Enlow v. Tishomingo County, Miss.

                   UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                        For the Fifth Circuit



                             No. 93-7173



      HAROLD WAYNE ENLOW, (Angela Deaton, Donathon Enlow,
                 Lisa James and Martha Enlow, as
              Personal Representatives of appellant
           Harold Wayne Enlow, for Substitution in the
  Place and Stead of the Appellant Harold Wayne Enlow), et al.,

                                              Plaintiffs-Appellants,


                               VERSUS


               TISHOMINGO COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI, ET AL.,

                                              Defendants-Appellees.




          Appeal from the United States District Court
            For the Northern District of Mississippi
                          (CA EC89 61 D D)
                          (January 6, 1995)


Before REYNALDO G. GARZA, DEMOSS, and PARKER, Circuit Judges.

PER CURIAM:*

     The plaintiffs filed a § 1983 suit against Tishomingo County,

County Sheriff Richard Dobbs, and State Highway Patrol Investigator

Jim Wall, alleging that the defendants violated the plaintiffs'


     *
     Local Rule 47.5 provides: "The publication of opinions that
have no precedential value and merely decide particular cases on
the basis of well-settled principles of law imposes needless
expense on the public and burdens on the legal profession."
Pursuant to that Rule, the Court has determined that this opinion
should not be published.
constitutional and state common law rights.        The district court

ruled for the defendants on a variety of motions.       The plaintiffs

appealed, and we now affirm.

                                     I.

     The facts in this case are described at length in our opinion

disposing of an interlocutory appeal in this case.        See Enlow v.

Tishomingo County, 962 F.2d 501, 503-06 (5th Cir. 1992) (Enlow I).

We recount only a portion of those facts here.          Throughout the

1980s, Harold Wayne Enlow owned and, with the help of his daughter,

Angela Deaton, operated a skating rink in Iuka, Mississippi.           In

September 1988, he leased the premises to a Tennessee company that,

according to Enlow, represented to him that the premises would be

used for non-profit bingo games. Tishomingo County law enforcement

officials received a tip that, in fact, the premises were being

used for illegal gambling.     On the night the "bingo game" opened,

Sheriff Dobbs, Investigator Wall, and several other officers raided

the premises.

     Enlow challenged Dobbs' authority to raid the operation,

whereupon   Enlow   was   arrested   for interfering   with   the   raid.1

Pursuant to Mississippi law at the time of his arrest, Enlow was

     1
       Enlow specifically was charged with violating a Mississippi
law which prohibits anyone from opposing the seizure of gambling
funds. The statute reads as follows:
      Any person or persons who shall oppose the seizure of any such
      moneys or appliances by an officer or person so authorized to
      make it, shall, on conviction thereof, be liable to a penalty
      of fifteen hundred dollars; and any person who shall take any
      part of said money after the said seizure shall be declared,
      shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and on conviction thereof,
      shall be fined and imprisoned, at the discretion of the court.
MISS. CODE ANN. § 97-33-19.

                                     2
required to post a two percent bond fee, or $60, for executing his

$3,000 security bond to be released from jail.2             The interference

charge against Enlow ultimately was "nol. prossed"3 in February

1989.           Dobbs testified below that he urged that the charge, which

is a misdemeanor offense, be dropped so that he could present a

broader range of charges to the next grand jury, whose term was

scheduled to begin in April 1989.             Dobbs expected the charges to

include the misdemeanor interference charge along with various

gambling-related charges, one of which is a felony.4

     The plaintiffs5 filed this § 1983 suit in March 1989.              They

originally complained:

     (1)            Wall and Dobbs violated Enlow's First Amendment right to
                    speak out against the raid and his Fourth Amendment right
                    not to be arrested without probable cause;


    2
      The bond fee statute, at the time of Enlow's arrest, read as
follows:
      Upon every defendant charged with a criminal offense who posts
      a cash bail bond, a surety bail bond or property bail bond
      conditioned for his appearance at trial, there is hereby
      imposed a fee equal to two percent (2%) of the face value of
      each bond or twenty dollars ($20), whichever is greater.
MISS. CODE ANN. § 99-1-19(2) (Supp. 1990).
                3
          This term is short for "nolle prosequi," whereby the
prosecutor declares that he will not prosecute the case further.
BLACK'S LAW DICTIONARY 945 (5th ed. 1979). The nol. pros. order was
entered by the county's Justice Court in February 1989. The term
presumably carries no double jeopardy implications because, as
discussed below, the state eventually indicted and tried Enlow,
along with Deaton, for various gambling-related offenses.
        4
      The previous grand jury term had expired in September 1988,
meaning no felony indictments could be issued between September
1988 and April 1989.
            5
      The plaintiffs include not only Enlow and Deaton but also
Harold Enterprises, Inc., which owned a leasehold interest in the
skating rink.

                                          3
     (2)    the statute pursuant to which Enlow was arrested ("the
            interference statute") is facially unconstitutional under
            the free speech clause of the First Amendment;

     (3)    the two percent bond fee statute ("the bond fee statute")
            at that time was facially unconstitutional under the due
            process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment and the
            takings clause of the Fifth Amendment; and

     (4)    Dobbs violated the plaintiffs' Fourth Amendment right
            against improper seizures.

No criminal charges against Enlow and Deaton were pending when they

filed their suit.           However, Assistant District Attorney (ADA)

Roland Geddie, as planned, presented a broader range of offenses to

the grand     jury    in    April   1989.      Under    Geddie's    instructions,

Investigator Wall testified before the grand jury regarding the

events surrounding the raid.                 Wall was the only witness who

testified.    The grand jury indicted Enlow and Deaton for various

gambling-related offenses, whereupon Enlow (for the second time)

and Deaton (for the first time) had to pay two percent of their

bond as a fee.    The two were prosecuted but were never convicted of

any of the offenses.

     In    response    to    the    criminal    prosecution,    the   plaintiffs

amended their complaint in April 1989 to include a retaliation

claim   against      Wall   and     Dobbs.     The     plaintiffs   specifically

complained:

     (1)    Wall and Dobbs violated Enlow's and Deaton's First
            Amendment rights to sue the officers without retaliation;
            and

     (2)    Wall and Dobbs violated Enlow's and Deaton's Fourteenth
            Amendment right against malicious prosecution AND their
            state law rights against malicious prosecution and abuse
            of process.



                                         4
After considerable discovery, the plaintiffs and Wall each moved

for summary judgment.              Wall moved for summary judgment in June

19906       as   to   the   §   1983   claims   and    the    state    law   malicious

prosecution/abuse of process claims.                  He specifically argued that

he was entitled to qualified immunity from any claims arising out

of Enlow's and Deaton's arrest in September 1988.                        In addition,

Wall argued that he was entitled to absolute immunity from any

claims arising from his grand jury testimony.                         The plaintiffs,

meanwhile,        moved     for   summary   judgment     in   July    1990   on   their

constitutional challenges to the interference statute and the bond

fee statute.

        The district court issued its ruling in November 1990.                     See

Enlow v. Tishomingo County, 1990 WL 366913 (N.D. Miss. 1990).                      The

court first addressed the plaintiffs' motion for summary judgment

as to the constitutionality of the two statutes.                      The court found

that the interference statute was not facially invalid because it

"is capable of construction that respects the first amendment."

The court also concluded that the bond fee statute violated neither

the fourteenth nor the fifth amendments.                 The court then addressed

Wall's motion for summary judgment.                     The court denied Wall's

motion, finding that whether Wall was qualifiedly immune (i.e.,

whether Wall acted as a reasonable officer with a reasonable

understanding of the plaintiffs' constitutional rights) was a fact


        6
      Wall had moved for summary judgment in April 1989, prior to
any discovery.    He argued that he was entitled to qualified
immunity from any of the plaintiffs' claims. The district court
denied Wall's motion in September 1989.

                                            5
issue.   The court also rejected Wall's claim of absolute immunity

regarding his grand jury testimony.      Wall appealed the court's

denial of his summary judgment motion.    We held that the dispute

over the facts regarding Wall's claims of immunity was genuine and,

therefore, affirmed the district court's ruling.   See Enlow I, 962

F.2d at 509-13.

     The case then proceeded to trial.   Following the presentation

of all the evidence, the defendants moved for a directed verdict as

to the plaintiffs' claims that Wall and Dobbs retaliated against

them for filing the § 1983 suit.     The court granted the motion.

The plaintiffs then moved for a directed verdict as to their claim

that Sheriff Dobbs improperly seized their property.     The court

denied their motion.     The outstanding claims (i.e., whether the

defendants violated Enlow's first and fourth amendment rights when

they arrested him during the raid, and whether Sheriff Dobbs

violated the plaintiffs' fourth amendment rights when he seized

their property) were submitted to the jury.      The jury ruled in

favor of the defendants as to each claim.

     The plaintiffs now appeal: (1) the court's directed verdict

for Wall and Dobbs on the plaintiffs' retaliation claims, (2) the

court's ruling on the constitutionality of both the interference

statute and the bond fee statute, and (3) the court's refusal to

direct a verdict for the plaintiffs' claim that Dobbs improperly

seized their property.




                                 6
                                       II.

                                       A.

     We review a directed verdict de novo, applying the same

standard as the district court.         Becker v. Paine Webber, Inc., 962

F.2d 524, 526 (5th Cir. 1992). Accordingly, we must view the facts,

and any reasonable inferences that may be drawn therefrom, in the

light most favorable to the non-movant. Turner v. Purina Mills,

Inc., 989 F.2d 1419, 1421 (5th Cir. 1993).                If the facts and

inferences point so strongly and overwhelmingly in favor of one

party, such that reasonable men could not arrive at a contrary

verdict, the motion should be granted.          Boeing Co. v. Shipman, 411

F.2d 365, 374 (5th Cir. 1969) (en banc).                A mere scintilla of

evidence is insufficient to present a question for the jury.              Id.

     The plaintiffs at trial had claimed that Wall and Dobbs

instigated the state to prosecute Enlow and Deaton in retaliation

for their § 1983 suit and, therefore, violated Enlow's and Deaton's

rights       under   the   First   Amendment   (i.e.,   free   speech),   the

Fourteenth Amendment (i.e., malicious prosecution), and Mississippi

common law (i.e., malicious prosecution and abuse of process). The

court ruled that, as to all of the defendants, the evidence did not

present a question of fact upon which the jury could find that

plaintiffs were indicted and prosecuted in retaliation for filing

their § 1983 lawsuit.7

         7
       The court alternatively ruled that Wall was entitled to
absolute immunity from any claim arising from his grand jury
testimony. Because we affirm the district court's directed verdict
for the defendants, we do not reach the court's alternative
holding.

                                        7
     On appeal, Enlow and Deaton argue that the evidence adduced

below   constitutes   more   than   a       "scintilla,"   thereby   making   a

directed verdict inappropriate.8            They concede that all of it is

circumstantial, but argue that circumstantial evidence sometimes is

sufficient not only to avoid a directed verdict but also to find

liability.   The plaintiffs argue that a reasonable jury could have

inferred retaliatory intent because:

     (1)    Enlow was charged for a felony gambling offense only
            after he had filed his § 1983 suit;

     (2)    Deaton was charged not at the time of the raid but only
            after she had filed her § 1983 suit;

     (3)    Wall admitted that, after he learned of the § 1983 suit,
            several fellow officers told Wall he would be "better
            off" if Deaton were convicted;

     (4)    Wall and Dobbs admitted that they discussed the lawsuit
            prior to Wall's grand jury appearance;

     (5)    the timing of the indictments was too coincidental;

     (6)    Enlow and Deaton were custodially arrested after the
            indictments were issued whereas the other named
            defendants were not arrested;

        8
       The plaintiffs initially argue that the district court's
refusal to submit the retaliation claims to the jury violated the
law of the case doctrine because, in Enlow I, we found that
material factual issues precluded summary judgment as to Wall's
immunity claims. The district court rejected this argument below,
reasoning that we had directed the court only to hear the evidence.
The district court's ruling on this issue was correct. When the
evidence in a subsequent trial is substantially different, a prior
legal determination is not binding. Illinois Cent. Gulf R.R. Co. v.
International Paper Co., 889 F.2d 536, 539 (5th Cir. 1989). In
Enlow I, we did not resolve whether the plaintiffs had presented
sufficient evidence to avoid a directed verdict. See Enlow, 962
F.2d at 510-13.    Rather, we concluded that sufficient evidence
existed, at that stage of the proceeding, to preclude summary
judgment. Id. Between the court's ruling on Wall's motion for
summary judgment and its ruling on the defendants' joint motion for
directed verdict, the parties had presented all of their evidence.


                                        8
     (7)    the other named defendants were permitted to plead guilty
            to misdemeanor offenses while Enlow and Deaton were tried
            for felony offenses; and

     (8)    Deaton and Enlow at trial below directly contradicted
            Wall's grand jury testimony that they insisted during the
            raid that the gambling funds belonged to them.

     We disagree.     The defendants at trial proffered extensive,

uncontroverted direct evidence of their intent, prior to March

1989, to seek indictments.    Specifically, each defendant testified

that, as early as October 1988, they discussed their intention to

seek indictments. Sheriff Dobbs also testified that at the meeting

in February 1989, where Enlow's interference charge was nol.

prossed, he stressed his intentions to seek indictments against all

of the operation's participants.        The county attorney who was

present at the meeting corroborated Dobbs's testimony.           Enlow's

attorney at that time also was present at the meeting.               The

attorney did not testify below and, therefore, could not contradict

Dobbs.

     We also note that ADA Geddie testified at trial, without

contradiction, that he alone directed the grand jury proceeding

without     encouragement   or    coercion   from   Wall    or     Dobbs.

Specifically, Geddie initiated contact with Wall to instruct him to

testify before the grand jury, decided which charges to pursue, and

drafted the indictments.         Finally, as to the remaining named

defendants who were not arrested, Dobbs testified that because they

resided in Tennessee, he had no authority to cross state lines and

arrest     them.    While   the    plaintiffs   correctly   note     that

circumstantial evidence may be enough to avoid a directed verdict,


                                    9
we cannot overlook the strength of the defendants' direct evidence

to the contrary.       In the final analysis, the plaintiffs' claim of

retaliation rests largely on the sequence of litigation, i.e., the

plaintiffs were prosecuted only after they had filed their § 1983

suit.      We find this sequence of events, by itself, does not amount

to a reasonable inference of retaliatory intent.

                                        B.

          The plaintiffs next appeal the district court's ruling as to

the   constitutionality      of   the   interference   and   the   bond   fee

statutes.9       We have reviewed the parties' briefs and relevant

portions of the record and have concluded that the district court's

opinion regarding the plaintiffs' constitutional challenges to the

statutes is well reasoned and correctly decided.

                                        C.

          Finally, the plaintiffs appeal the district court's refusal to

direct a verdict for the plaintiffs regarding Sheriff Dobbs'

seizure of their property.         The jury below determined that the

length of the seizure was not unreasonable.               The plaintiffs,

however, do not appeal the jury's verdict.             Instead, they claim

that the seizure was improper as a matter of law, and that the



      9
      Several days before we heard oral argument, Investigator Wall
"suggested" to the court that this portion of the plaintiffs'
appeal was moot because Enlow had died while the appeal was
pending. As a general rule, a claim for monetary damages must be
resolved on the merits. Henschen v. City of Houston, 959 F.2d 584,
587-88 (5th Cir. 1992); 13A CHARLES A. WRIGHT ET AL., FEDERAL PRACTICE AND
PROCEDURE § 3533 (1984).    Though the plaintiffs' complaints are
somewhat inartfully drafted, we will construe them as claims for
monetary damages.

                                        10
district court should have granted their directed verdict motion

for that reason.

        When reviewing a denial of a motion for a directed verdict, we

examine the record in a light most favorable to the party opposing

the motion.            We reverse the district court only if we find there

was no conflict in substantial evidence such that reasonable minds

could differ.           Horton v. Buhrke, A Division of Klein Tools, Inc.,

926 F.2d 456, 459 (5th Cir. 1991).              We find that the district

court's ruling in this case was proper.           The officers at the time

of the seizure were lawfully within the building and seized the

entire property in order to determine which items would be used as

evidence in the subsequent prosecution.

                                        III.

        For the foregoing reasons, the district court is AFFIRMED.




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