United States Court of Appeals
FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
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No. 09-1185
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Alice McCabe; Christine Nelson, *
*
Plaintiffs - Appellants, *
*
v. *
*
Michael Parker, *
*
Defendant - Appellee, *
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Iowa State Patrol, *
*
Defendant, *
*
W. Ralph Basham; Tom Ridge; *
Bruce Macaulay; Holly Michael; *
United States of America; Michelle *
Mais, Deputy Sheriff; Linn County, *
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Defendants - Appellees. *
___________
Appeals from the United States
No. 09-1847 District Court for the
___________ Northern District of Iowa.
Alice McCabe; Christine Nelson, *
*
Plaintiffs - Appellants, *
*
v. *
*
Michael Parker; Iowa State Patrol; *
W. Ralph Basham; Tom Ridge; *
Bruce Macaulay; Holly Michael; *
United States of America, *
*
Defendants, *
*
Michelle Mais, Deputy Sheriff, *
*
Defendant - Appellee, *
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Linn County, *
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Defendant. *
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Submitted: October 20, 2009
Filed: June 30, 2010
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Before WOLLMAN, MURPHY, and BYE, Circuit Judges.
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BYE, Circuit Judge.
Alice McCabe and Christine Nelson attended a 2004 Republican campaign rally
in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, to protest President Bush's position on the Iraq war. After
being arrested for trespass and subjected to a strip and visual body cavity search at the
Linn County jail, McCabe and Nelson brought suit against several federal, state, and
county officials alleging violations of the First and Fourth Amendments. Most of the
claims were dismissed before trial. The case went to trial against one secret service
agent on claims arising from the alleged unlawful arrests and against the county jailer
who conducted the strip and visual body cavity searches.
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The jury found against McCabe and Nelson on the arrest claims. The jury
found in favor of McCabe and Nelson on the search claims and awarded $750,000 in
damages. The district court granted the jailer's request for a new trial on the grounds
the $750,000 award was excessive and gave McCabe and Nelson the option of
accepting a remittitur in the amount of $75,000, which they rejected. A second jury
awarded $55,804. McCabe and Nelson filed timely appeals raising issues arising from
the pre-trial dismissal of some claims, the first trial, the second trial, and their post-
trial requests for attorney fees. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand.
I
On September 3, 2004, the Republican National Committee (RNC) held a
campaign rally at the Noelridge Park in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, supporting the
candidacies of President George W. Bush and other Republican candidates for federal
and state offices in the November 2004 elections. Two days prior to the rally, Joel
Miller, the chairman of the Linn County Democratic Party, arranged to hold a protest
at the pool house within the park, obtaining permission from the Cedar Rapids Police
Department to do so. Miller sent an email to various registered Democrats in eastern
Iowa, inviting "PEACEFUL PROTESTORS" to come to the pool house and protest
President Bush's visit. America Coming Together, a political action group, sent a
similar email to others including Christine Nelson, a schoolteacher (now retired),
inviting her to come to the pool house during the rally to protest the Iraq war. Nelson
decided to attend the rally and invited one of her friends, Alice McCabe, a retired
schoolteacher, to join her. McCabe accepted the invitation and invited another friend,
Barb Hannon, to join them. The three women agreed to meet with fellow
demonstrators near the pool house on the day of the rally.
In preparation for the rally, federal secret service agents implemented security
measures to ensure the safety of President Bush and other rally attendees. In
cooperation with state and local law enforcement officials, the secret service
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constructed physical barriers between the park and adjoining rights-of-way, imposed
restrictions upon entry to the park, and imposed restrictions on vehicular and
pedestrian use of adjoining rights-of-way. A parking lot in the southwest corner of
the park1 was set up as the secure entrance, with snow fences constructed around the
rest of the park. Rally attendees could either enter the parking lot on foot or take a
shuttle bus into the parking lot, and then pass through metal detectors before entering
the park itself. With the exception of law enforcement vehicles, shuttle buses were
the only vehicles allowed on 42nd Street NE, the street bordering the south side of the
park.
The restrictions the secret service placed on pedestrian traffic on the roads and
sidewalks adjacent to the park generally prohibited people from standing or
congregating on the roads or sidewalks so as not to disrupt the flow of shuttle buses
or pedestrians into the rally, impede emergency evacuation, or make it more difficult
for law enforcement to monitor the crowd for potential threats. Members of the
general public were not allowed to stop and stand in or around the shuttle bus entrance
on the park-side sidewalk of 42nd Street NE. In addition, only moving pedestrians
were allowed on the sidewalk across the street from the park on 42nd Street NE.
The pool house is on the south edge of the park, flanked by the parking lot to
the west and tennis courts to the east. Significantly, the secret service designated the
pool house as a command center that would be off limits to all but authorized
personnel, requiring a change in the protestors' plans. The afternoon before the rally,
Steven O'Konek, the Cedar Rapids police officer who had given permission for the
protest at the pool house, emailed Joel Miller to notify him the entire park had been
designated a secure area, including the pool house. Officer O'Konek assured Miller,
however, "[t]here will be a location for your demonstration," and that law enforcement
1
President Bush was to speak from a temporary stage set up in the opposite
(northeast) corner of the park.
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officers would direct demonstrators to a location suitable for the planned protest. The
southwest corner of Council Street NE and 42nd Street NE was made available as a
place for protestors to gather.
Nelson, McCabe, and Hannon did not learn about the change in plans regarding
the pool house. The three women were also unaware of the restrictions on pedestrian
traffic on the sidewalks and streets adjacent to the park, because the restrictions were
not posted for public view. On the day of the rally, the three women approached the
southwest corner of the park on foot, walking on the sidewalk across the street from
the park on 42nd Street NE. McCabe carried an 8 1/2" x 11" piece of paper affixed
to a small yard sign. The sign said "Bad War No More" and a had a "W" with a slash
through it. Nelson and Hannon did not have protest signs, but Nelson displayed a
small "Kerry-Edwards" button and Hannon wore a small "Kerry" button.
Still planning to meet other protestors at the pool house, the three women
crossed 42nd Street NE directly south of the tennis courts. They then turned and
doubled back, walking westward on the park-side sidewalk, all the while looking for
the pool house demonstration and their fellow protesters. Hannon got separated from
McCabe and Nelson when she met an acquaintance; the other two women continued
walking, finally stopping next to the shuttle bus entrance believing they could meet
fellow protestors there.
Secret Service Agent Michael Parker was posted near the shuttle bus entrance
in plainclothes. He saw McCabe standing next to the bus entrance and told her to
move off the sidewalk. Nelson heard Parker as well, and both women moved off the
sidewalk and onto the strip of grass between the sidewalk and the street, still standing
close to the shuttle bus entrance. After the two women had been standing in this
location for several minutes, Parker told McCabe to move down the street or across
the street. A few other people were near the bus entrance, including a man with a
bucket collecting donations on behalf of Republicans. McCabe, feeling she was being
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singled out, asked Parker whether he was going to tell everyone else to move as well.
Parker then radioed for assistance. Secret Service Agent Bruce Macaulay, also in
plainclothes, approached McCabe and Nelson and ordered them to move. The two
women questioned why they were not permitted to stay where they were. After
confronting McCabe three times, Macaulay made the decision to arrest the women for
trespass if they did not move within thirty seconds. After thirty seconds passed, Iowa
State Troopers Rich Busch and Troy Bailey, who along with Sergeant Jim Loveland
had also responded to Parker's request for assistance and had also directed McCabe
and Nelson to move several times, finally arrested the two women.
After being arrested and charged with simple misdemeanor trespass under Iowa
law, the two women were taken to the Linn County jail. At the jail, despite the fact
neither woman was suspected of hiding weapons or contraband and had only been
charged with a simple misdemeanor, Linn County Deputy Sheriff Michelle Mais
conducted a "full strip search" of the two women in violation of jail policy.2 The "full
strip search" required the two women to strip naked and included a visual body cavity
search. In a visual body cavity search, detainees must bend over and spread their
buttocks and allow an officer to inspect their rectal area. The visual body cavity
search also included an inspection of the women's vaginas. While Nelson was
searched, the top half of a Dutch door to the room in which the search took place was
open, and male jailers passed by the open door during the search.
Because the rally organizers had never obtained formal approval from the City
of Cedar Rapids to hold the rally in the park, or to close the adjacent public streets and
2
The federal officials responsible for the women's arrest at the rally had no
authority over the Linn County Jail, no knowledge of the jail's practices, and no
knowledge of what type of search, if any, might be performed on the two women
following their arrests.
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sidewalks for the exclusive use of the rally,3 there was no lawful basis for the trespass
charges against McCabe and Nelson. Three months after the rally, the Linn County
Attorney dismissed the trespass charges.
McCabe and Nelson brought suit in federal district court against a number of
federal, state, and county officials, including Secret Service Agents Macaulay and
Parker, Iowa State Troopers Busch and Bailey, and Linn County Jailer Michelle Mais.
The two women asserted various violations of their First and Fourth Amendment
rights arising out of the allegedly unlawful arrest and unlawful strip and body cavity
search. McCabe and Nelson also alleged a nationwide conspiracy on the part of the
Bush Administration to target and suppress protesters for exercising their First
Amendment rights to oppose Bush's policy on the Iraq war.
McCabe and Nelson sought to add as defendants Tom Ridge (then the Secretary
of the Department of Homeland Security) and W. Ralph Basham (then the Director
of the United States Secret Service) for their part in the alleged conspiracy. These two
defendants moved to dismiss the claims against them for lack of personal jurisdiction.
McCabe and Nelson opposed the motion and requested jurisdictional discovery,
supporting their response with several newspaper articles and hundreds of pages of
internet research showing the existence of a number of lawsuits pending around the
United States involving the alleged unlawful arrests of protesters at Bush campaign
rallies. The district court granted the motion to dismiss Ridge and Basham without
allowing McCabe and Nelson to conduct discovery.
Most of the claims brought by McCabe and Nelson were dismissed prior to
trial, including Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA) claims brought directly against the
United States. The district court dismissed the FTCA claims as a sanction against
3
Under Iowa law, "public ways and grounds may be temporarily closed by
resolution," Iowa Code § 364.12(2)(a), but the RNC did not seek such a resolution
from the City prior to the rally.
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McCabe and Nelson on the grounds they filed an inadequate brief in response to the
government's motion to dismiss. The Iowa state troopers who executed the arrest
reached a settlement agreement prior to trial, and testified as witnesses rather than
parties. Mais, the jailer who conducted the strip and visual body cavity searches,
conceded liability4 and only contested damages. The district court concluded Agent
Macaulay was not responsible for any damages that arose from the unlawful searches.
Thus, the only claims that proceeded to trial were the First and Fourth Amendment
claims against Agent Macaulay arising from the allegedly unlawful arrests, and the
damages portion of the Fourth Amendment claims against Mais arising from the strip
and visual body cavity searches at the jail.
At trial, McCabe and Nelson described the humiliation and trauma they
experienced as the result of being forced to stand naked in front of a complete stranger
and expose intimate parts of their body. Barb Hannon bailed the two women out of
jail and described them as being in "shock." Both spent the night crying. When
describing the search, McCabe testified she was "horrified." She said it was "like it
was happening to another person, like – like I was almost standing back watching this
happen to me, because I just couldn't – I couldn't wrap my brain around what was
going on." Nelson testified she was "humiliated, and I felt violated. I felt as though
I had lost control of my own body. I couldn't imagine many things that would be
worse." Nelson was diagnosed with depression following the arrest and search, and
obtained medical treatment for her depression.
4
Mais's conduct not only violated the jail's policy, but also Iowa law, see Iowa
Code § 804.30 (prohibiting a strip search of a person arrested for a simple
misdemeanor absent probable cause to believe the person is concealing contraband or
weapons) as well as the Fourth Amendment, e.g., Jones v. Edwards, 770 F.2d 739,
740-42 (8th Cir. 1985) (concluding a strip and visual body cavity search of a person
arrested for a simple misdemeanor violated the Fourth Amendment where there was
no reason to suspect the detainee was harboring weapons or contraband, and
discussing cases from other circuits concluding the same).
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In answers to special interrogatories, the jury found Agent Macaulay reasonably
believed McCabe and Nelson disobeyed a law enforcement officer's order to move
and the arrests were not motivated by the two women's exercise of their First
Amendment rights.5 Based upon the jury's answers to the special interrogatories, the
district court concluded the arrests were supported by probable cause and dismissed
the First and Fourth Amendment claims against Agent Macaulay arising from the
arrests.
At the close of the plaintiffs' case, Mais requested that a directed verdict be
entered against her on the issue of liability, but argued only nominal damages should
be awarded to McCabe on the grounds McCabe had not presented sufficient evidence
of emotional distress arising from her unlawful search. The district court entered a
directed verdict on the issue of liability, but denied the request for nominal damages
against McCabe and allowed the jury to decide the amount of both McCabe's and
Nelson's damages arising from the searches. The jury awarded McCabe $250,000 and
Nelson $500,000 in damages.
Mais brought a post-trial motion for a new trial on the grounds the jury's
damage award was excessive. The district court granted the motion, concluding the
damage award was excessive and shocked the court's conscience. The district court
gave McCabe and Nelson the option of accepting a 90% remittitur in the amount of
$75,000 in lieu of a new trial, which they rejected. Mais then made an offer of
judgment under Rule 68 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure in the same amount
as the district court's remittitur, which the two women also rejected. The district court
5
The special interrogatories were crafted consistent with the process set forth
in Peterson v. City of Plymouth, 60 F.3d 469, 475-76 (8th Cir. 1995), involving a
Fourth Amendment unlawful arrest claim. Peterson indicates the jury should be asked
to resolve discrete factual questions to determine what the officers knew at the time
of an arrest, with the court thereafter deciding the legal question of probable cause
(and, in this case, infringement of the First Amendment as well).
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set the date for a second trial just three weeks after granting the motion for a new trial.
Because of the short notice, McCabe and Nelson filed a motion for a continuance
setting forth their counsels' scheduling conflicts. The district court denied the request
for a continuance. In the second trial, the jury awarded $10,002 in damages to
McCabe, and $45,802 in damages to Nelson. McCabe and Nelson brought post-trial
motions following the second trial, which the district court denied.
Finally, McCabe and Nelson moved for an award of attorney fees as prevailing
parties under 42 U.S.C. § 1988. As to the fees incurred up to and through the first
trial, McCabe and Nelson conceded 60% of their total fees should be attributed toward
the unsuccessful claims involving their arrests, and argued the remaining 40% should
be awarded for their success on the search claims. Mais opposed the request, arguing
85% of the total fees should be allocated to the unsuccessful arrest claims, and only
15% to the successful search claims. The district court agreed with Mais and awarded
15% of the fees incurred through the first trial.
With respect to the fees incurred during the second trial, the district court
awarded $7,532.95 out of a requested amount of $65,798.40. The amount awarded
by the district court equaled the amount incurred prior to Mais's Rule 68 offer of
judgment. The district court denied the request for fees incurred after the Rule 68
offer of judgment because the amount awarded by the second jury was less than the
offer of judgment. See City of Riverside v. Rivera, 477 U.S. 561, 580 (1986) (holding
a defendant is not liable for § 1988 attorney fees which are incurred after a Rule 68
offer of judgment "where the judgment recovered by the plaintiff is less than the
offer").
McCabe and Nelson filed timely appeals raising a host of issues with respect
to claims dismissed prior to trial, the arrest claims, the unlawful search claims, and the
partial award of attorneys fees.
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II
A. The Arrest Claims
McCabe and Nelson challenge the adverse resolution of the First and Fourth
Amendment claims arising from their arrests. The two women contend the district
court (1) erred in dismissing Ridge and Basham for lack of personal jurisdiction
without allowing jurisdictional discovery, (2) erred in sanctioning them by dismissing
the FTCA claims against the United States, (3) erred in granting summary judgment
to two individual Secret Service Agents prior to trial, (4) abused its discretion by
refusing to allow State Troopers Busch and Bailey to be treated as adverse witnesses
and by preventing the troopers' status as settling parties from being introduced into
evidence to establish bias, (5) erred in concluding probable cause supported the arrest
based upon the jury's answers to the special interrogatories, (6) committed
instructional error on their First Amendment claims, and (7) erred in failing to submit
to the jury a conspiracy claim brought pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1985(3).
Lack of probable cause is a necessary element of all the claims McCabe and
Nelson brought arising from the allegedly unlawful arrests. See Devenpeck v. Alford,
543 U.S. 146, 152 (2004) ("[A] warrantless arrest by a law officer is reasonable under
the Fourth Amendment where there is probable cause to believe that a criminal
offense has been or is being committed."); Williams v. City of Carl Junction,
Missouri, 480 F.3d 871, 876 (8th Cir. 2007) (holding that a plaintiff asserting a Bivens
or § 1983 claim for an alleged unlawful citation arising from the exercise of First
Amendment rights must plead and prove a lack of probable cause for the underlying
charge pursuant to the Supreme Court's decision in Hartman v. Moore, 547 U.S. 250
(2006)). As a consequence, most of the challenges to the disposition of specific
arrest-related claims (and the defensive arguments advanced by the appellees) will
be rendered moot if the arrests were supported by probable cause. We therefore focus
our attention on the issues related to probable cause. Before we do that, however, we
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must address the evidentiary issues raised by McCabe and Nelson with respect to the
sequence of events surrounding the arrests, because a change in that evidence may
have affected the jury's answers to the special interrogatories.
McCabe and Nelson raise two evidentiary issues involving the testimony of
Iowa State Troopers Busch and Bailey with respect to the sequence of events
surrounding the arrests. First, they contend the district court should have allowed
them to ask leading questions during the troopers' direct examinations because they
were adverse witnesses, and the district court improperly disrupted the flow of the
direct exam with sua sponte comments at a critical juncture. Second, they contend the
jury should have been told the troopers were defendants who had settled. We review
these evidentiary issues under an abuse-of-discretion standard. Gill v. Maciejewski,
546 F.3d 557, 562 (8th Cir. 2008).
The exact location where the two women were arrested was a hotly contested
fact at trial. The two women had been instructed by secret service agents and local
law enforcement officers to move away from the shuttle bus entrance, and a primary
issue for the jury was whether the two women had disobeyed the orders. McCabe and
Nelson contend they obeyed the request to move by retreating from the park side of
42nd Street NE, and into or across the street to the south. A video taken by a
bystander, and a still photograph reproduced from the video, depict Trooper Busch
holding Nelson by the arm after her arrest. Significantly, Nelson is standing on the
south side of the street at the time, and a witness testified the photo shows the location
where Nelson was arrested. Another photo shows McCabe in the middle of the street
after her arrest. The photos discredited testimony given by the troopers marking the
location of the arrests on the park side of the street. McCabe and Nelson further
contend the photos conflicted with the troopers' testimony that McCabe and Nelson
could have avoided being arrested if they had just moved south across the street,
because the photos showed they already had moved south across the street by the time
they were arrested.
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McCabe and Nelson called the troopers as witnesses in their case-in-chief.
During the troopers' direct examination, at times when plaintiff's counsel was
attempting to impeach the troopers regarding the location of the arrests, the district
court instructed plaintiff's counsel to avoid leading questions and denied counsel's
request to treat the first testifying trooper (Bailey) as an adverse witness. McCabe and
Nelson contend these evidentiary rulings were an abuse of discretion and had a
substantial impact on the jury's answer to the probable cause inquiry. We disagree.
A similar challenge to a district court's sua sponte instructions to avoid leading
an adverse witness on direct examination was addressed in Scenic Holding, LLC v.
New Board of Trustees of Tabernacle Missionary Baptist Church, Inc., 506 F.3d 656
(8th Cir. 2007). Scenic Holding explained that under Federal Rule of Evidence 611(c)
"[t]he standard, acceptable, and preferred procedure is to permit counsel to lead an
adverse or hostile witness on direct examination" but that the Rule "is permissive and
must be read in context with the trial court's general authority and discretion to control
the conduct of the trial." Id. at 664. The court concluded the impact of the district
court's sua sponte instructions was "minuscule" and did not affect the appellant's
substantial rights. Id. We reach the same conclusion here.
A review of the trial transcript indicates plaintiffs' counsel was able to
adequately present the conflicting testimony regarding the exact location of the
arrests, including the discredited testimony given by the two troopers, despite the
district court's instruction to avoid leading questions during direct examination.
Significantly, the troopers also testified during Agent Macaulay's case-in-chief, and
counsel had a full opportunity to conduct cross examination using leading questions.
Thus, any limitations placed on the questions during the plaintiffs' case-in-chief had
little impact on the overall trial.
Moreover, even assuming the comments had some impact on counsel's ability
to discredit the officers regarding the exact location of the arrests, we do not believe
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the actual location of the arrests is as critical as McCabe and Nelson contend.
Although the two women testified they complied with the requests to move across the
street, multiple secret service agents and local law enforcement officers testified both
women refused repeated requests to move over an extended period of time,
interrupting the officers by claiming other people were not being asked to move and
insisting they had a right as taxpayers to be on a public sidewalk. The jury heard all
the conflicting evidence on the disputed sequence of events surrounding the arrests,
and ultimately decided McCabe and Nelson disobeyed a law enforcement officer's
order to move. In other words, even if the evidence showed McCabe and Nelson
eventually moved away from the park and across the street before they were actually
arrested, the jury was free to decide they had already disobeyed an order to move by
then.
McCabe and Nelson also complain the district court improperly excluded any
reference to their settlement with the troopers or the troopers' status as former parties
to the lawsuit. While settlement evidence of this type is generally prohibited,
settlement evidence can be used to prove a witness's bias or prejudice. Fed. R. Evid.
408(b); see also Hennepin County v. AFG Indus., Inc., 726 F.2d 149, 152-53 (8th Cir.
1984). Prior to trial and before the troopers settled, McCabe and Nelson filed a
motion in limine seeking to have all settlement negotiations with the defendants
excluded from trial. The district court granted the motion. After settling with the
troopers, McCabe and Nelson changed course and sought to introduce evidence of the
settlement, purportedly to show the troopers' bias. The district court declined to
change its ruling on the prior motion in limine, ultimately excluding any evidence
related to the settlement under Federal Rule of Evidence 403. See Wood v. Minn.
Mining & Mfg. Co., 112 F.3d 306, 310 (8th Cir. 1997) (indicating evidence may be
excluded under Rule 403's balancing test even assuming it is relevant and admissible
under Rule 408). In this case, counsel was allowed to ask other questions related to
the troopers' alleged bias, and we perceive no abuse of the district court's discretion
in excluding the settlement evidence under Rule 403.
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We turn next to the probable cause issue. McCabe and Nelson challenge the
district court's conclusion that the jury's answers to the special interrogatories support
a finding of probable cause as a matter of law. The district court's conclusion there
was probable cause to support the arrests is reviewed de novo. United States v.
Quiroga, 554 F.3d 1150, 1154 (8th Cir. 2009); see also United States v. Brunette, 256
F.3d 14, 17 (1st Cir. 2001) (explaining de novo review of probable cause
determinations is "no different where First Amendment concerns may be at issue.").
The special interrogatory posed to the jurors asked:
In light of the information available to Defendant Bruce Macaulay at the
time of the arrest of Plaintiff Alice McCabe [and Christine Nelson], did
Defendant Bruce Macaulay have a reasonable basis to conclude that
Plaintiff Alice McCabe [and Christine Nelson] had disobeyed a law
enforcement officer's order to move?
App. at 174, 176. The jury answered "Yes" to this question with respect to both Alice
McCabe and Christine Nelson. Id.
As noted above, there was no lawful basis for the trespass charges actually
brought against McCabe and Nelson. That fact has no bearing on whether the arrests
comported with the Fourth Amendment, as long as there was probable cause to believe
some criminal offense had been committed. See Devenpeck, 543 U.S. at 153
(indicating an officer's "subjective reason for making the arrest need not be the
criminal offense as to which the known facts provide probable cause."). In
determining whether probable cause supported an arrest, we consider "the totality of
the circumstances as set forth in the information available to the officers at the time
of the arrest." United States v. Kelly, 329 F.3d 624, 628 (8th Cir. 2003) (citing
Illinois v. Gates, 462 U.S. 213, 230-39 (1983)). Furthermore, because Agent
Macaulay is entitled to qualified immunity if he had a mistaken but objectively
reasonable belief McCabe and Nelson had committed a criminal offense, McCabe and
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Nelson lose even if there was merely arguable probable cause to support the arrests.
Amrine v. Brooks, 522 F.3d 823, 832 (8th Cir. 2008).
The district court determined the jury's answers to the interrogatories supported
a finding of probable cause for the arrests under one or more of five separate federal
and state statutes, specifically: 18 U.S.C. § 3056(d),6 18 U.S.C. § 1752,7 Iowa Code
§ 719.1,8 Iowa Code § 723.4,9 and Iowa Code § 321.229.10
6
Section 3056(d) states:
Whoever knowingly and willfully obstructs, resists, or interferes with a
Federal law enforcement agent engaged in the performance of the
protective functions authorized by this section [protecting the President]
or by section 1752 of this title shall be fined not more than $1,000 or
imprisoned not more than one year, or both.
7
Section 1752 states in relevant part:
It shall be unlawful for any person or group of persons . . . willfully and
knowingly to enter or remain in . . . any posted, cordoned off, or
otherwise restricted area of a building or grounds where the President or
other person protected by the Secret Service is or will be temporarily
visiting.
8
Section 719.1 of the Iowa Code states in relevant part:
A person who knowingly resists or obstructs anyone known by the
person to be a peace officer . . . in the performance of any act which is
within the scope of the lawful duty or authority of that officer ... commits
a simple misdemeanor.
9
Section 723.4 of the Iowa Code states in relevant part:
A person commits a simple misdemeanor when the person does any of
the following . . . [w]ithout authority or justification, the person obstructs
any . . . sidewalk . . . with the intent to prevent or hinder its lawful use by
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We conclude there was arguable probable cause to arrest McCabe and Nelson
for violating 18 U.S.C. § 3056(d), which prohibits a person from resisting a federal
law enforcement agent who is performing protective services for the President. Cf.
United States v. McPherson, 21 F.3d 429 (6th Cir. 1994) (unpublished table
disposition) (1994 WL 100261, at *1-2) (affirming the conviction of a woman under
§ 3056(d) for repeatedly refusing a secret service agent's request to move from a
restricted area while he was performing protective services for former First Lady
Barbara Bush). Notwithstanding the secret service's failure to publicly post the
restrictions on pedestrian traffic on the sidewalks and streets adjacent to the park
(which was unfortunate), it is clear the area near the shuttle bus entrance had been
designated as a restricted area to ensure the safety of the President. McCabe and
Nelson were in the restricted area, and the jury found that Agent Macaulay had a
reasonable basis to conclude McCabe and Nelson had disobeyed a law enforcement
officer's order to move from the area. The totality of the circumstances present in this
case supports a finding of arguable probable cause that the two women violated §
3056(d).11
The remaining challenges to unfavorable rulings on the arrest claims are mooted
by the presence of arguable probable cause, including the claim the district court
committed instructional error on the First Amendment claims. See Hartman, 547 U.S.
at 265-66 (requiring absence of probable cause to be proven as an element of a
others.
10
Section 321.229 of the Iowa Code states: "No person shall willfully fail or
refuse to comply with any lawful order or direction of any peace officer invested by
law with authority to direct, control, or regulate traffic." In addition, section
321.1(84) includes "pedestrians" in the definition of "traffic."
11
Having concluded there was arguable probable cause that the two women
violated § 3056(d), it is unnecessary to address whether there was probable cause or
arguable probable cause to believe the women violated any of the other federal or state
statutes relied upon by the district court.
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retaliatory-prosecution case); Williams, 480 F.3d at 876 (applying Hartman to a First
Amendment claim where the plaintiff alleged he received citations in retaliation for
exercising his First Amendment rights); see also Beck v. City of Upland, 527 F.3d
853, 863-64 (9th Cir. 2008) (indicating a claim alleging an unlawful arrest in
retaliation for exercising First Amendment rights can only go forward under Hartman
"if a plaintiff can prove that the officials secured his arrest or prosecution without
probable cause and were motivated by retaliation against the plaintiff's protected
speech") (emphasis added).
In sum, we find no reversible error with respect to the disposition of the claims
McCabe and Nelson brought arising from their arrests.
B. The Search Claims
McCabe and Nelson also raise a number of challenges to the manner in which
the search claims were resolved. The two women contend the district court (1) erred
in concluding Agent Macaulay could not be held liable for damages arising from the
unlawful strip and visual body cavity search at the jail, (2) abused its discretion in
granting the jailer's request for a new trial or, in the alternative, requiring them to
accept a remittitur in the amount of $75,000, (3) abused its discretion by denying their
request for a continuance before the second trial, and (4) abused its discretion by
refusing to grant their request for a new trial following the second trial.
McCabe and Nelson first contend the district court erred in granting summary
judgment to Agent Macaulay on the claim that he, in addition to Mais, could be held
liable for damages arising from the unlawful search. We review a grant of summary
judgment de novo. Rand Corp. v. Yer Song Moua, 559 F.3d 842, 845 (8th Cir. 2009).
One of the premises for the claim that Macaulay could be held liable for the damages
the two women suffered at the jail following their arrests is that the arrests themselves
violated the Fourth Amendment. From this premise, McCabe and Nelson contend
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there was a causal link between the unconstitutional arrests and any damages later
caused by the unlawful strip and visual body cavity searches. We do not need to
address this causation argument, however, because we have already concluded the
women's arrests did not violate the Fourth Amendment. Because Agent Macaulay did
not commit a constitutional violation in arresting the two women, it necessarily
follows that he cannot be held liable for any damages arising from the unlawful
searches that followed the arrests.
McCabe and Nelson next contend the district court abused its discretion in
granting Mais's motion for a new trial on the grounds the $750,000 damage award was
excessive, and in remitting the award to $75,000. We review a district court's
conditional grant of a new trial, and offer of a remittitur, for an abuse of discretion.
Dominium Mgmt. Servs., Inc. v. Nationwide Hous. Group, 195 F.3d 358, 366 (8th
Cir. 1999). Assuming the district court did not abuse its discretion in granting a new
trial on the grounds the verdict was excessive, we must also determine the propriety
of the amount of the remittitur offered. "[T]he standard we will apply in determining
whether there was an abuse of discretion in ordering the remittitur is whether the
remittitur was ordered for an amount less than the jury could reasonably find." Slatton
v. Martin K. Eby Const. Co., Inc., 506 F.2d 505, 508-09 (8th Cir. 1974).
McCabe and Nelson contend the district court improperly determined the
$750,000 award was excessive. In support of their contention, the two women point
to a number of damage awards comparable to or larger than $750,000 in cases
generally involving claims for emotional distress, but not necessarily cases involving
unlawful strip and body cavity searches. McCabe and Nelson further contend it was
improper for the district court to judge the excessiveness of this award by comparing
it to damage awards in other cases involving unlawful strip and visual body cavity
searches, because we have said "comparisons to other jury verdicts are often not
particularly helpful" in claims involving noneconomic damages. Herold v. Burlington
N., Inc., 761 F.2d 1241, 1248 (8th Cir. 1985).
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The district court justified its decision to use a damage comparison approach
on the grounds this particular case was a "garden variety" strip and body cavity search
case without any particularly unique or egregious facts. Although we have said a
damage comparison approach is often not helpful in claims involving noneconomic
damages, we have never prohibited the practice. In some cases, where the facts are
not easily comparable to the facts of other cases, the use of a damage comparison
approach may be an abuse of discretion. We do not, however, believe that to be true
here.
McCabe and Nelson have not identified any particularly egregious or unique
facts which would make this case difficult to compare to the facts of other cases
involving an unlawful strip and body cavity search. We do not mean to downplay the
emotional distress that arises from being subjected to an unlawful strip and body
cavity search. As the district court noted, however, the claims brought by McCabe
and Nelson were solely for the emotional distress that would naturally arise in every
such case. Neither McCabe nor Nelson presented evidence, for example, regarding
lost wages, loss of consortium, or loss of earning capacity. Moreover, while Nelson
offered testimony from a physician regarding the diagnosis of depression and
treatment she received following her arrest and the search, McCabe did not.12 We
therefore find no abuse of discretion in the district court's determination this was a
garden variety case, or in its decision to use a damage comparison approach.
Likewise, we find no abuse of discretion in the district court's determination the
damage award was excessive. As the district court further noted, McCabe and Nelson
12
The difference between the $250,000 the jury awarded to McCabe and the
$500,000 awarded to Nelson is likely explained by the medical treatment Nelson
received following the traumatic experience (while McCabe did not present evidence
of medical treatment) as well as the fact that the Dutch door was open while Nelson
was searched and male jailers passed by the open door (while that was not the case
with McCabe).
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were unable to cite to any case in which a court upheld a verdict this large solely for
the emotional distress associated with an unlawful strip and body cavity search. As
a consequence, we find no reversible error resulting from the district court's decision
to grant a new trial and offer a remittitur.
Having determined there was no abuse of discretion in granting a new trial and
offering a remittitur, we must still address whether the district court abused its
discretion in remitting the combined award of $750,000 down to $75,000, a reduction
of 90%.
Once the district court decided to implement a damage comparison approach,
it was incumbent upon the district court to follow the rules that apply to such an
approach. Our circuit (as well as others) requires remittiturs to comport with what is
often referred to as the maximum recovery rule. Under the maximum recovery rule,
when a district court remits a jury award, the remitted amount cannot be "for an
amount less than the jury could reasonably find." Slatton, 506 F.2d at 509; see also
Thomas v. Texas Dept. of Criminal Justice, 297 F.3d 361, 369 (5th Cir. 2002)
(indicating damages can be remitted "only to the maximum amount the jury could
have awarded" pursuant to the maximum recovery rule).13
The courts can look "to past similar awards [and if] the verdict falls within the
range established by previous awards . . . we will uphold the decision." Thomas, 297
13
We cite Thomas, a Fifth Circuit case, because we followed the Fifth Circuit's
approach when we adopted the maximum recovery rule. See Slatton, 506 F.2d at 509
(citing Gorsalitz v. Olin Mathieson Chemical Corp., 456 F.2d 180 (5th Cir. 1972)).
The Fifth Circuit also employs a multiplier when comparing similar damage awards,
see, e.g., Salinas v. O'Neill, 286 F.3d 827, 831 & n.6 (5th Cir. 2002), which we have
not to date adopted, and do not adopt now. Instead, we agree with the district court
that adjusting for inflation when comparing past similar awards is a better approach
than using a multiplier. See McCabe v. Mais, 580 F. Supp. 2d 815, 835 n.14 (N.D.
Iowa 2008) (citing Virginian Ry. Co. v. Rose, 267 F.2d 312, 316 (4th Cir. 1959)).
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F.3d at 369. When the verdict falls above the reasonable range, the amount can be
reduced but "only if the reduction permits recovery of the highest amount the jury
tolerably could have awarded." Langevine v. District of Columbia, 106 F.3d 1018,
1024 (D.C. Cir. 1997) (emphasis added) (internal quotation omitted). A reduction to
less than the full amount a reasonable jury could award violates a party's Seventh
Amendment right to a trial by jury. Id.; see also Dimick v. Schiedt, 293 U.S. 474, 486
(1935) (indicating the purpose of a remittitur is "merely lopping off" that portion of
the award deemed to be excessive, thereby preserving a plaintiff's right to have a jury
"determine . . . the extent of the injury by an assessment of damages.").14
In other words, once a district court decides to employ a damage comparison
approach and thereafter identifies a range of reasonable jury awards in similar cases,
it is not at liberty to remit an award to the low end of the range, or even somewhere
in the middle of the range. A district court's only choice is to remit the award to the
maximum amount identified as within the reasonable range.
In conducting its damage comparison, the district court listed a number of cases
from this jurisdiction and other jurisdictions which it considered comparable. The
district court appears to have identified the low end of the range as being the nominal
damages approved in Hunter v. Auger, 672 F.2d 668, 672 (8th Cir. 1972), and the
high end of the range as being the $75,000 awarded to one plaintiff in Joan W. v. City
of Chicago, 771 F.2d 1020, 1025 (7th Cir. 1985).
14
Other circuits which use the maximum recovery rule, in conjunction with a
damage comparison approach, include the Second and the Seventh. See Rangolan v.
County of Nassau, 370 F.3d 239, 244-47 (2d Cir. 2004); Spesco, Inc. v. Gen. Elec.
Co., 719 F.2d 233, 240-41 (7th Cir. 1983) (applying the maximum recovery rule) and
Joan W. v. City of Chicago, 771 F.2d 1020, 1023-25 (7th Cir. 1985) (utilizing a
damage comparison approach).
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McCabe and Nelson contend some of the cases identified by the district court
should not have been included to determine the range of reasonable awards. For
example, Hunter involved a strip and body cavity search policy applied to visitors at
the Iowa Men's Penitentiary after the prison received information that drugs were
being smuggled into the prison by visitors. The prison told visitors, because of the
threat of smuggling, they would be subject to strip searches and body cavity searches
before being allowed to visit. Visitors had the option of foregoing their visits.
Hunter is distinguishable from this case for at least two reasons. One, the
prison had a legitimate penological interest in preventing drug smuggling, and thus
the constitutional violation was not as severe as it was in this case, where there was
no legitimate interest in subjecting McCabe and Nelson to body cavity searches. Two,
the plaintiff in Hunter had the option of foregoing her visit to avoid being searched,
whereas there was nothing McCabe or Nelson could do to prevent the body cavity
searches in this case.
The district court did, however, identify some cases which we conclude were
properly considered as comparable because they included these four characteristics:
1) the cases involved female plaintiffs, 2) arrested for minor or invalid infractions, 3)
who were subjected to both strip and body cavity searches, and 4) the damages were
solely for the emotional distress generally associated with an unlawful strip and body
cavity search. One of the cases both parties agree the district court properly identified
as comparable was Joan W., which involved a female plaintiff unlawfully subjected
to a strip and body cavity search following a traffic arrest which occurred on January
28, 1978. 771 F.2d at 1021, 1025.
Significantly, Joan W. was the highest amount the district court identified as
within the range of reasonable awards for a female in an unlawful strip and body
cavity search case. Thus, it was the key case under the maximum recovery rule
applied in Slatton, and therefore should have been used as the benchmark for
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determining the proper amount of a remittitur. The remitted amounts the district court
selected were $25,000 and $50,000 for McCabe and Nelson, respectively, below the
$75,000 identified as reasonable for one plaintiff in Joan W.. The amounts selected
by the district court are inconsistent with the maximum recovery rule, and reflect a
clear abuse of discretion. See United States v. Gonzalez-Lopez, 403 F.3d 558, 564
(8th Cir. 2005) ("[A] district court by definition abuses its discretion when it makes
an error of law.").
Moreover, the $75,000 awarded in Joan W. involved an incident that occurred
on January 28, 1978. McCabe and Nelson were unlawfully searched on September
3, 2004. As the district court acknowledged, when adopting a damage comparison
approach, the court must adjust the comparable awards for inflation because "[i]t does
not necessarily follow, however, that a verdict deemed excessive ten years ago must
be viewed similarly today. Common experience attests that the value of the dollar has
been subject to consistent depreciation." Virginian Ry. Co. v. Rose, 267 F.2d 312,
316 (4th Cir. 1959); see also Mazyck v. Long Island R.R Co., 896 F.Supp. 1330, 1337
(E.D.N.Y. 1995) ("Needless to say, any comparison with damages awards in other
cases must take into account the increase in the cost of living between the date of the
case being compared, and the date of the jury's verdict in the instant case."). An award
of $75,000 in 1978 dollars amounts to significantly more when adjusted for inflation
to 2004 dollars.
Therefore, the district court's error in selecting $75,000 as the amount of the
total remittitur in this case was two-fold. First, the district court selected a total
amount for two plaintiffs that it identified as a reasonable amount for a single plaintiff.
Second, the district court failed to calculate how much a $75,000 award for an
incident that occurred in 1978 would equal for an incident that occurred in 2004 after
adjusting for inflation. These errors amount to an abuse of discretion, and require us
to remand this case to calculate the amount of an appropriate remittitur for both
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women.15 After an appropriate remittitur is calculated (using $75,000 in 1978 dollars
as the benchmark and adjusting for inflation), McCabe and Nelson are entitled to the
choice of accepting the new remittitur or facing a third trial on the issue of the
damages arising from the unlawful strip and body cavity search.16
C. Attorney Fees
Finally, McCabe and Nelson challenge the amount of attorney fees awarded by
the district court pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1988. McCabe and Nelson contend the
district court abused its discretion (1) by attributing only 15% of the total fees incurred
prior to and during the first trial to the successful search claims, and (2) by denying
their request for the fees incurred in the second trial following the date of the Rule 68
offer of judgment. We review the district court's decisions for an abuse of discretion.
Hensley v. Eckerhart, 461 U.S. 424, 437 (1983).
With respect to the fees incurred prior to and during the first trial, McCabe and
Nelson conceded that 60% of the fees should be attributed to the unsuccessful arrest
claims, and requested the other 40% for the successful search claims. The district
court disagreed the plaintiffs spent 40% of their time on the search claims, finding the
plaintiffs focused most of their energy on the unlawful arrest claims and that little
effort was required to prosecute the search claims (in part because Mais conceded
liability at trial and the only remaining issue was the amount of damages). We find
no abuse of discretion in the district court's decision. The district court ruled on many
15
In calculating the correct amount of the remittitur, it may not be possible to
preserve the two-to-one ratio between the amounts the jury awarded for McCabe and
Nelson, because Nelson is not entitled to more than the maximum amount the jury
could have reasonably awarded, and the court may not remit McCabe's award to an
amount less than the maximum amount a jury could have reasonably awarded.
16
Having resolved the remittitur issue in favor of McCabe and Nelson, it is
unnecessary to address their challenges to the second trial.
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nondispositive and dispositive issues prior to trial, in addition to presiding over the
first trial. Thus, the district court was in an excellent position to determine how much
effort the plaintiffs had devoted to the arrest claims versus the search claims.
With respect to the fees incurred after Mais's Rule 68 offer of judgment,
McCabe and Nelson contend the district court abused its discretion because it did not
include the value of preserving the right to appeal in analyzing whether the second
jury verdict was worth more than the amount offered by Mais in the offer of judgment.
Ultimately, we need not address that issue, because we have now determined the
amount of the remittitur offered in lieu of the second trial was inadequate. McCabe
and Nelson were required to endure the second trial in order to preserve the right to
appeal the remittitur offered by the district court. Donovan v. Penn Shipping Co.,
Inc., 429 U.S. 648, 649 (1977). Because we have now determined the remittitur was
inadequate, McCabe and Nelson are prevailing parties and entitled to recover all
reasonable fees incurred in the second trial.
III
We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand for further proceedings consistent
with this opinion.
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