PRECEDENTIAL
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
________
No 10-3388
_________
COURTLAND C. PITTS,
Appellant
v.
STATE OF DELAWARE; RUTH ANN MINNER;
RENEE HRIVNAK; STATE OF DELAWARE POLICE;
LT. COL. AARON CHAFFINCH; LT. MARK DANIELS;
GREGORY SPENCE; M. JANE BRADY
________
On Appeal from the United States District Court
for the District of Delaware
(D.C. No. 1-05-cv-00185)
District Judge: Honorable Joseph J. Farnan, Jr.
_______
Argued April 25, 2011
Before: SLOVITER, GREENAWAY, JR., Circuit Judges
and POLLAK,* District Judge
(Filed June 17, 2011 )
______
*
Hon. Louis H. Pollak, Senior Judge, United States
District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania,
sitting by designation.
Karen E. Keller (Argued)
John W. Shaw
Young, Conaway, Stargatt & Taylor
Wilmington, DE 19899
Attorneys for Appellant
Ralph K. Durstein, III (Argued)
Department of Justice
Wilmington, DE 19801
Attorney for Appellees
_____________
OPINION OF THE COURT
_____________
SLOVITER, Circuit Judge.
It is only on rare instances that a jury‟s verdict in a
civil case should be overturned. This appeal presents the
question whether this is such a case.
Courtland Pitts filed a Complaint against Corporal
Gregory Spence of the Delaware State Police, asserting
claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and state law. After a trial, a
jury found in favor of Pitts on two of his four claims. The
District Court granted Spence‟s subsequent motion for
judgment as matter of law, made pursuant to Rule 50 of the
Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Viewing the evidence in
the light most favorable to Pitts, we conclude that the District
Court erred.
I.
Pitts‟ Complaint against Spence alleged that Spence
falsely arrested, illegally seized, and maliciously prosecuted
him, as well as deprived him of equal protection under the
law. At trial, Pitts testified that his claims arose out of events
occurring when Pitts, who is African American, went to
2
Mitchem‟s Auto Body Shop and conversed with its owner,
James Mitchem, Jr., who is Caucasian, about Pitts‟
displeasure with work Mitchem had done on Pitts‟ car. A
verbal dispute between the men arose, which quickly
escalated into a physical altercation. At some point, Mitchem
“promised” to “[o]pen up a can of whoop ass” on Pitts, which
Mitchem conceded was intended to convey a physical threat.
App. at 328-29. The men brawled and Pitts knocked
Mitchem to the ground by punching him after Mitchem lost
his balance.
After Mitchem fell, Daniel Wykpisz, a shop employee
who had witnessed the altercation and who is Caucasian,
grabbed an aluminum baseball bat from the shop and chased
Pitts from the area. During the chase, Pitts came across a
board, which he picked up to defend himself. Wykpisz then
stopped giving chase, turned around, and walked back to the
shop.
Pitts testified that he walked back to his car, which he
had parked in the common parking lot shared by the
numerous industrial shops in the area, and discovered that his
car windshield and hood had sustained fresh damage.
Mitchem later admitted responsibility for causing the damage.
While Pitts was near his car, Mitchem threatened him by
saying “[y]ou better get the F out of here or I‟ll get my gun.”
App. at 252. Pitts dialed 9-1-1 several times, conveying to
the dispatcher that he had been chased with a baseball bat and
that Mitchem had threatened him with a gun. Wykpisz and
Mitchem testified they had also called 9-1-1. At least two
officers responded to the calls, including Spence, who is
Caucasian, and another officer, Corporal Helen Dane.
Although the exact sequence of events is unclear, Pitts
testified that when Pitts saw Spence‟s patrol car, he started
waving his arms to identify himself as the person who called
for assistance. Spence, who had received a report that there
might be a gun at the scene, acknowledged Pitts by rolling
down his window slightly and yelling, “[g]et back, get back.”
App. at 255. Pitts accused Spence of treating him unfairly,
exclaiming “[i]f I was a white guy, you would have been out
3
of that car, and I would have been treated differently.” Id.
According to Pitts, Spence then jumped out of his patrol car,
got in Pitts‟ face, and when Pitts asked for Spence‟s badge
number and supervisor‟s name, told Pitts to “[s]hut the fuck
up.” App. at 256.
Pitts and Spence hollered at each other and Spence
eventually told Pitts that “[i]f you don‟t shut the fuck up, I‟m
going to arrest you.” App. at 257. Pitts put his hands behind
his back and told Spence that he was not going to resist.
Spence handcuffed Pitts and placed him in the backseat of the
patrol car, but did not read Pitts his rights under Miranda v.
Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966).
Pitts testified that he was unable to tell Spence about
Mitchem‟s threats or that Wykpisz chased him with a bat
because Spence “never gave [Pitts] a chance” and “didn‟t
want to hear anything [Pitts] had to say.” App. at 276. Pitts
declined to give a statement but Spence continued his
investigation by speaking with Mitchem and Wykpisz, who
gave a narrative of the events and informed Spence that Pitts
had made the gun threat. Pitts did not see Spence question
any of the numerous witnesses who had gathered at the scene.
After speaking with Mitchem and Wykpisz, Spence
drove Pitts to the police station where Pitts‟ Miranda rights
were read to him and he was informed of the charges against
him. Spence charged Pitts with aggravated menacing, two
counts of terroristic threatening, assault in the third degree,
disorderly conduct, and criminal trespass. Spence charged
Mitchem with disorderly conduct, offensive touching, and
criminal mischief. Dane also arrested Mitchem and brought
him to the station.
Spence towed and conducted an inventory search of
Pitts‟ car. The inventory search produced nothing
incriminating. Spence did not report finding a weapon.
The parties‟ briefs do not discuss the state court trial
based on the charges against Pitts on one hand and Mitchem
on the other. Pitts was acquitted of all the charges brought
4
against him. Pitts asserts that Mitchem pled no contest to two
of the charges against him, and that the third was dropped
pursuant to a plea agreement.
Following the state court proceedings, the District
Court proceeded to hear the instant suit, which Pitts had filed
against Spence. The jury returned a verdict, pursuant to a
general verdict form, finding in favor of Pitts on his illegal
seizure and equal protection claims, and in favor of Spence on
Pitts‟ false arrest and malicious prosecution claims. The jury
awarded Pitts $80,000 in compensatory damages and $1,000
in punitive damages. Spence filed a motion for judgment as
matter of law, which the District Court granted.
In granting the motion, the District Court noted that
the parties‟ agreed-upon instructions presented the jury with
two possible scenarios that could support Pitts‟ claim of
illegal seizure: (1) when Spence handcuffed and placed Pitts
in the back of the patrol car; and (2) when Spence towed and
conducted an inventory search of Pitts‟ car.1 The District
Court first considered whether there was sufficient evidence
to support the jury‟s illegal seizure verdict insofar as it was
based on Pitts‟ detention. Citing investigatory detention
jurisprudence under Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1 (1968), the
Court concluded that “based on the facts available to Corporal
Spence at the time he handcuffed Mr. Pitts, the detention of
1
The District Court held that the jury‟s verdict in favor
of Spence on Pitts‟ false arrest claim was facially inconsistent
with its verdict in favor of Pitts on his illegal seizure claim
insofar as the latter was based on Pitts‟ arrest, but that the
verdicts may be reconcilable if Pitts‟ detention were viewed
as separate and distinct from his arrest. The Court, however,
declined to address whether the verdicts could be so
harmonized because, as it stated, “regardless of whether the
verdict is inconsistent or reconcilable, the Court concludes
that Corporal Spence is entitled to judgment as a matter of
law because there is insufficient evidence to support the jury
verdict that Mr. Pitts was subject to an illegal seizure based
upon his handcuffing and placement in the patrol vehicle.”
Pitts v. Spence, 722 F. Supp. 2d 476, 481 (D. Del. 2010).
5
Mr. Pitts was reasonable in that Corporal Spence had an
articulable suspicion that Mr. Pitts had been involved in a
fight at Mitchem‟s Auto Body Shop, and that Corporal
Spence‟s personal safety or the safety of others at the scene
could be in danger.” Pitts v. Spence, 722 F. Supp. 2d 476,
483 (D. Del. 2010). The Court therefore held that Spence‟s
detention of Pitts was reasonable as a matter of law and that
there was insufficient evidence to support the jury‟s verdict to
the extent it was based on this conduct.
The Court next considered whether there was
sufficient evidence to support the jury‟s illegal seizure verdict
insofar as it was based on the search and seizure of Pitts‟ car.
The Court concluded that Spence‟s testimony at trial
established “that the towing of [Pitts‟] vehicle was required
both to prevent harm to the vehicle and to prevent the
possibility of another altercation.” Id. at 484. Based on this
testimony, and Spence‟s assertion that he conducted the
search in accordance with standard procedure, the Court held
that the search and seizure was reasonable as a matter of law
and that there was insufficient evidence to support the jury‟s
verdict in Pitts‟ favor. The Court rejected Pitts‟ argument that
the evidence suggested that the search of the car was
pretextual. It also rejected Pitts‟ contention that Spence‟s
admission that he lacked probable cause to search Pitts‟ car
rendered the inventory search unreasonable. In finding this
argument unpersuasive, the Court cited inventory search
jurisprudence and reasoned that “the concept of probable
cause is not implicated in an inventory search.” Id.
Turning to the jury‟s verdict in favor of Pitts on his
equal protection claim, the Court was not persuaded that
Spence‟s failure to properly document or investigate the
incident could support the jury‟s verdict, reasoning that “any
gaps in the police report concerning Mr. Pitts‟ point of view
are attributable to [Pitts‟] own lack of cooperation” in
declining to give a statement to Spence after Spence
attempted to interview him. Id. at 487. The Court rejected
Pitts‟ other arguments, concluding that there was “no
evidence” that Spence acted with discriminatory purpose or
that his actions were in any way motivated by racial animus.
6
Id. at 486. The Court therefore granted Spence judgment as a
matter of law on Pitts‟ equal protection claim.
Having overturned both of the jury‟s verdicts in favor
of Pitts, the Court denied the motions of Pitts‟ current and
former counsel made pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1988 for
attorneys‟ fees and expenses, on the basis that Pitts was no
longer a prevailing party. Pitts appeals.
II.
The District Court had jurisdiction pursuant to 28
U.S.C. § 1331 and this court has appellate jurisdiction
pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We exercise plenary review
over the District Court‟s decision to grant judgment as a
matter of law, viewing the record evidence in the light most
favorable to Pitts, as the verdict winner, and drawing all
reasonable inferences in his favor. We have cautioned that a
court should grant judgment as a matter of law “sparingly.”
Johnson v. Campbell, 332 F.3d 199, 204 (3d Cir. 2003). A
court must not weigh evidence, engage in credibility
determinations, or substitute its version of the facts for the
jury‟s. Only if the record is “critically deficient of the
minimum quantum of evidence” upon which a jury could
reasonably base its verdict will we affirm a court‟s grant of
judgment as a matter of law. Acumed LLC v. Advanced
Surgical Servs., Inc., 561 F.3d 199, 211 (3d Cir. 2009)
(internal quotation omitted).
III.
Pitts contends that the District Court erred in
concluding that the evidence was insufficient to support the
jury‟s illegal seizure verdict in his favor. Pursuant to the
parties‟ agreement, the Court instructed the jury that the
Fourth Amendment “protects persons from being subjected to
unreasonable searches and seizures by police.” App. at 520.
The Court explained that Pitts was required to demonstrate by
a preponderance of the evidence: (1) that Spence
“intentionally handcuffed [Mr. Pitts], and placed him in the
back seat of a patrol vehicle, and towed and impounded [his]
7
vehicle[;]” (2) “that those acts subjected Mr. Pitts to a
seizure[;]” and (3) that “the seizure was unreasonable.” App.
at 520-21. With respect to reasonableness, the jury heard
only that an arrest of a person constitutes an unreasonable
seizure if not supported by probable cause. The jury was told
to consider in its probable cause assessment “whether the
facts and circumstances available to Corporal Spence would
warrant a prudent police officer in believing that Mr. Pitts had
committed or was committing a crime.” App. at 521.
We agree with Pitts that the evidence was sufficient to
permit the jury to conclude that Spence subjected Pitts to an
unlawful seizure.2 With regard to Pitts‟ detention, Spence
testified that at the time that he detained Pitts, he had not
finished his investigation and had not decided whether Pitts
“should be arrested for anything at that point.” App. at 461.
Additionally, Spence and Pitts both testified that Spence had
not read Pitts his Miranda rights at that time. Spence testified
only that he detained Pitts because Spence feared for his
safety, an assertion the jury could have found not credible
because Spence failed to include any mention of that fear in
his contemporaneous crime report. It follows that the District
Court necessarily weighed the evidence and did not view it in
the light most favorable to Pitts when it concluded that Pitts‟
2
With respect to the District Court‟s holding that the
jury‟s verdict on the illegal seizure and false arrest claims
were facially inconsistent, we conclude that the verdicts, to
the extent they were inconsistent, were reconcilable. A court
has a “„duty to attempt to read the verdict in a manner that
will resolve inconsistencies.‟” Mosley v. Wilson, 102 F.3d
85, 90 (3d Cir. 1996) (quoting City of L.A. v. Heller, 475 U.S.
796, 806 (1986) (Stevens, J., dissenting)). Here, the verdicts
were reconcilable on the basis that the instructions permitted
the jury to conclude that Pitts‟ detention was an unlawful
seizure, and there was sufficient evidence to support that
determination. Moreover, the instructions permitted the jury
to conclude that the search and seizure of Pitts‟ car was an
unlawful seizure, and there was also sufficient evidence to
support that determination.
8
detention was reasonable as a matter of law in light of
Spence‟s asserted fear.
Moreover, it was error for the Court to rely on Fourth
Amendment principles regarding investigatory detentions
because the jury was not instructed on that jurisprudence.
Even if Spence had an articulable suspicion that Pitts had
committed a crime, the jury was informed only of the law
regarding probable cause. The jury could have concluded on
the evidence that probable cause was lacking; and thus, based
on the instructions given, the evidence was sufficient to
support Pitts‟ claim that Pitts‟ detention was unlawful.
With regard to the towing and inventory search of
Pitts‟ car, Spence conceded at trial that he lacked probable
cause to conduct a search of Pitts‟ car. Spence testified that
he considered the towing necessary to prevent the possibility
of another altercation or further damage to Pitts‟ car, and
conceded that he did not search the car for safety reasons or
to look for a gun. The jury, however, could have found that
Spence was not credible and could have concluded that
Spence unlawfully searched the car in order to search for the
gun that Mitchem had accused Pitts of threatening to use.
The Court necessarily weighed the evidence and did not view
it in the light most favorable to Pitts when it concluded that
there was no evidence to support a suggestion of pretext and
that Spence‟s asserted fear rendered the towing and inventory
search reasonable as a matter of law. It was also error for the
Court to consider inventory-search jurisprudence in its
analysis because the jury was not given an instruction
thereon. Based on the instructions given, the evidence was
sufficient to support the jury‟s verdict, and the District Court
erred in concluding otherwise.
Pitts further asserts that the District Court erred in
concluding that the evidence was insufficient to support the
jury‟s verdict in Pitts‟ favor on his equal protection claim.
The Court informed the jury that “[t]he Equal Protection
Clause of the 14th Amendment to the United States
Constitution . . . guarantees each and every person that they
will not be denied their fundamental rights in an arbitrary or
9
discriminatory manner.” App. at 518. The Court explained
that it was Pitts‟ burden to demonstrate by a preponderance of
the evidence that Spence was motivated by a discriminatory
purpose, or “an intent or purpose to discriminate against
[Pitts] . . . based upon [Pitts]‟ membership in a protected
class.” App. at 519. It was also Pitts‟ burden to demonstrate
that Spence‟s conduct had a discriminatory effect, which “is
shown where the plaintiff is a member of a protected class, he
is similarly situated to members of that class, and that he was
treated differently than members of the unprotected class.”
App. at 519-20. The jury was informed that it could consider
direct or circumstantial evidence in its deliberations and that
neither form of evidence was superior to the other.
We agree with Pitts that the evidence circumstantially
demonstrated that Spence violated Pitts‟ rights to equal
protection. For example, the jury was entitled to consider
Spence‟s admittedly inaccurate reporting of the incident.
Spence acknowledged that he did not record that he spoke
with Pitts first upon arriving at the scene, that Pitts accused
Spence of being racist, that Spence handcuffed Pitts and
placed him in his patrol car before interviewing Mitchem and
Wykpisz, or that Spence did not try to interview Pitts after he
concluded his investigation. Spence explained that he “didn‟t
feel the need” to explain and that “there was no reason to say”
that Pitts had accused Spence of being racist because that
exchange was “irrelevant to the crimes that occurred between
[Pitts] and Mr. Mitchem.” App. at 405-06. The jury,
however, was entitled to disregard this testimony as
incredible. The District Court‟s conclusion that Spence‟s
inaccurate reporting was the fault of Pitts‟ decision to remain
silent, a right that he was entitled to exercise under the Fifth
Amendment, was not only in direct conflict with Spence‟s
testimony, but also necessarily resulted from the Court‟s
substitution of its view of the facts for the jury‟s.
The jury was also entitled to consider Spence‟s
testimony regarding his manner of investigating the incident.
Spence admitted that he did not question Mitchem‟s
statement that Pitts told Mitchem that he was going to get a
gun. Indeed, Spence‟s crime report made no mention of
10
Spence having interviewed anyone other than Wykpisz or
Mitchem at the scene.3 And Spence admitted that he did not
give Pitts an opportunity at the scene to rebut Mitchem‟s
allegation. Spence agreed that because Mitchem reported that
Pitts was the one who had threatened to retrieve a gun, “[t]hat
was good enough for [him] to end that part of the
investigation.” App. at 398. The jury could have deemed this
testimony suggestive that Spence was motivated by
discriminatory purpose and that his conduct had a
discriminatory effect.
Similarly suggesting an equal protection violation was
the testimony of Pauline Reid, a witness to the altercation and
Pitts‟ confrontation with Spence. Reid testified that Spence
was “agitated” and “elevated” when speaking with Pitts, and
“was not listening to what [Pitts] was trying to explain.”
App. at 304, 305, 309. Reid confirmed that she was so
concerned for Pitts‟ wellbeing after watching Spence‟s
demeanor towards him that she followed Pitts in Spence‟s
patrol car back to the police station. She stated that she felt
Pitts had been treated unfairly because the officers “bypassed
[Pitts] and went to the other person. They didn‟t really listen
to [Pitts]. When they came back, no one was listening . . . .”
App. at 309. This observation of unequal treatment supported
Pitts‟ assertion that Spence treated him dismissively. The
testimony circumstantially demonstrated that Spence acted
with a discriminatory purpose and effect.
The jury could have also given weight to Spence‟s
post-investigation conduct. Spence charged Pitts with
aggravated menacing, a charge that requires that the
defendant place the victim in fear of imminent physical
3
Spence testified that he attempted to interview the
witnesses at the scene, but that they informed him that they
did not see anything, and then dispersed. The jury was
entitled to discredit this testimony on the basis of Spence‟s
failure to include any mention of his interview attempts in his
crime report, as well as the testimony of Wykpisz, who
agreed that “there were several people watching the fight as it
happened.” App. at 373.
11
injury, 11 Del. C. § 602(a), for having “CHASED VICTIM
WYKPISZ WITH A LONG WOODEN POLE.” App. at 67.
At trial, however, Wykpisz testified that he was not afraid
that Pitts would strike him, and in fact turned his back to Pitts
to walk back to the shop. The jury could have concluded that
Spence was aware that Wykpisz did not feel threatened, and
acted with discriminatory purpose and effect by bringing an
improper charge against Pitts.4 Moreover, Spence
acknowledged that he simultaneously sent the warrants for
Mitchem and Pitts to the arraigning judge, but his warrant for
Pitts was detailed, and his warrant for Mitchem was not. The
warrant for Pitts emphasized in capital letters the alleged
conduct supporting the basis of each charge. The warrant for
Mitchem, on the other hand, capitalized names and locations.
It also failed to include any description of Mitchem‟s alleged
conduct that supported the charges against him. These
unaccounted for differences provided support for the jury‟s
verdict in favor of Pitts.
The above sampling of evidence, much of which the
District Court failed to mention, was sufficient to support the
jury‟s verdict in favor of Pitts on his equal protection claim.
In concluding that there was no evidence that Spence was
motivated by a discriminatory purpose and engaged in
conduct that had a discriminatory effect, the Court necessarily
weighed the evidence, engaged in credibility determinations,
and substituted its view of the facts for the jury‟s. This
exceeded the Court‟s role and was therefore in error.5
4
This conclusion would not have been impermissibly
inconsistent with the jury‟s verdict in favor of Spence on
Pitts‟ malicious prosecution claim. Neither the instructions
nor the general verdict form required the jury to conclude that
every charge Spence brought against Pitts was supported by
probable cause. Thus, the jury could have concluded that any
one of the six charges brought against Pitts was supported by
probable cause to find in favor of Spence on Pitts‟ malicious
prosecution claim.
5
Because we conclude that the District Court erred in
granting Spence‟s motion for judgment as a matter of law, we
12
IV.
This case does not present one of those infrequent
occasions in which the record evidence is so critically
deficient that the jury‟s verdict should be overturned. To the
contrary, when viewing the evidence in the light most
favorable to Pitts, as we must, we conclude that the evidence
amply supported Pitts‟ claims. Accordingly, we will reverse
the judgment of the District Court and reinstate the jury‟s
verdict and damages award in Pitts‟ favor. We will also
vacate the District Court‟s denial of the motions of Pitts‟
current and former counsel for attorneys‟ fees and expenses
under 42 U.S.C. § 1988, with instructions that the District
Court consider those motions on the merits.
need not address Pitts‟ remaining contention that the District
Court abused its discretion in partially denying his motion to
compel the production of documents.
13