WARREN W. EGINTON, Senior District Judge.
In this action, plaintiffs allege on behalf of their then 12-year-old son (1) excessive force against Officer Paul W. Gionfriddo, (2) municipal liability against the Town of West Hartford for failure to adequately train its police officers, (3) violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act and the Rehabilitation Act against the Town, (4) municipal liability against the Town for failure to adequately supervise its officers, (5) negligence against the American School for the Deaf, (6) negligent infliction of emotional distress against the School, (7) battery against Officer Paul W. Gionfriddo, Officer Christopher Lyth, Chris Hammond, Elwin Espinoza, the Town, and the School, (8) assault against Officer Paul W. Gionfriddo, Officer Christopher Lyth, Chris Hammond, Elwin Espinoza, the Town, and the School, (9) intentional infliction of emotional distress against Officer Paul W. Gionfriddo, Officer Chris Hammond, Elwin Espinoza, the Town, and the School, (10) violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act and the Rehabilitation Act against the School, (11) negligence against Officer Paul W. Gionfriddo, and (12) negligence against the Town.
Defendants have moved for summary judgment on all of plaintiffs' claims. For the following reasons, defendants' motions will be granted in part and denied in part.
The following background was gleaned from the parties' statements of fact, affidavits, deposition transcripts, and other exhibits.
On April 30, 2013, plaintiff A.M. was a 12-year-old student at the American School for the Deaf, located in West Hartford, Connecticut. On that date, Paul Gionfriddo and Christopher Lyth were employed as police officers by the Town of West Hartford.
The American School for the Deaf serves deaf and hearing impaired persons. At all relevant times, Christopher Hammond was employed by the School as a residential counselor. Hammond is a deaf individual who communicates with other deaf persons by means of American Sign Language.
Following a dispute between A.M. and staff at his school regarding an attempt to place a takeout meal order, A.M. made a videophone call to his parents. Hammond unplugged the videophone from the wall to end A.M.'s call causing A.M. to become angry. A.M. threw the videophone remote against the wall and proceeded to wrap the videophone wires around his neck with enough tension to cause his face to turn red. Hammond was able to succeed in loosening and removing the wires from A.M.'s neck, but A.M. subsequently ran out of the dorm building into a nearby, fenced-off, construction area.
The parties dispute the degree to which A.M. became violent toward Hammond and other staff members as well as the extent to which A.M.'s actions were taken in self-defense, but A.M. admits to hitting Hammond with a stick and throwing rocks that struck Hammond in several places.
A.M. picked up a larger rock, which caused staff members to back away. Dean Ron Davis called 911. When the police arrived, Officer Gionfriddo spoke with School staff members and Dean Davis.
Officers Gionfriddo and Lyth moved into the construction area with Davis and Hammond. The officers relied on Davis and Hammond to act as interpreters between A.M. and the officers. Gionfriddo gave instructions to Davis, who relayed them to Hammond, who in turn signed the instructions to A.M. Defendants maintain that there was no doubt that A.M. was aware of the presence of the police, but A.M. denies that he was aware of their presence and denies receiving such instructions.
According to defendants, Officer Gionfriddo told Davis to tell Hammond (in sign language) to tell A.M. (in sign language) to put down the rock. Defendants also contend but plaintiffs deny that A.M. was warned that he would be shot with an electric gun if he refused to relinquish the rock that he was holding. A.M maintains that he was never alerted to the possibility that he would be shot with a Taser gun. Although Gionfriddo testified that he believed that Hammond was accurately interpreting the commands being relayed by Davis, a jury is not required to credit such testimony when A.M.'s testimony directly contradicts it.
Officer Gionfriddo shot A.M. in the back with his Taser gun, and electroshock was administered for a period of 5 seconds. However, the two officers were unable to handcuff A.M. at that time, so Gionfriddo administered a second round of electroshock. After the second Taser deployment, the officers were able to handcuff A.M.
Paramedical personnel on the scene removed the Taser prongs and transported A.M. in an ambulance to a hospital. A physical evaluation at the hospital revealed a Taser mark on A.M.'s back, an abrasion to his chest, and a scratch to his right hand.
At deposition, Officer Gionfriddo admitted that A.M. did not make any quick, adverse moves before Gionfriddo fired the projectile prongs into A.M.'s back. Nor did A.M. threaten to throw any rocks in Gionfriddo's presence. Moreover, Gionfriddo testified that if A.M. were to have made any quick moves, Goinfriddo was comfortable that he could disarm him by deploying the Taser at that time.
Gionfriddo was on the scene for under three minutes before resorting to his Taser.
Plaintiffs maintain that A.M.'s "passive resistance" did not warrant the deployment of an electric gun. The West Hartford Police Department's own guidance order on the use of Taser guns provides that the guns "may be used by trained West Hartford Police Officers to temporarily incapacitate an actively resisting, combative or violent individual." (emphasis added).
A motion for summary judgment will be granted where there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and it is clear that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
The burden is on the moving party to demonstrate the absence of any material factual issue genuinely in dispute.
If a nonmoving party has failed to make a sufficient showing on an essential element of his case with respect to which he has the burden of proof, then summary judgment is appropriate.
All claims that law enforcement officers have used excessive force in the course of a seizure should be analyzed under the Fourth Amendment and its reasonableness standard.
"[T]he reasonableness inquiry in an excessive force case is an objective one: the question is whether the officers' actions are objectively reasonable in light of the facts and circumstances confronting them, without regard to their underlying intent or motivation."
"Determining whether the force used to effect a particular seizure is reasonable under the Fourth Amendment requires a careful balancing of the nature and quality of the intrusion on the individual's Fourth Amendment interests against the countervailing governmental interests at stake."
In arguing that summary judgment is appropriate for plaintiffs' excessive force claim, defendants present only the facts helpful to their cause, for example: (1) A.M. was armed with a rock, (2) darkness was falling over unknown terrain, and (3) the Officers' shift that evening was very busy, so the government had an interest in arrest being completed efficiently and without waste of limited resources. But for purposes of defendants' motions for summary judgment, all permissible inferences and credibility questions must be resolved in the light most favorable to plaintiffs.
"Summary judgment is inappropriate when the admissible materials in the record make it arguable that the claim has merit, for the court in considering such a motion must disregard all evidence favorable to the moving party that the jury is not required to believe."
The Fourth Amendment's reasonableness test requires "careful attention to the facts and circumstances of each particular case, including the severity of the crime at issue, whether the suspect poses an immediate threat to the safety of the officers or others, and whether he is actively resisting arrest or attempting to evade arrest by flight."
Crediting plaintiffs' version of events, it is arguable that plaintiffs' excessive force claim has merit. The crime at issue was assault and battery by a 12-year-old against his teachers. But not all armed suspects are created equal. This was a deaf 12-year-old with a rock — not a hearing adult with a gun. The immediate threat to the safety of the officers or others had subsided by the time they approached A.M., who was then sitting in the construction area adjacent to his school. A.M. did not raise the rock in his hands and made no motion to throw it. Nor did he make any quick, adverse moves of any kind. Gionfriddo testified that if A.M. were to have made any such quick moves, Goinfriddo was comfortable that he could disarm A.M. by deploying his Taser at that time. A.M. was not actively resisting arrest or attempting to evade arrest by flight.
Moreover, plaintiffs submit that Gionfriddo deployed his Taser only minutes after arriving at the School. Indeed, both officers were on scene as of 8:20:37 p.m., and A.M. was reported in custody as of 8:23:13 p.m., less than three minutes later. Within that remarkably short time span, A.M. denies that he was instructed in sign language that refusal to put down the rock would result in subjection by incapacitating electric shock. Indeed, A.M.'s testimony is that he was not looking at Dean Davis when Davis allegedly communicated directions in sign language.
Even according to Hammond, A.M. initially refused to make eye contact during Hammond's efforts to communicate, which would be necessary to the receipt of sign language. Although Hammond contends that he was "finally" able to make eye contact with A.M., the jury is not required to believe such evidence. At this stage, the inferences and credibility questions must be resolved in plaintiffs' favor. Disregarding all the evidence favorable to the moving party, plaintiffs present the following scenario:
Under these circumstances, a reasonable jury could find in plaintiffs' favor that defendants' use of force was unreasonable.
"[W]hen a defendant official invokes qualified immunity as a defense in order to support a motion for summary judgment, a court must consider two questions: (1) whether the evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, makes out a violation of a statutory or constitutional right, and (2) whether that right was clearly established at the time of the alleged violation."
Defendants argue that even if plaintiffs' evidence makes out a violation of a constitutional right (it does), there was no such precedent at the time that would have provided Officer Gionfriddo with fair warning that his use of the Taser under the instant circumstances would violate the Fourth Amendment. But the Second Circuit has cautioned against narrowing the scope of clearly established rights in excessive force cases:
Gionfriddo's own testimony contradicts defendants' position that A.M. posed an immediate threat to the safety of the officers or others. And the parties agree that A.M. was not actively resisting or attempting to evade arrest by flight. The painful and traumatizing intrusion on an unsuspecting deaf 12-year-old child is not adequately supported by the countervailing governmental interest in expediency, even if "the shift that evening was very busy." Such an argument for efficiency might slightly tip the balance if the engagement with A.M. had become a drawn-out affair. But a jury could infer from the quick action in this case, despite the lack of active threat or resistance by the suspect, that the police unreasonably prioritized haste at the expense of A.M.'s Fourth Amendment rights.
From A.M.'s perspective, he was seated, putting up no resistance, when shot from behind and shocked twice by a Taser gun, without any warning. If a jury credits plaintiffs' version of events, it may be that (under those circumstances) officers of reasonable competence would agree that use of the Taser was unlawful. Indeed, Gionfriddo's use of the Taser could be found to run contrary to The West Hartford Police Department's own guidance order on the use of Taser guns. Depending on disputed facts, a reasonable officer on the scene may have understood that immediate use of an electric gun was far more force than necessary and would violate A.M.'s constitutional rights under the Fourth Amendment.
Defendants place significant weight on the proposition that Gionfriddo believed Hammond was accurately interpreting and communicating his commands to A.M., but even if the jury credits Gionfriddo's testimony, it does not significantly change the analysis of the factors listed in
Under these circumstances, taken in the light most favorable to plaintiffs, genuine issues of material fact exist as to whether Gionfriddo is entitled to qualified immunity.
Ultimately, Gionfriddo's entitlement to immunity depends on factual disputes that will hinge on credibility determinations, which must be made by a jury. The evidence presented at trial and the findings of the jury may necessitate a ruling that qualified immunity shall apply. But at this stage, viewed in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs, the evidence is sufficient to create triable issues. Defendants have not demonstrated entitlement to qualified immunity, and summary judgment on plaintiffs' excessive force claim will be denied.
Defendants argue that no failure to train or supervise may be found without an underlying constitutional deprivation, but this argument fails in light of the survival of the excessive force claim discussed above.
Defendants also argue that plaintiffs have not demonstrated any evidence of deficiency of training or supervision, as required for claims of municipal liability.
Plaintiffs have failed to respond to this argument or to present evidence of deliberate indifference by policymaking officials. Accordingly, the court finds that plaintiffs have abandoned their municipal liability claims, and summary judgment will be granted in defendants' favor on these claims.
Defendants argue that summary judgment should be granted on plaintiffs' ADA and Rehabilitation Act claims, as neither statutory framework applies to "on-street" arrest encounters such as this one.
Plaintiffs respond that its ADA and Rehabilitation Act claims stem from (1) the Town's failure to properly train police officers for encounters with the deaf population; (2) the Town's failure to ensure effective, unbiased communication with A.M. during the April 30, 2013, encounter. Plaintiffs submit that A.M. had a right to a neutral, qualified interpreter, and that he was not reasonably accommodated.
As discussed above, plaintiffs have not responded or demonstrated evidence as to deficiency of training or supervision. Moreover, under the instant circumstances, no reasonable jury could find that the Town should have been required to obtain a "neutral" interpreter rather than retain the translation services of the American School for the Deaf.
"Whether a disabled individual succeeds in proving discrimination under Title II of the ADA will depend on whether the officers' accommodations were reasonable under the circumstances."
Plaintiffs withdraw their intentional tort claims against the Town of West Hartford.
Defendants argue that a police officer is not liable for assault and battery based upon the officer's lawful arrest of a person, where there was no use of excessive force.
Summary judgment will be denied as to plaintiffs' assault, battery, and intentional infliction of emotional distress claims against Gionfriddo. However, plaintiffs have not presented sufficient argument or evidence of assault, battery, and intentional infliction of emotional distress claims against any other individual defendants. Accordingly, the court considers those claims abandoned, and summary judgment will be granted as to those claims.
Defendants argue that plaintiffs' negligence claims are barred by the doctrine of governmental immunity for discretionary acts.
Plaintiffs withdraw their claims against Elwin Espinosa.
All of plaintiffs' claims against the American School for the Deaf and Hammond stem from allegations that A.M. was discriminated against based on his Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder by "not being provided a safe environment." But defendants contend, and the court agrees, that plaintiffs' written response cites no factual support beyond their conclusory claims that the School failed to provide A.M. "the benefit of a safe educational environment afforded to students without Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder."
Accordingly, summary judgment will be granted on plaintiffs' claims of negligence, negligent infliction of emotional distress, and violations of the ADA and Rehabilitation Act against the School; as well as on plaintiffs' claims of battery, assault, and intentional infliction of emotional distress against Hammond and the School.
For the foregoing reasons, defendants' motions for summary judgment will be GRANTED in part and DENIED in part.
Summary judgment is DENIED as to plaintiffs' claims of excessive force, assault, battery, intentional infliction of emotional distress, and negligence against Officer Paul W. Gionfriddo; and as to plaintiffs' claim of negligence against the Town of West Hartford. Summary judgment is GRANTED as to the balance of plaintiffs' claims.