Mario Diana v. Williard Oliphant , 441 F. App'x 76 ( 2011 )


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  •                                                               NOT PRECEDENTIAL
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    ____________
    No. 09-3360
    ____________
    MARIO J. DIANA
    v.
    WILLIARD OLIPHANT;
    CARMEN R. ALTAVILLA,
    Appellants
    ____________
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    (D.C. Civil No. 05-cv-02338)
    District Judge: Honorable A. Richard Caputo
    ____________
    Argued: January 11, 2011
    ____________
    Before: BARRY, VANASKIE and COWEN, Circuit Judges*
    (Opinion Filed: August 2, 2011)
    ____________
    OPINION
    ____________
    *
    The Honorable Anthony J. Scirica recused following oral argument; the panel was
    reconstituted to include the Honorable Robert E. Cowen.
    Joanna N. Reynolds, Esq. (Argued)
    Keli M. Neary, Esq.
    Office of Chief Counsel
    1800 Elmerton Avenue
    Harrisburg, PA 17110
    Counsel for Appellants
    Bart W. Holmes, Esq. (Argued)
    Owens Barcavage & McInroy
    2595 Interstate Drive
    Suite 101
    Harrisburg, PA 17110
    Don A. Bailey, Esq.
    4311 North 6th Street
    Harrisburg, PA 17110
    Counsel for Appellee
    BARRY, Circuit Judge
    Lieutenant Willard Oliphant and Captain Carmen Altavilla, both of the
    Pennsylvania State Police, appeal from a post-trial order of the District Court denying
    their motion for judgment as a matter of law or for a new trial, and from an order
    awarding attorneys’ fees to Pennsylvania State Police Trooper Mario Diana, the plaintiff
    in the action. For the reasons below, we will vacate the Court’s order denying the motion
    for judgment as a matter of law and the Court’s order on the motion for attorneys’ fees,
    2
    and will remand for the entry of an order granting appellants’ motion for judgment as a
    matter of law on all counts, and denying appellee’s motion for attorneys’ fees.
    I.
    Because we write primarily for the benefit of the parties, we will only briefly
    summarize the history of this case. In January 2003, appellee Diana went on leave from
    his position as a State Trooper due to a work-related injury. On November 14, 2003,
    appellant Altavilla, Diana’s commander, had Diana served with a return-to-work notice
    identifying November 22, 2003 as the return date. The order stated that the Pennsylvania
    State Police would seek to suspend his benefits unless he returned to work, and Diana
    was instructed to call Altavilla. When Diana called, he stated that he was still injured.
    Diana testified that Altavilla said that he did not have to return to work unless Altavilla
    told him to do so, though Altavilla’s testimony conflicts with Diana’s recollection. In
    either case, on November 21, 2003, the day before his scheduled return date, Diana called
    the police barracks to speak with Altavilla, who was out that day. Informed of Diana’s
    call, Altavilla asked appellant Oliphant, who was on duty, to return Diana’s call using one
    of the recorded lines in the barracks. Altavilla testified that he asked Oliphant to use a
    recorded line because he wanted to protect Oliphant from potential problems that could
    arise over Diana’s interpretation of the call. Oliphant called Diana and told him that he
    must return to work.
    3
    The recorded telephone lines at the police barracks were set to emit a repeating
    beep that could be heard by both parties on the call. Diana testified that he did not hear
    any beeps and that he was unaware that the call was being recorded. The recording of the
    call, played at trial, contains audible beeps occurring at approximately 17-second
    intervals. Diana suggested at trialCbased only on his own say-soCthat it was possible to
    alter the “beep-box” equipment so that it could not be heard by the party receiving the
    call.
    Through a co-worker in the barracks, Diana became aware that his call had been
    recorded, and that Oliphant had requested that a copy of the recording be preserved.
    Diana stated that he became depressed, lost weight, and had marital troubles because of
    his anxiety upon finding out that the call had been recorded.
    Diana filed a complaint on November 11, 2005, alleging that the recording of the
    call without his knowledge violated his First, Fourth, and Fourteenth Amendment rights
    under the U.S. Constitution, the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act, 
    18 U.S.C. § 2510
     et seq. (“Title III”), and Pennsylvania’s Wiretapping and Electronic Surveillance
    Control Act, 
    18 Pa. Cons. Stat. § 5701
     et seq. (“Pennsylvania Wiretap Act”). Following
    motion practice that resulted in the dismissal of some of Diana’s claims, the case
    proceeded to trial in April 2008 on the First and Fourth Amendment claims and the Title
    III and Pennsylvania Wiretap Act claims. At the close of Diana’s case, and again at the
    4
    close of their case, Altavilla and Oliphant moved for judgment as a matter of law pursuant
    to Rule 50 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. The Court dismissed the First
    Amendment claim but allowed the remaining claims to go to the jury. The jury found in
    Diana’s favor on all three claims against both defendants, awarding Diana a total of
    $262,126 in compensatory damages and $238,878 in punitive damages. The Court also
    awarded $20,000 in statutory damages.
    Following trial, defendants renewed their motion for judgment as a matter of law,
    a new trial, and, in the alternative, moved for remittitur. On February 13, 2009, the
    District Court denied defendants’ motion for judgment as a matter of law and for a new
    trial, but granted the motion for remittitur and reduced the total compensatory and
    statutory damages to $50,000 and $10,000, respectively. The Court rejected defendants’
    motion to reduce the punitive damages. On August 6, 2009, the Court awarded Diana
    $62,283.07 in attorneys’ fees.
    II.
    We have jurisdiction under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
    . “We exercise plenary review over
    the District Court’s denial of judgment as a matter of law.” Eshelman v. Agere Sys., Inc.,
    
    554 F.3d 426
    , 433 (3d Cir. 2009). We apply the same standard as the District Court,
    which is whether, after “viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the
    nonmovant and giving it the advantage of every fair and reasonable inference, there is
    5
    insufficient evidence from which a jury reasonably could find liability.” Lightning Lube,
    Inc. v. Witco Corp., 
    4 F.3d 1153
    , 1166 (3d Cir. 1993). “Although judgment as a matter of
    law should be granted sparingly, we will grant it where the record is critically deficient of
    the minimum quantum of evidence in support of the verdict.” Eshelman, 
    554 F.3d at 433
    (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). However, “we must refrain from
    weighing the evidence, determining the credibility of witnesses, or substituting our own
    version of the facts for that of the jury.” Marra v. Phila. Hous. Auth., 
    497 F.3d 286
    , 300
    (3d Cir. 2007).
    A.
    Appellants argue that they are entitled to qualified immunity on the Fourth
    Amendment and Title III claims. They contend that the District Court erred in allowing
    those claims to go to the jury because they reasonably believed they were protected by an
    exception within Title III for “an investigative or law enforcement officer in the ordinary
    course of his duties.” 
    18 U.S.C. § 2510
    (5)(a)(ii).   On the Fourth Amendment claim, they
    argue that since they reasonably relied on the Title III “ordinary course” exception when
    recording the call, they reasonably believed that they were acting within an exception to
    the Fourth Amendment’s ban on warrantless searches and seizures. The Court rejected
    this argument outright because § 2510(5)(a)(ii) “is not an exception under the Fourth
    Amendment itself,” and “[a] recording exempted under § 2510(5)(a)(ii[]) is still subject to
    6
    the constraints of the Fourth Amendment.” App. at 10. The Court rejected appellants’
    claim of qualified immunity on the Title III claim because it found that the argument was
    not raised in the Rule 50(a) motion.
    i.
    “The doctrine of qualified immunity protects government officials 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.” Pearson v.
    Callahan, 
    555 U.S. 223
    , 231 (2009) (citation and internal quotations omitted). The
    Supreme Court has established a two-part analysis that governs whether a government
    official is entitled to qualified immunity. Ashcroft v. al-Kidd, 
    131 S. Ct. 2074
    , 2080
    (2011). The first question is whether the official’s conduct violated a constitutional or
    federal right. In examining this question we look at whether the official’s actions were
    “reasonable in light of the facts and circumstances available to the officer at the time.”
    Curley v. Klem, 
    499 F.3d 199
    , 207 (3d Cir. 2007). We review the official’s actions from
    the perspective of an objectively reasonable law enforcement officer under the
    circumstances, “rather than with the 20/20 vision of hindsight.” Graham v. Connor, 
    490 U.S. 386
    , 396 (1989). The second question is whether the right at issue was “clearly
    established.” al-Kidd, 
    131 S. Ct. at 2080
    . To be clearly established, “[t]he contours of
    the right must be sufficiently clear that a reasonable official would understand that what
    7
    he is doing violates that right.” Anderson v. Creighton, 
    483 U.S. 635
    , 640 (1987). If “the
    officer made a reasonable mistake about the legal constraints on his actions,” then
    qualified immunity should protect him or her from suit. Curley, 
    499 F.3d at 207
    . The
    two questions in the qualified immunity analysis need not be addressed in sequence.
    Pearson, 
    555 U.S. at 236
    .
    We disagree with the District Court’s conclusion that appellants were not entitled
    to qualified immunity on the Fourth Amendment claim. The law was not clearly
    established that they could not rely on the “ordinary course” exception in Title III to
    protect them from liability under the Fourth Amendment.
    As an initial matter, the law in 2003 was not clearly established that the ordinary
    course exception in Title III did not apply to the officers’ actions in recording an
    administrative phone call to another officer. If anything, the disparate results of the
    leading circuit court cases established that the question was unsettled and extremely fact
    specific. See Adams v. City of Battle Creek, 
    250 F.3d 980
    , 984 (6th Cir. 2001) (ordinary
    course exception did not apply to surreptitious retrieval of messages from police officer’s
    pager because the practice was not routine, indiscriminate, and well known by pager
    users); Abraham v. Cnty. of Greenville, S.C., 
    237 F.3d 386
    , 389-90 (4th Cir. 2001)
    (ordinary course exception did not apply to recording of judges’ telephone calls because
    the county did not have an established policy of monitoring such calls, and it recorded the
    8
    calls only by mistake); First v. Stark Cnty. Bd. of Comm’rs, No. 99-3547, 
    2000 WL 1478389
    , at *3-4 (6th Cir. Oct. 4, 2000) (ordinary course exception applied to act of
    recording all conversations on open microphones in police dispatch center because the
    system recorded conversations indiscriminately and the system was used in the ordinary
    course of the police department’s duties); Amati v. City of Woodstock, 
    176 F.3d 952
    , 955
    (7th Cir. 1999) (ordinary course exception could apply to act of recording all calls off of a
    previously unrecorded police line because the term “ordinary” “is [] reasonably
    interpreted to refer to routine noninvestigative recording of telephone conversations . . . .
    To record all calls to and from a police department is . . . a routine police practice”). We
    also note that our Court had provided no guidance on this issue at the time of Oliphant’s
    call, which further suggests that a reasonable officer in appellants’ position would not
    have known that he or she was violating clearly established law in calling another officer
    on a recorded police line.
    Second, the District Court erred to the extent that it determined that no reasonable
    officer could believe that an exception to liability under Title III could also function as an
    exception to Fourth Amendment liability. Congress enacted Title III “[l]argely in
    response” to two decisions of the Supreme Court that found Fourth Amendment
    violations in police wiretap activities. See Bartnicki v. Vopper, 
    532 U.S. 514
    , 523 (2001)
    (referencing Berger v. New York, 
    388 U.S. 41
     (1967), and Katz v. United States, 
    389 U.S. 9
    347 (1967)). One of Title III’s purposes was to “authoriz[e] and regulat[e] electronic
    surveillance for law enforcement purposes.” 
    Id.
     It was not clearly established in 2003
    that Congress intended to provide law enforcement officers with a statutory exception to
    liability while still holding officers liable under the Fourth Amendment for the same
    behavior. See, e.g., Walden v. City of Providence, R.I., 
    596 F.3d 38
    , 54 (1st Cir. 2010)
    (“If under Title III law the defendants could have concluded their actions were not illegal,
    then they could reasonably have concluded it was not clearly established that the same
    actions would violate the Constitution. Congress enacted Title III in response to Katz,
    and in doing so attempted to provide at least as much protection as the Constitution
    affords.” (internal citation omitted)). We cannot say that it was sufficiently clear to a
    reasonable officer that he could be liable for a Fourth Amendment violation when he
    reasonably believed he was protected under Title III. See al-Kidd, 
    131 S. Ct. at 2083
    (“We do not require a case directly on point, but existing precedent must have placed the
    statutory or constitutional question beyond debate.”).
    Accordingly, appellants were entitled to qualified immunity on Diana’s Fourth
    Amendment claim because they were entitled to qualified immunity on the Title III claim.
    ii.
    The District Court refused to consider appellants’ argument that they were entitled
    to qualified immunity on the Title III claim because it determined that they had not raised
    10
    the issue in their Rule 50(a) motion for judgment as a matter of law. The Court’s
    determination was erroneous; the transcript of the argument reflects that qualified
    immunity had been raised as to both the Fourth Amendment and Title III claims. App. at
    631-35. Appellants argued that because they were entitled to qualified immunity on the
    Title III claim, they also were entitled to qualified immunity on the Fourth Amendment
    claim. Id. at 632 (“[T]he officers would have reasonably believed that they were acting in
    the ordinary course of their duties. If they were acting in the ordinary course of their
    duties they would have to be on notice through some binding case law that they were
    wrong in believing they were acting in the ordinary course of their duties.”), 635 (“In this
    particular instance they have a right to rely on an exception to the Federal Wiretap Act,
    because the privacy right is inextricably linked with that. And what I’m arguing is
    basically qualified immunity, and I think they are two separate things.”).
    Appellants’ arguments regarding qualified immunity for the Fourth Amendment
    claim necessarily relied on the District Court also accepting that they were entitled to
    qualified immunity on the Title III claim or that they actually qualified for the ordinary
    course exception in Title III. Because appellants had raised the Title III qualified
    immunity argument, the Court erred in rejecting it as waived. For the reasons discussed
    above, appellants were entitled to qualified immunity on the federal statutory claim
    11
    because it was not “beyond debate” that their actions did not fall into the ordinary course
    exception. al-Kidd, 
    131 S. Ct. at 2083
    .
    B.
    Appellants argue that their actions constitute an exception to liability under the
    Pennsylvania Wiretap Act, and thus that they are entitled to judgment as a matter of law
    on that claim.1 Section 5704(3) of the act, a provision relevant to law enforcement
    personnel, states:
    It shall not be unlawful and no prior court approval shall be required
    under this chapter for:
    ...
    (3) Police and emergency communications systems to record telephone
    communications coming into and going out of the communications
    system of the Pennsylvania Emergency Management Agency or a police
    department, fire department or county emergency center, if:
    (i) the telephones thereof are limited to the exclusive use of the
    communication system for administrative purposes and provided the
    communication system employs a periodic warning which indicates to
    the parties to the conversation that the call is being recorded;
    (ii) all recordings made pursuant to this clause, all notes made
    therefrom, and all transcriptions thereof may be destroyed at any time,
    unless required with regard to a pending matter; and
    1
    The defense of sovereign immunity is not available under the Pennsylvania Wiretap
    Act. 
    18 Pa. Cons. Stat. § 5725
    (b).
    12
    (iii) at least one nonrecorded telephone line is made available for
    public use at the Pennsylvania Emergency Management Agency and at
    each police department, fire department or county emergency center.
    
    18 Pa. Cons. Stat. § 5704
    .
    The District Court did not reach the applicability of this defense because it found
    that appellants did not advance the argument in the pre-verdict Rule 50(a) motion. We
    will address this argument on appeal because it was preserved at the summary judgment
    stage. Porous Media Corp. v. Pall Corp., 
    110 F.3d 1329
    , 1338 n.12 (8th Cir. 1997);
    Ruyle v. Cont’l Oil Co., 
    44 F.3d 837
    , 841 (10th Cir. 1994) (“A party who properly raises
    an issue of law before the case goes to the jury need not include the issue in a motion for
    a directed verdict in order to preserve the question on appeal.” (citation and internal
    quotation marks omitted)).
    We find that even viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to Diana, the
    evidence demonstrated as a matter of law that appellants’ actions were covered by the
    exception to liability at § 5704(3). First, Oliphant’s call to Diana met the requirements of
    § 5704(3)(i): the phone call was for administrative purposesCto tell Diana that he had to
    return to workCand the telephone system contained audible periodic warning beeps. Any
    evidence suggesting that the Pennsylvania State Police removed the beep warnings so the
    police could surreptitiously record Diana is unsupported by anything other than Diana’s
    speculation. Second, it is undisputed that the recording of the phone conversation could
    13
    be destroyed at any time, satisfying the requirement of § 5704(3)(ii). Finally, it is
    undisputed that there were nonrecorded telephone lines available at the police barracks,
    satisfying the requirement of § 5704(3)(iii). Appellants were entitled to judgment as a
    matter of law on the Pennsylvania Wiretap Act claims.
    III.
    Because we find that appellants were entitled to qualified immunity on the Fourth
    Amendment and Title III claims, and to judgment as a matter of law on the Pennsylvania
    Wiretap Act claims, we need not address appellants’ remaining arguments. For the
    reasons previously stated, we will vacate the February 13, 2009 and August 6, 2009
    orders of the District Court and remand for entry of an order granting appellants’ motion
    for judgment as a matter of law on all counts and denying Diana’s motion for attorneys’
    fees.
    14