Derrick Wheatt v. City of East Cleveland, Ohio ( 2021 )


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  •                           NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION
    File Name: 21a0581n.06
    Nos. 20-4017/4018
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    )
    DERRICK WHEATT, et al.,
    )
    )
    Plaintiffs-Appellees,
    )       ON APPEAL FROM THE
    )       UNITED STATES DISTRICT
    v.
    )       COURT     FOR      THE
    )       NORTHERN DISTRICT OF
    CITY OF EAST CLEVELAND, OHIO, et al.,
    )       OHIO
    )
    Defendants-Appellants.
    )
    Before: BATCHELDER, ROGERS, and WHITE, Circuit Judges.
    ALICE M. BATCHELDER, Circuit Judge. In this 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
     action Defendants
    Michael Perry and Vincent Johnstone appeal the jury’s verdict finding that they had violated the
    due process rights of the plaintiffs, leading to the plaintiffs’ wrongful murder convictions. The
    sole issue in this appeal is whether in charging the jury the district court erred by including a
    fabrication-of-evidence instruction.     Because there was sufficient evidence to support the
    instruction, and because any error was harmless, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
    I.
    The plaintiffs in this case, Derrick Wheatt, Laurese Glover, and Eugene Johnson, were
    convicted of murder in 1996. Nearly twenty years later, in 2015, they were exonerated after it was
    discovered that Michael Perry1 and Vincent Johnstone (“Defendants”), two police detectives for
    1
    Michael Perry passed away in 2018. His wife and executor of his estate, Karen Perry, was substituted in
    his place as defendant.
    Case Nos. 20-4017/4018, Wheatt, et al. v. City of Cleveland, Ohio, et al.
    the City of East Cleveland, had withheld exculpatory evidence.               Plaintiffs filed suit under
    
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
     in February 2017, claiming, among other things, that Defendants had violated
    their Fourteenth Amendment rights to due process by withholding exculpatory evidence,
    conducting an unduly suggestive photo identification, and falsifying in a police report a young
    witness’s statement.2 Relevant to this appeal is Plaintiffs’ theory that Defendants falsified the
    account of Tamika Harris, a then-14-year-old eyewitness to the murder.
    A. The Criminal Trial
    In 1995, Clifton Hudson was shot and killed on the street in East Cleveland, Ohio.
    Plaintiffs witnessed the shooting while they were at a stop sign in a vehicle owned by Glover.
    Tamika Harris also witnessed the shooting, and Defendants took her statement the day after the
    shooting. Perry typed Harris’s statement, and Johnstone witnessed it. The statement included
    Harris’s description of the shooter and indicated that Harris saw the shooter get out of, and back
    into, a vehicle that matched the description of Glover’s vehicle.3 Harris affirmed this account
    when she testified at Plaintiffs’ criminal trial. Based primarily on this testimony, Plaintiffs were
    convicted of murder in 1996.
    Years later, however, Harris recanted her testimony. She claims that she never told
    Defendants that she clearly saw the shooter, saw the shooter get into or out of a vehicle, or that she
    heard gunshots coming from the vehicle at the scene. Harris claims that she told Defendants only
    2
    Plaintiffs also brought claims against the City of East Cleveland, Cuyahoga County, and other state
    officials, but each of those claims was either dismissed by the district court or settled by the parties.
    3
    That same day, Perry typed up a police report, which stated in part that:
    [Harris] was then shown three photo’s [sic] of the arrested males and Harris positively
    identified the photo of a black male, wearing a maroon and green down jacket and hooded
    sweatshirt as the male being the same male she observed shoot the victim on Strathmore,
    and the same male she observed run down Manhattan and enter the black Blazer that came
    from Strathmore.
    2
    Case Nos. 20-4017/4018, Wheatt, et al. v. City of Cleveland, Ohio, et al.
    that she saw the shooter approach the victim on foot and that her view of where the shooter came
    from was obstructed by Glover’s vehicle. Harris revealed that she originally testified against
    Plaintiffs in accordance with her typed statement because she “thought that’s what [she] was
    supposed to do.” Despite this recantation, Plaintiffs were not exonerated until 2015, after they
    discovered that Defendants had withheld exculpatory evidence during their criminal prosecution.
    B. The Civil Trial
    The district court held a three-day jury trial in November 2018, and Plaintiffs presented
    evidence of Harris’s eyewitness account, her 1995 statement, and her subsequent recantation.
    Plaintiffs argued that this evidence proved that Defendants falsified Harris’s 1995 statement and
    wrongfully used it to convict Plaintiffs of murder and deprive them of a fair trial. At the close of
    the evidence at trial, Plaintiffs requested that the district court include a fabrication-of-evidence
    jury instruction. Outside the presence of the jury, the district court and the parties briefly discussed
    the need for the instruction, but Defendants never formally objected to the instruction. After a
    recess to consider the propriety of the instruction, the district court decided to include it and
    charged the jury, in relevant part, as follows:
    Now, plaintiffs’ second claim is that Defendants Perry and Johnstone violated their
    constitutional rights to due process by fabricating the evidence or concealing,
    withholding, or suppressing evidence favorable to them.
    To succeed on this claim, as to the particular defendant you are considering, each
    plaintiff must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the defendant
    prevented plaintiff from receiving a fair trial because . . . evidence unfavorable to
    the plaintiff was knowingly fabricated or . . . evidence favorable to the plaintiff was
    knowingly withheld, suppressed, or concealed from the plaintiffs, his defense
    lawyer, or the prosecutor.
    3
    Case Nos. 20-4017/4018, Wheatt, et al. v. City of Cleveland, Ohio, et al.
    The jury found Defendants liable and awarded each Plaintiff $5,000,000 in compensatory
    damages.4       After the district court denied Defendants’ post-trial motions and entered final
    judgment on the verdict, Defendants appealed.
    II.
    On appeal, Defendants argue for a new trial on the ground that the district court erroneously
    charged the jury with a fabrication-of-evidence instruction. Defendants contend that the evidence
    presented at trial––namely, the testimony of Harris––did not support such a jury charge.5 We
    disagree.
    District courts have discretion in charging the jury, United States v. Prince, 
    214 F.3d 740
    ,
    761 (6th Cir. 2000), but they generally may not include an instruction “if it lacks evidentiary
    support or is based upon mere suspicion or speculation,” United States v. James, 
    819 F.2d 674
    ,
    675 (6th Cir. 1987) (quotation omitted); see also Jones v. Consol. Rail Corp., 
    800 F.2d 590
    , 592
    (6th Cir. 1986). We have emphasized, though, that a district court’s decision to give a particular
    jury instruction need only be supported by “a slim amount of evidence.” Taylor v. TECO Barge
    Line, Inc., 
    517 F.3d 372
    , 387 (6th Cir. 2008).
    Ordinarily, we review these decisions for abuse of discretion. United States v. Capozzi,
    
    723 F.3d 720
    , 725 (6th Cir. 2013). But where, as here, the defendant fails to make a proper
    objection at trial to the jury instructions, we review for plain error. Fed. R. Civ. P. 51(d)(2);
    Cranpark, Inc. v. Rogers Grp., Inc., 
    821 F.3d 723
    , 736 (6th Cir. 2016). An objection to a jury
    4
    For each Plaintiff, the jury returned a verdict against Perry for $3,500,000 and Johnstone for $1,500,000.
    5
    Remarkably, other than to argue for a de novo standard of review, Defendants do not provide the court
    with a single case to support their argument on appeal. The cases that are cited in the three-page argument
    section of Defendants’ opening briefs are cited summarily and lay out an incorrect legal standard. Contrary
    to Defendants’ claim, we do not review the district court’s decision de novo because Defendants do not
    challenge the legal accuracy of the jury instruction. See United States v. Pritchard, 
    964 F.3d 513
    , 522 (6th
    Cir. 2020).
    4
    Case Nos. 20-4017/4018, Wheatt, et al. v. City of Cleveland, Ohio, et al.
    instruction is preserved for appeal if it is “sufficiently specific to bring into focus the precise nature
    of the alleged error.” Libbey-Owens-Ford Co. v. Ins. Co. of N. Am., 
    9 F.3d 422
    , 427 (6th Cir.
    1993) (quoting Palmer v. Hoffman, 
    318 U.S. 109
    , 119 (1943)). In other words, Defendants were
    required to “stat[e] distinctly the matter objected to and the grounds for the objection.” Fed. R.
    Civ. P. 51(c)(1). Defendants’ vague statements regarding Harris’s testimony and their implication
    that they “would object if [the instruction] is included” are insufficient to meet this standard.6 We
    have defined plain error “as an ‘obvious and prejudicial error that requires action by the reviewing
    court in the interest of justice.’” E.E.O.C. v. New Breed Logistics, 
    783 F.3d 1057
    , 1076 (6th Cir.
    2015) (quotation omitted).
    We find no plain error. Through the testimony of Harris, Plaintiffs presented more than
    sufficient evidence to support the district court’s decision to give the fabrication-of-evidence
    instruction. Harris’s recantation, coupled with her testimony of what she says she told the
    Defendants in 1995, raises a reasonable inference that Defendants knowingly falsified her
    statement in a way that inculpated Plaintiffs. Harris’s 1995 statement, written by Perry and
    witnessed by Johnstone, contains allegations that Harris now says she never made to the officers.
    This inconsistency, of course, does not definitively prove that Defendants knowingly fabricated
    evidence. But it does reasonably support that accusation—and it is therefore sufficient to uphold
    the district court’s decision to give the instruction. See United States v. Baumgartner, 581 F.
    App’x 522, 534 (6th Cir. 2014) (affirming the district court’s decision to give a jury instruction
    because “the evidence suggested that an inference of [the conduct underlying the instruction] was
    reasonable”); United States v. Darji, 609 F. App’x 320, 336 (6th Cir. 2015) (finding “no error
    6
    It is also noteworthy that Defendants’ argument on appeal does not appear anywhere in their pre-verdict
    Rule 50(a) motion or in their post-trial Rule 59 and Rule 60 motions.
    5
    Case Nos. 20-4017/4018, Wheatt, et al. v. City of Cleveland, Ohio, et al.
    because substantial evidence supported the district court’s decision to give the instruction”);
    Taylor, 
    517 F.3d at 387
    . The district court did not plainly err.
    Moreover, any error in giving the instruction was harmless. We have held that even when
    an instruction is unsupported by the evidence, it is harmless error if the instruction properly states
    the law and there is sufficient evidence to support an alternative ground for liability. United States
    v. Mari, 
    47 F.3d 782
    , 785–86 (6th Cir. 1995). We have consistently reasoned that, in such a
    situation, we must assume that the jury followed the jury charge and did not reach a verdict based
    on an unsupported theory. 
    Id. at 787
     (“To conclude otherwise, . . . we would have to assume that
    the jury ignored the jury instructions.”); United States v. Monus, 
    128 F.3d 376
    , 390–91 (6th Cir.
    1997); United States v. Rayborn, 
    491 F.3d 513
    , 520–21 (6th Cir. 2007); see also Griffin v. United
    States, 
    502 U.S. 46
    , 59–60 (1991) (explaining that, while it is “generally . . . preferable” that courts
    do not instruct jurors on “alternative legal theor[ies]” that lack evidentiary support, jurors are
    nevertheless “well equipped to analyze the evidence” for themselves when presented with
    “factually inadequate theor[ies]”); Sochor v. Florida., 
    504 U.S. 527
    , 538 (1992) (declining to
    presume error where the jury was “allowed to rely on any of two or more independent grounds,
    one of which [was] infirm,” because the jury is “likely to disregard an option simply unsupported
    by evidence”).
    Likewise, here, we assume that the jury followed the district court’s instructions and
    reached a verdict based on a theory that was supported by the evidence. As reflected in the jury
    instructions, Plaintiffs’ due process claim was based on two independent theories: first, that
    Defendants fabricated inculpatory evidence, and second, that Defendants withheld, suppressed, or
    concealed exculpatory evidence. The court’s instruction on that claim read: “plaintiffs second
    claim is that Defendant Perry and Johnstone violated their constitutional rights to due process by
    6
    Case Nos. 20-4017/4018, Wheatt, et al. v. City of Cleveland, Ohio, et al.
    fabricating the evidence or concealing, withholding, or suppressing evidence favorable to them.”
    Because neither Defendant challenges the legal accuracy of the instruction nor argues that there is
    insufficient evidence to support Plaintiffs’ second theory, the jury verdict stands. The verdict is,
    at worst, still supported by Plaintiffs’ suppression-of-evidence theory, and any error was harmless.
    To the extent that Defendants challenge the verdict form, generally we will not address
    arguments raised for the first time on appeal. Frazier v. Jenkins, 
    770 F.3d 485
    , 497 (6th Cir. 2014).
    We decline to do so here, especially given that Defendants devote only one paragraph to this
    argument and, again, cite no supporting authority. Barany-Snyder v. Weiner, 
    539 F.3d 327
    , 331
    (6th Cir. 2008) (“Issues adverted to in a perfunctory manner, unaccompanied by some effort at
    developed argumentation, are deemed waived.”) (quotation omitted).
    III.
    For these reasons, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
    7