at 586–87, 588 (internal quotation marks omitted). A

reasonable officer could draw these inferences even though the house had some

“signs of inhabitance—working electricity and plumbing, blinds on the windows,

toiletries in the bathroom, and food in the refrigerator[,]” id. at 586, and even

though the condition of the house was arguably consistent with the putative host’s

being a new tenant, id. at 588. The Court held that “[v]iewing the[] circumstances

as a whole, a reasonable officer could conclude that there was probable cause to

believe the partygoers knew they did not have permission to be in the house.” Id.

at 588. 6 To have probable cause, the Court cautioned, the officers did not have to

“rule out [the partygoers’] innocent explanation” for their presence in the house.7


      6
         The Court recited a number of “suspicious facts”: partygoers scattered or
hid when they saw the uniformed officers; the floor was dirty; the house had no
furniture other than a few metal chairs and a bare mattress; there were no clothes in
closets or boxes or other moving supplies; and Peaches had lied about renting the
house and seemed evasive. Id. at 583, 586, 587, 588.
      7
        As the Supreme Court observed, the D.C. Circuit majority thought that the
lap dances and drinking observed by the officers found when they entered the
house were “‘consistent with’ the partygoers’ explanation that they were having a
bachelor party” and “dismissed the condition of the house as ‘entirely consistent
with’ Peaches being a new tenant.” 138 S. Ct. at 588 (quoting 765 F.3d at 23).
But the Supreme Court was more impressed with the fact that none of the
                                                                       (continued…)
                                         17

Id. And, notably, the Supreme Court did not simply conclude that the plaintiff

partygoers’ wrongful arrest claim should go to a jury; rather, notwithstanding the

record facts that weighed on both sides of the probable-cause issue and that split

the D.C. Circuit panel, the Court concluded that the District of Columbia and its

officers were entitled to summary judgment on all of the plaintiffs’ wrongful arrest

claims. See 138 S. Ct. at 589. The Court stated that its analysis “would not change

no matter which party is considered the moving party” (i.e., even viewing the

evidence in the light most favorable to the partygoers). Id. at 584 n.1.



      In the instant case, the police responded to a radio run reporting that “a knife

had been pulled” following a traffic dispute at the Wharf. The police thereafter

spoke to the complainant and his nephew S.M., who both reported that Mr. Jenkins

had angrily confronted the complainant while holding in his hand a pocketknife

with the serrated blade visible. Mr. Jenkins acknowledged that he had confronted

the complainant to complain about the latter’s taking of the parking space, thus

partially corroborating the complainant’s and S.M.’s account. Mr. Jenkins denied

that he had a knife, and no knife was found, but the officers knew that the


(…continued)
partygoers “could identify the bachelor[,]” a fact from which the officers could
reasonably infer that the partygoers were lying. Id. at 587.
                                         18

Jenkinses had walked away from the parking lot after the incident and thus would

have had an opportunity to hide or dispose of the knife (if Mr. Jenkins had one)

had they noticed the police presence (which, it appears, would have been “within

[their] eyesight” [JA 147]) before or during their walk back to the parking lot.



      On the foregoing undisputed facts and the summary judgment record as a

whole, and given the “not . . . high” bar that the probable-cause standard presents,

we are satisfied that any reasonable juror would have to conclude that the police

had evidence from which they could reasonably believe that there was a fair

probability (even if not a preponderant likelihood) that Mr. Jenkins displayed a

knife during the encounter with complainant, and that no reasonable jury could

conclude that the officers lacked probable cause to arrest Mr. Jenkins for ADW.

Wesby, 138 S. Ct. at 586. In the wake of Wesby, we conclude that even if the facts

here present “a very close call” as to what actually occurred during the encounter,

probable cause is “too low a bar[,]” Hyung Seok Koh, 307 F. Supp. 3d at 848, for

Mr. Jenkins to succeed on his wrongful arrest claim.



      “Probable cause to arrest exists if a police officer either had firsthand

knowledge or received his information [about an offense having been committed]

from some person — normally the putative victim or an eyewitness — who it
                                        19

seems reasonable to believe is telling the truth.” Davis v. United States, 759 A.2d

665, 670 (D.C. 2000) (internal quotation marks omitted). Here, the summary

judgment record contains no deposition testimony about S.M.’s demeanor or

manner of dealing with the officers from which a jury could conclude that the

officers could not reasonably believe that his account (which, according to the

police report, “remained consistent”) was truthful. 8 And, as a matter of law,



      8
          Cf. Smith, 304 A.2d at 306–7 (explaining, in malicious prosecution action,
that in the absence of evidence raising an issue about the honesty of the
complainant’s belief that plaintiff was the intruder she saw leaving her tavern,
“there was no fact issue respecting probable cause for the jury to resolve.”). The
instant case, which involved a prompt report to police and the absence of any video
evidence, is quite different from Sherrod v. McHugh, 334 F. Supp. 3d 219 (D.D.C.
2018), in which the court summarized the facts that “[f]rom the very beginning”
should have caused the police detective to “view[] skeptically” the claim that
plaintiff Mrs. Sherrod had threatened the complainant with a gun after a traffic
incident, and that enabled the plaintiff’s wrongful arrest claim to survive summary
judgment: the complainant “waited several hours before reporting the alleged
incident” to police; Mrs. Sherrod was an elderly woman (“pushing 80 years old”)
who “did not fit the profile of the typical perpetrator of an assault with a deadly
weapon”; before arresting Mrs. Sherrod, the detective did not interview a witness
who was shown on a security video that the parties agreed captured the altercation;
and the security video was so pixelated that a jury was “the proper mechanism by
which th[e] question [of whether it showed Mrs. Sherrod pointing a gun] should be
resolved. Id. at 232, 233, 238, 240, 241.

      Mr. Jenkins makes much of the fact that during his deposition (and in
response to leading questions), S.M. agreed to a description of the knife different
from the one he gave police officers on the scene. Specifically, during his
deposition, S.M. agreed with appellants’ counsel that the knife he allegedly saw
was “purple” “with designs,” while one of the detectives on the scene testified that
she had been told that S.M. described the knife as “black.” However, that apparent
                                                                      (continued…)
                                          20

although Mr. Jenkins appears to imply that S.M. was not credible simply because

of his youth, the fact that S.M. was only ten years old did not foreclose a

reasonable belief that he was telling the truth about seeing Mr. Jenkins with a

knife.9 We note further that Mr. Jenkins stated in his deposition that he did not

overhear any of the conversation between the officers and S.M., and the record

does not call into question the testimony by Officer Ronny Arce, who “assisted

with talking with” S.M. in Spanish, that he “satisfied [him]self that, wherever

[SM.] was [at the time of the incident], he was able to see [the knife].” 10


(…continued)
inconsistency was not known to the police officers at the time of Mr. Jenkins’s
arrest.
      9
          See, e.g., Gerald M. v. Conneely, 858 F.2d 378, 381 (7th Cir. 1988)
(rejecting claim that police lacked probable cause to detain two juveniles whom a
ten-year-old had accused of stealing his bicycle; reasoning that the complainant’s
young age and the animosity between the children’s families, without more, did
not allow a reasonable inference that the ten-year-old’s story was not worthy of
belief); People v. Hetrick, 604 N.E.2d 732 (N.Y. 1992) (probable cause for a
search of defendant’s apartment was properly based on affidavit of nine-year-old
child who claimed to have witnessed drug activity there); see also Scott v. United
States, 953 A.2d 1082, 1093 (D.C. 2008) (upholding trial court’s finding that six-
year-old was competent to testify in criminal proceeding).
      10
           And, of course, the possibility that Mr. Jenkins might be able to elicit
testimony at trial that could cause a jury to question the reasonableness of the
officers’ reliance on the statements from the complainant and S.M. was not enough
to stave off summary judgment. “[S]peculation and surmise, even when coupled
with effervescent optimism that something definite will materialize further down
the line, are impuissant in the face of a properly documented summary judgment
motion.” Roche v. John Hancock Mutual Life Ins. Co., 81 F.3d 249, 253 (1st Cir.
                                                                          (continued…)
                                        21



      As with S.M., the summary judgment record contains no deposition

testimony from the officer who initially interviewed the complainant about the

complainant’s demeanor or other factors that would enable a jury to conclude that

it was unreasonable for police to believe that the complainant was truthful in his

later statement (made with the assistance of a translator) about Mr. Jenkins’s

display of a knife. The complainant’s claim that Mr. Jenkins held a knife during

the altercation was corroborated by S.M.’s statement and partially corroborated by

Mr. Jenkins’s acknowledgment of the angry encounter. Police could reasonably

infer that the complainant’s initial statement that he saw Mr. Jenkins with keys and

not a knife was attributable to the complainant’s limited English proficiency, and,

in assessing the complainant’s credibility, could reasonably take into account the

fact, mentioned in the police report, that the complainant “doesn’t speak fluent

English[]” (and wasn’t sure what Mr. Jenkins was saying to him during the

encounter).11 [JA 147] Further, the fact that the complainant changed his account


(…continued)
1996). “The function of summary judgment is to . . . assay the parties’ proof in
order to determine whether trial is actually required.” Ayala-Gerena v. Bristol
Myers-Squibb Co., 95 F.3d 86, 94 (1st Cir. 1996) (internal quotation marks
omitted).
      11
         Cf. Balasubramanrim v. Immigration and Naturalization Service, 143
F.3d 157, 163–64 (3d Cir. 1998) (rejecting Board of Immigration Appeals’s
                                                                      (continued…)
                                          22

did not preclude a reasonable belief that the complainant was telling the truth

during his later interview (that was conducted with the aid of a translator). 12



      Finally, the officers could reasonably infer that Mr. Jenkins disposed of the

knife after he noticed the police presence in the Wharf parking lot. 13 To be sure,


(…continued)
adverse credibility determination regarding asylum seeker’s claim that he was
detained and tortured in his country because Board unreasonably failed to take into
account that inconsistencies in his account, including his statement that he had
never been arrested in his country, likely stemmed from his limited English
proficiency; noting the asylum seeker’s explanation that “[w]hatever [airport
interview questions] I didn’t understand, I said no.”).
      12
          See, e.g., Sharrar v. Felsing, 128 F.3d 810, 818 (3d Cir. 1997) (rejecting
argument that police lacked probable cause to arrest the assault victim’s husband,
reasoning that even if police sergeant heard victim’s initial claim that a different
man had attacked her, it was reasonable for the sergeant “to assess [the victim’s]
demeanor, find her story credible, and rely on her subsequent identification of her
husband as the attacker.”); Torchinsky v. Siwinski, 942 F.2d 257, 263 (4th Cir.
1991) (concluding that detective acted reasonably in relying on victim’s
identification of the Torchinskys as his assailants even though the victim had
previously “offered differing statements about the cause of his injuries”).
      13
          This case is readily distinguishable from Payne v. Maher, No. 11 C 6623,
2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19617 (N.D. Ill. Feb. 18, 2014). There, complainants
Denton and Henderson called 911 to report that after Payne brandished a pocket
knife, they disarmed him and threw him to the ground. Id. at *2-3. All three men
were still at the scene when police arrived, and Payne was lying on the ground,
semi-conscious. Id. at *2, 7. The district court, ruling in the suit for false arrest
brought by Payne (who claimed that Denton and Henderson had accosted him),
reasoned that with Payne injured, semi-conscious, on the ground and calling for an
ambulance when police arrived, “the knife, if there actually was one, should have
been there too.” Id. at *7. But no knife was found, “a state of affairs that [the
                                                                          (continued…)
                                         23

Mr. Jenkins consistently denied that he displayed or had a knife, but the officers

were not required to believe him. 14 Mr. Jenkins emphasizes the undisputed fact

that the officers never found a knife in the “immediate area” they searched, but that

fact also did not negate probable cause. Per Wesby, we may not look at the

absence of a knife in isolation, but must consider the totality of the circumstances




(…continued)
court reasoned] refuted [Denton’s and Henderson’s] claim that [Payne] had
brandished a knife, [such that] a reasonable officer could not have reasonably
believed, without more, that there was probable cause to arrest or charge Payne.”
Id. at *11. In the instant case, by contrast, police arrived after Mr. Jenkins had
walked away from the parking lot where witnesses claimed he had displayed a
knife and, unlike Denton and Henderson, Mr. Jenkins had not only an opportunity
but also an incentive to dispose of any knife before police officers interviewed
him.
      14
           See, e.g., Nichols v. Woodward & Lothrop, Inc., 322 A.2d 283, 286
(1974) (holding that an officer was not “obliged to believe the explanation of a
suspected shoplifter.”); Borgman v. Kedley, 646 F.3d 518, 524 (8th Cir. 2011)
(“[An officer] need not rely on an explanation given by the suspect.”); Cox v.
Hainey, 391 F.3d 25, 32, n.2 (1st Cir. 2004) (“A reasonable police officer is not
required to credit a suspect’s story.”); Curley v. Vill. of Suffern, 268 F.3d 65, 70
(2d Cir. 2001) (“[T]he arresting officer does not have to prove plaintiff’s version
wrong before arresting him[]” “is not required to explore and eliminate every
theoretically plausible claim of innocence before making an arrest[,]” and “need
not also believe with certainty that the arrestee will be successfully prosecuted.”);
Marx v. Gumbinner, 905 F.2d 1503, 1507, n.6 (11th Cir. 1990) (“[Officers a]re not
required to forego arresting [a suspect] based on initially discovered facts showing
probable cause simply because [the suspect] offered a different explanation.”);
Criss v. Kent, 867 F.2d 259, 263 (6th Cir. 1988) (“A policeman . . . is under no
obligation to give any credence to a suspect’s story . . . .”).
                                        24

of which the police officers were aware at the time Officer Davis arrested Mr.

Jenkins. See 138 S. Ct. at 588.



      Mr. Jenkins argues that there was no probable cause to arrest him for ADW

because there was “no allegation . . . that [he] threatened [the] complainant with

the knife or that the complainant felt threatened by the knife or that Jenkins acted

in any way in a threatening manner with the knife.” He also contends that a pocket

knife was not a “dangerous weapon” as that term is used in the ADW statute

because it was not a per se “prohibited weapon” as defined in D.C. Code

§ 22-4514(b) (2012 Repl.), which proscribes the possession of a “knife with a

blade longer than 3 inches, or other dangerous weapon” “with intent to use [the

weapon] unlawfully against another.”       D.C. Code § 22-4514(b) (2012 Repl.).

However, ADW occurs when a person commits simple assault with a dangerous

weapon, see Perry v. United States, 36 A.3d 799, 811 (D.C. 2011), and one species

of simple assault is intent-to-frighten-assault, see Contreras v. United States, 121

A.3d 1271, 1274 (D.C. 2015). Intent-to-frighten-assault “requires proof that the

defendant intended either to cause injury or to create apprehension in the victim by

engaging in some threatening conduct . . . .” Parks v. United States, 627 A.2d 1, 5

(D.C. 1993). “[F]actual proof that the victim actually experience[d] apprehension

or fear” is not “one of the essential elements” of the offense; rather, “the crucial
                                          25

inquiry is whether the assailant acted in such a manner as would under the

circumstances portend an immediate threat of danger to a person of reasonable

sensibility.” Id. at 5–6 (brackets omitted). Further, simply holding a weapon

before another person in a threatening manner can constitute intent-to-frighten

assault; it is not necessary for the defendant to “brandish” the weapon or

ostentatiously threaten the victim with it.      See, e.g., Parks, 627 A.2d at 6–7

(holding that Parks’s “act of starting his car, reaching for his pistol, and bringing it

up [to his knee] . . . with his gaze fixed on” a police officer who had pulled him

over constituted intent-to-frighten assault); Mihas v. United States, 618 A.2d 197,

199–200 (D.C. 1992) (upholding a conviction for intent-to-frighten assault where

the evidence showed that Mihas, who claimed to have been using a paring knife to

clean his nails immediately before the assault, came within four or five feet of the

victim holding the paring knife with the blade pointing towards the ground at a

forty-five-degree angle while speaking “words of commanding tone”).



      Here, Mr. Jenkins was alleged to have “pulled” a folding pocketknife on the

complainant while arguing with him “angrily” in the parking lot and to have held

the knife in his hand, blade out, during the confrontation, such that the knife was

visible. We have little trouble concluding that a person of reasonable sensibility

witnessing that alleged conduct would perceive an immediate threat of danger.
                                        26

Moreover, it is immaterial that the length of the blade of the (putative) knife may

have been under three inches. A “dangerous weapon is one which is likely to

produce death or great bodily injury by the use made of it.” In re M.L., 24 A.3d

63, 68 (D.C. 2011). Even a pocketknife with a short blade can be a dangerous

weapon under some circumstances. See M.L., 24 A.3d at 66, 68, 70–71 (upholding

a conviction for possession of a prohibited weapon where the blade of the

defendant’s folding pocketknife “measured two and fifteen-sixteenths inches long”

and the defendant was “carrying an open folding knife,” which the court remarked

was “indicative of an intent to use it as a dangerous weapon”); Mihas, 618 A.2d at

199, 201 n.1 (upholding convictions for intent-to-frighten assault and possession of

a prohibited weapon in a case in which, during a confrontation, the defendant

possessed a paring knife with a two-and-three-quarters-inch-long blade).



      Because we conclude that Mr. Jenkins’s arrest was supported by probable

cause, we need not determine whether Officer Davis is protected by qualified

immunity from Mr. Jenkins’s constitutional claim. See Foster v. Metro. Airports

Comm’n, 914 F.2d 1076, 1079 (8th Cir. 1990) (“If probable cause was indeed

present, it is not necessary to consider an immunity defense.”); see also Pearson v.

Callahan, 555 U.S. 223, 236 (2009) (“[J]udges . . . should be permitted to exercise

their sound discretion in deciding which of the two prongs of the qualified
                                          27

immunity analysis should be addressed first in light of the circumstances in the

particular case at hand.”). In addition, our resolution of the probable-cause issue

also resolves Mr. Jenkins’s common-law false arrest claim and assault and battery

claims.   See Scales v. District of Columbia, 973 A.2d 722, 729 (D.C. 2009)

(stating that “if a police officer has so-called constitutional probable cause to

arrest, determined by reference to the objective standard used to determine

probable cause in a criminal proceeding . . . the arrest will be lawful and the officer

accordingly will have a complete defense to a false arrest claim . . . . ”) (internal

quotation marks omitted).



      We turn finally to Mr. Jenkins’s negligent supervision claim.           A party

alleging negligent supervision must “show that an employer knew or should have

known its employee behaved in a dangerous or otherwise incompetent manner, and

that the employer, armed with that actual or constructive knowledge, failed to

adequately supervise the employee.” Brown v. Argenbright Sec., Inc., 782 A.2d

752, 760 (D.C. 2001). As already noted, the Superior Court entered summary

judgment in favor of the District on this claim without explaining its reasoning.

The court may have assumed that a cause of action for negligent supervision could

not lie because Officer Davis had probable cause to arrest Mr. Jenkins, and thus,

his conduct was not tortious. See Griffin v. Acacia Life Ins. Co., 925 A.2d 564,
                                          28

576 n.32 (D.C. 2007) (per curiam) (citing Daka, Inc. v. McCrae, 839 A.2d 682,

693 (D.C. 2003), for the proposition that “[w]e have suggested — but not

decided — that in an action seeking damages for negligent supervision, the

conduct of the servant must be independently tortious.”). Mr. Jenkins suggests,

however, that the instant case is akin to District of Columbia v. Tulin, 994 A.2d

788 (D.C. 2010), in which this court reasoned that the finding that an officer was

not liable for false arrest does not necessarily absolve the District from a claim of

negligent supervision. Id. at 799 (“[T]he jury’s verdict in favor of Officer McKoy

with respect to the [false arrest claim] against her was not irreconcilable with its

finding of liability against the District for negligent supervision.”). In Tulin, the

jury heard evidence that a very junior police officer arrested the plaintiff following

a rear-end collision after being advised by two sergeants and a detective that the

plaintiff’s conduct was “an automatic lockup” despite the absence of any

investigation into several “critical” questions bearing on the plaintiff’s culpability.

Id. at 797, 800. Harmonizing the jury’s verdicts, we affirmed, reasoning that the

jury could reasonably find that the officer “believed in good faith that she had the

legal right and obligation to make the arrest,” while further concluding that

regardless of the officer’s bona fide belief, the superior officers at the scene

“should have recognized that the investigation was inadequate and that the arrest
                                         29

was unlawful, but . . . nevertheless failed to prevent [the officer] from making it.”

Id. at 800.



      Tulin is distinguishable from the instant case in several respects. First,

Officer Davis did not make an unlawful arrest that was nonetheless privileged

because of his good faith; rather, as we have concluded, he made a legal, valid

arrest supported by probable cause. Second, there is no allegation or evidence in

this case that the officers conducted an incomplete investigation. Third, there is no

record evidence tending to show that Officer Davis was effectively a “puppet,” id.,

being manipulated by superiors on the scene who knew or should have known

better. Thus, while Tulin shows that the District of Columbia may be liable for

negligent supervision for allowing a police officer to make a false arrest based on a

good-faith but mistaken belief that the arrest was proper, the allegations and

undisputed facts of this case supported the entry of summary judgment in favor of

the District. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the Superior Court that the

District and Officer Davis were entitled to summary judgment on Mr. Jenkins’s

claims against them.



                              B. Mrs. Jenkins’s claims
                                          30

      Mrs. Jenkins brought a § 1983 claim against Officer Davis based on the

search or frisk of her person as well as a common-law assault and battery claim

against Officer Davis and the District of Columbia based on the same facts.15

Although there is no dispute that Officer Davis was not the officer who performed

the pat-down of Mrs. Jenkins, Mrs. Jenkins contends that Officer Davis may still

be held vicariously liable for the asserted violation of her civil rights under a

“bystander liability” theory. Under the bystander liability theory, which has been

adopted by several federal circuit courts of appeal, a police officer may be held

liable under § 1983 for another officer’s constitutional violation if he or she “(1)

knows that a fellow officer is violating an individual’s constitutional rights; (2) has

a reasonable opportunity to prevent the harm; and (3) chooses not to act.” Randall


      15
          The Jenkinses’ complaint refers to the search of Mrs. Jenkins as a “full-
body search,” but Mrs. Jenkins confirmed in her deposition that the search was
“outside of [her] clothing.” Thus, it seems appropriate to refer to the search (for a
knife) as a “frisk” or “patdown.” See Black’s Law Dictionary (“A frisk is a
patdown search to discover a concealed weapon.”); see also Terry v. Ohio, 392
U.S. 1, 17 n.13 (1968) (citing an article explaining that in a patdown, “[t]he officer
must feel with sensitive fingers every portion of the prisoner’s body. A thorough
search must be made of the prisoner’s arms and armpits, waistline and back, the
groin and area about the testicles, and entire surface of the legs down to the feet.”);
cf. People v. King, 183 Cal. App. 4th 1281, 1286–287 (Cal. Ct. App. 2010) (“King
proceeded to conduct a full body search of the woman, including reaching inside
her bra to ‘massage’ her breasts, and digitally penetrating her vagina with each of
his hands.”); Fletcher v. State, 39 S.W.3d 274, 279 (Tex. App. 2001) (“Plaxco
admitted that he did a pat-down search of Parker and not a full body search.
Specifically, he admitted that he did not search Parker’s shoes or socks.”).
                                         31

v. Prince George’s Cty., Md., 302 F.3d 188, 203–04 (4th Cir. 2002) (footnote

omitted). We agree with Officer Davis that he was entitled to summary judgment

in his favor on Mrs. Jenkins’s § 1983 claim because Mrs. Jenkins has not borne her

burden of coming forward with evidence that Officer Davis knew that the unnamed

female officer was conducting the claimed unlawful pat-down on Mrs. Jenkins;

had a reasonable opportunity to prevent the pat-down; and made a decision not to

act.16 Since the trial record is devoid of facts that would support holding Officer

Davis liable as a bystander for the unnamed female officer’s acts, we conclude that

Officer Davis was entitled to judgment as a matter of law on Mrs. Jenkins’s § 1983

claim. See Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 323 (1986) (stating that “[t]he

moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law [where] the nonmoving

party has failed to make a sufficient showing on an essential element of her case

with respect to which she has the burden of proof.”) (internal quotation marks

omitted).



      16
           The Jenkinses’ brief asserts that Officer Davis “directed the female law
enforcement officers who searched Mrs. Jenkins to do so,” but includes no record
citation to support that assertion, and we see no such support in the record. Mrs.
Jenkins stated in her deposition that the female officer “went to [converse with] the
detectives” — not Officer Davis — when she first arrived on the scene. Moreover,
the Reply Brief asserts that there was an arrest order by “Sergeant Arce” rather
than a decision by Officer Davis to make the arrest, which suggests that it may
have been Sergeant Arce who directed the female officer to do the patdown of Mrs.
Jenkins.
                                          32

      Finally, we consider Mrs. Jenkins’s common-law assault and battery claim

against the District (which we, like the District, understand to be based on a

respondeat superior theory). We begin our analysis by recognizing that “[a] police

officer may have a qualified privilege in an assault and battery case.” Scales, 973

A.2d at 730. Relatedly, the District may avoid vicarious liability for what would

otherwise be common-law assault and battery by a police officer if it shows, with

respect to conduct by one of its police officers alleged to constitute that tort, either

that the conduct was constitutional or that the officer “(1) believed, in good faith,

that his or her conduct was lawful, and (2) this belief was reasonable.” Bradshaw,

43 A.3d at 323 (brackets omitted); see also District of Columbia v. Minor, 740

A.2d 523, 531 (D.C. 1999) (noting that “[t]his standard resembles the section 1983

. . . and qualified immunity standards . . . (with the added clear articulation of the

requirement of good faith”)). We have also said that “[f]or assault and battery the

inquiry is whether the officer’s conduct was reasonably necessary and thereby

privileged.” Kotsch v. District of Columbia, 924 A.2d 1040, 1048 (D.C. 2007);

Smith, 882 A.2d at 788.



      Mrs. Jenkins contends that the patdown search was not constitutional, and

that the female officer could not have reasonably believed that it was lawful,

because Mrs. Jenkins’s right not to be searched was made clear by United States v.
                                          33

Di Re, 332 U.S. 581 (1948) (holding that a passenger’s mere presence in a car

believed to contain contraband does not give rise to probable cause to search the

suspect for contraband). 17



      As we explain below, we can decide this case on the basis of privilege and

therefore need not definitively decide whether the patdown search of Mrs. Jenkins

was lawful. In short, we conclude that the officers, including the female officer

who searched Mrs. Jenkins, could reasonably have believed that the search was

lawful. We also see no evidence in the record to suggest that the police acted in

bad faith in searching, or directing the female officer to search, Mrs. Jenkins.



      Our analysis rests largely on the fact that “some courts have adopted the so-

called automatic companion rule, under which officers may conduct a patdown

search of the companion of a lawfully detained suspect even though the officers

lack a reasonable suspicion to believe that the companion is armed and dangerous.”

      17
          Mr. Di Re was a passenger in a vehicle whose driver was suspected of
selling counterfeit gasoline ration coupons. After stopping the vehicle, officers
arrested Mr. Di Re even though they had no previous information implicating him.
At the police station, he was thoroughly searched, and counterfeit gasoline ration
coupons were found on his person. The Supreme Court held that the search was
unlawful. The Court was “not convinced that a person, by mere presence in a
suspected car, loses immunities from search of his person to which he would
otherwise be entitled.” Di Re, 332 U.S. at 587.
                                          34

State v. Kelly, 95 A.3d 1081, 1094 n.16 (Conn. 2014).             The rule was first

articulated in United States v. Berryhill, 445 F.2d 1189 (9th Cir. 1971),18 in which

the court concluded that “[a]ll companions of the arrestee within the immediate

vicinity, capable of accomplishing a harmful assault on the officer, are

constitutionally subjected to the cursory ‘pat-down’ reasonably necessary to give

assurance that they are unarmed.” Id. at 1193. As our court recognized in Trice v.

United States, 849 A.2d 1002 (D.C. 2004), “the Berryhill rationale does not depend

on the existence of a reasonable suspicion that is particular to the person frisked

. . . .” Id. at 1007. We observed in Trice, id., that this court “relied explicitly on

Berryhill” in deciding Mayes v. United States, 653 A.2d 856 (D.C. 1995). We

reasoned in Mayes that having “found a pistol on Mayes . . . the officers had the

right to order the remaining occupants out of the car and, at least, to frisk them.”

653 A.2d at 865; see also Lewis v. United States, 399 A.2d 559, 561 (D.C. 1979)

(noting that “[t]he fact that his companion had just been arrested for unlawful

possession of a firearm is a particularly compelling justification for the frisk of

appellant[]” and quoting Berryhill for the point that “[i]t is inconceivable that a

peace officer effecting a lawful arrest . . . must expose himself to a shot in the back

      18
         See John J. O’Shea, Note, The Automatic Companion Rule: A Bright Line
Standard for the Terry Frisk of an Arrestee’s Companion, 62 Notre Dame L. Rev.
751, 751 n.10 (1987) (observing that “[n]o court that has adopted the automatic
companion rule has indicated that the officer comply with any standard of
suspicion with respect to the companion.”).
                                        35

from defendant’s associate because he cannot, on the spot, make the nice

distinction between whether the other is a companion in crime or a social

acquaintance”).19



      Applied in this case, the automatic companion rule would dictate that having

lawfully detained Mr. Jenkins upon the statements of a complainant and witness

that Mr. Jenkins pulled out a knife while angrily confronting the complainant about

a parking space, the police could also lawfully frisk Mr. Jenkins’s companion, Mrs.

Jenkins, to be sure that she was not armed. We need not endorse an “automatic

companion” rule any further than our case law already has, to conclude that on the

undisputed facts of this case there was no clear rule prohibiting police from

frisking Mrs. Jenkins, and that the officers could reasonably have believed that the

frisk of Mrs. Jenkins was lawful.




      19
            “A number of courts have approved the Berryhill approach.”
Commonwealth v. Ng, 649 N.E.2d 157, 157 n. 1 (Mass. 1995) (collecting cases).
But see, e.g., United States v. McKie, 951 F.2d 399, 402 (D.C. Cir. 1991) (per
curiam) (taking no position on the “automatic companion” rule); United States v.
Meadows, 885 F. Supp. 1, 2 (D.D.C. 1995) (“It is undoubtedly a close question
whether the ‘automatic companion’ frisk rule comports with the strictures of
Fourth Amendment jurisprudence . . . .”).
                                         36

      Neither Di Re nor Ybarra v. Illinois, 444 U.S. 85 (1979),20 another case on

which appellants rely, rendered such a belief objectively unreasonable. Unlike Di

Re, the instant case is not a “mere presence in a suspected car” case. 332 U.S. at

587.21 Mrs. Jenkins was not a mere passenger in the vehicle driven by a suspect

(Mr. Jenkins). And unlike Mr. Ybarra, Mrs. Jenkins was not merely someone who

happened to be present, along with several other people, in a public place where

the police had reason to believe a certain individual possessed contraband. See 444

U.S. at 91. Rather, Mrs. Jenkins was Mr. Jenkins’s wife (and, it may reasonably be

inferred, wished to protect him); she was with him during the altercation in the

parking lot (and, according to S.M., participated in the encounter by warning of

follow-up action by her relative who was a “cop”); she left the parking lot with Mr.


      20
           The Supreme Court held in Ybarra that “a person’s mere propinquity to
others independently suspected of criminal activity does not, without more, give
rise to probable cause to search that person.” 444 U.S. at 91.
      21
          In Di Re, there were three passengers in the vehicle targeted by the police,
including an informant, the driver whom police suspected of trafficking in
counterfeit gas ration coupons, and Mr. Di Re. 332 U.S. at 583. The informant
told the police officer that the driver was the source of counterfeit coupons found
in his possession, “[b]ut the officer had no such information as to Di Re.” Id. at
592. There also was no allegation that any of the three men had a weapon, but
officers took all three into custody and, at the police station, “thoroughly searched”
Mr. Di Re and found counterfeit coupons. Id. at 583. An observation by the
Berryhill court applies equally here: “The distinction made in Terry between a
limited search for weapons and a thorough personal search of a companion of the
criminal, cogently distinguishes Di Re from the instant case.” Berryhill, 445 F.2d
at 1193.
                                          37

Jenkins and returned to it with him; she was in the vehicle with Mr. Jenkins after

an officer first asked Mr. Jenkins whether he had pulled a knife on the complainant

and then told him to stay put in his vehicle while the officer spoke again with the

complainant; and she was left alone in the vehicle when the police asked Mr.

Jenkins to step out of the vehicle. These facts, all known to the police by the time

the female officer searched Mrs. Jenkins, gave Mrs. Jenkins both an interest in

concealing and an opportunity to conceal any knife that Mr. Jenkins had carried on

his person or that was in the car. Mrs. Jenkins was much like the appellant in

Trice, whom, we said, a detective could lawfully stop “even if the detective lacked

sufficient reason to suspect Trice of criminal activity[,]” given that:

             A violent crime involving the use of a knife reportedly
             had just been committed nearby, and Castle matched the
             description of the criminal. . . . As he was walking with
             Castle, Trice appeared to be the companion of a
             potentially violent, fleeing criminal and not a mere
             bystander. Moreover, given the recency of the crime, it
             was reasonable to think that if Castle committed it, his
             companion Trice likely was aware of that fact and was a
             witness if not also an accomplice or an accessory after
             the fact. . . . [who] might have tried to help Castle resist
             arrest or retaliate against the officer.

Trice, 849 A.2d at 1008 (holding that “[u]nder these circumstances, our cases make

clear that it was prudent, and hence constitutionally permissible, for Detective
                                          38

Espinosa to freeze the situation briefly by forcibly detaining Trice along with

Castle until help arrived.”) (internal quotation marks omitted). 22



      Further, the following circumstances particular to this case enhanced the

reasonableness of the police conduct. Mrs. Jenkins was wearing clothing of a type

(e.g., a collared shirt) and was wearing her hair in a style that (it appears from the

record) might have permitted the concealment of a small pocket knife. Mr. Jenkins

would have had an opportunity to transfer the knife to his wife before his arrest,

and Mrs. Jenkins might have picked up the knife in the car and secured it on her

person while the couple remained in their vehicle after first speaking with the

officer, or while she remained in the car as the police questioned her husband.23

The officers could reasonably believe that the frisk of Mrs. Jenkins “was

reasonably necessary and thereby privileged.” Kotsch, 924 A.2d at 1048.



      The foregoing does not end our analysis, because “the test for qualified

privilege in an assault and battery suit is both subjective and objective: the officer


      22
         “As it happened, Castle was released; evidently he was not the man being
sought for the stabbing at Hadley Hospital.” Id. at 1005 n.2.
      23
           And if the officers’ search of the immediate area, including in trashcans
and under cars, preceded their frisk of Mrs. Jenkins, that fruitless search increased
the likelihood that the knife (if there was one) was on Mrs. Jenkins’s person.
                                        39

must subjectively believe” that his or her conduct was lawful. Scales, 973 A.2d at

730. This court has “not resolved the question of burden of proof as to . . .

privilege in an assault and battery claim . . . .” Smith, 882 A.2d at 791; see also

Evans-Reid v. District of Columbia, 930 A.2d 930, 938 (D.C. 2007) (“assum[ing],

without deciding, that where a plaintiff establishes a prima facie case of assault

and battery and the officer invokes the qualified privilege as an affirmative

defense, the officer bears the burdens of production and persuasion”). We have

reasoned, however, that if a plaintiff admittedly did not hear the conversation that

precipitated an officer’s challenged conduct, and thus does not know what

motivated it, the plaintiff cannot avoid summary judgment by asserting that the

officer’s objectively reasonable conduct was undertaken in bad faith. See District

of Columbia v. Murphy, 631 A.2d 34, 38 (D.C. 1993) (“If Mary Young or the

officers had testified that she told them she had asked Murphy to leave and he had

refused, this would be a different case. Such testimony would have been

uncontroverted — because Murphy testified that he had not heard the conversation

between Mary Young and the police officers — and thus would have supplied

undisputed evidence requiring a conclusion, as a matter of law, that the officers

had a reasonable, good faith belief in the lawfulness of the arrest.”); see also

Bradshaw, 43 A.3d at 327 (“If [Officer Jones’s] testimony regarding what the

bouncer told him about Bradshaw’s fighting had been definitive and consistent, the
                                         40

testimony — which described a conversation about which Bradshaw claims no

personal knowledge — could have supplied a basis for summary judgment [on the

issue of the officer’s good faith in arresting Bradshaw]. . . . In that circumstance,

Bradshaw could have defeated summary judgment only if she had affirmative

evidence to the contrary . . . .”).



       Here, Mrs. Jenkins acknowledged in her deposition that she did not hear

what was said when the female officer arrived on the scene and spoke to the

detectives before telling Mrs. Jenkins that she was going to search her. Thus, Mrs.

Jenkins does not know the content of any instructions or rationale the officers

expressed. “In that circumstance, [Mrs. Jenkins was entitled to] defeat[] summary

judgment only if she had affirmative evidence” of the officers’ bad faith.

Bradshaw, 43 A.3d at 327. The Jenkinses did not come forward with any such

evidence; the summary judgment record is devoid of evidence that the police

personnel who frisked Mrs. Jenkins or directed that she be frisked acted in bad

faith. Cf. Evans-Reid, 930 A.2d at 941 (sustaining entry of judgment as a matter of

law for the District on assault and battery claim based on police shooting because

“the evidence that was admitted – even when viewed favorably to appellant – did

not suffice for a jury to find for her [on the issue of bad faith] without engaging in

speculation.”) (footnote omitted). Indeed, the Jenkinses do not even assert that the
                                        41

officers acted in bad faith. For these and all the foregoing reasons, we conclude

that whether or not the frisk of Mrs. Jenkins was legal, the conduct of the officer

who frisked Mrs. Jenkins was protected by privilege and the District was entitled

to summary judgment on Mrs. Jenkins’s assault and battery claim.



                                       ***



      The Superior Court did not err in granting summary judgment in favor of the

District and Officer Davis on the Jenkinses’ claims. Wherefore, the judgment of

the Superior Court is



                                             Affirmed.