Laura Moehlman and David Gordon moved in together. Title to the house was in her name, but he put up some of the money. In October 1991 the relationship collapsed. Moehlman complained to the Skokie police that Gordon was threatening her and asked for protection. She told the police that she owned the house and that Gordon had refused to leave. She provided evidence to support her claim of ownership; Gordon claimed to be part owner but could furnish no evidence of this to the police.
After consulting with an assistant state’s attorney, Dennis Degelmann told other officers assembled for a roll call on October 31, 1991, that, if Moehlman again complained, Gordon lawfully could be arrested for criminal trespass unless he left voluntarily. Moehlman called that night, saying that she was terrified because Gordon had again threatened her. Officer Misrae went to the house, and, when Gordon could not produce evidence of ownership and refused to leave, arrested him for trespassing. He was soon released on bond. The next day Moehlman obtained from the circuit court an emergency protective order prohibiting Gordon from entering the house. The criminal charges were dismissed on November 12, however, because in Illinois a person residing in a dwelling under a claim of right is entitled to the judicial hearing afforded by the forcible entry and detainer statute before he may be removed as a trespasser.
People v. Evans,
1. Meyer received summary judgment on the ground that she had nothing to do with the arrest.
2. Degelmann relayed to fellow officers the conclusion of the assistant state’s attorney that the law permitted them to arrest Gordon for trespass. When Misrac arrested Gordon, Degelmann was not present. The district court instructed the jurors that Gordon could prevail against Degelmann under § 1983 for a violation of the fourth amendment only if “defendant Degelmann arrested plaintiff’. Needless to say, the jury returned a verdict in Degelmann’s favor.
The instruction was incorrect. One who directs or assists an unlawful arrest may be liable.
Kilboum v. Thompson,
None of this does Gordon any good, however, for he did not draw the court’s attention to the error. Apparently Gordon’s lawyer thought it sufficient to propose his own instruction, which was argumentative and misleading. When the district judge indicated that she preferred the defendants’ proposed instructions, Gordon’s lawyer did not point out the problem they contained. As we have recently reiterated, tendering one’s own instruction does not satisfy Fed. R.Civ.P. 51, which provides: “No party may assign as error the giving or the failure to give an instruction unless that party objects thereto before the jury retires to consider its verdict, stating distinctly the matter objected to and the grounds of the objection.” See
Hebron v. Touhy,
3. The jury found Skokie liable to Gordon under state law and awarded a total of $17,-100 in damages. Because of
Monell v. New York City Department of Social Services,
The district court did not explain why it started from the verdict absolving Degelmann. Why not the other way ’round? One could say that because the jury awarded damages against the ViHage, it must have meant to hold Degelmann liable. As the district court perceived things, the jury’s verdicts are inconsistent. There is no priority among inconsistent verdicts.
American Casualty Co. v. B. Cianciolo, Inc.,
Perhaps, however, there is no inconsistency. Although the Village cannot be hable unless one of its employees violated Gordon’s rights, that employee need not be Degelmann. How about Misrac? The district court granted judgment to Misrac on account of official immunity.
Gordon’s principal theory, however, is that the Village’s liability may be based on
Degelmann’s
tort. That contention, which depends on the contention that we should set aside the jury’s verdict in Degelmann’s favor, is unavailing in hght of the preceding discussion. What is more, even the possibility of holding the Village hable for Misrac’s acts (or those of his unidentified colleagues) would not assist Gordon. A municipality in Illinois is hable only for the wilful and wanton acts of its employees. 745 ILCS 10/2-202. Whatever labels one may apply to the arresting officers’ conduct, based as it was on a combination of facts described by the recipient of threats, advice from the prosecutor, and on-the-spot investigation into Gordon’s claim of ownership, “wilful and wanton” is not among them. Misrac and his companions may have acted without probable cause (an objective standard) and may lack immunity, but their decisions were made after gathering both factual and legal information. Their alternative, forcing Moehlman to flee from her own home to escape her tormentor, was not so plainly compelled by the Constitution and state law that the course of removing Gordon can be called “wilful and wanton.” We therefore agree with the district judge that Skokie is entitled to judgment as a matter of law, although not for the reason the judge gave. See
Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co. v. Ludwig,
4. When concluding that Misrac is entitled to qualified immunity, the district judge noted Misrae’s “good faith reliance on the law as explained by Degelmann”. Until 1982 immunity turned on subjective issues such as good faith and intent; since
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
*300
One could recast the argument for immunity by saying that police often act on each other’s instructions. An all points bulletin or wanted flyer induces an officer to arrest someone about whom he knows nothing beyond the instruction to make an arrest. Whether the arrest is lawful depends on the information available to the police collectively; if the person issuing the radio bulletin or authorizing the wanted poster had probable cause to do so, the facts need not be present to the mind of the person making the arrest.
United States v. Hensley,
We need not grapple with the question whether this perspective on immunity is correct, and, if so, whether it protects Misrae, because we conclude that Misrae did not violate the fourth amendment and therefore does not need immunity. This would be pellucid if the Illinois law of trespass were as the prosecutor believed it to be. The Skokie police received a complaint from Moehlman that Gordon was a squatter in Moehlman’s house. They verified that Moehlman was the record owner; they asked Gordon for proof of an interest (for example, a lease or canceled checks showing payments toward the mortgage), and he produced none. Police may act on a victim’s complaint; if the evidence conflicts, they may let the courts sort out who is telling the truth.
Hebron,
Where to draw the line between
Evans
and
Brown
is, however, a question of Illinois law rather than of the fourth amendment. That Misrae violated state law does not mean that he transgressed against the Constitution of the United States. Scarcely a month goes by that the Supreme Court does not reject another permutation on the theme that, by violating state law, state employees violated the Constitution.
Romano v. Oklahoma,
— U.S. -, -,
Illinois has a criminal trespass law, however, so this hypothetical need not detain us. Read without reference to the forcible entry and detainer statute, the criminal trespass act forbids exactly the conduct in which Gordon appeared (to Misrae) to be engaged. What the forcible entry and detainer law adds is a prior ‘procedure: a judicial hearing to determine the person’s entitlement to remain on the property. Federal judges do not enforce state-created procedures in the name of the Constitution.
Olim v. Wakinekona,
State, law neither adds to nor subtracts from these constitutional rules. “In determining whether there has been an unreasonable search and seizure by state officers, a federal court must make an independent inquiry.... The test is one of federal law, neither enlarged by what one state court may have countenanced, nor diminished by what another may have eolorably suppressed.”
Elkins v. United States,
AFFIRMED.
