Angel CLARK; Melvin Thomas; Frederick Anderson; Mary Roe; Jamie Luby, by her next friend Christine M. Luby; Tashiana Elliott, by her next friend, Barbara J. Elliott; Duane Cuthrell; Alfred Colon; Jane Doe; Lynette Chronister, by her next friend Karen Burgess; Lisa Becker; Jeff Dixon; Titus Clark; Sherry Stuffle; Charles Kennedy, II v. Joseph CLABAUGH, Sergeant; Douglas Riley, Sergeant; Randy Whitson, Sergeant; Devis Leese, Sergeant; Ken Smith, Officer; Dwayne Smith, Officer; David Zumbrum, Officer; Wayne Martin, Officer; Officer Bigham; Officer Hess; J.D. Roser, Officer; Hanover Police Department; County of York; Carl Boyer, Conewago Township Police Department; Randy Chronister; Scott Leese; Daniel Messinger; Jeffrey Parks; James Swartz; Jeffrey Trish; Donald Wilson; James Winebrenner, All Individual defendants are sued individually only, Angel Clark, Melvin Thomas, Frederick Anderson, “Mary Roe“, Jamie Luby, Tashiana Elliott, Duane Cuthrell, Alfred Colon, “Jane Doe“, Lynette Chronister, Lisa Becker, Jeff Dixon, Titus Clark, Sherry Stuffle; Charles Kennedy, II, Appellants.
No. 93-7471.
United States Court of Appeals, Third Circuit.
Argued Jan. 25, 1994. Decided April 8, 1994.
20 F.3d 1290 | 62 USLW 2643
Before: MANSMANN, NYGAARD and SEITZ, Circuit Judges.
John C. Dowling (Argued), David B. Dowling, Rhoads & Sinon, Harrisburg, PA, for appellees.
OPINION OF THE COURT
MANSMANN, Circuit Judge.
A racial riot in Hanover, Pennsylvania, during the summer of 1991 provides the setting for this appeal by the members of an interracial youth group who claimed numerous violations of their civil rights by public officials when the members were attacked by white “bikers” and townspeople. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of the Borough of Hanover, Mayor W. Roy Attlesberger, Chief of Police Gerald Lippy and Conewago Township Police Officer Carl Boyer on all
In responding to the motion for summary judgment, the plaintiffs had relied almost exclusively on a Pennsylvania State Police Report, generated from a state police investigation conducted into the circumstances of the racial disturbances, to establish the elements of their claims. The issues before us concern the propriety of the district court‘s consideration of the PSP Report, which is unsworn and contains opinions based on hearsay, in deciding the summary judgment motions, as well as the Report‘s sufficiency in raising a genuine issue of material fact as to
We exercise plenary review over this challenge to the district court‘s summary judgment order, and will view all inferences drawn from the evidence in the light most favorable to the party which opposed the motion. Big Apple BMW, Inc. v. BMW of N. Am., Inc., 974 F.2d 1358, 1363 (3d Cir.1992), cert. denied, --- U.S. ----, 113 S.Ct. 1262, 122 L.Ed.2d 659 (1993).
I.
Hanover Center Square, in Hanover Borough, York County, Pennsylvania, was the site of a disgraceful two-day spectacle of racial unrest which ignited between the members of a self-styled interracial youth group on the one side, and a band of all-white motorcyclists and a crowd of townspeople on the other. The incidents which gave rise to this cause of action were preceded by a rumor, which apparently circulated about town for two weeks, that the white bikers were conspiring to assemble in the Square on the evening of July 13, 1991, to drive the interracial group, which regularly congregated and socialized in the Square, out of Hanover. In fact, on the evening of July 13th, the interracial group and the white bikers did assemble in the Square, apparently in anticipation of and prepared for a hostile confrontation.3 The presence of the two groups, as well as, presumably, the effect of the rumors, incited the participation of many townspeople who had also gathered as spectators and as supporters of the bikers. The series of racial disturbances which ignited from that point on July 13th through the evening of July 14th did not involve serious bodily injury or extensive property damage, despite the grave potential for both.
In short, by midnight of July 13th, a volatile assemblage of approximately 40 interracial youth group members, twelve or more white bikers and approximately 200 to 300 townspeople had gathered in the Square. A racially charged altercation and exchange of taunts, challenges, accusations and obscenities ensued. Only six Hanover police officers were present. The officers formed a police line separating the two factions, which soon proved ineffectual. The bikers and townspeople broke through the line, and the interracial group retreated to an apartment on the Chestnut and Carlyle Streets intersection, where they had frequently congregated. Although the white bikers apparently were not involved in any further confrontation, over 500 townspeople congregated on the street outside this apartment building on the evening of July 14th to confront members of the interracial group gathered on the rooftop. Again, a racial altercation ensued, but this time the two factions threw objects such as stones and bottles at each other. Police officers ascended the fire escape, arrested all the members of the interracial group present on the rooftop and charged them with disorderly conduct. This scenario was repeated when a second group of interracial youths gathered on the rooftop and entered into the same type of altercation with the crowd below. This time the police officers made arrests in a fourth floor apartment which had access to the roof, where the youths had reentered the building from the rooftop.
In addition to these incidents, on the evening of July 14th approximately 50 townspeople gathered across the street from the residence of an interracial couple, the Becker-Dixons, and their young child for the purpose of verbally assaulting the couple. By the time police arrived there, the townspeople had dispersed. The police determined that the threat to the couple was no longer viable. The Hanover police did not take any further action on behalf of the couple, and no other incident at that residence was alleged.
Finally, on the evening of July 14th as well, two black plaintiffs were arrested in an automobile incident after police officers observed what they characterized as the reckless and threatening maneuvering of an automobile through the crowd of townspeople. The owner of the car, Ms. Chronister, a white female plaintiff who was standing on the street within six feet of arresting Police Officer Boyer, was struck several times by an unidentified townsperson. Police Officer Boyer scolded her for allowing black persons to use her car in Hanover under the volatile circumstances.
At midnight on July 14th, Hanover‘s Mayor Attlesberger declared a state of emergency and invoked a curfew, which ended all incidents.4 Although there is some dispute as to which officials knew “what” prior to the July 13th Hanover Square incident, the district court acknowledged that at least Mayor Attlesberger became aware of the rumored bikers’ conspiracy on July 12, 1991, and informed Police Chief Lippy of the rumors that same day. The PSP Report confirms the timing of the Mayor‘s awareness, and indicates that Police Chief Lippy was apprised of the rumors no later than 4 p.m. on July 13, 1991, hours before the Square incident occurred.
II.
Before deciding whether the evidence suggests a genuine issue of material fact as to
We are quite satisfied that the district court exercised sound discretion in admitting for consideration the PSP Report, which is indeed unsworn, authored by an investigator who did not have personal knowledge, and which contains opinion based on hearsay. We note that affidavits in support of summary judgment can be opposed by any admissible evidence, including that contained in “the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any.”
We note further that
Despite the defendants’ contentions, we are satisfied that the district court‘s implicit finding that no special bias impeded a fair investigation or entered into the preparation of the PSP Report was not clearly erroneous.
III.
Every person who, having knowledge that any of the wrongs conspired to be done, and mentioned in section 1985 of this title, are about to be committed, and having power to prevent or aid in preventing the commission of the same, neglects or refuses so to do, if such wrongful act be committed, shall be liable to the party injured, or his legal representatives, for all damages caused by such wrongful act, which such person by reasonable diligence could have prevented; and such damages may be recovered in an action on the case....
The district court dismissed the
The critical element here is the requirement that the defendants have actual knowledge of the conspiracy. Plaintiffs rely on the PSP report to establish this knowledge. This report, however, speaks only about “rumors,” not definite plans. It does not establish the actual knowledge necessary to support a section 1986 claim. This claim will therefore be rejected.
Memorandum Opinion filed May 6, 1993, at A. 18.
The plaintiffs contend that the district court misconstrued
We find the factual question of the exact time when the Mayor and the Chief of Police were apprised of the “rumors” to be irrelevant because the district court determined that both had been apprised of the rumors at least by July 12th, i.e., a full day before the events transpired. According to the PSP Report, which we take to be accurate for purposes of reviewing the summary judgment order,
[t]he Mayor indicated he was aware of the rumors on Friday (July 12, 1991) and that he advised the Chief of Police of them on the same day. The Chief advised he was not aware of any rumors until Saturday (July 13, 1991) at 4:00 P.M., when he was contacted by the Mayor. The Chief then contacted county control in order to have his 3-11 shift commander contact him to clarify the rumors. An article in the Evening Sun, dated July 15, 1991, attributes the Mayor as stating, “... he contacted Hanover Police Chief ... Wednesday, after hearing rumors of a potential riot.” There is an obvious difference of opinion relative to who knew what and when. However, it was evident that rumors abounded a considerable time before the actual incident. Notwithstanding the differences of opinion regarding prior knowledge of the incident, there was no action taken by Hanover City officials or the Hanover Police Department to defuse the impending situation either with the bikers, townspeople or the youth group.
The nature of conspiracy typically precludes direct evidence or a “blueprint” of the conspiratorial plan, and firsthand knowledge is not required under
We believe that the PSP Report and other evidence relevant to the defendants’ potential knowledge of the conspiracy is sufficient, for purposes of defending against an adverse summary judgment motion, to submit to the jury the question of whether the defendants’ knowledge of rumors that bikers planned to drive the interracial group from Hanover on the evening of July 13th was sufficiently reliable to constitute “actual knowledge” of a
Q Had you heard any rumors about there being possible trouble that weekend in Hanover?
A Yes.
Q When did you first hear these rumors?
A I believe it was Thursday, the day before--well, two days, I guess, before.
Q And who did you hear them from?
A Just people like around, like neighbors, people that I‘ve worked with. It was just common knowledge that a lot of people heard it. You know, we all went to the store, you heard people talking in the store, but not really people that I really knew. Well, I mean, people that I worked with I knew but not really.
Q Were they mostly people your age that year heard this from?
A No, no, it was a range.
Q What did you hear what was going to happen?
A That motorcycle gangs were supposed to come in and run the black people and interracial groups out of town and off the square.
With regard to Police Officer Boyer, the plaintiffs have shown that he was on the scene of the Chronister automobile incident on July 14th. The PSP Report indicates that by 12:07 a.m. Sunday morning the Hanover Police Department made its first mutual aid request for assistance from other police departments. Twenty-seven other municipal police departments responded, including Boyer‘s Conewago Township Police Department, and by 12:14 a.m. outside police units began arriving on the scene in Hanover. Officer Boyer‘s precise moment of appearance on the scene is not clear from the record; however, the PSP Report indicates that police officers who were on the scene of the car incident had been standing nearby waiting to transport arrestees from the apartment incident before the police converged on the scene of the car incident in response to the sound of a racing engine, squealing tires and screams. The direct inference is that Officer Boyer may have arrived on the scene in Hanover as early as 12:14 a.m. Sunday morning, but not later than approximately 11 p.m. Sunday evening, the hour of the apartment incident. Not only was he presumably briefed on the circumstances before arriving on the scene, but given the escalating racial situation, a jury could infer from his presence on the scene that he, too, became sufficiently aware of the alleged conspiracy to violate the plaintiffs’ civil rights when he allegedly failed to protect Ms. Chronister and told her that the car incident was her fault for bringing blacks into the Hanover area.7
The text of
The plaintiffs separately challenge the district court‘s judgment against the Becker-Dixons on their
We additionally wish to clarify that
We will thus vacate the district court‘s order granting summary judgment to these defendants.
IV.
For the foregoing reasons, we will vacate the district court‘s May 6, 1993, entry of summary judgment, certified for appeal on May 7, 1993, and amended on June 4, 1993. We will remand to the district court for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Angel CLARK; Melvin Thomas; Frederick Anderson; Mary Roe; Jamie Luby, by her next friend Christine M. Luby; Tashiana Elliott, by her next friend, Barbara J. Elliott; Duane Cuthrell; Alfred Colon; Jane Doe; Lynette Chronister, by her next friend Karen Burgess; Lisa Becker; Jeff Dixon; Titus Clark; Sherry Stuffle; Charles Kennedy, II v. Joseph CLABAUGH, Sergeant; Douglas Riley, Sergeant; Randy Whitson, Sergeant; Devis Leese, Sergeant; Ken Smith, Officer; Dwayne Smith, Officer; David Zumbrum, Officer; Wayne Martin, Officer; Officer Bigham; Officer Hess; J.D. Roser, Officer; Hanover Police Department; County of York; Carl Boyer, Conewago Township Police Department; Randy Chronister; Scott Leese; Daniel Messinger; Jeffrey Parks; James Swartz; Jeffrey Trish; Donald Wilson; James Winebrenner, All Individual defendants are sued individually only, Angel Clark, Melvin Thomas, Frederick Anderson, “Mary Roe“, Jamie Luby, Tashiana Elliott, Duane Cuthrell, Alfred Colon, “Jane Doe“, Lynette Chronister, Lisa Becker, Jeff Dixon, Titus Clark, Sherry Stuffle; Charles Kennedy, II, Appellants.
No. 93-7471.
United States Court of Appeals, Third Circuit.
Argued Jan. 25, 1994. Decided April 8, 1994.
20 F.3d 1290 | 62 USLW 2643
The majority reverses the order of the district court granting summary judgment to four of the defendants on civil rights claims asserted against them under
I agree with the conclusion reached by the majority reversing the judgment for three of the defendants on the
BOROUGH OF HANOVER, ITS FORMER MAYOR AND ITS CHIEF OF POLICE
At the threshold, I agree with the majority that the district court did not abuse its discretion under
We believe that the PSP Report and other evidence relevant to the defendants’ potential knowledge of the conspiracy is sufficient, for purposes of defending against an adverse summary judgment motion, to submit to the jury the question of whether the defendants’ knowledge of rumors that bikers planned to drive the interracial group from Hanover on the evening of July 13th was sufficiently reliable to constitute “actual knowledge” of a Sec. 1985 conspiracy.
As the majority opinion notes, the State Police Report indicated that the Mayor and the Chief of Police had knowledge of the rumors of the conspiracy at least a day before the rumor came to fruition in Hanover on the date and time contained in the rumor, viz., Saturday, July 13, at 10:00 p.m. Knowledge of the rumors was also stated in the Dixon and Becker depositions.
In my view the issue is whether the combination of these record factors would permit a reasonable finder of fact to infer that the defendants had actual knowledge of the biker conspiracy before it was implemented. The critical and sole factor in resolving that issue here is what constituted “knowledge” as used in
(7) Requirement of Knowledge Satisfied by Knowledge of High Probability. When knowledge of the existence of a particular fact is an element of an offense, such knowledge is established if a person is aware of a high probability of its existence, unless he actually believes that it does not exist.9
Indeed, the Model Penal Code definition of knowledge is more meaningful in a civil law context. Because knowledge of a high probability is sufficient for proof of “knowledge” beyond a reasonable doubt, it is more than sufficient for proof of “knowledge” by a preponderance of the evidence.
The pervasive rumors and the other evidence in this record would permit a reasonable jury to conclude that defendants were aware of a high probability of the existence of the conspiracy, at least a day before it was carried out, thus creating an issue for the factfinder as to the existence of defendants’ knowledge for
In reaching my conclusion I fully realize that rumor often indicates less than certainty. But here its pervasive character is but part of the totality of circumstances in this record which could permit a reasonable factfinder to determine that these defendants, given their public positions, had sufficient advance knowledge of the alleged conspiracy.
I therefore join in the judgment reversing the order of the district court granting summary judgment to defendants, the Borough of Hanover, its former Mayor and its Chief of Police. Needless to say, I believe other issues raised by defendants are open for later resolution in the district court.
DEFENDANT CARL BOYER
The majority also reverses the order of the district court granting summary judgment to Carl Boyer (“Boyer“) on the
Defendant, Carl Boyer, is an officer of the Conewago Township Police Department. That Department had a mutual aid agreement with the Borough of Hanover. According to the Pennsylvania State Police Report, the Hanover Chief of Police did not begin requesting assistance from outside police units until 12:07 a.m. Sunday, July 14. That assistance began arriving at 12:14 a.m. The necessary inference is that defendant Boyer did not arrive in Hanover until early Sunday morning. Thus, the disturbances were well underway before Boyer even arrived. Moreover, he did not live or work in the Borough of Hanover. Furthermore, there is no record evidence to suggest that the rumors of the conspiracy reached Boyer‘s workplace in Conewago Township or his residence in New Oxford, Pennsylvania.
The majority says that:
... given the escalating racial situation, a jury could infer from his presence on the scene that he [Boyer], too, became sufficiently aware of the alleged conspiracy to violate the plaintiffs’ civil rights when he allegedly failed to protect Ms. Chronister and told her that the car incident was her fault for bringing blacks into the Hanover area.
I part company with the majority because I believe the facts relied on by my colleagues do not support the knowledge element required by
It is first evident that the majority seems to base its position on the premise that Boyer became aware of the conspiracy when he allegedly failed to protect Ms. Chronister. In my view, the failure to protect Ms. Chronister‘s civil rights is not evidence of Boyer‘s knowledge of an existing conspiracy. The same is true of the majority‘s reliance on what Boyer said to her during the car incident. Thus, in my view, there is no record evidence that creates a jury issue as to Boyer‘s prior knowledge of any conspiracy. The incident, if anything, raised a possible violation of
I would affirm the summary judgment order dismissing the
