Lopp v. Anderson ( 2016 )


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  •                IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA
    No. COA16-111
    No. COA16-112
    Filed: 20 December 2016
    Franklin County, No. 14 CVS 354
    FREDERICK SAMUEL LOPP, Plaintiff,
    v.
    JOEL ANDERSON, Individually and in his Official Capacity; KENT WINSTEAD,
    SHERIFF OF FRANKLIN COUNTY, in his Official Capacity; FRANKLIN COUNTY;
    GARRETT STANLEY, Individually and in his Official Capacity; ANDY
    CASTANEDA, Individually and in his Official Capacity; SHERRI BRINKLEY,
    Individually and in her Official Capacity; LOUISBURG POLICE DEPARTMENT;
    and THE TOWN OF LOUISBURG, Defendants.
    ____________________________________
    No. COA16-112
    Filed: 20 December 2016
    Franklin County, No. 14 CVS 353
    RODDIE McKINLEY LOPP, Plaintiff,
    v.
    JOEL ANDERSON, Individually and in his Official Capacity; KENT WINSTEAD,
    SHERIFF OF FRANKLIN COUNTY, in his Official Capacity; FRANKLIN COUNTY;
    GARRETT STANLEY, Individually and in his Official Capacity; ANDY
    CASTANEDA, Individually and in his Official Capacity; SHERRI BRINKLEY,
    Individually and in her Official Capacity; LOUISBURG POLICE DEPARTMENT;
    and THE TOWN OF LOUISBURG, Defendants.
    Appeal by Plaintiffs from orders entered 3 November 2015 by Judge Robert H.
    Hobgood in Superior Court, Franklin County. Heard in the Court of Appeals 22
    August 2016.
    LOPP V. ANDERSON & LOPP V. ANDERSON
    Opinion of the Court
    Stainback, Satterwhite & Zollicoffer, PLLC, by Paul J. Stainback, for
    Plaintiffs-Appellants.
    Womble Carlyle Sandridge & Rice, LLP, by Christopher J. Geis, for
    Defendants-Appellees Joel Anderson, Sheriff Kent Winstead, and Franklin
    County.
    Pinto Coates Kyre & Bowers, PLLC, by Richard L. Pinto and Andrew G. Pinto,
    for Defendants-Appellees Garrett Stanley, Andy Castaneda, Sherri Brinkley,
    Louisburg Police Department, and Town of Louisburg.
    McGEE, Chief Judge.
    I. Facts
    The events relevant to this appeal occurred on 28 June 2009. On that date,
    Roddie McKinley Lopp (“Roddie”) lived with his parents, Mary Lopp and Frederick
    Samuel Lopp (“Frederick”) (Frederick together with Roddie, “Plaintiffs”) in
    Louisburg. Roddie had two young children (“the children”), whose mother was Jodie
    Braddy (“Jodie”). Roddie and Jodie never married, and Jodie subsequently married
    Doug Braddy (“Doug”). On 28 June 2009, Roddie and Jodie shared custody of the
    children under the terms of a custody order. Pursuant to this custody order, Roddie
    was to deliver the children to Jodie by 6:00 p.m. on 28 June 2009. Deviation from
    established transfer times could only be made by the “mutual consent” of Roddie and
    Jodie. Roddie contends his attorney spoke with Jodie’s attorney prior to 28 June
    2009, and an agreement was reached whereby Roddie would keep the children past
    28 June 2009 to make up for times when Jodie had kept the children during Roddie’s
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    LOPP V. ANDERSON & LOPP V. ANDERSON
    Opinion of the Court
    custodial periods.      The record includes nothing beyond Roddie’s testimony and
    affidavit supporting the existence of this agreement.
    According to Jodie, after Roddie failed to appear by 6:00 p.m. on 28 June 2009,
    Jodie decided to drive to the Louisburg Police Department for assistance in retrieving
    the children. Jodie brought the custody order with her, which she showed to police
    officers. Jodi asked for assistance from the officers because she was worried that
    Roddie “could possibly get violent because [she and Roddie] had had such a physical
    history.” Jodie also informed the officers that Roddie kept firearms in his house.
    After speaking with the on-duty magistrate, an officer informed Jodie that the
    Louisburg police would assist her.
    Officers Garrett Stanly1 (“Officer Stanly”), Andy Castaneda (“Officer
    Castaneda”), and Sherri Brinkley (“Officer Brinkley”) were in the parking lot of the
    police station preparing to leave for Plaintiffs’ house when Deputy Joel Anderson
    (“Deputy Anderson”) of the Franklin County Sheriff’s Department (Deputy Anderson,
    along with the above three officers “Defendant Officers”), passed by and agreed to join
    them. Defendant Officers headed to Plaintiffs’ house, and Jodie and Doug followed
    in their own automobile.
    1  Although his name is written as “Garrett Stanley” on the complaint, orders granting
    summary judgment, and on notices of appeal, in his affidavit Officer Stanly struck out the spelling of
    “Stanley,” and hand-wrote “Stanly,” underneath his signature. We will use the spelling “Stanly”
    throughout the body of this opinion.
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    LOPP V. ANDERSON & LOPP V. ANDERSON
    Opinion of the Court
    The following is Roddie’s account of the events that occurred at his home on 28
    June 2009. Defendant Officers approached Roddie in his yard and “proceeded to
    confront him and insisted upon the return of the children to Jodi[e.]” Roddie told
    Defendant Officers that he wanted to call his attorney so his attorney could explain
    that an agreement had been reached allowing Roddie to keep the children for some
    extra period of time. According to Roddie’s deposition testimony, he told Defendant
    Officers: “‘Well, I’m going to go in and call . . . my attorney and then get a copy of the
    consent order and show you.’” Roddie testified: “There was [sic] no words after that.
    All four of them took me down, beat me, kicked me, assaulted me.” Roddie testified
    that he had done nothing to provoke Defendant Officers, and that all four Defendant
    Officers “assaulted” him. Roddie testified that all four Defendant Officers punched
    and kicked him as he was lying on the ground and already handcuffed. Roddie further
    testified that he believed Deputy Anderson attempted to shock him with a stun gun
    as Roddie was “getting into the [police] car[,]” even though he was not resisting.
    According to Roddie, Deputy Anderson placed his stun gun on him, and he felt a small
    “jolt,” but “not like what I’m used to seeing on TV[.]” Roddie believed the stun gun
    didn’t “work[] completely right.”
    Concerning the treatment of Frederick, Roddie testified that, after he had been
    helped off the ground, he “looked back and [Frederick] was down” on the ground.
    Roddie testified that Officer Stanly and Deputy Anderson “were roughing [Frederick]
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    LOPP V. ANDERSON & LOPP V. ANDERSON
    Opinion of the Court
    up and cuffing him.” Roddie further testified that by “roughing up” he meant Officer
    Stanly and Deputy Anderson were punching Frederick in the face and upper body.
    In an affidavit, Roddie stated:
    [A]s I was led away and taken to the police vehicle I saw
    my father, Frederick Lopp, who was then 83 years of age,
    thrown to the ground and assaulted in much the same
    manner as me, and he [had] to be taken to the hospital later
    that same night.
    In his verified complaint, Frederick alleged that when he “saw his son . . . being
    wrongfully harmed and assaulted by” Defendant Officers, he asked Defendant
    Officers if they had a warrant and told Defendant Officers they had no right to be
    there. Frederick then walked toward Roddie and Defendant Officers, “but [Frederick]
    was thereafter thrown to the ground by [Defendant Officers]” and “beaten,
    handcuffed and generally assaulted[.]”       Defendants have included in the record
    testimony and affidavits contradicting Plaintiffs’ recitation of the events.
    Plaintiffs filed complaints on 22 April 2014 alleging assault and battery, false
    imprisonment, and malicious prosecution against Defendant Officers, in both their
    official and individual capacities; and against Defendants Franklin County, the Town
    of Louisburg, the Louisburg Police Department, and Jerry Jones, as Sheriff of
    Franklin County, in both his official and individual capacity.       By consent order
    entered 1 June 2015, Jerry Jones was dismissed as a Defendant in this matter, and
    Kent Winstead was substituted as a Defendant for Jerry Jones, solely in his official
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    LOPP V. ANDERSON & LOPP V. ANDERSON
    Opinion of the Court
    capacity as Sheriff of Franklin County. Defendants moved for summary judgment by
    motions filed 14 September 2015 and 16 September 2015.
    Defendants argued that Defendant Officers, acting in their individual
    capacities, were entitled to public official immunity; and that the municipal
    Defendants, along with the individual Defendants acting in their official capacities,
    were protected from suit by governmental immunity.           The trial court granted
    summary judgment in favor of all Defendants by orders entered 3 November 2015.
    Plaintiffs appeal.
    II. Analysis
    In Plaintiffs’ sole arguments on appeal they contend that the trial court erred
    in allowing Defendants’ motions for summary judgment “based upon issues of
    sovereign immunity and public officer immunity.” We agree in part and disagree in
    part.
    “Our standard of review of a trial court’s order granting or denying summary
    judgment is de novo. Under a de novo review, the [C]ourt considers the matter anew
    and freely substitutes its own judgment for that of the lower tribunal.” Bryson v.
    Coastal Plain League, LLC, 
    221 N.C. App. 654
    , 656, 
    729 S.E.2d 107
    , 109 (2012)
    (citations and quotation marks omitted).
    “On appeal from summary judgment, the applicable
    standard of review is whether there is any genuine issue of
    material fact and whether the moving party is entitled to a
    judgment as a matter of law.” Summary judgment is
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    LOPP V. ANDERSON & LOPP V. ANDERSON
    Opinion of the Court
    appropriate “if the pleadings, depositions, answers to
    interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the
    affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to
    any material fact and that any party is entitled to
    judgment as a matter of law.” If there is any evidence of a
    genuine issue of material fact, a motion for summary
    judgment should be denied. “[W]e review the record in a
    light most favorable to the party against whom the order
    has been entered to determine whether there exists a
    genuine issue as to any material fact.”
    Smith v. Harris, 
    181 N.C. App. 585
    , 587, 
    640 S.E.2d 436
    , 438 (2007) (citations
    omitted). However, this Court will only consider those arguments properly set forth
    in an appellant’s brief. Bryson, 221 N.C. App. at 655, 729 S.E.2d at 108.
    A. Sovereign Immunity
    The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of the municipal
    Defendants and the individual Defendants in their official capacities based upon
    sovereign immunity. The trial court based its orders granting summary judgment on
    the following:2
    1. Defendants Joel Anderson, Sheriff Kent Winstead,
    Garrett Stanley, Andy Castaneda, and Sherri a/k/a Shari
    Brinkley, in their official capacities, by reason of sovereign
    and/or governmental immunity, because there was no
    liability insurance providing indemnity coverage because
    the only policy of insurance for Franklin County and the
    only policy of insurance for the Town of Louisburg for the
    time in question did not provide liability coverage for the
    alleged actions of Defendants Anderson, Winstead,
    Stanley, Castaneda, and Brinkley against Plaintiff.
    2  The orders granting summary judgment in Roddie’s case and Frederick’s case are identical
    in every relevant way, though there are some minor wording differences.
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    LOPP V. ANDERSON & LOPP V. ANDERSON
    Opinion of the Court
    2. Franklin County and the Town of Louisburg are entitled
    to sovereign and/or governmental immunity because the
    only policy of insurance for Franklin County and the only
    policy of insurance for the Town of Louisburg for the time
    in question preserves sovereign and/or governmental
    immunity for Plaintiff’s claims, and, additionally, under
    North Carolina Law, a county may not be liable for the acts
    or omissions of a sheriff or his deputies.
    3. Defendants Joel Anderson, Garrett Stanley, Andy
    Castaneda, and Sherri a/k/a Shari Brinkley, in their
    individual capacities, are entitled to public officer
    immunity in that said defendants did not act with malice,
    were not corrupt, and were not acting outside of or beyond
    the scope of their duties. Furthermore, Defendants
    Stanley, Castaneda, and Brinkley conducted the arrest of
    Plaintiff based on probable cause for acts committed in
    their presence which would induce a reasonable police
    officer to arrest Plaintiff. Additionally, because there was
    probable cause for the arrest of Plaintiff, none of the
    Plaintiff’s North Carolina State Constitutional Rights have
    been violated as Defendants Anderson, Stanley,
    Castaneda, and Brinkley used the minimum amount of
    force necessary to safely arrest Plaintiff.
    4. Defendant Louisburg Police Department is not a public
    entity that can be sued.
    Concerning the issue of sovereign immunity, Plaintiffs make identical
    arguments. Their entire arguments are as follows:
    The Defendants have all asserted governmental immunity,
    and contend that they are entitled to immunity unless it is
    waived through the purchase of insurance. It is clear that
    both Franklin County and the City of Louisburg had
    acquired insurance, but the Defendants all contend that
    the acquisition of this insurance purportedly did not waive
    as a defense the defense of governmental immunity, and
    therefore the County and City are still entitled to that
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    LOPP V. ANDERSON & LOPP V. ANDERSON
    Opinion of the Court
    defense. That is absurd, in that it is a fallacy and contrary
    to public policy. Why would you purchase insurance which
    had a provision in it that it would allow the County to not
    waive governmental immunity as a defense? If that is the
    case, the County and City are spending money for feckless
    reasons.
    Plaintiffs’ arguments consist of declaratory statements unsupported by any citation
    to authority. Plaintiffs do not discuss the provisions of the insurance policies and,
    subsequently, Plaintiffs also fail to make any argument concerning the specific
    provisions of the policies that they contend served to waive sovereign immunity.
    Plaintiffs further fail to cite to any authority in support of any contention that the
    relevant insurance policies served to waive sovereign immunity.              Plaintiffs’
    arguments violate Rule 28(b)(6) of the North Carolina Rules of Appellate Procedure,
    and these arguments are therefore abandoned. McKinnon v. CV Indus., Inc., 
    228 N.C. App. 190
    , 196, 
    745 S.E.2d 343
    , 348 (2013) (citation omitted) (“Although plaintiff
    makes a passing reference to these statutes in his brief, he makes no specific
    argument that the trial court erred in denying his motion for attorney’s fees under
    them. We therefore deem these issues abandoned. N.C.R. App. P. 28(b)(6) (‘Issues
    not presented in a party’s brief, or in support of which no reason or argument is
    stated, will be taken as abandoned.’)”); N.C. Farm Bureau Mut. Ins. Co. v. Smith,
    
    227 N.C. App. 288
    , 292, 
    743 S.E.2d 647
    , 649 (2013) (“[Appellant] fail[s] to cite any
    controlling authority in support of this contention or otherwise explain why it has
    merit, and we accordingly deem the issue abandoned. See N.C.R. App. P. 28(b)(6)
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    LOPP V. ANDERSON & LOPP V. ANDERSON
    Opinion of the Court
    (2013) (providing that an appellant’s argument ‘shall contain citations of the
    authorities upon which the appellant relies’).”).
    Because Plaintiffs fail to properly argue that relevant insurance policies served
    to waive sovereign immunity with respect to Defendants Franklin County, Town of
    Louisburg, Louisburg Police Department, or Defendants Joel Anderson, Garrett
    Stanly, Andy Castaneda, Sherri Brinkley, and Kent Winstead, acting in their official
    capacities, any such arguments are abandoned. McKinnon, 228 N.C. App. at 196, 745
    S.E.2d at 348. We affirm the grant of summary judgment in favor of the municipal
    Defendants, and the individual Defendants in their official capacities.          Because
    Plaintiffs agreed, by consent order, to pursue Defendant Kent Winstead in his official
    capacity only, no claims remain against Defendant Kent Winstead.
    B. Additional Abandoned Arguments
    Further, Plaintiffs do not argue on appeal that Franklin County can be held
    liable for the acts of its elected Sheriff or his deputies, so any such arguments are also
    abandoned. Id. In addition, Plaintiffs make no arguments in their briefs concerning
    Defendant Louisburg Police Department. Plaintiffs have therefore abandoned any
    arguments that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment in favor of
    Defendant Louisburg Police Department. Id.
    C. Public Official Immunity
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    LOPP V. ANDERSON & LOPP V. ANDERSON
    Opinion of the Court
    Plaintiffs also contend the trial court erred in granting summary judgment in
    favor of Defendant Officers Garrett Stanly, Andy Castaneda, Sherri Brinkley, and
    Joel Anderson, in their individual capacities.
    Defendants contend that, because the individual Defendants were public
    officials conducting their public duties, their actions were protected by public official
    immunity. Police officers engaged in performing their duties are public officials for
    the purposes of public official immunity: “a police officer is a public official who enjoys
    absolute immunity from personal liability for discretionary acts done without
    corruption or malice.” Campbell v. Anderson, 
    156 N.C. App. 371
    , 376, 
    576 S.E.2d 726
    ,
    730 (2003) (citations omitted).
    The North Carolina rule is that a public official engaged in
    the performance of governmental duties involving the
    exercise of judgment and discretion may not be held liable
    unless it is alleged and proved that his act, or failure to act,
    was corrupt or malicious, or that he acted outside of and
    beyond the scope of his duties.
    Showalter v. N.C. Dep’t of Crime Control & Pub. Safety, 
    183 N.C. App. 132
    , 136, 
    643 S.E.2d 649
    , 652 (2007) (citation omitted). Plaintiffs have specifically alleged that
    Defendant Officers acted with malice.
    “A defendant acts with malice when he wantonly does that
    which a man of reasonable intelligence would know to be
    contrary to his duty and which he intends to be prejudicial
    or injurious to another.” As the moving party, defendants
    had “the burden of showing that no material issues of fact
    exist, such as by demonstrating through discovery that the
    opposing party cannot produce evidence to support an
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    LOPP V. ANDERSON & LOPP V. ANDERSON
    Opinion of the Court
    essential element of his claim or defense.”
    
    Id.
     (citations omitted).
    1. Roddie McKinley Lopp
    As discussed in greater detail above, Roddie testified and averred that all four
    Defendant Officers participated in taking him to the ground and punching and
    kicking him even though he was not resisting. Roddie further testified he was treated
    in that manner simply because he stated he was going to call his attorney to help
    clear up a misunderstanding about the custody agreement and his right to keep the
    children on 28 June 2009. There are multiple accounts from other witnesses who
    contradict Roddie’s description of the events surrounding his arrest, but we must view
    the evidence in the light most favorable to Plaintiffs, since they are the non-moving
    parties. Smith, 181 N.C. App. at 587, 
    640 S.E.2d at 438
    . This Court previously
    addressed a similar fact situation in Showalter, where this Court held that denial of
    the police officer defendant, Trooper Emmons’, motion for summary judgment was
    proper based upon the following evidence:
    In support of their motion for summary judgment,
    defendants offered the deposition testimony of plaintiff and
    his wife, and the affidavit of Trooper Emmons. Although
    Trooper Emmons averred in his affidavit that he did not
    act maliciously or with reckless indifference toward
    plaintiff, and that all of his actions were “based on probable
    cause,” plaintiff testified in his deposition that the officer
    was angry, was “very loud and spitting,” and that when he
    opened his car door in response to the officer’s command,
    Trooper Emmons “maced” him, with some of the spray
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    LOPP V. ANDERSON & LOPP V. ANDERSON
    Opinion of the Court
    going inside plaintiff’s car and contacting his wife. Plaintiff
    also testified that he told the officer that he needed his
    crutches, but the officer jerked him out of the car and
    handcuffed him, notwithstanding plaintiff’s wife telling the
    trooper that plaintiff was disabled. The court must
    consider the evidence “in a light most favorable to the
    nonmoving party,” and “[a]ll inferences of fact must be
    drawn against the movant and in favor of the nonmovant.”
    When so considered, the foregoing evidentiary materials
    are sufficient to create a genuine issue of fact, material to
    the issue of immunity, as to whether Trooper Emmons
    actions were done with malice.
    Showalter, 183 N.C. App. at 136, 
    643 S.E.2d at 652
     (citations omitted).
    In the present case, Roddie’s deposition testimony was as follows: Defendant
    Officers came to his home and informed him that they were going to take his children
    from him and arrest him. Roddie tried to explain that his attorney and Jodie’s
    attorney had reached an agreement whereby Roddie would keep the children for a
    few days beyond 28 June 2009, to make up for extra time Jodie had kept the children
    in the past. Defendant Officers were not interested in listening to Roddie, so Roddie
    said he was going to go inside and call his attorney so his attorney could explain the
    situation to Defendant Officers. At that moment, according to Roddie: “They took me
    down and assaulted me.” Roddie testified that all four Defendant Officers “took him
    down” and then punched and kicked him in front of his children.                Roddie was
    handcuffed and placed in the back of a police vehicle. Roddie testified that a stun gun
    was deployed for no reason while Defendant Officers were attempting to place him in
    the vehicle, but he did not think the stun gun functioned properly.
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    LOPP V. ANDERSON & LOPP V. ANDERSON
    Opinion of the Court
    Although there is both affidavit and deposition testimony challenging Roddie’s
    recitation of events, we must look at the evidence in the light most favorable to
    Roddie, as the non-moving party. We hold that, similar to the facts in Showalter, the
    record evidence raises an issue of material fact concerning whether Defendant
    Officers acted with malice. See also Thompson v. Town of Dallas, 
    142 N.C. App. 651
    ,
    656–57, 
    543 S.E.2d 901
    , 905–06 (2001) (unnecessarily rough treatment of the plaintiff
    by defendant officer, as forecast in the plaintiff’s complaint, sufficient to survive
    summary judgment even though defendant forecast evidence to the contrary).
    Therefore, relevant to Roddie’s complaint, it was error for the trial court to grant
    Defendants’ motion for summary judgment in favor of Defendant Officers, acting in
    their individual capacities, based upon public official immunity.3
    2. Frederick Samuel Lopp
    Defendants tried to depose Frederick on two occasions — 15 January 2015 and
    8 September 2015. Unfortunately, Frederick, who turned eighty-nine years old on 26
    June 2015, was unable to answer coherently the questions asked of him on either
    3We also note that much of Roddie’s argument in his brief before this court focuses on his
    contention that the officers had no legal authority to assist Jodie in retrieving the children according
    to the custody order, so the officers were acting “outside of and beyond the scope of [their] duties”
    simply by entering his property to assist Jodie in retrieving the children. The forecast of evidence does
    not show that the officers were acting outside or beyond the scope of their duties simply by assisting
    Jodie according to an existing custody order; it shows only that the officers may have used
    inappropriate force in dealing with Roddie and Frederick.
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    LOPP V. ANDERSON & LOPP V. ANDERSON
    Opinion of the Court
    occasion. Therefore, the only evidence in support of Frederick’s claims consists of his
    verified complaint, and the deposition testimony and affidavit of Roddie.
    Although Frederick could not participate in his attempted depositions,
    Frederick’s verified complaint alleges that he was “thrown to the ground[,]” then
    “beaten, handcuffed and generally assaulted[.]” Frederick’s complaint alleges that
    he suffered “severe injuries” including “lacerations to his face, head, back, knees, legs
    and wrists” that required medical attention.          Further, Roddie’s testimony and
    affidavit include testimony that Roddie witnessed Frederick being assaulted by
    Deputy Anderson and Officer Stanly and, more specifically, that these two officers
    were punching Frederick in the head and upper body as he was subdued on the
    ground.
    For the same reasons discussed above concerning Roddie, we hold that,
    because there is a material conflict in the evidence asserted by Plaintiffs and
    Defendants, summary judgment in favor of Deputy Anderson and Officer Stanly
    based upon public official immunity relating to Frederick’s complaint, was error. We
    further hold, however, that Frederick failed to present the trial court sufficient facts
    to support a finding of malice on the part of Officers Brinkley and Castaneda.
    Roddie’s deposition testimony only implicated Deputy Anderson and Officer Stanly
    in the alleged mistreatment of Frederick, and Frederick was unable to give any
    testimony at all. We affirm the trial court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of
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    LOPP V. ANDERSON & LOPP V. ANDERSON
    Opinion of the Court
    Officers Brinkley and Castaneda, in their individual capacities, based upon public
    official immunity, for Frederick’s claims.
    D. Specific Individual Capacity Claims
    We must now consider whether summary judgment should have been granted
    in favor of the individual Defendants for any of the specific claims Plaintiffs filed
    against them. Shore v. Brown, 
    324 N.C. 427
    , 428, 
    378 S.E.2d 778
    , 779 (1989) (citation
    omitted) (“If the granting of summary judgment can be sustained on any grounds, it
    should be affirmed on appeal. If the correct result has been reached, the judgment
    will not be disturbed even though the trial court may not have assigned the correct
    reason for the judgment entered.”). We reiterate that none of the following analysis
    applies to Officers Castaneda or Brinkley for Frederick’s individual capacity claims
    because, as held above, they were protected by public official immunity from
    Frederick’s individual capacity claims.
    1. Assault and Battery
    A law enforcement officer may be held liable for assault and battery in the
    course of an arrest if he or she uses excessive force in the course of that arrest.
    [A] civil action for damages for assault and battery is
    available at common law against one who, for the
    accomplishment of a legitimate purpose, such as justifiable
    arrest, uses force which is excessive under the given
    circumstances.
    Under the common law, a law enforcement officer has the
    right, in making an arrest and securing control of an
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    LOPP V. ANDERSON & LOPP V. ANDERSON
    Opinion of the Court
    offender, to use only such force as may be reasonably
    necessary to overcome any resistance and properly
    discharge his duties. “[H]e may not act maliciously in the
    wanton abuse of his authority or use unnecessary and
    excessive force.” Although the officer has discretion, within
    reasonable limits, to judge the degree of force required
    under the circumstances, “when there is substantial
    evidence of unusual force, it is for the jury to decide
    whether the officer acted as a reasonable and prudent
    person or whether he acted arbitrarily and maliciously.”
    Further, an assault and battery need not necessarily be
    perpetuated      with   maliciousness,      willfulness    or
    wantonness, and actual physical injury need not be shown
    in order to recover.
    Myrick v. Cooley, 
    91 N.C. App. 209
    , 215, 
    371 S.E.2d 492
    , 496 (1988) (citations
    omitted). There are questions of material fact concerning whether Defendant Officers
    used excessive force, such as punching or kicking Plaintiffs, or deploying a stun gun,
    while facilitating the arrest of Plaintiffs. The trial court erred in granting summary
    judgment in favor of all Defendant Officers in their individual capacities for Roddie’s
    assault and battery claims, and further erred in granting summary judgment in favor
    of Deputy Anderson and Officer Stanly in their individual capacities for Frederick’s
    assault and battery claims.
    2. False Imprisonment
    Defendant Officers did not have a warrant to arrest Plaintiffs and, according
    to Defendants’ evidence, they were not intending to arrest Plaintiffs when they
    arrived at Plaintiffs’ residence.     Defendants’ evidence suggests that Roddie
    “aggressively initiated contact with the [individual Defendants.]” However, Roddie’s
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    Opinion of the Court
    evidence, if believed, suggests that immediately after Roddie indicated that he
    wanted to call his attorney in order to clear up the custody issue, Defendant Officers
    “surrounded [Roddie], threw him to the ground, handcuffed him, [and] arrested
    him[.]” Roddie claims he did not initiate contact with Defendant Officers. Roddie
    further claims that he was beaten by Defendant Officers. Frederick, in his verified
    complaint, contended that, when he saw Defendant Officers assaulting Roddie, he
    “asked the said Defendants if they had a warrant and stated they had no right to be
    at said premises without a warrant.” “Thereupon [Frederick] turned to walk toward
    the location within his yard where all of said persons were located, but [Frederick]
    was thereafter thrown to the ground by the individual Defendants[,]” and then
    “assaulted.”
    False imprisonment is the illegal restraint of a person
    against his will. A restraint is illegal if not lawful or
    consented to. A false arrest is an arrest without legal
    authority and is one means of committing a false
    imprisonment. The existence of legal justification for a
    deprivation of liberty is determined in accordance with the
    law of arrest, which is set forth in Chapter 15A of the
    General Statutes.
    N.C.G.S. § 15A–401(b)(1) (Cum. Supp. 1994) provides that
    an officer may arrest a person without a warrant if the
    officer has probable cause to believe that the person has
    committed a criminal offense in the officer’s presence. A
    warrantless arrest without probable cause is unlawful.
    Thus, the dispositive issue is whether defendant had
    probable cause to believe that plaintiffs had committed
    assaults upon him.
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    LOPP V. ANDERSON & LOPP V. ANDERSON
    Opinion of the Court
    The existence or nonexistence of probable cause is a mixed
    question of law and fact. If the facts are admitted or
    established, it is a question of law for the court. However,
    if the facts are in dispute, the question of probable cause is
    one of fact for the jury. In this case, the material facts
    surrounding the incident are in dispute, and therefore the
    existence or nonexistence of probable cause is for the jury
    to determine. Accordingly, defendant was not entitled to
    summary judgment on this ground.
    Marlowe v. Piner, 
    119 N.C. App. 125
    , 129, 
    458 S.E.2d 220
    , 223 (1995) (citations
    omitted). As in Marlowe, in the present case the facts are in dispute concerning
    probable cause to arrest Plaintiffs on 28 June 2009. The trial court erred in granting
    summary judgment in favor of all Defendant Officers in their individual capacities
    for Roddie’s false imprisonment claims, and further erred in granting summary
    judgment in favor of Deputy Anderson and Officer Stanly in their individual
    capacities for Frederick’s false imprisonment claims.
    3. Malicious Prosecution
    As this Court explained in Moore v. Evans, 
    124 N.C. App. 35
    , 
    476 S.E.2d 415
    (1996):
    In order to maintain an action for malicious prosecution,
    the plaintiff must demonstrate that the defendant “(1)
    instituted, procured or participated in the criminal
    proceeding against [the] plaintiff; (2) without probable
    cause; (3) with malice; and (4) the prior proceeding
    terminated in favor of [the] plaintiff.” “[M]alice can be
    inferred from the want of probable cause alone.” As it is
    undisputed that defendant Evans initiated the criminal
    prosecution against Mr. Moore and that the prosecution
    ended with a dismissal of the charges against him, the only
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    LOPP V. ANDERSON & LOPP V. ANDERSON
    Opinion of the Court
    issue as to Mr. Moore’s claim for malicious prosecution is
    whether defendant Evans had probable cause to initiate
    the criminal prosecution against him. Hence, a common
    element of each of the state claims alleged (false
    imprisonment and malicious prosecution) is the absence of
    probable cause.
    The test for whether probable cause exists is an objective
    one—whether the facts and circumstances, known at the
    time, were such as to induce a reasonable police officer to
    arrest, imprison, and/or prosecute another. In Pitts, our
    Supreme Court stated:
    The existence or nonexistence of probable cause is a
    mixed question of law and fact. If the facts are admitted
    or established it is a question of law for the court.
    Conversely, when the facts are in dispute the question
    of probable cause is one of fact for the jury.
    
    Id.
     at 42–43, 
    476 S.E.2d at
    421–22 (citations omitted). Defendants do not dispute
    that the criminal proceedings were subsequently terminated in Plaintiffs’ favor. We
    hold there is sufficient evidence to survive summary judgment on the fourth element
    of malicious prosecution.
    Concerning the first element, Officers Stanly, Castaneda, and Brinkley do not
    dispute that they were involved in instituting the criminal proceedings. Deputy
    Anderson argues that he did not “institute” the criminal proceedings because neither
    he nor the Franklin County Sheriff’s Office brought charges against Plaintiffs.
    However, it is not necessary that an individual be directly involved in charging a
    person, or filing civil claims against that person, in order to have participated
    sufficiently in “institut[ing], procur[ing] or participat[ing] in the criminal proceeding
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    LOPP V. ANDERSON & LOPP V. ANDERSON
    Opinion of the Court
    against [the] plaintiff[.]” Id. at 42, 
    476 S.E.2d at 421
    . “[W]here ‘it is unlikely there
    would have been a criminal prosecution of [a] plaintiff’ except for the efforts of a
    defendant, this Court has held a genuine issue of fact existed and the jury should
    consider the facts comprising the first element of malicious prosecution.” Becker v.
    Pierce, 
    168 N.C. App. 671
    , 675, 
    608 S.E.2d 825
    , 829 (2005) (citation omitted). Because
    Deputy Anderson is identified by Plaintiffs as having participated in the subduing
    and arrests of both Roddie and Frederick, we hold there is sufficient evidence to
    survive summary judgment that Deputy Anderson instituted, procured or
    participated in the criminal charges brought against Plaintiffs.
    Concerning the third element – probable cause:
    Our Supreme Court has defined probable cause with
    respect to malicious prosecution as:
    “the existence of such facts and circumstances, known
    to [the defendant] at the time, as would induce a
    reasonable man to commence a prosecution.” Whether
    probable cause exists is a mixed question of law and
    fact, but where the facts are admitted or established,
    the existence of probable cause is a question of law for
    the court.
    The test for determining probable cause is “‘whether a man
    of ordinary prudence and intelligence under the
    circumstances would have known that the charge had no
    reasonable foundation.’”
    Id. at 677, 
    608 S.E.2d at
    829–30 (citations omitted). When we take the evidence in
    the light most favorable to Plaintiffs, as we must, Smith, 181 N.C. App. at 587, 640
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    LOPP V. ANDERSON & LOPP V. ANDERSON
    Opinion of the Court
    S.E.2d at 438, we hold there is sufficient evidence, as set out above, for a trier of fact
    to determine that the charges against Plaintiffs “had no reasonable foundation.”
    Becker, 168 N.C. App. at 677, 
    608 S.E.2d at 830
    .
    Concerning the second element, Defendants argue there was insufficient
    evidence of malice to survive summary judgment. “‘Malice’ in a malicious prosecution
    claim may be shown by offering evidence that defendant ‘was motivated by personal
    spite and a desire for revenge’ or that defendant acted with ‘reckless and wanton
    disregard’ for plaintiffs’ rights.” Id. at 676, 
    608 S.E.2d at 829
     (citations and quotation
    marks omitted).     If Plaintiffs’ allegations are taken as true, Defendant Officers’
    actions could be found to have been done with “‘reckless and wanton disregard’ for
    plaintiffs’ rights.” 
    Id.
    We hold there was sufficient evidence, when viewed in the light most favorable
    to Plaintiffs, to survive Defendants’ motions for summary judgment on the individual
    capacity claims of assault and battery, false imprisonment, and malicious prosecution
    against all Defendant Officers in Roddie’s action, and against Officer Stanly and
    Deputy Anderson in Frederick’s action. We stress that our holdings should not be
    taken as the opinion of this Court concerning the relative strength of Plaintiffs’
    evidence as compared to the evidence supporting Defendant Officers. We simply hold
    that Plaintiffs have sufficiently forecast evidence creating issues of material fact,
    which must be decided by the trier of fact. We remand for further action on Plaintiffs’
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    LOPP V. ANDERSON & LOPP V. ANDERSON
    Opinion of the Court
    individual capacity claims against Defendant Officers, excepting Frederick’s
    individual capacity claims against Officers Castaneda and Brinkley, which were
    properly disposed of on summary judgment.
    AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED AND REMANDED IN PART.
    Judges STROUD and INMAN concur.
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