Topp v. Wolkowski ( 1993 )


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    June 16, 1993 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    ____________________


    No. 92-2468

    LEE J. TOPP,

    Plaintiff, Appellee,

    v.

    THOMAS J. WOLKOWSKI
    and THOMAS J. LOMBARDI,

    Defendants, Appellants.
    __________

    ERRATA SHEET

    Please make the following corrections in the opinion in the above
    case released on June 3, 1993:

    Page 4, line 2: delete all extra spaces.

    Page 5, line 17: insert the word "charge" following the word
    "conduct".








































    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

    ____________________


    No. 92-2468

    LEE J. TOPP,

    Plaintiff, Appellee,

    v.

    THOMAS J. WOLKOWSKI
    and THOMAS J. LOMBARDI,

    Defendants, Appellants.


    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM AN ORDER OF THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE


    [Hon. Dickran M. Tevrizian,* U.S. District Judge]
    ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Boudin, Circuit Judge,
    _____________
    Coffin and Oakes,** Senior Circuit Judges.
    _____________________
    ____________________

    Claire L. Gregory, Assistant Attorney General, with whom Jeffrey
    _________________ _______
    R. Howard, Attorney General, and Robert E. Dunn, Jr., Assistant
    __________ _____________________
    Commissioner, New Hampshire Department of Safety, were on brief for
    appellants.
    Lynn D. Morse for appellee.
    _____________

    ____________________

    June 3, 1993
    ____________________

    _____________________

    * Of the District of Central California, sitting by designation.
    **Of the Second Circuit, sitting by designation.



















    OAKES, Senior Circuit Judge. New Hampshire State
    ____________________

    Troopers Thomas J. Lombardi and Thomas J. Wolkowski appeal

    from a judgment of the District Court for the District of

    New Hampshire, Dickran Tevrizian, Judge1, denying their
    _____

    motion for summary judgment in this 42 U.S.C. 1983 (1988)

    action brought by Lee J. Topp. Topp's complaint alleged

    that Lombardi and Wolkowski violated Topp's civil rights and

    committed a variety of common law torts against him when

    they arrested him for making an illegal lane change on an

    interstate highway. Neither Lombardi nor Wolkowski actually

    saw Topp make the lane change. They were radioed to pull

    over Topp's car by another state trooper, David Benoit, who

    did see the lane change.

    The district court concluded that Lombardi and

    Wolkowski did not have qualified immunity to make an arrest

    on the basis of another officer's probable cause

    determination, since a New Hampshire statute bars troopers

    from making arrests for traffic violations not committed in

    their "presence." N.H. Rev. Stat. Ann. 594:10 I(a)

    (1986). We conclude that the officers violated no clearly

    established federal or state standards in arresting Topp,

    ____________________

    1Judge Tevrizian, a District Judge of the Central District
    of California, was designated to sit in the District of New
    Hampshire.

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    particularly in light of state case law interpreting the

    "presence" requirement as permitting any member of a team of

    officers to make an arrest for an offense seen by another

    member of the team. Consequently, we reverse the denial of

    summary judgment.





    BACKGROUND
    __________

    Topp filed this 42 U.S.C. 1983 action after

    Lombardi and Wolkowski arrested him for making an illegal

    lane change on Interstate 95, southbound near Portsmouth.

    The officers were part of a detail; Officer Benoit,

    stationed one-quarter mile north of Lombardi, Wolkowski and

    two others, spotted traffic violators and signalled to the

    other officers which cars to pull over. At oral argument,

    the New Hampshire Assistant Attorney General candidly

    described this setup as a "speed trap."

    According to the state troopers, Benoit saw Topp

    make a sudden lane change into the fastest of the four

    lanes, forcing another car in the fourth lane into the high-

    speed breakdown lane. Topp agrees that he made a sudden,

    unsignalled lane change, but says that he did so only as an

    emergency measure to avoid hitting a car that had braked


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    suddenly in front of him. Topp also agrees that Benoit

    radioed to Lombardi to stop Topp's car. Lombardi did so,

    and Benoit, who had watched Topp's car as it travelled to

    Lombardi's position, signalled to Lombardi that he had

    stopped the right car.

    Topp, however, refused to take the ticket without

    talking to the officer who had seen his lane change.

    Lombardi radioed Benoit for more details, and Benoit told

    him that Topp had made a sudden, unsignalled lane change,

    forcing another car into the high-speed breakdown lane and

    "nearly caus[ing] an accident." Topp agrees that Benoit

    conveyed this version of events to Lombardi, though he

    contends that this was not what happened, and that Benoit

    therefore could not have seen it happen. In any event,

    Lombardi told Topp that he could challenge the ticket in

    court, not on the highway, and that Officer Benoit would not

    come to speak with him directly.

    In the face of Topp's alleged continuing refusal

    to take the ticket or to leave the scene,2 Lombardi told

    ____________________

    2The actions of both Topp and the officers after Topp's
    initial refusal to take the ticket are the subject of a
    factual dispute. We need not -- and, indeed, may not --
    resolve this dispute. The significant fact for this
    interlocutory appeal is that Topp made, and was seen making,
    a sudden, unsignalled lane change. There is no dispute on
    this point.

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    Topp that if he did not take the ticket, he would be

    arrested, and then that he was under arrest. Seeing the

    commotion, Lombardi's superior officer, Sergeant Wolkowski,

    came up to the car. Lombardi explained that Topp would not

    take the ticket. After further arguments, Wolkowski also

    told Topp that he was under arrest. Topp then allegedly

    started his car and moved half a car length down the road.

    Wolkowski leaned in to the open convertible, turned the car

    off, opened the door, and, when Topp would not get out,

    pulled Topp from his car. Wolkowski allegedly directed Topp

    to the rear of his car, holding one of Topp's wrists high

    behind his back, and then pushed Topp's head onto the trunk

    of the car twice. Lombardi then handcuffed Topp. Topp was

    charged not only with the illegal lane change, but also with

    disorderly conduct and resisting arrest.

    The charges were later dismissed: the disorderly

    conduct on the theory that the underlying statute had been

    found unconstitutional in a case involving protestors

    against the Seabrook Nuclear Power Plant; the other charges

    because the Portsmouth District Court found that the

    complaints had not been properly sworn.

    Topp then filed this action, naming officers

    Lombardi and Wolkowski as defendants in both their


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    individual and official capacities and charging due process

    and unspecified equal protection violations. The complaint

    also raised state common law claims of assault, false

    arrest, false imprisonment, and malicious prosecution.3

    Topp, who was represented by counsel, sought compensatory

    and punitive damages of $800,000 for psychological harm and

    resultant business losses. Topp alleged that officers

    Lombardi and Wolkowski had had no probable cause to arrest

    him, because they had not seen the lane change themselves

    and because the lane change was justified. The officers

    moved for summary judgment on all claims except the assault

    conduct. The district court dismissed the claims against

    the officers in their official capacity, as barred by the

    Eleventh Amendment; dismissed the equal protection claim for

    failure to state a claim; and dismissed the claims of

    malicious prosecution on grounds of absolute prosecutorial

    immunity. The court denied summary judgment on the other

    claims on the theory that there was a dispute of fact as to

    whether the officers had probable cause to arrest, and that

    the officers did not have qualified immunity.


    ____________________

    3The complaint did not, however, raise a claim of invasion
    of privacy from the officer's reaching into Topp's vehicle,
    nor could it. Harbulak v. County of Suffolk, 654 F.2d 194
    _____________________________
    (2d Cir. 1981).

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    The officers then filed this interlocutory appeal

    of the ruling on qualified immunity.





    DISCUSSION
    __________

    As a preliminary matter, we note that, although

    interlocutory, the appeal is proper. This court will hear

    interlocutory appeals of denials of motions for summary

    judgment on grounds of absolute or qualified immunity.

    Floyd v. Farrell, 765 F.2d 1, 2-3 (1st Cir. 1985).
    ________________

    The only question before us is whether the motion

    for summary judgment on grounds of qualified immunity should

    have been granted. In general, the doctrine of qualified

    immunity provides that "government officials performing

    discretionary functions . . . are shielded from liability

    for civil damages insofar as their conduct does not violate

    clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of

    which a reasonable person would have known." Harlow v.
    __________

    Fitzgerald, 457 U.S. 800, 818 (1982). See also Anderson v.
    __________ ________ ___________

    Creighton, 483 U.S. 635, 640 (1987) ("The contours of the
    _________

    right must be sufficiently clear that a reasonable official

    would understand that what he is doing violates that

    right."); Malley v. Briggs, 475 U.S. 335, 341 (1986)
    __________________


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    (qualified immunity protects "all but the plainly

    incompetent or those who knowingly violate the law"). In

    cases applying this standard to police arrests in this

    circuit, an arrest challenged as unsupported by probable

    cause is deemed "'objectively reasonable'" unless "there

    clearly was no probable cause at the time the arrest was
    _______

    made." Floyd v. Farrell, 765 F.2d 1, 5 (1st Cir. 1985).
    ________________

    The undisputed facts demonstrate that Lombardi and

    Wolkowski could easily have believed that they had probable

    cause to believe Topp had committed a traffic violation.

    Topp agrees that the arresting officers acted on the basis

    of Officer Benoit's statement that he had just seen Topp

    force another car off the road in the course of making a

    sudden, unsignalled lane change. Topp concedes that he made

    the lane change without signalling. All agree that Benoit

    described Topp's white Chrysler convertible to Lombardi and

    confirmed that Lombardi had stopped the right car.

    The crux of Topp's case is his contention that

    Officers Lombardi and Wolkowski had no authority to arrest

    him because they did not themselves see him make the

    allegedly illegal lane change. Topp claims that, under New

    Hampshire law, probable cause to believe he had made an

    improper lane change is not enough. In New Hampshire, he


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    says, an officer cannot make a warrantless arrest for a

    violation, such as an improper lane change, unless the

    officer "has probable cause to believe that the person to be

    arrested has committed a . . . violation in his presence."

    N.H. Rev. Stat. Ann. 594:10. Thus, Topp claims that the

    troopers violated New Hampshire's "presence" requirement,

    and that this violation raises a federal civil rights claim

    as well.

    However, New Hampshire case law interpreting this

    provision quite strongly suggests that where one member of a

    law enforcement team has seen the violation, any member of

    the team can make the arrest. State v. Standish, 116 N.H.
    __________________

    483, 363 A.2d 404 (1976) (driving under the influence;

    vehicle was inoperable by time arresting officer arrived),

    citing State v. Cook, 399 P.2d 835 (Kan. 1965) (arresting
    ______ ______________

    officer received information from airplane tracking highway

    speeds). Topp attempts to distinguish Standish, since the
    ________

    arresting officer in that case arguably had independent

    probable cause to believe that the offense had occurred

    (Standish was drunk, in his car, and crashed against a tree,

    enough to suggest to the arresting officer that he had

    driven the car into the tree). However, the language of the

    case is more sweeping than that. The Standish court
    ________


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    justified its result not by arguing that the arresting

    officer had independent probable cause to arrest, but by

    relying on the concept of team arrests and on case law in

    other states, including the Cook case. These cases
    ____

    interpret similar statutes setting forth "presence"

    requirements for misdemeanor arrests as permitting arrests

    to be made by any member of a team of officers so long as

    one of the officers was "present."

    Furthermore, the officers in this case were using

    routine procedures. It cannot have been clear to them, in

    light of established practice and the supportive case law,

    that the procedure of using one officer to spot violators

    and others to effect the actual arrests, with confirmation

    that the correct vehicle was stopped, was inconsistent with

    the statute. Thus, even assuming that 1983 requires

    officers to comply with the requirements of a state statute

    defining probable cause more narrowly than the federal

    Constitution requires, the standard is met because the

    officers were not clearly wrong in believing that they were

    acting properly. In light of case law and established

    practice, their interpretation of the "presence" requirement

    of the New Hampshire misdemeanor arrest statute was

    reasonable.


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    CONCLUSION
    __________

    Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the

    district court, insofar as it denied the officers' motion

    for summary judgment on grounds of qualified immunity.








































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