OPINION
Presently before the Court is a Motion for Reconsideration brought by Defendants City of Trenton (“the City”), Trenton Police Department (“TPD”) and former Director of Police J. Santiago (“Director Santiago”)(collectively, the “City Defendants”) pursuant to Local Civil Rule 7.1(i). Through the instant motion, the City Defendants challenge this Court’s December 27, 2011,
I. BACKGROUND
The factual background of this matter is set forth more fully in this Court’s prior decision, thus, the Court will only recount the facts necessary for disposition of the instant motion. Plaintiffs claims arise out of two separate arrests during which Plaintiff alleges that Trenton Police Department (“TPD”) Officers used excessive force and arrested him without probable cause. The first incident took place on November 8, 2004, when Officers Kmiec and Kurfuss were detailed to a Trenton residence based on a report that an intoxicated individual, later identified as Plaintiff, was trying to kick in the front door. Kmiec and Kurfuss physically restrained Plaintiff and arrested him for obstructing the administration of law. While effectuating the arrest, Plaintiff alleges Kmiec and/or Kurfuss both physically and verbally abused him, at one point telling him to “shut the fuck up.” White Dep. Tr. 215:12-13. Ultimately, all charges against Plaintiff were dismissed. No other TPD officers, including Director Santiago, participated in the incident. The second incident took place on February 4, 2005 (“February 2005 incident”) and involved a different group of officers.
Importantly, Officers Kmiec and Kurfuss are not named defendants in this action. In his original complaint and his First Amended Complaint, Plaintiff asserted a fourth amendment excessive force claim against the officers involved in the November 2004 incident, referring to them as “P.O. John Doe I” and “P.O. John Doe II. ” After his First Amended Complaint was filed, Plaintiff moved to file a Second Amended Complaint pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 15 that would substitute Officers Kmiec and Kurfuss for the John Doe officers. On December 12, 2007, Magistrate Judge Bongiovanni, the Magis
Thereafter, the parties engaged in motion practice on the remaining counts, of Plaintiffs First Amended Complaint. The subject of the City Defendants’ instant motion for reconsideration is the most recent motion decided by this Court on December 27, 2011. That summary judgment motion involved the Plaintiffs Monell municipal liability claims against the City Defendants relating to both the November 2004 and February 2005 incidents. The Monell claim was based on a failure to supervise and discipline (“failure to supervise”) theory that the City Defendants failed to adequately track excessive force complaints against TPD officers.
In my ruling, I granted in part and denied in part the City Defendants’ motion. I granted summary judgment on the claim related to the February 2005 incident but denied summary judgment on the claim relating to the November 2004 incident. The reasoning underlying my decision was that, by the time of the February 2005 incident, the City Defendants had implemented a system that tracked the number of complaints filed against each police officer, certain details about the incident, and the disposition of the complaint, inter alia. At the time of the November 2004 incident, in contrast, the City Defendants did not have an effective tracking system in place.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
Local Rule 7.1(i) allows a party to seek reconsideration of a court’s decision if there are “matters or controlling decisions which counsel believes the Judge ... has overlooked” within ten business days following the entry of the order or judgment on the original motion. L. Civ. R. 7.1(i); see also Interfaith Cmty. Org. v. Honeywell Int’l, Inc.,
A timely motion for reconsideration may be granted upon a finding of at least one of the following grounds: “(1) an intervening change in the controlling law; (2) the availability of new evidence that was not available when the court granted the motion ...; or (3) the need to correct a clear error of law or fact or to prevent manifest injustice.” Max’s Seafood Café v.
III. DISCUSSION
The City Defendants base their motion for reconsideration on what they perceive to be an error of law. As noted, in my December 27, 2011 decision, I granted summary judgment on the City Defendants’ motion with respect to the failure to supervise claim related to the February 2005 incident. Summary judgment was appropriate on the Monell claim against the City Defendants’ because, by the February 2005 date, a tracking system that adequately tracked excessive force complaints against TPD officers was in place. Summary judgment was denied, however, with respect to the November 2004 arrest because the testimony of Director Santiago, when read in the light most favorable to Plaintiff, could be read to indicate that no adequate tracking system was in place and functioning by that date.
In the summary judgment briefing for that motion, neither party argued that summary judgment should be granted with respect to one date and denied with respect to the other. Each party treated the question of Monell liability as relating to both incidents. Moreover, the parties did not address that the individual officers who allegedly used force in arresting and jailing Plaintiff are not named as defendants for their role in the November 2004 incident.
On reconsideration, the City Defendants now argue that since Plaintiff did not name as defendants the individual officers who allegedly used excessive force during the November 2004 arrest no determination of their liability may be made. According to the City Defendants, this means that Monell liability may not attach and summary judgment should be granted in their favor. The City Defendants rely primarily upon City of Los Angeles v. Heller,
At the outset, Plaintiff argues that the City Defendants’ motion is an impermissible attempt to argue a point that could have been raised in the underlying motion. Plaintiff is correct that motions for reconsideration are not the vehicle for a party to “argue what could have been, but was not, argued in the original set of moving and responsive papers.” Bowers,
As explained in Bowers, the impetus for the rule that reconsideration may not be used to raise an issue ignored in the underlying motion was that “motions for reargument ha[d] become quite the matter of course within the District of New Jersey....”
In my view, the City Defendants’ motion is not an inappropriate use of the reconsideration vehicle. Even assuming the City Defendants could have anticipated the Court’s denial of summary judgment only with respect to the November 8, 2004 incident, this is not a case where the Court has already addressed the defendants’ arguments or where the defendants are using the motion as a substitute for an appeal. Rather, the City Defendants are now raising a legal issue that could have significant implications on the instant suit and, if I were to agree with their interpretation of the law, a reversal of my prior grant of summary judgment would be appropriate. As such, the motion fits within those category of motions that express a “need to correct a clear error of law or fact or to prevent manifest injustice.” Max’s Seafood,
The City Defendants hinge their argument on language in the Supreme Court’s decision in Heller that
neither Monell [ ] nor any other of our cases authorizes the award of damages against a municipal corporation based on the actions of one of its officers when in fact the jury has concluded that the officer inflicted no constitutional harm. If a person has suffered no constitutional injury at the hands of the individual police officer, the fact that the departmental regulations might have authorized the use of constitutionally excessive force is quite beside the point.
But, contrary to the City Defendants’ assertion, this does not mean that a plaintiff must always name the individual officers who allegedly inflicted the constitutional harm. As explained by the First Circuit in Wilson v. Town of Men-don, “[tjhere is ... nothing to prevent a plaintiff from foregoing the naming of an individual officer as a defendant and proceeding directly to trial against the municipality....”
Wilson, while explaining that a Monell claim may proceed where a plaintiff has not named the officers who inflicted the alleged constitutional harm, acknowledges that “[t]here is, at first blush, a visceral unease at the idea that a person’s conduct can be the subject of a jury’s condemnation in a case to which the person is not a party.” Wilson,
Moreover, Wilson explains, a plaintiff who fails to name the officers who allegedly inflicted the unconstitutional harm fore-goes the opportunity to seek a judgment against the unnamed officers that would be personally binding upon the officers. Id. at 8. And, where a plaintiff initially brings suit against the officer and subsequently dismisses him to proceed solely against the municipality, the dismissal could have the claim preclusive effect of barring the plaintiff from attempting to re-litigate the same claim against the officer in another proceeding. See Young v. City of Providence,
This is not to say that a plaintiff may make a mockery of the judicial process through pleading gamemanship. While the Wilson Court rejected the general proposition that a plaintiff must name the municipal employees who allegedly inflicted the constitutional harm as a defendant in order to sue the municipality, the circuit affirmed the lower court’s refusal to submit to the jury a special verdict form on the unnamed officer’s alleged constitutional harm in that case. This was because the plaintiff intentionally did not name the officer as a defendant in order to prevent the municipality from presenting evidence of a prior perjury in another case that called into question the officer’s veracity. On the eve of trial, the plaintiff also dropped all claims that would have permitted the municipality to introduce evidence of the officer’s perjury. Throughout the trial, the officer’s name was mentioned several times and testimony was admitted as to her excessive-force related actions. Following closing arguments, the plaintiff
Here, Plaintiff does not dispute that his Monell claim is predicated on Officers Kurfuss’ and Kmiec’s conduct, nor that he failed to name these officers as defendants.
Returning to the reconsideration question at hand, I conclude that there is no error of law in my prior ruling denying summary judgment to the City Defendants for the November 2004 incident. Because Plaintiff was not permitted to substitute the unnamed officers for the John Doe defendants, no judicial determination as to the officers’ liability has been made. This distinguishes Heller and its progeny because, in those cases, there had been a judicial determination that the officers did not inflict constitutional harm. So, while the general rule is that “municipal liability will only lie where municipal action actually caused an injury,” Grazier,
In the event the City Defendants do not successfully move for summary judgment on whether Plaintiff has proven constitutional harm and this matter advances to trial, I may exercise my discretion to bifurcate the trial. See In re Bayside Prison Litigation,
Even if I elect not to bifurcate the trial, Plaintiff is reminded that he will be required to first establish he suffered constitutional harm in order for his claim against the municipality to succeed. See Bayside,
The Court further reiterates that, in addition to the constitutional harm element of his Monell claim, Plaintiff must establish existence of the custom that implicitly encouraged excessive force and that the custom was a motivating factor in the officers’ use of excessive force in the November 2004 incident. See Canton, Ohio v. Harris,
In sum, summary judgment on Plaintiffs Monell claim is not appropriate at this juncture under Heller and, consequently, there is no basis for reversing my prior denial of summary judgment.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, the City Defendants’ motion for reconsideration is granted. However, the Court affirms its prior denial of summary judgment on Count III of Plaintiffs First Amended Complaint against Director Santiago in his official capacity and against the City on that same count.
Notes
. At that time, the parties jointly agreed to dismiss a false arrest/malicious prosecution count of the First Amended Complaint also related to the November 2004 incident.
. Indeed, while not addressing the issue of unnamed officers explicitly, the Third Circuit’s ruling in Beck v. City of Pittsburgh,
. By way of example, the Fifth Circuit granted summary judgment on a Monell liability claim predicated on excessive force by two unnamed officers. The circuit granted summary judgment even though the plaintiff presented sufficient evidence that the officers used excessive force because the plaintiff failed to present sufficient evidence of a municipal policy or custom. See Peterson v. City of Fort Worth, Texas,
. The First Amended Complaint makes clear that Plaintiff’s Monell claim against the City Defendants is explicitly based on these officers' use of excessive force, which he asserts violated the fourth amendment. See First Am. Compl., ¶ 25-6. To be sure, Plaintiff’s claim against the City Defendants is not a substantive due process claim under the fourteenth amendment for which these defendants may be independently liable "even in situations where none of [the officers] are liable.” Brown v. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania,
In this connection, the Court further notes that there is a line of cases in the Third Circuit beginning with Fagan, supra, that stand for the proposition that "a municipality’s liability under section 1983 for a substantive due process violation does not depend upon an individual officer's liability.”
