Tatro v. Kervin ( 1994 )


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  • USCA1 Opinion








    December 15, 1994 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

    ____________________

    No. 94-1046

    DAVID TATRO,
    Plaintiff - Appellant,

    v.

    TIMOTHY KERVIN, ET AL.,
    Defendants - Appellees.

    ____________________

    ERRATA SHEET

    The opinion of this court issued on December 1, 1994 is
    amended as follows:

    The cover page should read: "Hon. William G. Young, U.S. ____
    District Judge" instead of "Hon. Rya W. Zobel, U.S. District _______________ _____________
    Judge." _____











































    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    ____________________

    No. 94-1046

    DAVID TATRO,

    Plaintiff - Appellant,

    v.

    TIMOTHY KERVIN, ET AL.,

    Defendants - Appellees.

    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

    [Hon. William G. Young, U.S. District Judge] ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Torruella, Circuit Judge, _____________

    Campbell, Senior Circuit Judge, ____________________

    and Carter,* District Judge. ______________

    _____________________

    Sarah R. Wunsch, with whom Massachusetts Civil Liberties ________________ ______________________________
    Union Foundation and Chrystal Murray, were on brief for _________________ ________________
    appellant.
    Kevin S. McDermott, Assistant Corporation Counsel, with whom __________________
    Albert W. Wallis, Corporation Counsel, City of Boston Law __________________
    Department, was on brief for appellees.



    ____________________

    December 1, 1994
    ____________________
    ____________________

    * Of the District of Maine, sitting by designation.












    TORRUELLA, Circuit Judge. In this appeal, plaintiff- TORRUELLA, Circuit Judge. ______________

    appellant David Tatro seeks a new trial for his civil rights

    action against three Boston police officers on the ground that

    the verdict for the defendants was based on erroneous jury

    instructions. While we agree that the trial court erred in

    instructing the jury that plaintiffs had to prove that defendant

    police officers "clearly" lacked probable cause to arrest and

    "clearly" used excessive force in that arrest, we find the error

    to be prejudicial only as to part of the verdict, and harmless as

    to the rest. We therefore affirm in part and reverse in part.

    I. BACKGROUND I. BACKGROUND

    In September of 1992, Tatro brought suit against Boston

    Police Officers Timothy Kervin, Stephen O'Brien, and Stephen

    Chin, alleging that the officers arrested Tatro twice without

    probable cause, used excessive force in making one of the

    arrests, and interfered with Tatro's First Amendment rights, in

    violation of federal and Massachusetts civil rights laws, 42

    U.S.C. 1983, and Mass. Gen. L. ch. 12, 11H & I,

    respectively. Tatro also raised pendent state claims.

    The series of events that are the subject of this

    action occurred after police responded to complaints about a

    Halloween party on the night of October 31, and the early morning

    of November 1, 1989, at 27 Seattle Street in a neighborhood of

    Allston, Massachusetts. Either Officer Kervin or Officer O'Brien

    arrested Tatro on the sidewalk outside of the house on Seattle

    Street where the party was being held during an apparently


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    violent and chaotic effort to break up the festivities.

    Following Tatro's release from the police station a few hours

    later, Tatro either intentionally or accidentally knocked over

    Officer Chin and was arrested a second time. Tatro alleges that

    both arrests were made without probable cause and that the second

    arrest was made with excessive force.

    Tatro and the police officers presented two

    dramatically different versions of these events at trial.

    A. Tatro's Version A. Tatro's Version _______________

    Tatro testified that he was standing outside 27 Seattle

    Street where the party was held when he saw some Boston police

    officers arrive, enter the house, order everyone to leave, and

    then violently arrest the party's host after he questioned the

    officers' right to enter the house without a warrant. As more

    police officers arrived, Tatro claims he exited the yard in front

    of the house, walked out the front gate, and then stood on the

    sidewalk on the other side of the fence enclosing the yard.

    Tatro testified that many of the partygoers came into the yard

    and began asking the police officers what the problem was. Tatro

    then saw the officers hitting people with their nightsticks and

    flashlights. Tatro stated he was "horrified" and that he stayed

    to watch the scene because he felt it was his duty to witness the

    incident of police brutality. On cross-examination, Tatro

    characterized the scene as a "riot."

    According to Tatro, Officer Kervin suddenly approached

    Tatro and said, "Get the fuck out of here," at which point Tatro


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    claims he turned toward Kervin and said "I can't believe what is

    happening." Tatro testified that Kervin then grabbed him by the

    arms and said, "You didn't move fast enough." The police then

    put Tatro in handcuffs, placed him in a police cruiser, and drove

    him to the police station.

    After being held at the station for three hours, the

    police released Tatro. Subsequently, Tatro, several other

    partygoers who had been arrested, and their friends, congregated

    on the sidewalk outside the police station. Police officers then

    came out of the station and told them to leave. According to

    Tatro, he decided to walk home and, as he stepped off a curb, he

    accidentally walked into Officer Chin. Tatro claims he was

    looking down at the time because he had a vision disability and

    needed to watch his feet as he stepped off the curb. Officer

    Chin grabbed Tatro and then released him. Tatro asserts that

    Officer Kervin then tackled him from behind, ground Tatro's face

    into the pavement, grabbed him by the hair, pulled his arm way up

    behind his back, and said, "I've got you now, fucker." Officer

    Kervin then pulled Tatro to his feet, handcuffed him, and

    arrested him a second time.

    Tatro suffers from a hereditary eye disorder which

    renders him legally blind. He carries an ID card attesting to

    his eyesight condition. Tatro told Officers Kervin and Chin that

    he was legally blind and he had not seen Officer Chin before

    running into him. He repeatedly asked the officers to look in

    his wallet for the ID card that would prove his near blindness,


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    but the officers refused.

    Tatro was charged with assault and battery on four

    different police officers, disorderly conduct, and disturbing the

    peace. Tatro was also charged with assault and battery on

    Officer Chin outside the police station. All charges were

    ultimately dismissed.

    B. The Police Officers' Version B. The Police Officers' Version ____________________________

    The officers and their witnesses provided an entirely

    different account of the events surrounding Tatro's arrests.

    According to the police officers, they were originally dispatched

    to 27 Seattle Street in Allston in response to neighbors'

    complaints of noise from the party. Several officers testified

    that the partygoers were uncooperative and initiated physical

    contact with the officers, after which a riot broke out.

    Several officers and witnesses testified that Officers

    Kervin, O'Brien and some other police officers were trying to

    subdue and arrest another person when Tatro came from the

    sidewalk and struck one of the officers in the back. Tatro

    allegedly continued to strike several of the officers while they

    were handcuffing the other partygoer. Officer Kervin himself

    never said anything to Tatro and did not make the arrest of

    Tatro. Officer O'Brien testified that after securing the arrest

    of the other person, during which Tatro punched him, he grabbed

    Tatro and arrested him.

    As for the second arrest, the officers claimed Tatro

    deliberately knocked Officer Chin down from behind, after walking


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    directly toward Officer Chin. The officers testified that

    Officer Kervin then pulled Tatro off Officer Chin. Officer

    Kervin stated that he did not arrest Tatro nor initially take

    Tatro into custody at that point, rather his only action was to

    pull Tatro off of Officer Chin. The officers refused to look at

    the ID in Tatro's wallet showing that Tatro was legally blind

    because there was no doubt in their minds that Tatro deliberately

    and violently pushed Officer Chin.

    C. Jury Instructions C. Jury Instructions _________________

    At trial, the court gave a number of instructions to

    the jury which Tatro claims were erroneous. Among those

    instructions are the ones concerning whether the officers had

    probable cause to arrest Tatro and whether the officers used

    excessive force. In its preliminary instructions, the court told

    the jury that in order for Tatro to prove that the police

    officers arrested Tatro without probable cause, in violation of

    Tatro's civil rights:

    Tatro has to prove that it would be clear _____
    to the reasonable police officer, the
    reasonably well-trained police officer,
    that that reasonably well-trained police
    officer exercising reasonable, good
    judgment, would know that he didn't have
    probable cause to arrest this individual.
    (emphasis added).

    In the actual charge to the jury, the court stated:

    Now, even if there was not probable cause
    in order for there to be a constitutional
    violation, it must appear clearly to that _______
    reasonable police officer that no
    probable cause exists for the arrest.
    Police officers are not to be held to the
    standards of lawyers or judges in the

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    quiet of the courtroom. Police officers
    are out on the streets engaged in public
    affairs in the discharge of their duty.

    So, with respect to this first aspect of
    the federal civil rights claim, and it
    applies to both arrests, you must ask
    yourself whether Mr. Tatro has proved
    that clearly there was not probable cause _______
    for his arrest.

    . . .

    . . . that he was seized clearly without _______
    probable cause as judged through the eyes
    of a reasonable police officer.
    (emphasis added).

    With respect to the court's instructions on Tatro's

    claim of excessive force, the court stated before trial:

    [The police] don't have the right to use
    clearly more force, clearly more force _______ _______
    than is required under the circumstances
    to take the person into custody.
    Mr. Tatro says that's what the three
    officers did here; they used excessive
    force in accomplishing the arrest.

    So now on this claim, here's what
    Mr. Tatro has to prove. . . . [W]as the
    force so clearly excessive, again, that a _______
    reasonable police officer faced by the
    same or similar circumstances, would have
    known, would have known, allowing now for
    a range of judgment, about what's
    required in an unfolding situation, the
    reasonable police officer faced by that
    same situation would have known this
    force is clearly excessive. To do this, _______
    it's clearly too much force than what we _______
    need to take the person into custody.
    (emphasis added).

    In the final instructions, the court repeated that the police

    "could not use clearly excessive force, that is, clearly more _______ _______

    force than was justified under all the circumstances." (emphasis

    added).

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    II. ANALYSIS II. ANALYSIS

    A. Probable Cause and Excessive Force Instructions A. Probable Cause and Excessive Force Instructions _______________________________________________

    We review allegedly erroneous jury instructions de novo __ ____

    to determine if the instructions, taken as a whole, show a

    tendency to confuse or mislead the jury with respect to the

    applicable principles of law. Davet v. Maccarone, 973 F.2d 22, _____ _________

    26 (1st Cir. 1992); Aubin v. Fudala, 782 F.2d 280, 283 (1st Cir. _____ ______

    1983). An erroneous instruction will require a new trial only if

    the error was prejudicial, based on the record as a whole; we

    will not reverse a judgment if we find the error from the

    proffered instructions to be harmless. Davet, 973 F.2d at 26. _____

    The court's instructions on probable cause and

    excessive force were erroneous. In a civil rights action under

    1983, the plaintiff must prove by a preponderance of the evidence __________________________________

    that he or she was deprived of a right secured by the

    Constitution by a person acting under the color of state law.

    Pittsley v. Warish, 927 F.2d 3, 6 (1st Cir.), cert. denied, 112 ________ ______ ____ ______

    S. Ct. 226 (1991). In the present case, Tatro had to prove by a

    preponderance of the evidence that the police officers violated

    his Fourth Amendment rights by arresting him without probable

    cause, Santiago v. Fenton, 891 F.2d 373, 383 (1st Cir. 1989), and ________ ______

    by using excessive force in their second arrest of Tatro. Graham ______

    v. Connor, 490 U.S. 386 (1989). ______

    Initially, the court gave the appropriate instructions

    regarding the meaning of probable cause and excessive force. The

    court stated that "probable cause exists if the facts and


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    circumstances known to the officer are sufficient to warrant a

    reasonable police officer in believing that the suspect has or is

    committing a crime." See Santiago, 891 F.2d at 384; United ___ ________ ______

    States v. Figueroa, 818 F.2d 1020, 1023 (1st Cir. 1987). In the ______ ________

    instructions on excessive force, the court properly explained

    that the officers "could only arrest using the appropriate and

    reasonable degree of force under the circumstances of the case."

    See Graham v. Connor, 490 U.S. at 396; Gaudreault v. Municipality ___ ______ ______ __________ ____________

    of Salem, Mass., 923 F.2d 203, 205 (1st Cir. 1990), cert. denied, _______________ ____ ______

    500 U.S. 956 (1991). The court also quoted the Supreme Court's

    "calculus of reasonableness" from Graham v. Connor, which ______ ______

    includes consideration of a police officer's need to make split

    second decisions in situations that might involve potential

    threats to public safety, or that might require the officer to

    subdue a perpetrator of a serious or violent crime. Id. __

    The court then further instructed the jury that, in

    order to prove his case, Tatro had to establish that the

    elements, as described above, were "clearly" evident to a

    reasonable police officer. Indeed, the court explicitly told the

    jury that finding lack of probable cause to arrest, and the use

    of excessive force, was not sufficient to find for Tatro unless

    they found that the arrest was made clearly without probable _______

    cause, and clearly with excessive force. The court explained to _______

    Tatro's counsel upon counsel's objection that it was embellishing

    the traditional language because "I think this is how qualified

    immunity, if you will survives." The court added:


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    I don't think we put to the jury the
    issue of qualified immunity, but that
    concept survives. And I think it
    survives in this guise. It's not simply
    the question whether there was probable
    cause or not. It's, the question is
    whether the reasonable police officer
    would know that there was not probable
    cause and went ahead anyway and arrested
    him.

    The court responded similarly after Tatro's counsel objected to

    the "clearly with excessive force" instruction: "[T]his is how

    they get their benefit, if you will, of qualified immunity. It

    has to be clear to the officers that what they're doing is not

    authorized by the situation."

    It is not evident to us whether the court envisioned

    its instructions as a way to send some component of the qualified

    immunity defense to the jury, or merely as a way to effectively

    describe the "calculus of reasonableness" for the jury's benefit.

    Regardless of the court's reasons, the extra language may have

    erroneously misled the jury, and was not otherwise required by

    the facts or law of the case.

    The court's persistent use of "clearly without probable

    cause" and "clearly excessive" force was erroneous because it

    tended to mislead the jury into believing that Tatro faced a

    heightened burden of proof with respect to these elements of his

    claim under 1983. "Clear" has been defined as "[o]bvious

    beyond reasonable doubt," and "clear and convincing proof" has

    been described as "proof beyond a reasonable, i.e., a well-

    founded doubt" or else as "more than a preponderance but less

    than is required in a criminal case." Black's Law Dictionary 227 ______________________

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    (5th ed. 1979). The court correctly provided the jury with a

    description of the preponderance of the evidence standard and

    instructed them generally that this was Tatro's burden of proof.

    The repeated and emphasized use of "clearly" with respect to the

    probable cause and excessive force elements of Tatro's action,

    however, transformed Tatro's burden of proof for those elements

    into something that sounded like the stricter "clear and

    convincing" standard of proof used in certain fraud and breach of

    fiduciary duty actions. See e.g., Putnam Resources v. Pateman, ___ ____ _________________ _______

    958 F.2d 448, 468 n.22 (1st Cir. 1992); Burdett v. Miller, 957 _______ ______

    F.2d 1375, 1382 (7th Cir. 1992). Thus, instead of thinking they

    could find for Tatro if they determined it was more likely than

    not that a reasonable police officer would not have believed

    Tatro was committing an offense, the jury may have been misled

    into believing that it had to find by clear and convincing

    evidence that a reasonable officer would not have believed Tatro

    was committing an offense. This was error.

    If the court was placing some element of qualified

    immunity into the jury instructions, this was not the proper time

    or manner to do it. Qualified immunity, which is a question of

    law, is an issue that is appropriately decided by the court

    during the early stages of the proceedings and should not be

    decided by the jury. Hunter v. Bryant, 112 S. Ct. 534, 537 ______ ______

    (1991); Whiting v. Kirk, 960 F.2d 248, 250 (1st Cir. 1992); Lewis _______ ____ _____

    v. Kendrick, 944 F.2d 949, 953 (1st Cir. 1991); Hall v. Ochs, 817 ________ ____ ____

    F.2d 920, 925 (1st Cir. 1987); Finnegan v. Fountain, 915 F.2d ________ ________


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    817, 821 (2d Cir. 1990). The language of the court's

    instructions and the court's explanation for that language appear

    very similar to the standard for qualified immunity. Hunter v. ______

    Bryant, 112 S. Ct. at 536 (qualified immunity shields police ______

    officers from suit if "'a reasonable officer could have believed

    [plaintiff's arrest] to be lawful, in light of clearly

    established law and the information the [arresting] officers

    possessed'" or if the officers "'reasonably but mistakenly

    conclude that probable cause is present.'") (quoting Anderson v. ________

    Creighton, 483 U.S. 635, 641 (1987)); see also Rivera v. Murphy, _________ ________ ______ ______

    979 F.2d 259, 263 (1st Cir. 1992); Hall v. Ochs, 817 F.2d at 924; ____ ____

    Floyd v. Farrell, 765 F.2d 1, 5 (1st Cir. 1985). The police _____ _______

    officers did not raise a qualified immunity defense and both

    parties agree that, given the facts of the case, no qualified

    immunity issue exists. Under such circumstances, we see no

    reason why Tatro must prove, as an additional element, the

    absence of qualified immunity. _______

    In any event, if a court does feel obligated to give

    the defendants the benefit of qualified immunity at the final

    stage of the trial, or, more appropriately, if it needs to

    resolve factual issues related to qualified immunity, see Prokey ___ ______

    v. Watkins, 942 F.2d 67, 73-74 & n.7 (1st Cir. 1991) (noting that _______

    some factual disputes concerning qualified immunity may need to

    be resolved by the appropriate factfinder, although the ultimate

    issue of qualified immunity remains with the court), it must do

    so without using potentially misleading language like the


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    "clearly" language used in the present jury instructions.

    Similarly, if, as the police officers argue, the court

    was merely using the special language in its instructions to

    better explain and describe the calculus of reasonableness to the

    jury, and not to add additional elements of the offense or

    requirements of proof, the court did so in a way that tended to

    mislead the jury. As such, the instructions were erroneous.

    Although determining "reasonableness" is a fact-sensitive

    determination that would greatly benefit from some illustrative

    explanation, and although the jury must take into account the

    difficult situations in which police officers often find

    themselves, these considerations can be conveyed to the jury

    without possibly misleading them into thinking a heightened

    standard of proof applies to their deliberations. See Graham v. ___ ______

    Connor, 490 U.S. at 396 (providing helpful description of ______

    reasonableness without using "clearly" language).

    B. The Riot Statute Instructions B. The Riot Statute Instructions _____________________________

    Tatro also argues that a third instruction prejudiced

    him, because when taken together with the "clearly" language, the

    instructions would allow the jury to both believe Tatro's version

    of events as to the first arrest, and at the same time find for

    the police officers as to probable cause because of the

    misleading instructions on the standard of proof. This allegedly

    erroneous instruction involved the Massachusetts "riot statute,"






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    Mass. Gen. L. ch. 269, 1.1 The court instructed:

    [I]f a reasonable police officer would
    have probable cause to believe that he
    was facing a riot and Mr. Tatro refused
    to leave after a lawful order to
    disperse, then Mr. Tatro was liable to
    arrest.

    Over Tatro's vigorous objection, the court insisted on giving

    this instruction so that, under Tatro's version of the first

    arrest, the jury could determine whether Tatro violated the riot

    statute by refusing to leave the "riotous" party after Officer

    Kervin told him to "get out of here," thus giving Officer Kervin

    probable cause to arrest Tatro. Tatro argues that because the

    police officers explicitly asserted that they arrested Tatro

    because he assaulted them, the riot instruction did not apply to

    the facts of the case, and, anyway, would be unconstitutional if

    applied to Tatro's version of events. Analyzing the riot statute

    instructions standing alone, we disagree with both of these

    contentions, and address them separately.

    First, Tatro himself characterized the scene of his

    first arrest as a "riot," and stated that he did not comply when

    ____________________

    1 Mass. Gen. L. ch. 269 1 provides in pertinent part:

    If . . . ten or more persons, whether armed
    or not, are unlawfully, riotously, or
    tumultuously assembled in a city or town,
    . . . the police . . . shall go among the
    persons so assembled, . . . and in the name
    of the commonwealth command all persons so
    assembled immediately and peaceably to
    disperse; and if they do no thereupon
    immediately and peaceably disperse, each of
    said . . . officers shall . . . arrest[] such
    persons.

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    he was ordered by police officers to leave the scene. Tatro

    testified that he was arrested for "not leaving fast enough," and

    he encouraged the jury to disbelieve the police officers' version

    of the events. Contrary to Tatro's argument that "there is no

    evidence in the record upon which a jury could determine that

    Tatro was arrested for failing to leave the scene of a riot after

    receiving a lawful order to disperse," Tatro himself placed such

    evidence in the record, through his own testimony. If the jury

    believed Tatro's version of events, it could reasonably have

    found that Tatro was arrested for failing to comply with the

    officers' orders to disperse. We see no reason why the court

    could not properly invite the jury to find that, even according

    to Tatro's version of events, the officers may have had probable

    cause under the riot statute to arrest Tatro. Accordingly, we

    find that the court's decision sua sponte to issue the riot ___ ______

    statute instruction was not erroneous.

    Second, application of the riot statute to Tatro's

    version of events does not violate his First Amendment rights.

    In relating his version of the events, Tatro himself testified

    that he was arrested for "not moving fast enough," and not for

    any statements he allegedly made to Officer Kervin. In its

    instructions to the jury, the court specifically and thoroughly

    stated that even if Officer Kervin had probable cause to arrest _______

    Tatro, if the jury found that Officer Kervin's real reason for

    the arrest was to interfere with or prevent Tatro's statements,

    or otherwise "chill" his First Amendment rights, then Officer


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    Kervin would be liable. Heard together with the court's riot

    statute instructions, these charges allowed the jury to find

    probable cause under the riot statute based on Tatro's alleged

    failure to comply with the officers' orders to disperse, yet also

    allow the jury to find the officers liable if it found that the

    officers violated Tatro's First Amendment rights.2 Thus, these

    instructions were proper, and sufficient to prevent any possible

    misapplication of the riot statute by the jury.3

    C. Effect of Instructions Reviewed as a Whole C. Effect of Instructions Reviewed as a Whole __________________________________________

    Having found that the jury instructions regarding

    Tatro's burden of proof were erroneous, we must next determine if

    that error prejudiced Tatro's ability to obtain a fair trial or

    was merely harmless. Because the jury delivered separate

    verdicts as to each of the two arrests, we analyze the effect of

    the instructions on each arrest separately, in reverse

    chronological order.

    1. The second arrest outside the police station. 1. The second arrest outside the police station.

    The two dramatically conflicting versions of the events
    ____________________

    2 We reject Tatro's contention that the application of the riot
    statute to him raises overbreadth problems under the First
    Amendment. As we explained, the court's careful instructions
    delineate the riot statute's limits in justifying the officers'
    conduct. Thus, the instructions as a whole sufficiently prevent
    an unconstitutional interpretation or application of the statute.

    3 This analysis assumes arguendo, of course, that the jury ________
    believed Tatro's testimony and disbelieved the officers'
    testimony. If, on the other hand, the jury disbelieved Tatro and
    found that he actually assaulted the officers, then they did not
    believe that the events leading to the violation of the riot
    statute ever occurred. Thus, there would be no prejudice to Tatro
    from the instructions, and his riot statute and First Amendment
    arguments would become moot.

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    regarding the second arrest in front of the police station

    required the jury to ascribe to either one version or the other.

    If the jury believed that Tatro deliberately pushed Officer Chin

    before the second arrest, there was probable cause to arrest him,

    and the confusing jury instructions would have had no bearing on

    this inevitable finding. If, on the other hand, the jury

    believed Tatro that the second arrest was made after he

    accidentally bumped into Officer Chin, and after the officers

    refused to verify Tatro's eyesight condition, the lack of

    probable cause is undisputable, because Tatro did not

    deliberately push Officer Chin and the officers failed to

    ascertain the reason for the accidental contact as the

    Constitution requires them to do. See Sevigny v. Dicksey, 846 ___ _______ _______

    F.2d 953, 957 n.5 (4th Cir. 1988); BeVier v. Hucal, 806 F.2d 123, ______ _____

    128 (7th Cir. 1986). The jury was explicitly instructed of this

    Constitutional requirement, so if they did not believe the

    officers that Tatro deliberately pushed Officer Chin, there would

    be no basis to find probable cause to arrest, regardless of

    whether it was judged according to the preponderance of the

    evidence standard or erroneously through the clear and convincing

    standard.

    If the jury had believed Tatro, they would have arrived at a

    different verdict as to the second arrest, the erroneous

    instructions notwithstanding. Under these circumstances, the

    erroneous instructions are necessarily harmless and did not

    prejudice Tatro.


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    The diametrically opposed versions of Officer Kervin's

    alleged use of excessive force during the second arrest similarly

    rendered the effect of the erroneous instruction harmless as to

    Tatro's excessive force claim. Officer Kervin claimed he never

    arrested Tatro or took him into custody, let alone tackle Tatro,

    grind his face into the pavement, or grab him by the hair.

    Tatro's version, if believed, would have Kervin doing all these

    brutal acts without any justification whatsoever. The police ___

    officers admitted that Tatro did not resist arrest, fight back,

    or try to run away after he pushed Officer Chin. There was no

    middle ground in which the jury could have believed all or part

    of Tatro's version yet still rendered a verdict for the police

    officers. In sum, a heightened standard of proof would not have

    led to a mistaken verdict for the police officers, and thus Tatro

    did not suffer from prejudicial error regarding his claims as to

    the second arrest.

    2. The first arrest at 27 Seattle Street. 2. The first arrest at 27 Seattle Street.

    As noted above, Tatro contends that the riot statute

    instruction, taken together with the erroneous instructions on

    the standard of proof, unfairly prejudiced him, as it would allow

    the jury to both believe Tatro's version of events and still find

    for the police officers because of the erroneous heightened

    standard of proof. We agree.

    Although the riot statute instruction, standing alone,

    was proper, when taken together with the erroneous "clearly"

    language, the jury charge reviewed as a whole could well have


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    prejudiced the plaintiff as to the first arrest. Unlike the case

    of the second arrest, it is not altogether obvious that the jury

    necessarily believed the defendants regarding the first arrest.

    The jury could have believed all or part of Tatro's testimony,

    yet still found the defendants not liable because 1) the riot

    statute gave them probable cause to arrest, and 2) Tatro failed ___

    to meet the heightened burden of proof implied by the other

    erroneous instructions.

    Thus, it is impossible to conclude with any certainty,

    from either the evidence or the verdict itself, that the court's

    erroneous jury instructions were harmless as to the first arrest.

    For that reason, we find that the jury charge was reversible

    error, requiring a new trial as to Tatro's claims surrounding his

    first arrest.

    D. Other Jury Instructions D. Other Jury Instructions _______________________

    1. Tatro's First Amendment claim. 1. Tatro's First Amendment claim.

    Tatro alleged at trial that Officer Kervin arrested him

    the first time at least in part because of Tatro's statement, "I

    can't believe what is happening," in violation of Tatro's First

    Amendment right to freedom of speech. The court instructed the

    jury that to establish this claim, Tatro had to prove that he

    "would not have been arrested, but for the police officer's _______

    intent to interfere with Tatro's freedom of speech." (emphasis

    added). Tatro argues that this instruction was erroneous because

    all that Tatro needs to prove is that Tatro's speech entered into

    the officer's decision to make the arrest, at which point the


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    burden shifts to the police officer to prove that he would have

    arrested Tatro even in the absence of Tatro's speech.4

    The plaintiff's standard of proof in a 1983 action

    alleging First Amendment violations by a police officer has never

    been explicitly addressed by this circuit. Other circuits

    considering the matter, however, have adopted standards from the

    employment discrimination context. See, e.g., Sloman v. Tadlock, ___ ____ ______ _______

    21 F.3d 1462, 1471 (9th Cir. 1994); Mozzochi v. Borden, 959 F.2d ________ ______

    1174, 1179 (2d Cir. 1992). This Circuit has consistently applied

    a "but for" standard in mixed motive employment discrimination

    cases, see, e.g., Loeb v. Textron, Inc., 600 F.2d 1003, 1019 (1st ___ ____ ____ _____________

    Cir. 1979), and we see no reason why this standard should not

    also apply here.

    Accordingly, the district court's "but for"

    instructions to the jury were not erroneous. We note, however,

    that a "but for" instruction could be misunderstood to imply that

    a plaintiff must show sole causation or motive. This would be ____

    incorrect. As in the employment discrimination context, the

    plaintiff need not prove that the defendant's sole motive was to ____

    chill the plaintiff's protected expression. The plaintiff need

    only show that the officer's intent or desire to curb the

    ____________________

    4 Tatro cites Mt. Healthy City Sch. Dist. Bd. of Educ. v. Doyle, ________________________________________ _____
    429 U.S. 274, 287 (1977) as support for applying this burden-
    shifting analysis, but acknowledges that it is "questionable"
    whether the Mt. Healthy test, developed for mixed motive ____________
    discrimination or retaliatory termination cases, applies in the
    context of this action. Because it is unnecessary in light of
    our analysis, infra, we decline to decide here whether the Mt. _____ ___
    Healthy burden-shifting test applies. _______

    -20-












    expression was the determining or motivating factor in making the ___________ __________

    arrest, in the sense that the officer would not have made the

    arrest "but for" that determining factor. Trial courts should

    clarify their "but for" standard to this effect when charging a

    jury.5

    2. Tatro's state civil rights claim. 2. Tatro's state civil rights claim.

    Tatro also alleges that the court misled the jury by

    instructing them that, "as a general matter [] verbal abuse,

    specifically, being cursed at by a police officer, does not

    constitute a violation of anyone's civil rights." According to

    Tatro, this instruction was error because his case contains a

    claim under the Massachusetts Civil Rights Act, Mass. Gen. L. ch.

    12, 11H and I, which provides for a cause of action if the

    plaintiff's exercise of constitutional rights is interfered with

    by "threats, intimidation or coercion."

    In its charge to the jury regarding the state civil

    rights claim, however, the court carefully delineated the

    statute's requirements:

    [T]he denial of . . . Mr. Tatro's civil
    rights by, it is alleged, Mr. Kervin, has
    to be accomplished by threats, coercion,
    or intimidation. A threat simply means
    saying or gesturing, in effect, if you
    don't do this, then something will happen
    to you. Coercion is making someone do
    something they are unwilling to do.
    ____________________

    5 Because we have already determined that the district court
    committed reversible error as to the other charges, it is
    unnecessary to analyze whether the jury in this case did indeed
    misunderstand the court's "but for" instructions. On remand,
    however, the court should clarify its instructions in accordance
    with our explanation.

    -21-












    Intimidation is scaring them into doing
    something or refraining from doing
    something that otherwise they would do.
    If you find threats, coercion, or
    intimidation, . . . then he has proved a
    violation of the Massachusets civil
    rights statute.

    Taken together, all these instructions on the civil rights

    statute are a thorough and appropriate explanation to the jury of

    the plaintiff's burden. We do not believe that the jury could

    have been misled into thinking that being cursed at by a police

    officer could never constitute threat or intimidation. The _____

    charges read as a whole merely state, accurately, that a curse

    does not violate any civil rights unless it rises to the level of ______

    a threat or an attempt to intimidate. Thus, the court's

    statement was proper.

    III. CONCLUSION III. CONCLUSION

    For the foregoing reasons, the verdict is therefore

    affirmed as to the plaintiff's second arrest, and reversed and _________________________________________________________________

    remanded for new trial only as to the plaintiff's first arrest. ______________________________________________________________




















    -22-






Document Info

Docket Number: 94-1046

Filed Date: 12/1/1994

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 3/3/2016

Authorities (22)

Frank L. LOEB, Plaintiff, v. TEXTRON, INC., Et Al., ... , 600 F.2d 1003 ( 1979 )

Emma Rivera v. Paul Murphy , 979 F.2d 259 ( 1992 )

Putnam Resources v. Ronald M. Pateman, Ronald M. Pateman v. ... , 958 F.2d 448 ( 1992 )

Barry Eric Floyd v. Richard J. Farrell, Jr., Individually ... , 765 F.2d 1 ( 1985 )

Danielle J. Pittsley v. Sergeant Philip Warish , 927 F.2d 3 ( 1991 )

Steven Whiting v. George I. Kirk, Jr., Robert S. Choquette, ... , 960 F.2d 248 ( 1992 )

Charles Mozzochi v. Richard S. Borden, Jr., Paul J. Gibbons,... , 959 F.2d 1174 ( 1992 )

Bancroft Dudley Hall v. Frederick J. Ochs, Frederick J. ... , 817 F.2d 920 ( 1987 )

United States v. Raul Casiano Figueroa , 818 F.2d 1020 ( 1987 )

Hector Santiago v. Paul J. Fenton, Etc. , 891 F.2d 373 ( 1989 )

gloria-prokey-v-george-watkins-scott-cataldi-roderick-beaulieu-gloria , 942 F.2d 67 ( 1991 )

Richard F. Davet v. Enrico MacCarone , 973 F.2d 22 ( 1992 )

Robert A. Gaudreault v. Municipality of Salem, Massachusetts , 923 F.2d 203 ( 1990 )

lionel-aubin-v-stanley-fudala-appeal-of-town-of-bedford-and-richard , 782 F.2d 280 ( 1983 )

Diana Pepper Sevigny v. Andrew F. Dicksey, Individually, ... , 846 F.2d 953 ( 1988 )

Robert Bevier and Annette Bevier v. Steven Hucal , 806 F.2d 123 ( 1986 )

edward-sloman-v-philip-tadlock-david-allen-roger-douglas-pat-sardella-aka , 21 F.3d 1462 ( 1994 )

Patricia Burdett v. Robert S. Miller , 957 F.2d 1375 ( 1992 )

Mt. Healthy City School District Board of Education v. Doyle , 97 S. Ct. 568 ( 1977 )

Anderson v. Creighton , 107 S. Ct. 3034 ( 1987 )

View All Authorities »