On February 12, 2001, the Plaintiff-Appellant, Keith Gower, filed suit in federal court against two Champaign County, Illinois, sheriffs deputies seeking redress for the alleged violation of his Fourth Amendment rights, pursuant to 42 U.S.C. §§ 1983 and 1985, and malicious prosecution, pursuant to Illinois law. Gower’s claim was based on his assertion that on February 12, 2000, Deputies Jeffrey Vercler and Ryan Garrett illegally entered his home and arrested him for violation of 720 Ill. Comp. Stat. 5/26 — 1 (a)(1), Illinois’ disorderly conduct statute. The case was tried before a jury and after all the evidence had been submitted, Gowеr moved for a directed verdict under Rule of Civil Procedure 50(a). After hearing arguments, the trial judge denied Gower’s motion, and the jury proceeded to find in favor of the Defendants on each of the claims, the § 1983 and Illinois tort claims. Gower appeals, urging us to hold that the district court erred in denying his motion for a directed verdict and, in the alternative, that the jury’s verdict was unsupported by the evidence and, thus, was unreasonable. We affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
In 1999, Keith Gower (“Gower”) lived in a rural area of Champaign County, Illinois, with his wife, Tina, and with his two children, Kassandra and Preston. The Gow-ers were geographically close neighbors of Tina’s mother and stepfather, Thomas and Diana Taylor. Indeed, the homes of the two families were located approximately 70 yards apart from each other. In spite of their proximity, however, the Gowers and Taylors have a documented history of animosity towards each other, which has occasionally necessitated the involvement of law enforcement officers. For example, on *664 October 31, 1999, Deputy William Oliger, who is not a party to this suit, and Defendant Deputy Jeffrey Vercler of the Cham-paign County Sheriffs Department responded to an emergency call alleging a domestic disturbance at the Gower residence. Diana Taylor had placed the call, requesting assistance and stating that her husband and Keith Gower were exchanging verbal insults across their respective property -lines. After the deputies had investigated the matter, Gower told them that he was going to stay somewhere else for the remainder of the night so that he could “cool off.” Having diffused the situation and assured the safety of the parties, the deputies refrained from issuing any citations nor did they make any arrests.
A few months later, on the evening of February.il, 2000, the two families again engaged in a dispute, this time due to the Gowers’ refusal to allow their son Preston to visit the Taylors’ home. When they returned home that evening, Diana Taylor told the Gowers that she was going to take Preston with her. However, the Gowers refused to allow Preston to go because they were concerned that Diana’s smoking would aggravate his asthmatic condition. 1 This sparked an argument, which resulted in Thomas Taylor, who was nearby, getting involved. Thomas allegedly charged up the driveway of the Gower home and simultaneously appeared to be reaching for a buck knife that he commonly carried in his back pants pocket; however, neither party alleges a weapon was ever brandished. In response to this perceived threat, Gower stated that he went back to the kitchen and grabbed a six-inch chefs knife and held the weаpon out of view while he returned to the front door where his wife Tina was trying to reason with her stepfather. 2 According to the Gowers, the Taylors continued to demand that Preston remain with them and repeatedly asked the Taylors to leave. However, Thomas Taylor claims that Keith Gower also waived the knife he was holding at him and threatened that “he [was] going to urinate on [Thomas’s] grave when [he was] dead.” (Tr. 141.) In any event, Thomas retreated before the argument escalated into physical violence and Diana called the police. Once again Deputy Oliger was one of the officers who responded to the call, but for a second time, he refrained from issuing any citation or making any arrests. Instead he suggested to the parties that they apply for orders of protection against each other, if they should be so inclined.
The next morning, February 12, 2000, Champaign County deputies responded to yet another heated confrontation between the Gowers and Taylors, which is the subject of this action. Just before 6:00 a.m., Diana Taylor placed a 911 call alleging that a domestic disturbance had once again occurred involving Keith Gower and her husband. Deputy Vercler was the first to respond to the dispatch and, while en route to the scene, he was informed by the sheriffs department dispatcher that deputies had been called to the scene the night before to respond to a domestic disturbance call. Vercler was the first to arrive at the Taylor residence and he proceeded to interview Diana Taylor about the аlleged incident. During them conversation, the deputy noted that Mrs. Taylor was “very upset” and observed her “visibly shaking” and “crying.” (Tr. 160.) Diana informed Vercler that while her husband, Thomas, was leaving for work that morn *665 ing, Keith Gower shouted several obscenities from his residence directed at her and her husband, although: she refused to repeat the exact language used by Gower, stating only that “[i]t’s too horrible.” 3 (Tr. 160.) Continuing his investigation, Deputy Vercler telephoned Thomas Taylor on his mobile phone and talked to him while he was en route to work. Thomas informеd Vercler that, as he was walking to his garage to leave for work, Gower shouted “fuck you” three or four times, called him “a fat son-of-a-bitch,” and made noises that sounded like a clucking chicken. (Tr, 176.) Deputy Vercler testified at trial that, during his investigation, he also learned from Diana (and perhaps from the emergency police dispatch call, although he could not remember for certain) that during the altercation the previous evening Gower had brandished a butcher knife.
After Vercler had completed his investigаtion with the Taylors, Defendant Sheriffs Deputy Ryan Garrett arrived on the scene, and the two deputies proceeded to the Gower residence. At trial, the parties gave conflicting accounts of the incident that .followed. Gower testified that he never gave the deputies permission to enter into his house. Rather, he stated that, after getting up to call the. family, he went back to sleep and later awoke to a loud knock on the door. He thought the noise was made by his seven-year-old, son, Preston, who, aсcording to the Gower, would on occasion jokingly make “fake knock[ing]” sounds. (Tr. 62.) When Preston yelled to his father that people were at the front door, Gower testified that he responded with “Ha, ha. Very funny, Preston. Ha, ha.” Id. Gower stated that when he heard adult voices in the living room shortly thereafter, he called out to Preston and inquired as to whom he had let into the house, 4 at which time he heard someone say, “Keith, can you come out in the living room, please.” (Tr. 63.) Gower testified that, while still in his bedroom, he asked for the visitors tо identify themselves and was told that they were sheriffs deputies. According to Gower, he then awoke his wife and they proceeded to the living room to speak with the deputies.
In contrast to Gower’s testimony, Deputy Vercler testified that when he knocked on the door, Preston Gower answered. Vercler stated that he (Vercler) then yelled “Keith,” to which he heard a reply of “yeah” from down a hallway. Vercler claims that he promptly announced that he was with the Sheriffs Department and asked, “Can we come in?”, to whiсh the Gower again responded “yeah” at this time. The deputies entered the house and Gower appeared in a bathrobe. The officers stated that they proceeded to question Gower about the alleged insults that he had directed at the Taylors earlier that morning. Vercler and Garrett further testified that Gower initially told them that he had not been out of bed yet that day but eventually reversed his story and said that, at 6:00 a.m., he had arisen to call the cat in from outdoors and then returned to bed. Gower denied ever mаking the statements *666 that the Taylors alleged he had made that morning.
After interviewing Gower, the deputies arrested him for disorderly conduct, (a class C misdemeanor in Illinois, see 720 Ill. Comp. Stat. 5/26 — 1(a)(1)), based upon his alleged profane and combative statements to the Taylors — to wit, “fuck you, fuck you, fuck you, fat son-of-a-biteh.” Later that day, the Champaign County State’s Attorney formally charged Gower with disorderly conduct, to which later Gower pled not guilty and requested a jury trial. Thereafter, on the first day of his jury trial, the State voluntarily dismissed the disorderly conduct charges against Gower. 5
Gower subsequently filed suit against the deputies under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging that Vercler and Garrett violated his Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment rights by, first, entering his home without his consent or a warrant and, second, by arresting him without probable cause. In addition, Gower also brought an Illinois common law claim against the officers, under the district court’s pendant jurisdiction, for the intentional infliction of emotional distress. A two-day jury trial ensued on Gower’s claims against the deputies, at which all of the principals to the events underlying his arrest for disorderly conduct testified. At the close of thе evidence, Gower requested a directed verdict, arguing that, as a matter of law, the Defendants lacked probable cause to arrest him for disorderly conduct based merely upon the alleged words that he spoke to the Taylors. The district judge denied the motion, and the jury found in favor of the defendant officers on both counts.
II. Analysis
Gower appeals, presenting the following issues: (1) whether the Defendants’ war-rantless entry into his residence violated the Fourth Amendment; and (2) whether the district court erred in denying his motion for directed verdict because the deputies lacked, as a matter of law, probable cause to arrest him for disorderly conduct.
We review a trial court’s denial of a directed verdict
de novo,
viewing all the evidence in the light most favorable to the non-movant.
Byrne v. Bd. of Educ., Sch. of West-Allis Milwaukee,
Initially, we address Gower’s assertion that the Defendants’ warrantless entry into his residence violated his constitutional rights under the Fourth Amendment. It is well-settled that “[pjolice generally need a warrant to enter a home,”
United States v. Jenkins,
A. Voluntary Consent
In the instant case, the issue of whether Gower voluntarily consented to the war-rantless entry of his home clearly amounted to a credibility determination for the jury to resolve. Deputies Vercler and Garrett testified at trial that Gower voluntarily gave his consent to the deputies to enter. In particular, Vercler testified that once Gower’s son answered the door, he and Garrett, while still standing outside the front door, yelled into the house, calling aloud “Keith.” (Tr. 162-63.) Vercler testified that Keith replied, “yeah,” after which Vercler identifiеd himself as with the Sheriffs Department and asked in a loud voice, “Can we come in?” According to Vercler, Gower again replied “yeah,” and, after this statement, the deputies crossed the threshold and entered into the house. During his testimony, Deputy Garrett corroborated Vercler’s account of their entry into the Gower home, stating that “[Gower] invited-us in the residence.” (Tr. 213.) The plaintiff disagreed, testifying that he never consented to the officers’ entry. In particular, Gower claimed that it was not until he heard adult voices in the living roоm that he called out to his son and asked whom he had let into the house, only to hear a man identifying himself as from the Sheriffs Department ask Keith to come out to the living room.
Because the jury found in favor of the Defendants, it is clear that they accepted the deputies’ version of the facts to being more credible than Gower’s; a conclusion we refuse to disturb:
We will not second-guess a jury on credibility issues. While this court’s review is confined to the “cold pages” of an appellate transcript, the jury had an op *668 portunity to observe the verbal and nonverbal behavior of the witnesses, including the subject’s reactions and responses to the interrogatories, their facial expressions, attitudes, tone of voice, eye contact, posture and body movements .... [I]t is not the task of this appellate court to reconsider the evidence or assess the credibility of the witnesses.
Kossman v. Northeast Ill. Reg’l Commuter R.R.,
B. Probable Cause
Gower next argues that the Defendants lacked, as a matter of law, probable cause to arrest him for disorderly conduct and that the district court should have granted his motion for a directed verdict.
7
Probable cause exists to arrest a suspect “if at the time of arrest the facts and circumstances within the arresting officer’s knowledge and of which [he] has reasonably trustworthy information would warrant a prudent person in believing that the suspect had committed or was committing an offense.”
Spiegel v. Cortese,
The Illinois statute proscribing disorderly conduct reads: “A person commits disorderly cоnduct when he knowingly does any act in such unreasonable manner as to alarm or disturb another and to provoke a breach of the peace.” 720 Ill. Comp. Stat. 5/26 — 1(a)(1). In applying this provision, Illinois courts have recognized that “the types of conduct intended to be included under this section almost defy definition.”
People v. Davis,
-When viewed in the context of the family conflict that plagued the Gowers and the Taylors,
cf. Humphrey v. Staszak,
The gravamen of Gower’s directed verdict motion, however, was that his arrest under the Illinois disorderly conduct statute would
in this case
violate his First Amendment right to .free speech. That is, he is arguing that an arrest which is premised merely on the words he yelled at the Taylors (i.e., shouting “fuck you” a
*670
number of times, calling Thomas Taylor a “big fat son-of-a-bitch” and “clucking” like a chicken) on the morning of February 12, 2000, would improperly punish constitutionally protected speech. Illinоis courts have previously addressed how constitutional requirements essentially provide an additional element for the disorderly conduct statute in the context where words alone are deemed to be disorderly. Freedom of speech is one of our most precious guarantees under the constitution; “it is a fundamental right protected from invasion by the state by the fourteenth amendment.”
See People v. Redioood,
We reject Gower’s assertion because we have little difficulty concluding, as a matter of law, that Deputies Vercler and Garrett had probable cause to believe that Gower’s reported verbal assaults, directed at the Taylors, consisted of “fighting words” that “by their very utterance inflict injury or tend to incite an immediate breach of the peace,”
Chaplinsky,
In all, Gower’s inflammatory, implicitly threatening, and personally abusive language, which was uttered after Gower had brandished a butcher knife at the Taylors the night before, is not the type of speech which is protected by the First Amendment and, therefore, the Illinois disorderly conduct statute was not applied unconstitutionally against Gower based on the facts of this cаse. Thus, the jury was properly allowed to rule in favor of the Defendants on Gower’s claim that Deputies Vercler and Garrett lacked probable cause to arrest him for disorderly conduct. The trial court’s denial of Gower’s motion for a directed verdict was correct. 8
III. Conclusion
For the reasons stated herein, the judgment of the district court is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. During previous day’s trip to the hospital, Preston had been prescribed steroid medication for his asthma flare-up, signifying his condition was worsening.
. According to Keith Gower, he never revealed his possession of the knife.
. While Deputy Vercler testified at trial that Mrs. Taylor would not divulge any more information to him regarding precisely what Gower had been yelling at the Taylors that morning, during her own testimony, Mrs. Taylor stated that "I was being called a psycho b-i-t-c-h. My husband was called a big fat a-s-s MF'er and threatening our lives." (Tr. 153. (emphasis added)).
. As a seven-year-old with a mental capacity of about a four or five year-old, it is highly doubtful that Preston possessed any authority, either actual or apparent, to consent to the officers’ entry into the Gower home. In аny event, the Defendants do not contend that Preston had authority to consent to their entry of the home, and thé issue is not before this Court.
. The record on appeal fails to explain the State’s reason for dismissing the charges.
. We also note that the officers initially entered Gower's home only to investigate the Taylors’ claim and not to arrest Gower. It is clear from the trial testimony that Officer Vercler made his probable cause conclusion only after he had communicated with the Gower regarding the alleged incident and had conсluded that Gower's chronicle was unworthy of belief.
. Gower also asserts that a warrantless arrest inside a suspect’s home, even with probable cause, is lawful only if the suspect is arrested for a felony, but this argument is wholly without merit: ''[Illinois law] allows a full custodial arrest for
any
crime on probable cause,”
Gramenos v. Jewel Cos., Inc.,
. Because we hold that Gower's arrest did not abridge any of his constitutional rights, we need not discuss whether, if his constitutional rights had been violated, Gower would have been entitled to physically resist arrest or whether 720 ILCS 5/7-7 is unconstitutional as overly broad.
See
720 Ill. Comp. Stat. 5/7-7 ("A person is not authorized to use force to resist an arrest which he knows is being made either by a peace officer or by a private person summoned and directed by a peace officer to make the arrest, even if he believes that the arrest is unlawful and the arrest in fact is unlawful."). Regardless, Gower concedes that he did not in fact resist arrest and, therefore, he would not have standing to challenge the statute in the first instance.
See Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
