Rodriguez v. United States ( 1995 )


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  • USCA1 Opinion








    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    ____________________
    No. 94-1369
    MANUELA RODRIGUEZ, ET AL.,

    Plaintiffs, Appellants,

    v.

    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

    Defendant, Appellee.

    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO

    [Hon. Gilberto Gierbolini, Senior U.S. District Judge] __________________________
    ____________________

    Before

    Torruella,* Chief Judge, ___________

    Bownes, Senior Circuit Judge, ____________________

    and Cyr, Circuit Judge. _____________

    ____________________


    Juan Rafael Gonzalez-Munoz, with whom Gonzalez Munoz Law Office, __________________________ _________________________
    Gerardo Pavia-Cabanillas and Moreda & Moreda were on brief for _________________________ _________________
    appellants.
    Peter R. Maier, Attorney, Guillermo Gil, United States Attorney, ______________ _____________
    Frank W. Hunger, Assistant United States Attorney, and Robert S. ________________ __________
    Greenspan, Attorney, were on brief for appellee. _________

    ____________________

    May 15, 1995
    ____________________



    ____________________

    *Chief Judge Torruella heard oral argument in this matter, but
    did not participate in the drafting or the issuance of the panel
    opinion. The opinion is therefore issued pursuant to 28 U.S.C.
    46(d).












    CYR, Circuit Judge. Plaintiffs-appellants Manuela CYR, Circuit Judge. _____________

    Rodr guez and family members challenge the summary judgment

    entered in the United States District Court for the District of

    Puerto Rico dismissing their Federal Tort Claims Act ("FTCA")

    suit for damages resulting from the errant arrest and imprison-

    ment of Manuela Rodr guez by the United States Marshals Service

    pursuant to a valid warrant. We affirm the district court

    judgment.


    I I

    BACKGROUND1 BACKGROUND __________

    On March 14, 1975, in Mineola, New York, an individual

    who identified herself as "Manuela Rodr guez" was arrested on

    drug charges by the United States Drug Enforcement Administration

    ("DEA"). The arrestee provided DEA with a social security number

    and the following additional information which the agents record-

    ed on a standard DEA booking form: sex: female; height: 5'; ___ ______

    weight: 140 pounds; race: white; place of birth: Maranjito ______ ____ ______________

    [sic], Puerto Rico; date of birth: December 29, 1942; ________________

    citizenship: United States; identifying characteristics: scar ___________ ___________________________

    on stomach, right-handed; eyes: brown; hair: brown; mother: ____ ____ ______

    deceased; father: deceased; sister: Martha Rodriques. On April q ______ ______

    7, 1975, the United States District Court for the Southern

    District of New York issued an arrest warrant against "Manuela
    ____________________

    1The relevant facts are recited in the light most favorable to
    plaintiffs-appellants, against whom summary judgment was entered. See ___
    Velez-Gomez v. SMA Life Assur. Co., 8 F.3d 873, 874 (1st Cir. 1993). ___________ ___________________


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    Rodr guez," directed to the DEA for execution. The DEA never g

    located the subject.

    In 1989, the United States Marshals Service became

    responsible for executing DEA arrest warrants, and Deputy Marshal

    Sandra Rodr guez ("Deputy Rodr guez"), Southern District of New

    York ("SDNY"), was assigned to locate the subject of the 1975

    arrest warrant. Sometime later, a credit bureau check by Deputy

    Rodr guez yielded a fresh lead: a "Manuela Rodr guez" residing

    in Bayam n, Puerto Rico, with the identical social security

    number recorded in the 1975 DEA booking form.

    Deputy Rodr guez promptly dispatched an "arrest packet"

    to the United States Marshals Service, District of Puerto Rico

    ("DPR"), which included copies of the 1975 DEA booking form and a

    handwritten information form prepared by the United States

    Marshals Service, SDNY. Deputy Rodr guez requested the United

    States Marshals Service, DPR, to "check the following lead." Her

    cover memorandum summarized most of the identifying information

    in the accompanying documents and included the following addi-

    tional information: a/k/a Lopez, Dora Restrepo, a/k/a Restrepo, _____ _____ _____________ _____ ________

    Dora; weight: 140 (back in 1975); sister: Martha Rodr guez. g ____ ____ __

    Even though Deputy Rodr guez, just five days earlier, had shown a

    photograph of the 1975 arrestee in the New York City neighborhood

    where "Manuela Rodr guez" was last believed to have resided, her

    cover memorandum noted: "photo not available." Nor did Deputy

    Rodr guez request fingerprints for inclusion in the arrest

    packet. Shortly after the arrest packet reached Puerto


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    Rico on January 26, 1990, the deputy marshals assigned to the

    case, C sar Torres and Eugenio D az, requested that the United

    States Marshals Service, SDNY, forward a photograph of the

    subject. The record is silent as to whether fingerprints were

    requested. In any event, Deputies Torres and D az once again

    were advised that no photograph was available and that SDNY could

    provide no additional information.

    On February 8, 1990, after confirming that a Manuela

    Rodr guez indeed was residing at the Bayam n address listed in

    the arrest packet, Deputies Torres and D az alerted a magistrate

    judge that an arrest was imminent. Later in the afternoon,

    Deputies Torres and D az proceeded to the Bayam n address to

    execute the arrest warrant, and identified themselves to plain-

    tiff-appellant Pedro Gonzalez Martinez ("Martinez"), plaintiff

    Rodr guez's husband. Martinez phoned plaintiff Rodr guez at her

    place of work, and she arrived home at approximately 4:50 p.m.

    At her insistence, the deputies interviewed plaintiff

    Rodr guez in the presence of her family. She confirmed most of

    the information provided in the arrest packet, including her full

    name, social security number, birthplace, birthdate, abdominal

    scar, right-handedness, and that both her parents were deceased.

    Prior to her arrest, plaintiff also told the deputy marshals that

    she had a sister named "Marta Rodr guez." Although the summary t g

    judgment record reveals that plaintiff Rodr guez has three

    siblings, including a sister named "Maria" and/or "Marta," the

    only grounds asserted in opposition to summary judgment below ____


    4












    were the alleged three-inch height difference, a twenty-pound

    weight difference, an additional scar on plaintiff Rodr guez's

    forehead, the failure of the United States Marshals Service,

    SDNY, to forward a photograph and fingerprints to Puerto Rico,

    and the failure of Deputies Torres and D az to request finger-

    prints.

    When Deputies Torres and D az advised that they had an

    arrest warrant for "Manuela Rodr guez," plaintiff protested to

    no avail that she could not be the individual named in the

    warrant since she had never been to New York. Immediately after

    the arrest, the deputies attempted likewise to no avail to

    contact a magistrate judge, then booked plaintiff and transported

    her to a pretrial detention facility for incarceration pursuant

    to the provisional commitment order previously issued by the

    magistrate judge. The following day, February 9, plaintiff was

    brought before a magistrate judge and released on personal recog-

    nizance pending a removal hearing on February 13, 1990.

    In anticipation of the removal hearing, Deputy D az

    again requested a photograph of the 1975 arrestee from the United

    States Marshals Service, SDNY. Finally, on February 10, a

    photograph taken at the Mineola Police Department at the time of

    the 1975 arrest was mailed to Puerto Rico. When the photograph

    arrived on February 12, it was readily determined that plaintiff

    Rodr guez was not the "Manuela Rodr guez" arrested in 1975. On

    February 13, the government moved to dismiss all proceedings

    against plaintiff Rodr guez.


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    In due course the United States Marshals Service

    disallowed the administrative claim filed by plaintiffs-appel-

    lants, clearing the way for the present action against the United

    States for false arrest and false imprisonment based solely on

    the conduct of its deputy marshals in (1) initiating, through

    Deputy Rodr guez, the wrongful arrest and detention of plaintiff

    Rodr guez pursuant to the 1975 arrest warrant without obtaining

    or forwarding a photograph and fingerprints of the 1975 arrestee

    to the District of Puerto Rico; (2) executing the arrest warrant,

    through Deputies Torres and D az, without a photograph and

    fingerprints of the subject and notwithstanding the height and

    weight differences between plaintiff Rodr guez and the 1975

    arrestee; and (3) delaying plaintiff Rodr guez's initial appear-

    ance before a magistrate judge.2

    The United States moved for summary judgment on all

    claims. The district court ruled that plaintiffs had not gener-

    ated a trialworthy dispute as to whether the arresting deputies

    had a reasonable basis for believing that plaintiff Rodr guez was

    the subject named in the 1975 arrest warrant. It concluded that

    the arresting deputies, with valid warrant in hand, were under no

    duty to corroborate their reasonable identification by obtaining

    either fingerprints or a fifteen-year-old photograph and that any

    failure on the part of Deputy Rodr guez to gather or forward such

    information was immaterial because the information made available

    ____________________

    2Appellants have not pursued the latter claim on appeal.


    6












    to Deputies Torres and D az prior to the arrest was adequate to

    support a reasonable belief by the arresting deputies that

    plaintiff Rodr guez was the person named in the 1975 warrant.

    Plaintiffs-appellants challenge the district court

    rulings, on two grounds: (1) that Deputies Torres and D az, with

    neither a photograph nor the fingerprints of the 1975 arrestee,

    could not have formed a reasonable belief that plaintiff Rodr -

    guez was the subject of the 1975 warrant, particularly in light

    of the height and weight discrepancies; and (2) that Deputy

    Rodr guez negligently failed to include a photograph and finger-

    prints of the 1975 arrestee in the arrest packet transmitted to

    the United States Marshals Service, DPR.

    The United States responds in kind. First, it claims

    that Deputies Torres and D az had reasonable cause to believe

    that plaintiff Rodr guez was the 1975 arrestee; hence, they were

    not negligent. Second, even assuming negligent conduct on the

    part of Deputy Rodr guez in the pre-arrest investigation, federal

    law enforcement officers owe no duty to exercise reasonable care

    in conducting pre-arrest investigations and, secondly, FTCA

    2680(h) waives sovereign immunity from suit for certain

    enumerated intentional torts only among them false arrest and

    false imprisonment and not for mere negligent investigation.


    II II

    DISCUSSION DISCUSSION __________

    A. Summary Judgment A. Summary Judgment ________________



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    A grant of summary judgment is subject to plenary

    review under the same criteria incumbent on the district court.

    Guzman-Rivera v. Rivera-Cruz, 29 F.3d 3, 4 (1st Cir. 1994). _____________ ___________

    Summary judgment is appropriate where the record, viewed in the

    light most conducive to the party resisting summary judgment,

    reveals no trialworthy issue of material fact, and the party

    requesting it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Id. ___

    B. Sovereign Immunity B. Sovereign Immunity __________________

    For many years the general waiver of sovereign immunity

    afforded by FTCA 2674 permitted tort actions to be brought

    against the United States "in the same manner and to the same

    extent as [against] a private individual under like

    circumstances," 28 U.S.C. 2674, except for such so-called ______

    "intentional torts" as assault, battery, false imprisonment,

    false arrest, malicious prosecution, abuse of process, libel,

    slander, misrepresentation, deceit, and interference with con-

    tract rights, 28 U.S.C. 2680(h). Then, in 1974 Congress

    narrowed the "intentional torts" exception so as to enable ________ _________

    actions against the United States based on six state-law torts

    assault, battery, false imprisonment, false arrest, abuse of

    process and malicious prosecution arising from acts or omis-

    sions of its "investigative or law enforcement officers." Id. ___

    Thus, the United States is liable "in the same manner and to

    the same extent" for a false arrest of plaintiff Rodr guez,

    "as a private individual" would be in "like circumstances" under

    the applicable state law.


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    C. Applicable Substantive Law C. Applicable Substantive Law __________________________

    The FTCA ordains that the "law of the place" where the

    act or omission occurred shall govern actions for damages against

    the United States. 28 U.S.C. 1346(b). Its reference to the

    "law of the place" encompasses choice-of-law principles. See ___

    Richards v. United States, 369 U.S. 1, 11-13 (1962); In re All ________ _____________ _________

    Maine Asbestos Litigation, 772 F.2d 1023, 1029 (1st Cir. 1985), _________________________

    cert. denied, 476 U.S. 1126 (1986). As all material acts and _____ ______

    omissions by Deputy Rodr guez took place in New York, we would

    look to New York law for the rule of decision applicable to her

    actions. New York choice-of-law principles provide that conduct-

    regulating causes of action normally are governed by the law of

    the place where an actionable injury is sustained. See Schultz ___ _______

    v. Boy Scouts of Am., Inc., 480 N.E.2d 679, 684 (N.Y. 1985). _______________________

    Any injury to plaintiff Rodr guez was sustained in

    Puerto Rico. Moreover, the parties, as well as the district

    court, assumed from the start that Puerto Rico law governs any

    actionable claim predicated on alleged acts and omissions of

    Deputy Rodr guez in New York. In these circumstances, we do

    likewise, see Commercial Union Ins. Co. v. Walbrook Ins. Co., ___ __________________________ ___________________

    Ltd., 7 F.3d 1047, 1048 n.1 (1st Cir. 1993), since Puerto Rico ____

    law bears a "reasonable relation" to all claims in litigation.

    Finally, since the false arrest and false imprisonment claims

    under Puerto Rico law raise no relevant distinction in the

    present context, we treat them as identical causes of action.




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    Cf. Ayala v. San Juan Racing Corp., 112 P.R. Dec.804, 812 (1982). ___ _____ _____________________

    D. The False Arrest Claims Relating D. The False Arrest Claims Relating ________________________________
    to Deputy Marshals Torres and D az to Deputy Marshals Torres and D az __________________________________

    Plaintiff Rodr guez contends that Deputies Torres and

    D az subjected her to false arrest by executing the 1975 warrant

    despite certain discrepancies between the physical description

    given by the 1975 arrestee and the physical description and

    biographical data Deputy Rodr guez provided to the arresting

    officers. These discrepancies were sufficient, she argues, to

    engender a reasonable doubt which the arresting deputies should

    have resolved by obtaining a photograph or fingerprints of the

    1975 arrestee. Their failure to do so therefore precluded

    summary judgment on the central issue whether the arresting

    officers could have harbored a reasonable belief that plaintiff

    was the person named in the arrest warrant.

    Misidentification cases comprise a distinct subset of

    false arrest claims, for which particularized rules and standards

    were fashioned at common law. See Restatement (Second) of Torts, ___ _____________________________

    125 (1965). Even though many such claims have found their way

    into the courts over the years, see William B. Johnson, Liability ___ _________

    for False Arrest or Imprisonment Under Warrant as Affected by _________________________________________________________________

    Mistake as to Identity of Person Arrested, 39 A.L.R.4th 705 _____________________________________________

    (1985), careful research has disclosed no reported Puerto Rico

    Supreme Court decision addressing a false arrest claim based on

    the execution of a valid arrest warrant against the wrong person.





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    As a general matter, however, the Puerto Rico Supreme

    Court has conformed its limited "false arrest" jurisprudence to

    common law principles. See, e.g., Ayala, 112 P.R. Dec. at 813 ___ ____ _____

    (citing common law sources, including Restatement (Second) of ________________________

    Torts); Dobbins v. Hato Rey Psychiatric Hosp., 87 P.R.R. 28, 31- _____ _______ __________________________

    32 (1962) (citing common law sources, including Restatement, ____________

    Torts (1938)). Accordingly, consistent with our longstanding _____

    practice in cases where the Puerto Rico court has not diverged

    from common law principles, see Importers Ctr., Inc. v. Newell ___ ____________________ ______

    Cos., Inc., 758 F.2d 17, 20 (1st Cir. 1985) (looking to Restate- __________ ________

    ment (Second) of Contracts (1979), absent controlling Puerto Rico __________________________

    law); United States v. Marshall, 391 F.2d 880, 883 (1st Cir. _____________ ________

    1968) (citing Restatement, Torts, where Puerto Rico Supreme Court ___________ _____

    demonstrated pattern of reliance on common law authority), we

    adopt the Restatement (Second) of Torts, 35-45A, 112-36, as ______________________________

    the appropriate framework for analysis of the instant false

    arrest claim.

    1. Conditional Privilege 1. Conditional Privilege _____________________

    Generally speaking, an arrest conducted pursuant to a

    valid warrant is conditionally privileged, and no false arrest

    liability lies against the officers responsible. Restatement ___________

    (Second) of Torts, 118, 122 (1965). Moreover, where an __________________

    agent's privilege is "properly exercised on his principal's _______

    behalf," the principal likewise has a defense to an action based

    on the conduct of the agent. Restatement (Second) of Agency, ______________________________




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    217(a)(iii) (1958).3 The privilege attaching to the conduct of

    a government employee acting within the scope of his employment

    likewise has been recognized as a defense available to the United

    States in actions based on the so-called intentional torts

    enumerated in FTCA 2680(h). See, e.g., Arnsberg v. United ___ ____ ________ ______

    States, 757 F.2d 971, 978-79 (9th Cir. 1985) (government liabili- ______

    ty for false arrest under FTCA determined in light of privilege

    accorded law enforcement officer effecting arrest), cert. denied, _____ ______

    475 U.S. 1010 (1986); Caban v. United States, 728 F.2d 68, 74 (2d _____ _____________

    Cir. 1984) (same). Thus, the United States is entitled to assert

    in its defense a conditional privilege conferred upon its agent

    by applicable local law in the same manner and to the same extent

    as a nongovernmental principal could assert in similar circum-

    stances. The legislative history accompanying the 1974 amendment

    makes clear that Congress intended "to make the Government

    independently liable in damages for the same type of conduct that ____ ____

    is alleged to have occurred in Bivens (and for which that case ______ ___ ___ _____ ____ ____

    imposes liability upon the individual Government officials _______ _________ ____ ___ __________ __________ _________

    ____________________

    3Section 217. Where Principal or Agent has Immunity or Privilege Section 217. Where Principal or Agent has Immunity or Privilege

    In an action against a principal based on the conduct of a In an action against a principal based on the conduct of a
    servant in the course of employment: servant in the course of employment:

    (a) The principal has a defense if: (a) The principal has a defense if:

    . . . . . . . .

    (iii) the agent had a privilege which he properly (iii) the agent had a privilege which he properly
    exercised on his principal's behalf . . . . exercised on his principal's behalf . . . .

    Restatement (Second) of Agency, 217(a)(iii). ______________________________


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    involved)." See S. Rep. No. 588, 93d Cong., 2d Sess. 3 (1973), ________ ___

    reprinted in 1974 U.S.C.C.A.N. 2789, 2791 (emphasis added); see _________ __ ___

    also Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents of Fed. Bureau of Nar- ____ ______ _________________________________________________

    cotics, 403 U.S. 388 (1971). ______

    Although it is undisputed that plaintiff Rodr guez was

    arrested pursuant to a valid arrest warrant, the conditional

    privilege would not insulate the arresting officers from liabili-

    ty unless the arrestee was

    (a) . . . a person sufficiently named or otherwise
    described in the warrant and [was] reasonably believed ___
    by the [officer] to be, the person intended, or __

    (b) although not such person, . . . knowingly
    caused the actor[s] to believe [her] to be so.

    Restatement (Second) of Torts, 125 (emphasis added). Since the _____________________________

    record plainly reflects that plaintiff Rodr guez maintained

    throughout that she was not the person named in the 1975 warrant, ___

    we need only inquire pursuant to subsection 125(a) whether

    (1) she was "sufficiently named or otherwise described in the

    warrant" and (2) Deputies Torres and D az "reasonably believed"

    that she was "the person intended" in the warrant. See id. ___ ___

    125(a).

    First and foremost, there can be no question that the

    person arrested was "sufficiently named" in the 1975 arrest

    warrant, see id. 125(a), which directed the arrest of a person ___ ___

    with the same name as plaintiff Rodr guez. A law enforcement

    officer "is privileged to arrest the person to whom the name [in

    the warrant] applies with complete accuracy, although the [offi-



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    cer] may have reason to suspect that a mistake has been made, and _______

    that the person, though accurately named, is not the person

    intended." Id. 125 cmt. f (emphasis added). ___

    The United States argues that the name in the 1975

    warrant, together with the information contained in the arrest

    packet, provided ample basis for Deputies Torres and D az to form

    an objectively reasonable belief that plaintiff Rodr guez was the

    person named in the warrant. Indeed, the information plaintiff

    herself provided in response to questions from the deputies

    comported in virtually every detail with the physical description

    in the arrest packet, except for a three-inch discrepancy in ______

    height and a twenty-pound difference in weight.4

    We agree with the government that these slight

    discrepancies minor variations between the plaintiff's physi-

    cal description and the fifteen-year-old DEA booking form de-

    scription could not have undermined the objective

    reasonableness of the arresting deputies' belief that plaintiff

    was the person named in the 1975 warrant. Furthermore, apparent-

    ____________________

    4The arresting deputies confirmed that plaintiff Rodr guez's
    birthplace, birthdate, abdominal scarring, right-handedness, citizen-
    ship, race, and Social Security number were all identical to the data
    contained in the arrest packet. Plaintiff even confirmed that her
    sister had the same name as that which the 1975 arrestee had given for
    her sister. Finally, plaintiff informed Deputies Torres and D az
    that, like the 1975 arrestee, both her parents were deceased as well.

    The record is silent as to whether anyone (including plaintiff)
    noted the three-inch height discrepancy at the time of arrest. The
    twenty-pound weight difference was reasonably attributed by the
    deputies to the fact that almost fifteen years had passed since the
    arrest of "Manuela Rodr guez" in Mineola, New York.


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    ly mindful of the risks inherent in executing a fifteen-year-old

    arrest warrant, Deputies Torres and D az prudently attempted to

    obtain further information, as well as a photograph, from the

    United States Marshals Service, SDNY, but were told that no photo

    or additional information was available. Indeed, the arresting

    deputies even afforded plaintiff Rodr guez an opportunity to

    explain how anyone other than she could have provided the DEA

    with all this information in 1975. Plaintiff Rodr guez was

    unable to explain then and offers no explanation now.

    Their painstaking efforts could have left Deputies

    Torres and D az with little inkling let alone a reasonable __________

    belief that plaintiff Rodr guez was not the "Manuela Rodr - ______ ___

    guez" named in the arrest warrant. Thus, notwithstanding their

    errant arrest of an innocent person, the arresting officers

    having utilized every available means to preclude misidentifica-

    tion were left with no grounds for forming a reasonable belief

    that plaintiff Rodr guez was not the person intended in the 1975

    arrest warrant. Consequently, the execution of the valid 1975

    arrest warrant by Deputies Torres and D az was privileged. And,

    lastly, the United States was entitled to rely on the privilege

    which attached to the arresting deputy marshals as a complete

    defense to liability for false arrest, as provided by Restatement ___________

    (Second) of Agency, 217(a)(iii). __________________

    E. The Claims Relating to Deputy Rodr guez E. The Claims Relating to Deputy Rodr guez _______________________________________

    Plaintiffs-appellants further contend that the United

    States is liable for the "negligent investigation and initiation


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    of arrest proceedings" by Deputy Rodr guez. The United States

    counters that federal law enforcement officers owe no legal duty

    to exercise reasonable care in conducting pre-arrest investi-

    gations. Additionally, it argues that FTCA 2680(h) waives

    sovereign immunity from suit for six enumerated intentional torts

    only -- assault, battery, false imprisonment, false arrest, abuse

    of process and malicious prosecution. Thus, according to the

    United States, even if local law afforded a right of action for

    negligent investigation and initiation it would be barred by

    sovereign immunity.


































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    1. Negligent Investigation 1. Negligent Investigation _______________________

    Plaintiffs-appellants point to no authority which

    recognizes a right of action for "negligent investigation" in

    these circumstances, nor have we found any authority for imposing

    liability on the sovereign for negligent investigation, whereas

    several courts have rejected such claims. See, e.g., Smith v. ___ ____ _____

    State, 324 N.W.2d 299, 302 (Iowa 1982); Landeros v. City of _____ ________ _______

    Tucson, 831 P.2d 850, 851 (Ariz. App. Ct. 1992); Wimer v. State, ______ _____ _____

    841 P.2d 453, 455 (Idaho App. Ct. 1992); cf. Bernard v. United __ _______ ______

    States, 25 F.3d 98, 102 (2d Cir. 1994) (applying New York law in ______

    FTCA action and rejecting claim that law enforcement officers

    failed to exercise due care in effecting arrest); Boose v. City _____ ____

    of Rochester, 421 N.Y.S.2d 740, 744 (N.Y. App. Div. 1979) (ruling ____________

    that plaintiff "may not recover under broad general principles of

    negligence . . . but must proceed by way of the traditional

    remedies of false arrest and imprisonment and malicious

    prosecution"). We therefore decline the invitation to speculate

    that the Puerto Rico Supreme Court would be receptive to such a

    claim.

    2. Instigation of False Arrest 2. Instigation of False Arrest ___________________________

    Plaintiffs-appellants cite Sami v. United States, 617 ____ ______________

    F.2d 755 (D.C. Cir. 1979), as support for their contention that

    the United States may be sued for the conduct of Deputy Rodr guez

    in initiating the errant arrest. Sami held that FTCA 2680(h) ____

    opens the government to suit for false arrest even though its law

    enforcement officer was not directly involved in "frontline law ___


    17












    enforcement work." See id. at 764; but cf. Pooler v. United ___ ___ ___ ___ ______ ______

    States, 787 F.2d 868, 872 (3d Cir.) (restricting waiver of ______

    sovereign immunity effected under FTCA 2680(h) to enumerated

    torts by investigative or law enforcement officers "in the course

    of a search, a seizure or an arrest"), cert. denied, 479 U.S. 849 _____ ______

    (1986). We need not resolve the question addressed in Sami, ____

    however, since we conclude that no right of action would lie

    under the legal principles likely to be applied by the Puerto

    Rico Supreme Court based on the conduct of Deputy Rodr guez.

    One who instigates or participates in the unlawful

    confinement of another is subject to liability to the other for

    false arrest. Restatement (Second) of Torts, 45A. "Instiga- ______________________________

    tion" is defined as "words or acts which direct, request, invite

    or encourage the false [arrest] itself." Id. 45A cmt. c. "In ___

    the case of an arrest, [instigation] is the equivalent, in words

    or conduct, of 'Officer, arrest that man!'" Id. Though it is by ___

    no means clear that Deputy Rodr guez's request to "check the

    following lead," see supra p. 3, amounted to "instigation" as ___ _____

    defined in the Restatement, we consider whether Deputy Rodr guez ___________

    herself would be liable for instigating a false arrest of plain-

    tiff Rodr guez in these circumstances.

    Instigation of false arrest, like the underlying tort

    itself, is subject to the conditional privilege accorded arrests

    effected pursuant to a valid warrant. Id. 45A cmt. b. Conse- ___

    quently, the conduct of Deputy Rodr guez would be privileged so

    long as the arrestee was "sufficiently named or otherwise de-


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    scribed in the warrant" and the officer instigating the arrest ___ ___________

    "reasonably believed" that plaintiff Rodr guez was "the person

    intended" in the arrest warrant. Id. 125(a); see id. 45A ___ ___ ___

    cmt. b.

    As noted above, see supra p. 13, there is no question ___ _____

    but that plaintiff Rodr guez was "sufficiently named" in the 1975

    warrant. Nor did the evidence developed at summary judgment

    generate a trialworthy dispute as to whether Deputy Rodr guez

    "reasonably believed" that the person identified in the arrest

    packet she forwarded to Puerto Rico was the person intended by

    the 1975 arrest warrant. See id. 125 cmt f. Moreover, plain- ___ ___

    tiffs-appellants have never suggested, either below or on appeal,

    that their opportunity to conduct discovery was inadequate.

    The record evidence reflects that Deputy Rodr guez

    matched the name and social security number of the fugitive with

    the name and social security number of an individual residing in

    Puerto Rico. The arrest packet Deputy Rodr guez forwarded to

    Puerto Rico included extensive personal and family information

    provided by the "Manuela Rodr guez" arrested in 1975, which

    matched almost precisely the personal and family information

    gathered on plaintiff Rodr guez in 1990. There were two minor

    discrepancies between the information provided by the 1975

    arrestee and that provided by plaintiff Rodr guez: a three-inch

    height difference and a twenty-pound weight difference. But

    there is no record evidence whatsoever to suggest that Deputy

    Rodr guez was even aware of these discrepancies.


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    Thus, the information forwarded by Deputy Rodr guez,

    when matched with the information relating to plaintiff Rodr guez

    herself, afforded ample basis for forming an objectively reason-

    able belief that plaintiff Rodr guez was the person named in the

    1975 arrest warrant. Consequently, Deputy Rodr guez's conduct

    relating to the errant arrest, even assuming it were actionable

    as a negligent instigation claim, would be conditionally privi-

    leged, see Restatement (Second) of Torts, 125(a), and the ___ _______________________________

    United States would be entitled to assert the privilege in its

    own defense. See supra pp. 11-15; Restatement (Second) of ___ _____ _________________________

    Agency, 217(a)(iii).5 ______


    III III

    CONCLUSION CONCLUSION __________

    As the challenged conduct of all three Deputy United

    States Marshals was privileged, summary judgment was properly

    entered for the United States.

    Affirmed. The parties shall bear their own costs. Affirmed. The parties shall bear their own costs. ________ ______________________________________



    - Concurring Opinion Follows -


    ____________________

    5Nevertheless, given the many uncontrolled ramps leading onto and
    off the "information highway," Judge Bownes' wise counsel clearly
    offers law enforcement agencies the best means of avoiding recurrences
    of the insufficiently explained wrong done in this case. As my
    brother cautions, all law enforcement officers whether directly
    involved in effecting an arrest or simply in gathering and forwarding
    information for use by the arresting officers should exercise the
    high degree of care commensurate with the seriousness of their mis-
    sion.


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    BOWNES, Senior Circuit Judge, concurring in the BOWNES, Senior Circuit Judge _____________________

    judgment. I agree with the judgment mainly because there was

    an improbably close match between the information provided by

    the plaintiff and the detailed information in the arrest

    packet. Given this level of specificity and similarity, I

    must conclude that it would be entirely unreasonable for a

    finder-of-fact to posit liability against the government. It

    was not the government which was culpable but the impostor

    who framed the plaintiff some fifteen years before the ar-

    rest.

    I write separately, however, to emphasize that the

    Restatement principles underlying our decision should not be

    applied mechanically where multiple government actors are

    engaged in collective action. In my view, it would be a

    mistake to treat the New York and Puerto Rico marshals piece-

    meal, as isolated actors rather than as co-agents of a common

    principal. Under the right circumstances, co-agents may have

    a duty to exchange certain information; where there is such a

    duty, the reasonableness of a given act -- and the princi-

    pal's liability for that act -- should be judged in light of

    what the actor knew or should have known, assuming the rea-

    sonable conduct of other concerned actors. This concept of

    imputed knowledge seems consistent with agency and vicarious

    liability principles.





    20













    The failings of the piecemeal approach can be

    illustrated using the facts of this case. A piece of infor-

    mation may mean little in the abstract to the person who

    holds it, but might be decisive to another actor in context.

    In this case, a photograph remained inert in Deputy Rodri-

    guez's file; had it been forwarded to the Puerto Rico mar-

    shals in the field, it would have prevented the plaintiff's

    arrest. Although I agree with my brother that, in light of

    the specificity of the information in her arrest packet,

    Deputy Rodriguez had no reason to fear that the wrong person

    might be arrested, the opinion nevertheless obscures the

    government's one regrettable omission. After all, the Puerto

    Rico marshals saw fit to request the photograph; and the

    United States has never explained why it was not timely sent.



    I doubt that common law principles either dictate a

    piecemeal approach, or foreclose a more integrated view of

    collective action. Indeed, my brother's opinion momentarily

    adopts an integrated view when it rejects the instigation

    claim against Deputy Rodriguez. See ante at 18 ("The arrest ___ ____

    packet Deputy Rodriguez forwarded to Puerto Rico . . .

    matched almost precisely the personal and family information

    gathered on plaintiff Rodriguez in 1990."). This correspon-

    dence matters only if Deputy Rodriguez is imputed with the





    21













    knowledge of information that was gathered solely by the

    Puerto Rico marshals.

    In sum, I have no quarrel with the bulk of my

    brother's scholarly opinion. I merely wish to raise a word

    of caution against judging co-agents of a common principal as



    isolated actors; their actions should be assessed as of one

    piece.





































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