Antonio KING, Plaintiff, Appellee, v. Cesar RIVAS, Individually, Defendant, Appellant.
No. 08-1557.
United States Court of Appeals, First Circuit.
Heard Dec. 3, 2008. Decided Feb. 2, 2009.
555 F.3d 14
To the extent that Lichoulas seeks compensation for the taking, the claim is properly brought in state court, as Williamson makes clear. As for Lichoulas’ appeal from the district court‘s refusal to issue a lis pendens,
Affirmed.
John J. Davis with whom Pierce, Davis & Perritano, LLP was on brief, for appellant.
Michael J. Sheehan, for appellee.
Before BOUDIN, STAHL and LIPEZ, Circuit Judges.
In the underlying case, Antonio King sued seven New Hampshire corrections officers and employees in federal district court in New Hampshire, alleging constitutional violations while King was a pretrial detainee in the Hillsborough House of Corrections. The gist of the claims was that he had been falsely accused of threatening a guard and was thereafter mistreated during his confinement. The five-count complaint charged procedural due process and eighth amendment violations, varying with the defendant.
According to King‘s later testimony, on July 14, 2002, while the inmates were out of their cells for recreation, Cesar Rivas, an on-duty corrections officer in a medium security wing of the jail (Unit 2D), radioed for assistance, falsely reporting that he was in jeopardy of being taken hostage. Rivas identified King, along with eight other inmates, as having threatened him. Three other corrections officers then took King to the jail‘s segregation unit (Unit 2B), known as “the hole“.
Soon after he was taken to the hole, a disciplinary officer charged King with disciplinary violations based on Rivas’ report. After a hearing, which took place on July 19, King was sentenced to thirty days in segregation beginning August 9. After King‘s thirty day sentence was complete, a classification officer placed him in administrative segregation, which resulted in his spending his remaining time at Hillsborough in the hole. He was released on December 23, 2002.
While in the hole, King was allowed only a mattress, sheet, pillow, and prison uniform; everything else was forbidden (including personal hygiene products and toilet paper). King had to ask guards to turn on the water to flush the toilet, drink, or wash his hands—requests not always satisfied promptly. He was allowed out of his cell only once every three days, shackled, in order to shower and was subject to frequent strip searches. These conditions remained throughout his time in segregation.
This description does not fully capture the grim and unsanitary circumstances of
After King filed his law suit, the defendants, jointly represented, invoked
At any time more than 10 days before trial begins, a party defending against a claim may serve upon the adverse party an offer to allow judgment to be taken against [him] for the money or property or to the effect specified in the offer, with costs then accrued.... If the judgment finally obtained by the offeree is not more favorable than the offer, the offeree must pay the costs incurred after the making of the offer.
By its terms, the defendants’ offer was one to settle the entire law suit for a fixed sum and did not apportion the sum among the seven defendants. The offer expired under the rule when King did not respond within ten days. On January 6, 2006, King voluntarily dismissed his claims against four of the seven defendants. After a five day trial involving the remaining three, a jury found only Rivas liable and awarded King $1 in nominal damages and $500 in punitive damages.
On King‘s motion, the trial judge ordered a new trial on compensatory damages; the judge agreed that because the jury had necessarily found that Rivas had falsely accused King and led to his wrongful punishment, the $1 nominal damage award was contrary to the substantial weight of the evidence. In the new trial on damages, the newly selected jury awarded King $5,000 in compensatory damages, giving him a total award of $5,500.
Other inmates have brought their own law suits based on the same incident. In Surprenant v. Rivas, No. 02-391JD, 2004 WL 1858316 (D.N.H. Aug.17, 2004), aff‘d, 424 F.3d 5, decided prior to King‘s trial, a jury found that Rivas and two other defendants also named by King had violated Jason Surprenant‘s constitutional rights, awarding nominal and punitive damages against both Rivas and another defendant, but only nominal damages against a third, totaling $20,503; Surprenant also recovered $29,754.50 in attorney‘s fees and $3,897.72 in costs. Id. at *5.
In Paladin v. Rivas, No. 05-cv-079-SM, 2007 WL 2907263 (D.N.H. Sept.28, 2007), which followed King‘s trial, a jury found that two other defendants but not Rivas—had violated inmates Paladin and West‘s constitutional rights. The jury awarded the plaintiffs nominal damages against both liable defendants and $50,000 each in punitive damages against one of the defendants; it also awarded Paladin alone $50,000 in compensatory damages against the other defendant. Id. at *1. Plaintiffs received $33,952.50 in attorney‘s fees and $1,247.32 in costs. Id. at *13. In other cases, the inmate-plaintiffs settled before trial.
Rivas has now appealed, arguing that the district court misconstrued
King responds that the offer was not apportioned and therefore did not allow him to determine how much Rivas was offering to settle the claims against Rivas alone, so the rule is not triggered. But the offer was hardly “ambiguous“: by its terms it was an offer to settle the whole case, and only the whole case, for $10,000—plus costs and attorney‘s fees to date. So King is saying either that a package offer alone does not trigger the rule or, in the alternative, must be accompanied by nominal allocations.
In addition,
Of course, tactically a plaintiff would prefer an apportioned set of offers that would allow him to pick and choose; indeed, an offer judged ample as to one defendant could provide resources to continue the litigation against others. And plaintiffs will often gain valuable bargaining information by learning which defendants are most eager to settle.
But in multi-defendant cases where a single employer is likely to pay the bill
Often, where there is one harm or a related set of harms, a plaintiff too will be primarily concerned with what the case as a whole “is worth.” In any event, each defendant is entitled to say that he will not settle unless the plaintiff settles with all. And how the individual defendants contribute to the settlement fund (in practice, the institution may well pay for everyone directly or by indemnification) ought ordinarily not be plaintiff‘s concern in deciding whether or not to settle.
The circuit courts have been divided about variations on the central problem. The Seventh Circuit has insisted that to trigger
Similarly, the Fifth Circuit also said the failure to allocate was fatal; but it did so on facts where it was otherwise plainly right to refuse to shift costs because the judgment against the defendant exceeded the offer—when combined with a settlement received from the other. Johnston, 803 F.2d at 870. The apportionment notion was invoked to reach a correct result but one properly reached by saying that the joint offer was less than the total amount actually recovered by the plaintiff.
The Third Circuit, by contrast, approved use of
Assuming that defendants are entitled to trigger
Nor is such a nominal allocation necessary to a package offer. If a trial results in a judgment encompassing all of the defendants, apportionment is beside the point: it is easy to see whether the total recovery exceeded the package offer. And, where some defendants settle or are dropped, as in this case, it is still easy enough to ask whether plaintiff‘s total recovery exceeded the total offer, treating a settlement as a recovery and a dismissed or prevailing defendant as a zero recovery.5
Requiring a nominal allocation in what is solely a package offer confuses form with substance: separate offers require allocation because they can be separately accepted; but with a package offer there is no allocation because there are no separate offers. By its language
Nor is it clear that such a nominal allocation would serve plaintiffs’ interests. Imagine a case where the package of recoveries exceeds the package offer but some of the awards exceeded the nominal allocation (assuming one had been required) and some were below. In that case, the plaintiff might well prefer comparison of the total amount of the joint offer to the aggregate recovery, as opposed to comparing the nominal allocations to separate recoveries and shifting costs as to some, but not all, of the defendants.
So we agree with the outcomes in the Seventh and Fifth Circuit decisions (Harbor Motor and Johnston) because comparability was impossible in the first case and favored the plaintiff in the second, but not the putative rationales adopted by those courts, and we align ourselves with the Third Circuit, save that we do not see why it matters whether liability was joint or several or how the defendants were related: a package offer is simply to be taken on its own terms and compared with the total recovery package.
At least two district courts have followed this approach, seemingly without difficulty. See note 4, above. And, perhaps more important, many states have counterparts to
However, the
In this circuit, Marek‘s consequences have been limited because this court, like several other circuits, holds that it does not permit an award of attorney‘s fees to a defendant under
Denial of post-offer attorney‘s fees under Marek seems fair enough where the plaintiff was unreasonable in rejecting an adequate defense offer—whether proffered by an individual defendant or in package form from several. But an offer may be reasonably rejected and then the jury prove much stingier than might be expected; that was perhaps the case here and, if so, the outcome may seem unfair. Compare Surprenant, 2004 WL 1858316, at *5; Paladin, 2007 WL 2907263, at *1, 13.
Such outcomes could be avoided if courts could read into
But the problem results from the interaction of
The order denying relief under
It is so ordered.
MICHAEL BOUDIN
UNITED STATES CIRCUIT JUDGE
