Abraham v. Nagle ( 1997 )


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    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    ____________________

    No. 96-1949
    ABIODUN ABRAHAM and HENRY AJAO,

    Plaintiffs, Appellees,
    v.

    JOSEPH NAGLE,
    Defendant, Appellant.

    ____________________
    No. 96-2008

    ABIODUN ABRAHAM and HENRY AJAO,
    Plaintiffs, Appellants,

    v.
    JOSEPH NAGLE, ET AL.,

    Defendants, Appellees.
    __________

    PERRY ROY, ET AL.,
    Defendants, Appellees.

    ____________________
    APPEALS FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
    [Hon. Nancy J. Gertner, U.S. District Judge] ___________________

    ____________________
    Before

    Torruella, Chief Judge, ___________
    Boudin and Lynch, Circuit Judges. ______________

    ____________________

    Susan M. Weise, Chief of Litigation, City of Boston Law _________________
    Department, with whom Merita A. Hopkins, Corporation Counsel, was on _________________
    brief for defendants.
    George C. Deptula, with whom George C. Deptula, P.C. was on __________________ _________________________
    consolidated brief for plaintiffs.

    ____________________

    June 9, 1997
    ____________________















    BOUDIN, Circuit Judge. Abiodun Abraham and Henry Ajao ______________

    sued several police officers and the City of Boston for false

    arrest and for other alleged wrongs. During trial, the

    district judge directed a verdict in favor of Ajao on his

    false arrest claim against the defendant officer Joseph

    Nagle; the jury found in favor of the defendants on all other

    claims. Before us are cross-appeals by the plaintiffs and by

    Nagle.

    Our main concern is with the directed verdict and, for

    that purpose alone, we set forth the evidence in the light

    most favorable to Nagle. Fashion House, Inc. v. K mart _____________________ ______

    Corp., 892 F.2d 1076, 1088 (1st Cir. 1989). On August 18, _____

    1990, at about 11 p.m., the plaintiffs, both black immigrants

    from Nigeria, arrived with three white women at the Venus de

    Milo nightclub in Boston. After waiting in line for several

    minutes, the group reached the club entrance. The three

    women were admitted, but the plaintiffs were not.

    The bouncer told Abraham that he could not enter the

    club because he was wearing jeans and because Abraham and

    Ajao were "a little intoxicated." The plaintiffs said that

    other people wearing jeans were being admitted and that the

    real reason for excluding them was their race. When Abraham

    continued to protest, a club employee summoned Nagle, a

    Boston police officer who was "on detail" at another

    establishment down the block.



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    Nagle talked with the plaintiffs for 15 to 20 minutes,

    telling them that the club was not going to admit them and

    that they should leave; he says that the plaintiffs never

    told him of the alleged discrimination. During the

    discussion, Abraham became increasingly agitated, continued

    to protest loudly, and at one point hit or pushed Nagle in

    the chest. Nagle then arrested Abraham for assault and

    battery on a police officer.

    Nagle sought to handcuff Abraham but the latter

    struggled free. Nagle radioed for help and was soon joined

    by officer Thomas Boyle. Together, Nagle and Boyle

    handcuffed Abraham and tried to bring him to Boyle's cruiser,

    which was double-parked in the street. Abraham resisted by

    going limp. As Nagle and Boyle sought to move Abraham to the

    car, Ajao circled the officers and yelled, "why are you doing

    this to my friend," "this isn't South Africa, you're white

    racist cops."

    According to Boyle, Ajao was "trying to prevent us from

    getting to the police car." At one point Boyle said that he

    "had to actually push [Ajao] out of my way" as the officers

    wrestled with Abraham. Several times the officers told Ajao

    to "get away." Eventually, with Ajao still present, the

    officers pushed Abraham into the back seat of the car; he

    then prevented the door from closing by kicking at it, but





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    the officers forced it closed. By this time a crowd of 20 or

    so had gathered to watch.

    In the meantime, as Abraham continued to yell from the

    cruiser, Ajao circled it and came up behind the left rear

    quarter of the car. Ajao was told: "Police, leave, get away

    from the cruiser"; Nagle later testified that he had feared

    that Ajao might try to open the car door and release Abraham.

    Ajao failed to move. Nagle then arrested Ajao, who in turn

    struggled with Nagle, Boyle and a third officer, once kicking

    Nagle in the mid-section, before being restrained.

    In due course, Abraham and Ajao were both charged with

    assault and battery and disorderly conduct. Mass. Gen. Laws

    ch. 265, 13D; id. ch. 272, 53. They were tried in state ___

    court in November 1990 and acquitted. In February 1993, they

    in turn brought suit in state court against Nagle and other

    police officers, and the city, charging the defendants with

    false arrest under 42 U.S.C. 1983 and state law and with

    various other wrongs.1 The defendants removed the action to

    federal court and, following discovery, trial began in March

    1995.

    After all of the evidence was taken, the district court

    granted Ajao's motion for a directed verdict in his favor


    ____________________

    1The other claims, some of which were dropped prior to
    or during trial, charged the defendants with false
    imprisonment, racial discrimination, violation of free speech
    rights, assault and battery, and use of excessive force.

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    against Nagle, see Fed. R. Civ. P. 50(a); in an oral ruling, ___

    the trial judge declared that Nagle was liable under both

    federal and state law for falsely arresting Ajao in violation

    of the latter's First and Fourth Amendment rights. The

    court's primary rationale, as we read the transcript, was

    that (in the district judge's view) Ajao's conduct prior to

    his arrest did not "rise to the level of disorderly conduct .

    . . ." The balance of the case was submitted to the jury.

    By responses to special interrogatories, the jury fixed

    Ajao's damages at $8,500 to vindicate his "rights against

    false arrest," but made no separate award for violation of

    free speech rights. On all of the plaintiffs' remaining

    claims, the jury found against the plaintiffs and in favor of

    the defendants. Thereafter, the district court awarded Ajao

    attorney's fees of $24,858.50. Nagle now appeals from the

    directed verdict against him. The plaintiffs also appeal,

    urging that they are entitled to a new trial on their

    unsuccessful claims, to an injunction, and to increased

    attorney's fees. We begin with Nagle's appeal.

    On review of a directed verdict, we take the evidence

    most favorably to the losing party and ask de novo whether a _______

    reasonable jury had inevitably to decide in favor of the

    victor. Smith v. F.W. Morse & Co., 76 F.3d 413, 425 (1st _____ _________________

    Cir. 1996). Here, putting aside some loose ends, the central

    question is whether Nagle at the time of the arrest had



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    probable cause to believe that Ajao had committed the offense

    of disorderly conduct. If so, this largely defeats the false

    arrest claim under both federal and state law. Logue v. _____

    Dore, 103 F.3d 1040, 1044 (1st Cir. 1997); see Commonwealth ____ ___ ____________

    v. Grise, 496 N.E.2d 162, 163 (Mass. 1986). _____

    Of course, it would be much easier to conclude that

    Nagle, on his own version of events, had probable cause to

    charge Ajao with assault and battery: Nagle said that Ajao

    kicked him. But the kick occurred after Ajao's arrest; prior _____

    to the arrest, the only pertinent charge was disorderly

    conduct. We reserve for another day various issues that

    would arise if the original arrest were unjustified but

    resistance to it provided grounds for a valid charge.

    Compare Groman v. Township of Manalapan, 47 F.3d 628, 635 (3d _______ ______ _____________________

    Cir. 1995), with United States v. Dawdy, 46 F.3d 1427, 1430- ____ _____________ _____

    31 (8th Cir.), cert. denied, 116 S. Ct. 195 (1995). ____________

    In defining disorderly conduct, Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 272,

    53 provides for the punishment, inter alia, of "idle and __________

    disorderly persons." In 1967, the Supreme Judicial Court

    rejected a challenge that this provision was

    unconstitutionally vague by interpreting it to incorporate

    the Model Penal Code's definition of disorderly conduct.

    Alegata v. Commonwealth, 231 N.E.2d 201, 211 (Mass. 1967). _______ ____________

    That definition states:

    A person is guilty of disorderly conduct if, with
    purpose to cause public inconvenience, annoyance or


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    alarm, or recklessly creating a risk thereof, he:
    (a) engages in fighting or threatening, or in
    violent or tumultuous behavior; or (b) makes
    unreasonable noise or offensively coarse utterance,
    gesture or display, or addresses abusive language
    to any person present, or (c) creates a hazardous
    or physically offensive condition by any act which
    serves no legitimate purpose of the actor.

    Id. (quoting ALI, Model Penal Code 250.2 (Proposed Official ___ _________________

    Draft 1962)).

    Several years later, the Supreme Judicial Court struck

    down subsection (b) of this definition as unconstitutionally

    overbroad. Commonwealth v. A Juvenile, 334 N.E.2d 617, 622 ____________ __________

    (Mass. 1975). And to avoid First Amendment concerns, the court

    ruled that the remaining subsections (a) and (c) must be

    construed to cover only conduct, not activities which involve the

    "lawful exercise of a First Amendment right." Id. at 628; see ___ ___

    also Commonwealth v. LePore, 666 N.E.2d 152, 155 (Mass. App. Ct.) ____ ____________ ______

    ("To be disorderly within the sense of the statute, the conduct

    must disturb through acts other than speech . . . ."), review ______

    denied, 668 N.E.2d 356 (Mass. 1996). ______

    Nagle testified that he arrested Ajao under subsection

    (c), not subsection (a), and we doubt that Ajao's conduct prior _____

    to his arrest would support a charge under subsection (a). Thus,

    the question for us is whether a reasonable jury could have found

    that Nagle had probable cause to believe that Ajao had violated

    subsection (c) by "creat[ing] a hazardous . . . condition by any

    act which serves no legitimate purpose of the actor." We think




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    that a reasonable jury, if it accepted the defense version of

    events, could have so found.

    An arrest of a struggling defendant--here, Abraham--is a

    serious business. Even without a gathering crowd and traffic

    blocked by a police cruiser, there is a potential for serious

    violence and of injury both to the suspect and to the police.

    Yet, assuming the truth of the defense evidence, Ajao--despite

    repeated requests to get out of the way--circled the officers

    while shouting, at least once got directly in their way, and then

    refused to move away from the cruiser.

    Such behavior can fairly be taken to fall directly within

    the literal language of subsection (c): creating "a hazardous . .

    . condition" by acts "which serve[] no legitimate purpose of the

    actor." Indeed, a number of Massachusetts cases have upheld

    disorderly conduct arrests where a refusal to obey police orders

    created a safety threat. See Commonwealth v. Mulero, 650 N.E.2d ___ ____________ ______

    360, 363 (Mass. App. Ct.), review denied, 652 N.E.2d 145 (Mass. _____________

    1995); Commonwealth v. Bosk, 556 N.E.2d 1055, 1058 (Mass. App. ____________ ____

    Ct. 1990); Commonwealth v. Carson, 411 N.E.2d 1337, 1338 (Mass. ____________ ______

    App. Ct. 1980).

    Literal language is not the full story. The state's

    highest court has glossed the statute not to apply wherever the

    activities are themselves the "lawful exercise of a First

    Amendment right." A Juvenile, 334 N.E.2d at 628. And Ajao had a __________

    free-speech right to protest the arrest of his companion, even if



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    this distressed or annoyed the police. But by the same token,

    "the mere fact that the conduct of the defendant was accompanied

    by speech does not preclude a conviction" under the disorderly

    conduct law. Carson, 411 N.E.2d at 1337. ______

    We have very little difficulty in separating Ajao's

    protected speech from his physical interference with two

    policemen struggling to arrest and detain a third person, which

    is not protected. Indeed, in Colten v. Kentucky, 407 U.S. 104, ______ ________

    109 (1972), the Supreme Court upheld a conviction for far less

    disruptive conduct, observing that "Colten's conduct in refusing

    to move on after being directed to do so" was not protect by the

    First Amendment. See also City of Houston v. Hill, 482 U.S. 451, ________ _______________ ____

    463 n.11 (1987).

    In some cases, peaceful demonstration and protected

    expression may appear to merge. Possibly, this may explain

    Commonwealth v. Feigenbaum, 536 N.E.2d 325, 328 (Mass. 1989), ____________ __________

    where the state court held that the disorderly conduct statute

    did not extend to the blocking of traffic in the course of a

    peaceful political rally because the defendant's purpose was

    legitimate. But Ajao's alleged conduct in the present case--

    disrupting a police attempt to arrest a struggling companion--

    seems to us both more dangerous and less legitimate.









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    Further, even if Feigenbaum were given its most extreme __________

    reading,2 making a good purpose a complete defense, it would be

    up to a jury to determine whether Ajao was acting to express

    protected speech or whether he also sought to interfere with the

    arrest. The latter aim could not be a legitimate purpose on any

    view of the matter. Yet a jury could infer, assuming it accepted

    the defense version of events, that Ajao was trying to frustrate

    the arrest by getting in the way or distracting the officers and

    not simply trying to convey his objections.

    In this case, the jury certainly did not have to accept

    the police version of the events. The plaintiffs gave a more

    benign account of their conduct and there were some

    contradictions in the defendants' own testimony. But it was the

    jury's province, after observing Nagle, the other officers, and

    the plaintiffs on the witness stand to decide whom the jurors

    believed. We simply disagree with the trial judge's conclusion

    that she was free to make that credibility determination. If the

    district judge thought that the credibility issues fell within

    her province, this was a mistaken view of the governing rule.

    See Smith, 76 F.3d at 425.3 ___ _____

    ____________________

    2At least two state court decisions after Feigenbaum __________
    suggest that an extreme reading is unwarranted and that a
    defendant can be liable for disorderly conduct even where his
    main objective is to protest police decisions. See Mulero, ___ ______
    650 N.E.2d at 363; Bosk, 556 N.E.2d at 1058. ____

    3Nagle points to the trial judge's comment (made in
    discussing jury instructions) that "I am basing my findings
    with respect to Mr. Ajao on my evaluations of the credibility

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    Three loose ends remain. One is the possibility that an

    arrest based on probable cause might still be unlawful if the

    police officer acted simply for the purpose of punishing

    protected speech. There is some law on this subject, compare _______

    Whren v. United States, 116 S. Ct. 1769, 1774 (1996), with Sloman _____ _____________ ____ ______

    v. Tadlock, 21 F.3d 1462, 1469 (9th Cir. 1994), but we need not _______

    pursue the issue here. Plaintiffs have not pointed to any direct

    evidence that Nagle acted out of an improper motive to suppress

    speech, and certainly nothing would remotely justify deciding

    that issue against him by a directed verdict.

    The second is the possibility, on remand, of a qualified

    immunity defense for Nagle. This defense, preserved in the

    district court, has been successfully invoked in this circuit

    where a police officer made a reasonable, if arguably mistaken,

    call on a close legal issue. E.g., Joyce v. Town of Tewksbury, ____ _____ _________________

    112 F.3d 19 (1st Cir. 1997); Veilleux v. Perschau, 101 F.3d 1, 3 ________ ________

    (1st Cir. 1996). We have ignored the issue here only because the

    city has chosen, for reasons not explained, to fight this appeal

    on the merits.

    Third, for the sake of completeness, we note that in 1995-

    -well after the incident in this case--Massachusetts enacted a

    separate "resisting arrest" statute that also covers situations

    in which the person charged prevented or attempted to prevent the


    ____________________

    of the witnesses as well as my evaluations of the sufficiency
    of the evidence . . . ."

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    arrest of another. Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 268, 32B. We need not

    consider whether Ajao could have been charged under this statute,

    which is narrower in focus but more severe in penalties than the

    disorderly conduct statute applied here. There is no indication

    that the adoption of the new statute was meant to eliminate or

    alter the availability of the disorderly conduct law as a less

    severe remedy for addressing disorderly interference with police

    activity.

    Turning now to the plaintiffs' appeal, we begin with their

    claim that the district court erred in denying them a new trial

    on their other claims which were rejected by the jury. The

    arguments are largely conventional ones turning on the weight of

    the evidence, the propriety of closing arguments, and possible

    confusion on the part of the jury evidenced by an inquiry made by

    the jury during its deliberations.

    The denial of a new trial motion under Fed R. Civ. P. 59

    is reviewed for abuse of discretion. Bogosian v. Mercedes-Benz ________ _____________

    of North America, Inc., 104 F.3d 472, 482 (1st Cir. 1997). __ ____________________

    Without describing the plaintiffs' arguments in detail, we find

    no abuse here in rejecting each of the new-trial grounds thus far

    mentioned. A potentially more serious claim is that the jury

    pool may have excluded minorities, but the plaintiffs have

    pointed to nothing in the record to support the charge or to show

    that it was even raised in the trial court.





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    The plaintiffs also object to the district court's failure

    to grant injunctive relief. The relief sought was to prevent the

    Boston police from continuing to use, at least without revision,

    a training bulletin that sets forth the Model Penal Code

    definition of disorderly conduct but fails to indicate that

    subsection (b) has been struck down by the Supreme Judicial

    Court. The city, which has not responded on this point, would be

    well advised to clarify the manual on its own.

    But the plaintiffs were not charged under subsection (b);

    in fact, Nagle testified that he had been taught that subsection

    (b) had been held invalid. Nor did the plaintiffs show that they

    faced any real threat of future injury, e.g., by threats to ____

    enforce subsection (b) against them in the future. City of Los ____________

    Angeles v. Lyons, 461 U.S. 95, 102 (1983). The district court, _______ _____

    exercising its equitable authority to grant or deny injunctive

    relief, certainly did not have to grant any here.

    To conclude, we vacate the judgment against Nagle on the ______

    false arrest claim and the now-mooted award of attorney's fees

    against him and otherwise affirm the judgment entered on the jury ______

    verdicts in favor of the defendants. The false arrest claim is

    remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. ________

    It is so ordered. _________________









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