MICHAEL KOSSLER, Appellant v. STEVEN CRISANTI; DONZI‘S BAR
No. 06-3241
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
April 21, 2009
Submitted on Initial Rehearing En Banc January 28, 2009
2009 Decisions, Paper 1431
BEFORE: SCIRICA, Chief Judge, SLOVITER, McKEE, RENDELL, BARRY, AMBRO, FUENTES, SMITH, FISHER, CHAGARES, JORDAN, HARDIMAN and ALDISERT, Circuit Judges.
On Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania (D.C. No. 03-cv-00679). District Judge: Honorable Terrence F. McVerry. PRECEDENTIAL.
Bryan Campbell, 220 Grant Street, 6th Floor, Pittsburgh, PA 15219, Attorney for Appellee, Steven Crisanti
Michael Fitzpatrick, 850 Washington Avenue, Carnegie, PA 15106, Attorney for Appellee, Donzi‘s Bar
Nancy Winkelman, Schnader Harrison Segal & Lewis, 1600 Market Street, Suite 3600, Philadelphia, PA 19103, Attorney for Amicus Appellant, ACLU PA
OPINION
FISHER, Circuit Judge, with whom SCIRICA, Chief Judge, BARRY, FUENTES, SMITH, CHAGARES, JORDAN and HARDIMAN, Circuit Judges, join.
This appeal raises a discrete issue involving a malicious prosecution claim brought under
I.
A. The Events of the Night of the Fight
At approximately 11:00 p.m. on November 11, 2001, thirty-nine-year-old X-ray technician Michael Kossler, his friend John Trelecki, and one other friend arrived at Donzi‘s Bar in Pittsburgh‘s Strip District and socialized, talked, walked around, and danced. While there, Kossler had a couple of beers but claims not to have consumed any alcohol prior to arriving at Donzi‘s.
Steven Crisanti, a City of Pittsburgh police officer, was working an off-duty detail, or secondary employment position,1 that night at Donzi‘s, where he had worked for about two years. With the exception of not wearing his official police baseball cap, Crisanti was dressed in his full police uniform. These secondary employment officers were paid in cash each night by Donzi‘s parent corporation.
Kossler and Trelecki left Donzi‘s at approximately 2:00 a.m. Upon exiting the bar, the two men walked up a ramp toward a parking lot located next to Donzi‘s entrance. They had not yet arrived in the parking lot when a fight broke out on the sidewalk at the top of the ramp. When the fight started, Crisanti was standing in the parking lot.
Crisanti and Kossler provide different accounts оf what occurred next. According to Crisanti, when he tried to go to break up the fight, Kossler grabbed him from behind and twisted him around. Crisanti responded by pushing Kossler away and ran toward the fight, but Donzi‘s security had already broken it up before Crisanti reached it. According to Trelecki, he and Crisanti were friends, and he had tapped Crisanti on the back to let him know that he was going to help him in breaking up the fight. Kossler confirms Trelecki‘s version of the events by stating that he was not the one who touched or grabbed Crisanti because he was standing near the valet stand several feet away waiting for his car.
With respect to what happened after the fight ended, Crisanti states that he approached Kossler to ask why Kossler had grabbed him and to warn Kossler not to touch a police officer again. At that point, Kossler became irate, “came at” Crisanti, and bent his middle finger and forefinger completely back on Crisanti‘s left hand. While Crisanti tried to pull his fingers free, he grabbed his pepper spray with his other hand and sprayed Kossler, at which point Kossler released Crisanti‘s left hand.
Kossler, in turn, states that Crisanti was yelling “in a loud, screaming, irate voice” that Kossler should not have touched him. Crisanti also pointed his finger in Kossler‘s face and forced Kossler to back up. Afraid that he would be slapped or punched, Kossler told Crisanti that he had recently undergone surgery on his nose and asked Crisanti: “[P]lease, get your hand out of my face.” When Crisanti touched Kossler‘s nose, Kossler “moved” or “pushed” Crisanti‘s hand away in a non-violent
B. Crisanti‘s Police Report
Following the incident, Crisanti completed and filed a City of Pittsburgh Bureau of Police Offense / Incident Report, which identified Kossler as the aggressor and recounted:
“As I tried to break up the fight another w/m (later identified as Kossler, Michael) grabbed me and pulled me away from the two actors. As the security men broke up the fight, I approached Kossler, he became very loud yelling ‘fuck you’ he then started charging at me, I put my arm out ordering h[im] to ‘stop,’ but he kept coming and grab[bed] a hold of my left hand bending them backwards. I tried to pull my hand away, but he would not let go. . . . P.O. is going to [hospital] for treatment of my left hand. Nature of injury was swelling to my knuckles, middle, and ring fingers. Actor (Kossler) was inside the bar and smelled of alcohol.”
Kossler was charged with the first-degrеe felony of aggravated assault and the summary offenses of disorderly conduct and public intoxication. Crisanti‘s police report listed “A.A. 2702(a)(2), 5503 Disorderly, Public Intox 5505” to denote the Pennsylvania statutory provisions covering each of the offenses charged. On November 21, 2001, Kossler appeared for a preliminary hearing before a state court magistrate. Although
C. Bench Trial Before Pennsylvania Common Pleas Judge
In a non-jury trial before Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas Judge Robert E. Colville on July 18, 2002, Kossler was found not guilty of aggravated assault and public intoxication, but was found guilty of disorderly conduct and fined one hundred dollars. Judge Colville explained:
“There were an awful lot of misperceptions going on that evening in the parking lot. Basically, there were a lot of people moving around and there was a lot of involvement and anger and people were drinking, and the consensus of that is nobody knows precisely exactly what happened.
My own personal belief in this, I don‘t see any misdemeanors or any felonies, it‘s not an aggravated assault, it isn‘t, simply isn‘t.
I‘m going to find him guilty of a summary offense of DC.
Basically, you were in the wrong place, wrong time and the officer addressed you, when he came
over, whether he was mistaken or not, when he‘s putting his hand up he‘s obviously putting himself at risk trying to break up what he feels – it may well have been your friend who touched him but he doesn‘t have time seeing which one of you did it, he‘s going to respond, he just is, and he‘s going to be upset, whether appropriate or not, having been in his uniform, and having done this I understand why he did what he did, he was upset, that‘s why he came to you, he doesn‘t recognize you, that‘s another fact, but at this point you have to respond, not by taking – hitting his hand away, but it‘s obvious he‘s put out, he‘s the only one there that hasn‘t been drinking all night, and he‘s the only one that has to be responsible. I think he acted reasonable; I think it got out of hand, but the charges don‘t fit the crime. I mean, you put yourself in a situation whereby striking the officer‘s hand away from him, that alone I‘m going to find you summary [sic] of disorderly conduct. I‘m going to charge you a hundred bucks.”
D. Procedural History in Federal District Court
On May 13, 2003, Kossler filed this lawsuit against Crisanti and Donzi‘s for excessive force, false arrest, and malicious proseсution pursuant to
Upon completion of discovery, on August 1, 2005, the District Court granted partial summary judgment in favor of Donzi‘s on the malicious prosecution and false arrest claims brought under both federal and state law, as well as on the failure to train claim. It denied summary judgment on the other claims, namely the excessive force and assault and battery claims.
On August 23, 2005, the District Court denied Kossler‘s motion for reconsideration in a separate memorandum opinion. We then denied Kossler‘s motion for allowance of an immediate interlocutory appeal. Before the remaining counts went to trial, on June 2, 2006, the parties stipulated to the dismissal of those counts with prejudice, and the District Court entered an order on June 5, 2006, reflecting this stipulation. Kossler timely appealed what he believed to be the District Court‘s final judgment, and raised arguments in his merits briefs related only to his malicious prosecution claims.
Following oral argument before a panel of this Court, we determined there was a defect in jurisdiсtion because of the lack of a final judgment. We informed the parties that the District Court‘s June 2006 order granted the parties’ stipulation only as to the excessive force and assault and battery claims; Kossler‘s false arrest claim against Crisanti remained open because it was not disposed of by any of the District Court‘s orders; and the actual “separate final judgment” pursuant to a November 2005 order of the District Court had not been entered. Because these
II.
The District Court had jurisdiction over Kossler‘s federal law claims pursuant to
III.
A. No Favorable Termination Under the Factual Circumstances of This Case
“To prove malicious prosecution under [§] 1983, a plaintiff must show that:
- the defendants initiated a criminal proceeding;
- the criminal proceeding ended in plaintiff‘s favor;
- the proceeding was initiated without probable cause;
- the defendants acted maliciously or for a purpose other than bringing the plaintiff to justice; and
- the plaintiff suffered deprivation of liberty consistent with the concept of seizure as a consequence of a legal proceeding.”
Estate of Smith v. Marasco, 318 F.3d 497, 521 (3d Cir. 2003).2 For Kossler to prevail, he needed to satisfy each of the elements of malicious prosecution, and thus the District Court‘s ruling that Kossler failed to establish the second element – the favorable termination of his underlying criminal proceeding – was fatal to his claims. Our agreement with the District Court‘s
ruling on this element suffices to affirm the District Court‘s order in toto.3
The purpose of the favorable termination requirement is to avoid “the possibility of the claimant [sic] succeeding in the tort action after having been convicted in the underlying criminal prosecution, in contravention of a strong judicial policy against the creation of two conflicting resolutions arising out of the same or identical transaction.” Heck v. Humphrey, 512 U.S. 477, 484 (1994) (alteration in original) (internal quotation marks omitted). Consistent with this purpose, we have held that a prior criminal case must have been disposed of in a way that indicates the innocence of the accused in order to satisfy the favorable termination element.4 Donahue v. Gavin, 280 F.3d 371, 383 (3d Cir. 2002); see also Gilles v. Davis, 427 F.3d 197, 211 (3d Cir. 2005) (holding that expungement under the Accelerated Rehabilitative Disposition program was not a favorable termination because the program “imposes several burdens upon the criminal defendant not consistent with innocence“). Accordingly, a malicious prosecution claim cannot be predicated on an underlying criminal proceeding which terminated in a manner not indicative of the innocence of the accused. A plaintiff may attempt to indicate his innocence by demonstrating
that his prior criminal proceeding terminated in one of the following ways:
“(a) a discharge by a magistrate at a preliminary hearing, or
(b) the refusal of a grand jury to indict, or
(c) the formal abandonment of the proсeedings by the public prosecutor, or
(d) the quashing of an indictment or information, or
(e) an acquittal, or
(f) a final order in favor of the accused by a trial or appellate court.”
Donahue, 280 F.3d at 383 (internal quotation marks and emphasis omitted); accord Haefner v. Burkey, 626 A.2d 519, 521 (Pa. 1993). In the present case, Kossler relies upon his acquittal as the only basis for arguing that he obtained a favorable termination.
Kossler‘s argument is problematic because his acquittal is accompanied by a contemporaneous conviction at the same proceeding. We are thus faced with a question of first impression in this Circuit: Whether acquittal on at least one criminal charge constitutes “favorable termination” for the purpose of a subsequent malicious prosecution claim, when the
Rather we conclude that, upon examination of the entire criminal proceeding, the judgment must indicate the plaintiff‘s innocence of the alleged misconduct underlying the offenses charged. In urging us not to hold that “the favorable termination element . . . categorically requires the plaintiff to show that all of the criminal charges were decided in his favor,” Kossler himself argues (correctly) that the result “depend[s] on the particular circumstances.” The argument goes both ways: The favorable termination element is not categorically satisfied whenever the plaintiff is acquitted of just one of several charges in the same proceeding. When the circumstances – both the offenses as stаted in the statute and the underlying facts of the
Beginning with the first part of this inquiry, an analysis of the offenses charged reveals that under Pennsylvania law, a person is guilty of the first-degree felony of aggravated assault if he “attempts to cause or intentionally, knowingly or recklessly causes serious bodily injury to [a police officer] while in the performance of duty.”
- engages in fighting or threatening, or in violent or tumultuous behavior;
- makes unreasonable noise;
- uses obscene language, or makes an obscene gesture; or
- creates a hazardous or physically offensive condition by any act which serves no legitimate purpose of the actor.”
Proceeding to the second part of the inquiry, we conclude the District Court correctly found that “the charge of aggravated assault was predicated on the same factual basis as the charge of disorderly conduct, i.e., the altercation between Kossler and Crisanti. . . . Kossler was clearly guilty of some wrongdoing in the altercation notwithstanding the fact that Judge Colville found that his wrongdoing did not amount to aggravated
On this indivisible factual basis, Judge Colville found Kossler guilty of disorderly conduct and imposed a fine upon him. These particular circumstances indicate that the judgment as a whole that resulted from the bench trial, which resolved all the charges aimed at punishing Kossler‘s role in the altercation, did not reflect Kossler‘s innocence on the night of the fight. As a result, Kossler‘s acquittal on the aggravated assault and public intoxication charges cannot be divorced from his simultaneous conviction for disorderly conduct when all three charges arose from the same course of conduct. Therefore, we must conclude that the state criminal proceeding – the entirety of which resolved Kossler‘s guilt and punishment for intentionаlly making physical contact with a city police officer after consuming alcohol – did not end in Kossler‘s favor, even when we view the facts in the light most favorable to him.
Amicus argues that there is no conflict between Kossler‘s conviction for disorderly conduct and a civil judgment in his
We acknowledge that caselaw in two other United States Courts of Appeals appears to favor Kossler‘s position as a general matter because those courts allowed malicious prosecution claims to proceed despite the plaintiffs’ convictions on some but not all of the charges; however, closer examination reveals the same two-part analysis that we employ here being utilized by these other courts as well. For example, in Janetka v. Dabe, 892 F.2d 187 (2d Cir. 1989), the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit held that a plaintiff whom a jury found not guilty of resisting arrest, but guilty of disorderly conduct, nonetheless could bring a common law malicious prosecution claim. The court reasoned:
“Allowing police officers to add unwarranted misdemeanor charges to valid violation charges may force аn accused to go to trial on the misdemeanor when he otherwise would plead to the violation. If the dispositive factor is whether, as the district court held, the charge resulting in acquittal ‘arose out of events that occurred on the same occasion’ as a charge resulting in conviction, then police officers could add unsupported serious charges to legitimate minor charges with impunity.”
Id. at 190. We are not bound by Janetka and disagree with it insofar as it rejects an analysis that considers whether the charge
In any event, we do not read Janetka that broadly because “Janetka was charged with two distinct offenses involving distinct allegations. The disorderly conduct charge involved Janetka‘s actions directed at [an] unidentified hispanic man; the resisting arrest charge involved his actions directed at the officers’ attempts to arrest him.” Id. So even though the charges in Janetka arose out of events that occurred on the same occasion, they did not arise out of the same criminal conduct, and therefore, as more narrowly interpreted, Janetka does not conflict with our analysis here. The distinction between charges arising from the sаme occasion and charges arising from the same conduct is also legally relevant because, to use concrete examples, the fact that Janetka yelled and pointed at a Hispanic man has no bearing on whether he struggled against the officers to resist arrest. By contrast, here, the fact that Kossler intentionally struck Crisanti has a direct bearing on whether he assaulted the same Crisanti. Without explicitly stating it did so, the Janetka court engaged in the same two-part inquiry that guides our analysis in the present case when it noted that the offenses not only contained distinct statutory requirements but also aimed to punish two different sets of conduct (even if the charges can be traced to events that occurred on one occasion). Janetka is therefore distinguishable.
Similarly, in Uboh v. Reno, 141 F.3d 1000 (11th Cir. 1998), the Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit held in a
“The fact that the allegations concerning drug trafficking were included alongside other charges for which [the рlaintiff] ultimately was convicted does not alter our conclusion that the prosecutor‘s decision to dismiss the drug counts constituted favorable termination, particularly under the facts of this case. . . . In sum, we conclude that the dismissal of some charges of the indictment by the prosecutor – notwithstanding [the plaintiff‘s] earlier conviction on other charges set forth in the indictment – constituted termination in favor of the accused . . . .”
Id. at 1005-06 (citing Janetka, 892 F.2d at 190).
In Uboh, the charges which were dismissed by the prosecutor and which formed the basis of the plaintiff‘s malicious prosecution action (drug trafficking) aimed to punish separate conduct from those charges for which the plaintiff was convicted (credit card fraud). The significance of the fact that the offenses were distinct was not lost on the court, which stated as much and also noted:
“Each of these offenses contains entirely different elements, neither charge is a lesser-included
offense of the other, and the charges were not tried as part of the same proceeding; in this context, it is reasonable to interpret the prosecutor‘s decision to not pursue the drug-related charges as consistent with . . . a finding of innocence on these specific counts of the indictment.”
Id. at 1005. Thus the court in Uboh engaged in an analysis that parallels our approach by considering the conduct which the charged offenses aimed to punish. Only after the Uboh court determined that the charges for which the plaintiff was convicted and the charges which were dismissed aimed to punish separate conduct did it allow the malicious prosecution action premised on the latter charges to proceed.
We read both the Janetka and Uboh courts’ focus on the differences between the offenses charged and the conduct leading to the charges as implying that, under different facts, when the offenses charged aim to punish the same misconduct, a simultaneous acquittal and conviction on related charges may not amount to favorable termination. The court in Uboh hinted at its agreement with that inference:
“Our consideration of these factors is not intended to convey any determination as to whether, given a different set of circumstances, dismissal of charges that do arise out of the same set of circumstances as the charges for which a defendant was convicted might constitute termination in favor of the accused. We only note
that the unique combination of factors present in this particular case further bolsters our conclusion that voluntary dismissal of charges by the prosecutor is a favorable termination for purposes of malicious prosecution.”
141 F.3d at 1005 n.8. Here we face a case in which the unique combination of factors is virtually the exact opposite of Uboh‘s and therefore points to the opposite conclusion. As the Uboh court did, we leave for another day the establishment of universal contours of when a criminal proceeding which includes both an acquittal (or dismissal) and a conviction constitutes a termination in the plaintiff‘s favor. The facts in the case at hand, however, fall on the no-favorable-termination end of the spectrum. To reiterate, we do not hold that there is never favorable termination unless a plaintiff is acquitted of all charges. It is precisely on the facts of this case, in which the charges aim to punish one course of conduct, that we cannot conclude there was favorable termination.
B. The Inapplicability of Cases in Which All Charges Were Dismissed and Courts Analyzed Whether a Malicious Prosecution Claim Could Proceed Under the Probable Cause Element
In response to the reasoning set forth above, Kossler cites a case that on its face has no applicability to the one at hand: Johnson v. Knorr, 477 F.3d 75 (3d Cir. 2007). In Johnson, the plaintiff, then a parolee, was involved in an altercation with an agent of the Pennsylvania Board of Probation and Parole. Id. at 77. As a result of the altercation, the plaintiff was charged with
The plaintiff then initiated a
On remand, the plaintiff amended his complaint to add a claim of malicious prosecution under
In the second appeal we framed the issue as “whether the finding that the agents had probable cause to arrest [the
Yet Kossler argues that we should analyze the favorable termination element exactly as we analyzed the probable cause element in Johnson. We do not agree with that approach. The favorable termination element and the probable cause element are distinct requirements that a malicious prosecution plaintiff must satisfy to prevail and therefore should not be conflated. Although Johnson employed a charge-by-charge analysis in the context of the probable cause element, it does not undermine our conclusion that the favorable termination element properly focuses on the proceeding as a whole. Because the favorable termination element was satisfied in Johnson, we were not faced with the concern that a ruling for the malicious prosecution
By contrast, watering down the favorable termination element to protect against tacking on additional charges is particularly inappropriate because it ignores the fact that a court, not simply prosecutors and their agents, has essentially endorsed the criminal proceeding. This would interfere with the “strong judicial policy against the creation of two conflicting resolutions arising out of the same or identical transaction.” Heck, 512 U.S. at 484. Unlike the favorable termination element, the probable cause element does not have the effect of undoing another court‘s judgment, and therefore loosening the plaintiff‘s burden on that element does not carry with it the same undesirable ramifications. In short, these are two different elements, оur caselaw has so held, and thus we are cautious not to categorically apply decisions covering one element to an analysis covering another.
Although we have already explained why our analysis of the favorable termination element need not mirror our approach to the probable cause element, we nonetheless note the considerable tension that exists between our treatment of the probable cause element in Johnson and our treatment of that element in the earlier case of Wright v. City of Philadelphia, 409 F.3d 595 (3d Cir. 2005). In Wright, the plaintiff faced charges of burglary, theft, criminal trespass, and criminal mischief for
Despite our clear statement in Johnson that the precedential status of Wright is not diminished, 477 F.3d at 82 n.9, we recognize that the holdings of these two cases are difficult to reconcile. Notwithstanding this difficulty, Wright and Johnson both illustrate that the analysis of malicious prosecution claims involving multiple charges is a fact-intensive one. Requiring a fact-based inquiry for the favorable termination element therefore conforms with the use of a fact-based inquiry revealed by those two precedents, even though Johnson and Wright are not directly applicable to the instant case. Beyond observing that the underlying facts drive the analysis of each malicious prosecution case – regardless of the element at issue – we do not rely on the approach taken in either
We reiterate that district courts need not reach the probable cause element unless they first make a finding of favorable termination after examining whether the proceeding as a whole indicates the innocence of the accused with respect to the conduct underlying all of the charges. Only if the favorable termination element is satisfied under this test must a district court engage in an analysis of the probable cause element and wrestle with the approaches set forth in Johnson and Wright to determine which provides the more appropriate framework to apply to a given set of facts. Addressing the malicious prosecution elements in this order may alleviate some of the difficulty district courts would otherwise encounter if they began their analysis with the probable cause element; however, we do not intend to suggest that the favorable termination element should always be addressed prior to the probable cause element. Because the probable cause element goes to the foundation of whether there were reasonable grounds for the
In the present case, the District Court chose to focus on Kossler‘s inability to demonstrate that his state criminal proceeding terminated favorably, but had the District Court instead focused its analysis on whether probable cause existed, it would have reached the same ultimate conclusion that Kossler‘s malicious prosecution claim could not proceed. The record reflects that Crisanti had probable cause to believe Kossler committed the offenses charged based on Crisanti‘s reasonable perception of the facts and circumstances surrounding Kossler‘s conduct in the parking lot outside of Donzi‘s on the night of the altercation. See Beck v. Ohio, 379 U.S. 89, 91 (1964) (stating that probable cause exists for an arrest if “at the moment the arrest was made . . . the facts and circumstances within [the officers‘] knowledge . . . were sufficient to warrant a prudent man in believing that [the suspect] had committed or was committing an offense” (citations omitted)); Wilson v. Russo, 212 F.3d 781, 789 (3d Cir. 2000) (explaining that probable cause to arrest “exists if there is a ‘fair probability’ that the person committed the crime at issue“). In particular, the fact that Kossler intentionally made physical contact with Crisanti after exiting a bar provided probable cause for Cristanti to believe that the charged offenses had been committed.9 Therefore, had the District Court
IV.
Because Kossler‘s conviction for disorderly conduct is not indicative of his innocence of the misconduct which all three charges aimed to punish, we hold that his prior criminal proceeding did not terminate favorably to him and, consequently, his malicious prosecution action necessarily fails. Therefore, we will affirm the two orders of the District Court.
ALDISERT, Circuit Judge, with whom Circuit Judges SLOVITER, MCKEE and AMBRO join, dissenting in part and concurring in part.
Michael Kossler appeals from an order of summary judgment, entered by the District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania, dismissing his state and federal malicious
I.
To prove an action for malicious prosecution brought under
It is beyond cavil that the criminal charges of disorderly conduct and aggravated assault emanated from the same event – an altercation that took place in a parking lot near a Pittsburgh bar. On appeal, Kossler challenges only the dismissal of his malicious prosecution claims premised on aggravated assault. Reduced to its essence, then, the issue we must decide pertaining to the favorable termination element is very limited: May we conclude that the criminal proceeding against Kossler ended in his favor where he was acquitted of aggravated assault under
A.
Conviction оf a summary offense does not “carr[y] a presumption that the underlying events leading to the conviction actually occurred,” Phoenixville Area Sch. Dist. v. Unemployment Comp. Bd., 596 A.2d 889, 892 (Pa. Commw. Ct. 1991); does not entitle a defendant to a jury trial, Rule 454(B), Pennsylvania Rules of Criminal Procedure; is inadmissible in a subsequent civil proceeding, Folino v. Young, 568 A.2d 171, 173-174 (Pa. 1990); and, in the case of disorderly conduct or disturbing the peace, does not count toward a criminal history calculation under the United States Sentencing Guidelines, U.S.S.G. § 4A1.2(c).12 Summary offenses are usually punished
B.
I add that my views on the consequences of acquittal of a felony and conviction of a summary offense are admittedly at odds with the majority‘s thoughtful analysis of the relationship between these two offenses. See Majority Op. Section III-A (“[A] finding in federal court that the defendants maliciously prosecuted Kossler for the same conduct underlying the aggravated assault . . . charge[] does indeed conflict with Kossler‘s state court conviction [of the summary offense of disorderly conduct].“). Unlike my colleagues of the majority, I am impressed by and accept the reasoning of cases from the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit.
In Janetka v. Dabe, 892 F.2d 187 (2d Cir. 1989), the court was faced with a scenario similar to ours – an appeal of a
Favorable termination is not so much an element of a malicious prosecution claim as it is a prerequisite to commencement of the action. See Munoz v. City of New York, 18 N.Y.2d 6, 10, 218 N.E.2d 527, 529, 271 N.Y.S.2d 645, 649 (1966) (“It is a kind of pre-condition to the later action, the sine qua non . . . .“); see also W. Keeton, D. Dobbs, R. Keeton & D. Owen, Prosser and Keeton On Torts § 119, at 874 (5th ed. 1984). The requirement of favorable termination ensures against inconsistent judgments. It also permits a finding that probable cause was lacking.
Id. at 189 (internal citations omitted). I associate myself completely with Janetka‘s reasoning:
To hold that an acquittal does not constitute a favorable termination would be particularly inappropriate in this case, where the charge for which [the appellant] was acquitted was more serious than the one for which he was convicted. Resisting arrest is a “misdemeanor,” see
N.Y. Penal Law § 205.30 (McKinney 1988), punishable by a maximum prison sentence оf one year, seeN.Y. Penal Law § 10.00(4) (McKinney 1987). Disorderly conduct is a “violation,” seeN.Y. Penal Law § 240.20 (McKinney 1989), punishable by a maximum prison sentence of 15 days, seeN.Y. Penal Law § 10.00(3) . Allowing police officers to add unwarranted misdemeanor charges to valid violation charges may force an accused to go to trial on the misdemeanor when he otherwise would plead to the violation. If the dispositive factor is whether, as the district court held, the charge resulting in acquittal “arose out of events that occurred on the same occasion” as a charge resulting in conviction, then police officers could add unsupported serious charges to legitimate minor charges with impunity.
Similarly, in Posr v. Doherty, 944 F.2d 91 (2d Cir. 1991), the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit held that “we should not allow a finding of probable cause on [the charge of disorderly conduct] to foreclose a malicious prosecution cause of action on charges requiring different, and more culpable, behavior.” Id. at 100. Although Posr addressed the probable cause element of malicious prosecution rather than the favorable termination element at issue here, the stated rationale is significant:
If the rule were [otherwise], an officer with probаble cause as to a lesser offense could tack on more serious, unfounded charges which would support a high bail or lengthy detention, knowing that the probable cause on the lesser offense
would insulate him from liability for malicious prosecution on the other offenses.
Where there has been acquittal of a felony and conviction of a summary offense of disorderly conduct arising out of the same event, this constitutes the necessary favorable termination element of a subsequent malicious prosecution claim.
II.
My analysis of the favorable termination element, however, does not end my analysis of this case. To prove malicious prosecution, Kossler must also show that “(1) the defendants initiated a criminal proceeding; . . . (3) the proceeding was initiated without probable cause; (4) the defendants acted maliciously or for a purpose other than bringing the plaintiff to justice; and (5) the plaintiff suffered deprivation of liberty consistent with the concept of seizure as a consequence of a legal proceeding.” Estate of Smith, 318 F.3d at 521.14
A defendant in a [federal] civil rights action must have personal involvement in the alleged wrongs; liability cannot be predicated solely on the operation of respondeat superior. Personal involvement can be shown through allegations of personal direction or of actual knowledge and acquiescence. Allegations of participation or actual knowledge and acquiescence, however, must be made with appropriate particularity.
Rode v. Dellarciprete, 845 F.2d 1195, 1207 (3d Cir. 1988) (internal citations omitted). Because Kossler does not allege participation or actual knowledge and acquiescence on the part of Donzi‘s, I would affirm the District Court‘s dismissal of Kossler‘s federal malicious prosecution claim against Donzi‘s and, in this respect, express my agreement with the majority. But I cannot go further.
A.
Unlike the federal malicious prosecution claims, it appears that liability for malicious prosecution under Pennsylvania law may be imposed on the basis of respondeat superior. See, e.g., Butler v. Flo-Ron Vending Co., 557 A.2d 730, 737 (Pa. Super. 1989); Randall v. Fenton Storage Co., 182 A. 767, 768 (Pa. Super. 1936); Riddell v. Phila. Rapid Transit Co., 80 Pa. Super. 176 (1922). Donzi‘s contends that Crisanti did not initiate the criminal proceeding against Kossler, and relies on Gatter v. Zappile, 67 F. Supp. 2d 515, 521 (E.D. Pa. 1999), where the district court dismissed a malicious prosecution claim against two police officers, observing, “Generally, it is the prosecutor, not the police officer, who is responsible for initiating a proceeding against a defendant.” Id. The court in Gatter, however, proceeded to explain that “[a]n officer may . . . be considered to have initiated the criminal proceeding if he or she knowingly provided false information to the prosecutor or otherwise interfered with the prosecutor‘s informed discretion.” Id. (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). The facts of this case can be distinguished from those of Gatter, where the two police officer defendants “had no input into the decision to prosecute Gatter . . . .” Id.
Here, the argument is that Crisanti, the police officer, did in fact file criminal charges. Kossler alleges that “Crisanti, although he did not have probable cause or any reasonable suspicion to believe that Michael Kossler had committed the criminal offenses of aggravated assault and public intoxication, nevertheless filed criminal charges against Kossler for such criminal offenses.” App. 37a.
The District Court entered summary judgment against Kossler. Drawing all inferences in favor of Kossler, however, I am unable to agree that no genuine issue of fact exists (a) as to whether Crisanti initiated the proceedings against Kossler and (b) whether Crisanti was no longer acting in the scope of his employment with Donzi‘s when he initiated the proceedings
* * * * *
For the foregoing reasons, together with the majority, I would affirm the grant of summary judgment that dismissed Kossler‘s federal malicious prosecution claim against Donzi‘s. I would reverse, however, the grant of summary judgment dismissing Kossler‘s state malicious prosecution claim against Donzi‘s, as well as his federal and state malicious prosecution claims against Crisanti.
RENDELL, Circuit Judge, dissenting.
I agree more with Judge Aldisert‘s view as to the proper application of the malicious prosecution ‘test’ in the multi-crime setting than with the majority‘s, but must part company somewhat even with his view. Examining the five-prong test for malicious prosecutiоn, I am struck by the language of the third, namely that the ‘proceeding was initiated without probable cause‘. Because probable cause is different for each offense, the word ‘proceeding’ must mean a prosecution for one offense, not the prosecution of multiple offenses.
And, ‘proceeding’ as used in the third prong must inform what ‘proceeding’ in the second prong means. The fact that the issue before us does not involve the probable cause prong, as such, is of no moment. The third prong nonetheless dictates that ‘proceeding’ in the second prong requires a crime-by-crime analysis. Accordingly, a defendant successful as to one of
The majority here seems to be proceeding under a “false arrest” theory, and ignoring persuasive precedent regarding
Therefore, I would reverse and remand for further proceedings.
Notes
Our result is not inconsistent with the principle that, in analyzing false arrest claims, a court to insulate a defendant from liability need find only that “[p]robable cause ... exist[ed] as to any offense that could be charged under the circumstances.” Barna v. City of Perth Amboy, 42 F.3d at 819. Thus, we do not question the rule that there need not havе been probable cause supporting charges for every offense for which an
officer arrested a plaintiff for the arresting officer to defeat a claim of false arrest. See Wright, 409 F.3d at 602-04. The rationale of this rule is that “[t]he existence of probable cause [for one offense] ... justifie[s] the arrest - and defeats [the plaintiff‘s] claim of false arrest - even if there was insufficient cause to arrest on the [second offense] alone.” Edwards v. City of Philadelphia, 860 F.2d 568, 576 (3d Cir. 1988). However, a cause of action for malicious prosecution may be based on the prosecution of more than one charge, and the validity of the prosecution for each charge comes into question inasmuch as the plaintiff was subject to prosecution on each individual charge which, as we have noted, is likely to have placed an additional burden on the plaintiff. Overall, we are satisfied that notwithstanding the rule when a plaintiff is pursuing false arrest charges, a defendant initiating criminal proceedings on multiple charges is not necessarily insulated in a malicious prosecution case merely because the prosecution of one of the charges was justified.
