Thе legal questions that plaintiffs and defendants raise in their cross-appeals in this “civil rights/tort” case are for the most part rooted in the facts and the evidence produced at trial. That is to say, the answers to the parties’ legal claims — e.g. that the district court should have given certain instructions, that it should have directed verdicts on certain issuеs but not others — can be determined only by a study of the record. We have conducted that study and we conclude that the judgments of the district court should be affirmed. This opinion, rather than reiterating all the relevant facts, testimony and arguments, will simply set forth enough trial-related information to indicate to the parties the reasoning on which our conclusion rests.
I
The suit underlying this appeal is a combined “federal civil rights/state negligence” action that Maurice and Normande Aubin and their two sons, Lionel and Norman, brought against the New Hampshire town of Bedford, its police chief (Audette), four police officers (Fudala, Biron, Morency, Abood) and a New Hampshire state trooper (Mеaneg). The claims arose out of the fact that the police shot Lionel Aubin by mistake while investigating a robbery with which he had absolutely no connection. Many of the surrounding facts are disputed; but for purposes of this appeal, we can take the following as a rough description of what is either agreed upon or at least firmly estаblished.
On New Year’s Eve, 1979, someone called the Bedford Police Department and reported a burglary in progress at the home of the Kuzakis’, exact address unknown. The police dispatcher, apparently knowing the approximate location, said to Officer Fudala, “Stan, we’ve got a burglary in progress at the Kuzakis residence, Palomino and Whitmore,” and he broadcast that information to policemen Biron and Abood. Trooper Meaney received the same broadcast and went to the scene, arriving there first.
Meaney saw two people on the corner; one fled; Policemen Fudala, Abood and Biron arrived; and all began to search thе area. Fudala noticed plaintiff Lionel Aubin in the basement of his family home. Lionel noticed Fudala’s flashlight through the basement window. Thinking that a burglar was outside, Lionel shouted to his brother, “Norman, in the backyard, quick.” Lionel went up the basement/backyard stairs, grabbed a shovel, stepped out into the yard, at which point Fudala, perhaps thinking Lionel was threatening him, shot him in the right shoulder.
Trooper Meaney, hearing the shot, went into the backyard, saw Lionel and Norman (who had come out of the house), and then ordered Norman to lie on the ground, where he handcuffed him. The police took Lionel to the hospital and took Norman to the police station.
Policemen Biron and Morency then went to the Aubin’s door and asked Ronald (another Aubin brother) if they could search. Ronald initially refused, then relented. The police searched for a few minutes and left.
Sometime later that evening, Maurice and Normande Aubin, who had not been at home, found out about their sons’ plight, retrieved Norman from the police station and found Lionel in the hospital.
The results of the Aubin’s state tort and federal civil rights claims were as follows.
1. The jury awarded Lionel Aubin $300,-000 on his common law tort claim against policemen Fudala and Biron, the chief of police, and the town. It awarded him $500 on a parallel federal civil rights action against policeman Fudala.
2. The jury fоund in favor of Maurice and Normande Aubin (the parents) on their civil rights claim complaining of an unlawful search of their house; but, the jury, following the court’s instructions, awarded only nominal damages ($1).
3. The jury found against Norman Au-bin on his tort and civil rights claims.
4. The court directed a verdict against all plaintiffs on a different civil rights claim — one that in essence chargеd an alleged agreement among the defendants to cover up their mistake in shooting Lionel.
Thus, Lionel was awarded $300,500; his relations effectively received nothing.
II
Defendants’ appeal rests primarily upon their claims of faulty jury instructions. The case was tried on a theory of negligence on the part of the policemen, the police chief who supervised their training, and the town that employed them. The parties agree that the district court correct ly defined “negligence” for the jury. Defendants argue, however, that the court should have instructed the jury more explicitly 1) about the reasonableness of the policemen’s behavior, 2) about the reasonablеness of the police department’s training and supervision, and 3) about the reasonableness of behavior that violates a specific rule or regulation.
In reviewing these instructions we must satisfy ourselves “that the instructions show no tendency to confuse or mislead the jury with respect to the applicable principles of law.” Harrington v. United States,
This case, as presented to the jury, was not unusually complex, nor was there any unusual risk of jury confusion. Defendants wanted an instruction that would have made clear to the jury that the simple failure by the pоlice to choose another, possibly better course of action does not necessarily show negligence. They wanted the court to tell the jury that it must determine “negligence” in light of what was known at the time, without benefit of hindsight. They wanted the court to go beyond its fairly simple instruction on supervision and training. (The court told the jury that
Lionel Aubin must establish ... that Mr. Audette did some act which the average chief of police in the exercise of ordinary care would not do, or failed to do something that the average chief of police in the exercise of ordinary care would do when prompted by the considerations that ordinarily regulate conduct of the affairs of a рolice department.)
And, they wanted the court to explain that violation of police department regulations does not automatically show negligence. See Emery v. Booth,
Defendants’ strongest “instruction based” argument concerns the courts’ charge about Lionel Aubin’s comparative negligence. The court told the jury that the “defendants here claim that Lionel Au-bin is legally at fault [in that he] ... was negligent in failing to telephone the police rather than coming into the backyard.” Defendants argue that this instruction could have led the jury to believe that Lionel Aubin’s contributory negligence could have consisted only of a ‘failure to telephоne the police’ when he saw a flashlight shining in the backyard. In fact, say defendants, Lionel Aubin’s negligence might have consisted of other failures, such as a simple,failure to check carefully by looking through another window before going out into the yard.
In evaluating this argument we have looked through the record, keeping in mind that the “question on apрeal is not whether an instruction was faultless in every respect, but whether the jury, considering the instruction as a whole, was misled.” Mid-Texas Communications Systems, Inc. v. American Telephone and Telegraph Co.,
Defendants go on to make two ‘weight of the evidence’ claims. First, they argue that the jury’s finding that Lionel Aubin was not contributorily negligent was against the weight of the evidence. In their view, a jury must find that a reasonably prudent person seeing a flashlight and fеaring a burglar, would not have picked up a shovel and gone out into the yard. Precisely what Lionel did, however, was subject to conflicting testimony. The jury may, for example, have thought Lionel picked up the shovel which was in his way, intending to put it down once he got outside, but, before he had a chance to do so, Fudala shot him. Credibility is a matter fоr the jury. Regardless, Lionel’s decision
Nor do we believe the jury’s finding. against the town of Bedford on the Aubin parents’ “illegal search” claim to be against the weight of the evidence. While an Aubin son gave the police permission to search the house, there was testimony that the son heard the policemen muttering what, in the circumstances, could certainly have sounded like threats. And, the jury might well have thought that the “consent” was forced, rather than freely given.
Finally, defendants оbject to the $300,000 verdict as excessive. Lionel Au-bin was shot in the right shoulder. He has suffered a permanent ten percent disability in his right arm. He was caused considerable pain and suffering. He had medical expenses. He has had to give up any hope of a career in football (and the record suggests some likelihood of success in this field). Hе has had to accept employment in a restaurant earning $175 per 60 hour week; previously he had worked in construction as a heavy equipment operator who earn, the record indicates, an average of $9.79 per hour. Some of this evidence, of course, was disputed. But, the jury may have believed enough of it to award $300,-000 without “shocking” this court’s “conscience.” Clark v. Taylor,
III
The town of Bedford and the Chief of Police object to an instruction the court gave in respect to Lionel Aubin’s parallel civil rights claim against policeman Fudala. Essentially, the town and the police chief believe that the Court’s instruction was too favorable to Fudala. They reason that а less favorable instruction might have led to a higher verdict against Fudala. Apparently, they feel that provisions in relevant insurance policies might have then led to a somewhat different (and more favorable) allocation of actual payments on Lionel’s judgment.
Regardless, the town and the police chief were not defendаnts on Lionel’s parallel civil rights claim. Ordinarily, one who is not a party to a claim cánnot appeal a judgment on the claim. United States ex rel. Louisiana v. Jack,
IV
In their cross-appeal plaintiffs argue that the district court should not have
1. The shovel and the flashlight disappeared from the scene before the police could take measurements and photographs.
2. The police handcuffed Norman and treated him like a criminal.
3. The police searched the Aubin house.
4. Fudala told conflicting stories about what happened.
5. Superior officers sent Fudala home instead of questioning him.
6. Trooper Meaney later testified that Lionel smelled of drink desрite total lack of corroboration.
7. Officials released “incorrect” and “prejudicial” information to the media.
Viewing this evidence most favorably to the plaintiffs, the issue for us is whether the trial court might reasonably have concluded that a jury could not have found for the plaintiffs without “speculation and conjecture.” Carlson v. American Safety Equipment Corp.,
The problem for the plaintiffs is not the propriety of the acts they cite, but, rather, whether they show agreement. Was there a “single plan the essential nature and general scope of which [was] known to each person who is to be held responsible for its consequences?” Hampton v. Hanrahan,
The Aubin parents argue that they should have received more than $1 nominal damages for the unlawful search of their house. In the absence of a showing that the Aubin parents suffered actual damages attributable to the search, however, a nominal damages award is proper. Carey v. Piphus,
Finally, plaintiffs argue that the jury verdict against Norman Aubin was against the weight of the evidence. The matter rests upon credibility determinations — decisions about what evidence to accept. The jury might reasonably have believed that the police officers who restrained Nоrman did not understand the circumstances fully and believed that he
Appellants’ other arguments are without merit.
The judgments of the district court are all
Affirmed.
