¶ 1. Plaintiff David M. Lay appeals from the superior court’s order granting summary judgment to defendants William J. Pettengill, Elizabeth F. Novotny, and Daniel K. Troidl on his complaint. Lay’s claims stem from an internal investigation into his behavior as a state trooper and his subsequent resignation from the Vermont State Police (VSP). Lay argues that the superior court erred in granting judgment to defendants on his claims of fraudulent nondisclosure, retaliatory prosecution, malicious prosecution, and negligent referral. He also challenges several discovery rulings made by the court. We affirm.
¶2. The superior court found the following facts undisputed. Lay worked as a state trooper for the VSP. On June 29, 2004, he was suspended from duty due to ongoing investigations by the Internal Affairs Unit (IAU). Lay’s access to the police barracks was revoked, and he was ordered to turn in his badge, identification, weapon, cruiser, and keys. On July 8, Lay contacted a fellow trooper and asked to meet. The parties met at a local eating establishment. According to the fellow trooper, Lay asked him to surreptitiously remove certain items from Lay’s desk and police cruiser that Lay believed could be used against him in the IAU investigation. Lay told the trooper not to make any notes about their conversation. The trooper understood Lay to be referring to marijuana paraphernalia, marijuana, and pills. He had seen Lay seize at least some of these items from a residence several months earlier in connection with a next-of-kin notification. Lay apparently did not intend to use these items in any criminal prosecution.
¶ 3. Lay does not contest telling the fellow trooper to get rid of items in his desk, although he challenges that there was marijuana in his desk. He also does not dispute telling the trooper that he wanted the items removed because “they,” presumably IAU, would “like to make something ugly out of it.”
¶ 4. Lay’s fellow trooper informed his supervisors of Lay’s request. Captain Pettengill informed the IAU, and these allegations were included as part of an investigative report authored by Lieutenant Troidl, Director of Internal Affairs. The report also detailed numerous other items found in Lay’s desk that indicated neglect of duty, as well as a lack of attention and follow-through with various aspects of his work. This included twenty-seven items of evidence, some of which dated back to 2001, that should have been included with case files or been submitted to the lab.
¶ 5. In August 2004, the IAU report was sent to the Windham County State’s Attorney’s Office pursuant to statute. See 20 V.S.A. § 1923(b) (IAU must investigate allegations of misconduct and the head of IAU “shall immediately report all allegations to the state’s attorney of the county in which the incident took place, to the
attorney general and to the governor, unless the head of the unit makes a determination that the allegations do not include violation of a criminal statute”). In a cover letter accompanying the report, Lieutenant Troidl stated that, after the conclusion of the IAU investigation, Novotny, a staff attorney with the Department of Public Safety (DPS),
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“pointed out that Trooper
¶ 6. In September 2004, DPS Commissioner Kerry Sleeper preferred charges against Lay alleging thirty-six counts of various infractions of the code of conduct governing VSP members. These included charges of falsification and misuse of property and evidence; making a false statement; failing to follow-up or make reports in numerous cases; and abuse of authority for conducting a warrantless search. Commissioner Sleeper also reserved the right to amend the charges to add any appropriate charges of criminal conduct if an investigation revealed that Lay violated any criminal laws. The commissioner indicated that he intended to dismiss Lay absent extenuating or mitigating circumstances. Included with the preferred charges was a copy of the IAU report.
¶ 7. Lay hired an attorney who negotiated a resolution to the preferred charges with defendant Novotny. As a result of the negotiation, Lay resigned and executed a release in exchange for eight weeks of pay and an agreed-upon process for addressing future employment referral requests. Lay and Commissioner Sleeper signed the agreement on October 20, 2004. There was no apparent discussion or inquiry between the parties’ attorneys that the agreement would resolve any criminal matters. 3
¶ 8. In late November 2004, the Windham County State’s Attorney’s Office became involved in commencing a criminal prosecution against Lay. In April 2005, Deputy State’s Attorney David W. Gartenstein charged Lay with two counts of obstruction of justice in violation of 13 V.S.A. § 3015. The information alleged that Lay attempted to obstruct justice by trying to procure the destruction of evidence relevant to an IAU investigation and to procure the destruction of evidence relevant to a VSP investigation and/or the processing of potential criminal cases. The information was supported by an affidavit from a VSP detective sergeant, who had interviewed various witnesses. The affidavit recounted Lay’s seizure of drug and drug paraphernalia from a residence, described above, and Lay’s subsequent request that a fellow trooper remove the evidence from Lay’s desk and destroy it. The affidavit also recounted the twenty-seven items of evidence found in Lay’s desk — items that should have been submitted to the lab as evidence and included with case files — including some of the evidence that Lay had asked his fellow trooper to destroy.
¶ 9. A judge found probable cause to support the charge and signed a warrant for Lay’s arrest. Lay was employed by a private company in Iraq at the time, and he was terminated from his job, allegedly as a result of the felony charges. Lay subsequently moved to dismiss the charges for lack of a prima facie case, and his motion was denied.
¶ 10. When Lay returned to Vermont, he was charged with numerous other
¶ 11. In April 2008, Lay filed suit against defendants raising numerous claims, including fraudulent nondisclosure, violation of his civil rights, and malicious process. In April 2010, the court issued the summary judgment decision from which Lay appeals. We discuss the court’s decision in detail below.
¶ 12. We review the court’s decision de novo, applying the same standard as the trial court.
Richart v. Jackson,
¶ 13. We begin with Lay’s fraudulent nondisclosure claim. Lay raised this claim against DPS staff attorney Novotny, alleging that she had a duty to inform him during the negotiation process that she had opined to Lieutenant Troidl that Lay’s conduct might give rise to a criminal action. By failing to do so, Lay maintained that Novotny fraudulently induced him to resign by implying “that the settlement resolved all issues” between himself and the State. In other words, Lay suggests that he would not have resigned — notwithstanding the commissioner’s indication that Lay would be fired — if Lay had known that Novotny thought that he might have violated several criminal statutes, statutes that he was never charged with violating.
¶ 14. The trial court found that Lay failed to meet his burden of proving fraudulent nondisclosure. See
Estate of Alden v. Dee,
¶ 16. Troidl, of course, had a statutory duty to send the IAU report to the Windham County State’s Attorney unless he concluded that the allegations against Lay did “not include violation of a criminal statute.” 20 V.S.A. § 1923(b). Lay and his attorney could have inquired whether such referral had been made. See Restatement (Second) of Torts § 551 cmt. k (recognizing in context of fraudulent nondisclosure cases that a “defendant may reasonably expect the plaintiff to make his own investigation, draw his own conclusions and protect himself’); see also
Solares v. Solares,
¶ 17. Lay identifies no basis for imposing a duty on Novotny to disclose her opinion about his potential criminal liability during negotiations to resolve Lay’s employment dispute. “Failing to disclose information is not fraudulent unless one has an affirmative duty to disclose, as in a confidential or fiduciary relationship.”
Solares,
¶ 19. The record shows that, with the assistance of counsel, Lay entered into a plain and unambiguous severance agreement. No reasonable person would conclude from this agreement, or the circumstances surrounding its execution, that the agreement immunized Lay from criminal prosecution. The undisputed facts support the trial court’s summary judgment decision in Novotny’s favor, and we find no error.
¶ 20. We turn next to Lay’s retaliatory prosecution claim, which Lay styled in his complaint as a claim for violation of his federal and state civil rights. Lay contends that he was prosecuted in response to what he asserts was the exercise of his civil rights under the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution and Chapter I, Article 11 of the Vermont Constitution — when Lay twice refused permission for police to retrieve items from his home — and under the First and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution and Chapter I, Article 13 of the Vermont Constitution — when Lay’s attorney wrote a letter to Novotny complaining about a breach of confidentiality in one of the IAU investigations. The trial court construed these allegations as stating a claim for retaliatory prosecution in violation of Lay’s state and federal rights to free speech and freedom from unreasonable search.
¶21. To prevail on such claim, a plaintiff must ordinarily plead and prove not only the retaliatory basis for inciting the prosecution but also that the prosecution was instituted without probable cause. See
Hartman v. Moore,
¶22. It is significant that the trial court in the criminal prosecution previously found probable cause on both counts and additionally denied a motion to dismiss each of the counts for lack of a prima facie case. The mere fact that a criminal tribunal found probable cause normally provides a presumption that probable cause existed in the context of a subsequent wrongful prosecution claim. See, e.g.,
Colon v. City of New York,
¶23. The probable cause finding here has an even stronger effect. In this case, the criminal tribunal’s finding of probable cause was not merely the result of an unopposed presentation by the State. Cf.
Davis v. United States,
¶24. In this context, we find that the criminal court’s decision rejecting Lay’s motion to dismiss for lack of a prima facie case collaterally estops Lay from relitigating the issue of probable cause for his wrongful prosecution claims in this case. Under Vermont law, the standard for issue preclusion comes from
Trepanier v. Getting Organized, Inc.,
[Preclusion should be found only when the following criteria are met: (1) preclusion is asserted against one who was a party or in privity with a party in the earlier action; (2) the issue was resolved by a final judgment on the merits; (3) the issue is the same as the one raised in the later action; (4) there was a full and fair opportunity to litigate the issue in the earlier action; and (5) applying, preclusion in the later action is fair.
We have recognized that collateral estoppel can apply between criminal and civil cases. See
State v. Stearns,
¶ 25. Other courts have generally agreed that a full adversarial hearing on probable cause can have preclusive effect for the purposes of a subsequent wrongful prosecution claim. See, e.g.,
Haupt v. Dillard,
¶26. Where issue preclusion has not been found, it is generally because the result of the initial hearing is alleged to have been procured on the basis of false testimony. See, e.g.,
Peet v. City of Detroit,
¶ 27. In this case, Lay does make one argument that, along these lines, might be taken to call into question the criminal court’s finding of probable cause. He points out that the affidavit upon which the criminal court based its finding of probable cause included a difference from the initial affidavit of the investigating officer. In describing what was found at Lay’s desk, the initial affidavit listed, among other things, “marijuana pipes, rolling papers and a piece of paper with pills taped to it.” The affidavit that was the basis for the finding of probable cause listed “marijuana, pipes, rolling papers, and a piece of paper with pills taped to it.” The first of the two added commas in the second version does change the meaning, and Lay argues that it misleadingly indicated criminal activity where there was none. Lay contends that this is significant because, according to his argument, probable cause for the obstruction of justice counts required that the evidence in question be evidence of criminal activity.
¶ 28. We nevertheless find it fair in this case to give preclusive effect to the criminal court decision on the motion to dismiss. First, Lay had the opportunity to address the misplaced comma in the criminal court. An important purpose of the Rule 12(d) motion is to allow a defendant to see the affidavits upon which probable cause is based and to challenge them. Second, although the comma clearly does change the meaning, Lay’s argument overstates the significance of this change. A police officer having marijuana, and not just marijuana pipes, in a plastic evidence bag at his police desk does not itself demonstrate criminal activity where there is no evidence that he wanted the marijuana for his own use. The allegation was that Lay obstructed justice by having a fellow trooper destroy the evidence in Lay’s desk. The fact that marijuana is an illegal drug which ordinary citizens are prohibited from possessing is of limited significance to Lay’s alleged crime. It is not as though the added comma suddenly transformed a description of purely innocent conduct into a description of criminal conduct.
¶ 29. In focusing on the absence of marijuana, Lay’s argument confuses the nature of an investigation with its outcome. Lay would have us conclude that because there appears to have been no marijuana at his desk, he was therefore not obstructing
¶ 30. We turn next to Lay’s malicious prosecution claim. In his complaint, Lay alleged in relevant part that, with a wrongful motive, Novotny encouraged or made the complaint that led to his criminal prosecution.
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He maintained that Novotny did so without probable cause to believe that he committed any crime. He also asserted that the prosecution of the obstruction of justice charges ended in his favor. The trial court found that Lay failed to state a claim on which relief could be granted because the criminal case was not resolved in Lay’s favor and there was nothing in the record to show that Lay was innocent of wrongdoing. See
Anello v. Vinci,
¶ 31. Given that a lack of probable cause is a necessary element for malicious prosecution, id., and having already found that Lay is precluded from arguing a lack of probable cause in his present action, see supra, ¶¶ 22-30, we conclude that summary judgment was appropriate on the malicious prosecution claims as well as on the retaliatory prosecution claims.
¶ 32. Furthermore, to the extent that Lay argues that there is a dispute of fact regarding the “favorable termination” element,
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we find this argument
¶ 33. In a similar vein, when the underlying case is a criminal one, the Restatement provides that “[pjroceedings are ‘terminated in favor of the accused’ . . . only when their final disposition is such as to indicate the innocence of the accused.” Restatement (Second) of Torts § 660 cmt. a. When a plea agreement is involved, the Restatement explains that “[ajlthough the accused by his acceptance of a compromise does not admit his guilt, the fact of compromise indicates that the question of his guilt or innocence is left open. Having bought peace the accused may not thereafter assert that the proceedings have terminated in his favor.”
Id.
cmt. c; see also
Kent v. Katz,
¶ 34. Lay offers no compelling argument in support of a contrary rule, and the case on which he heavily relies,
Kostrzewa v. City of Troy,
¶ 35. There is no such divergence from the general rule here, nor is there any suggestion that Lay was coerced into entering the plea agreement. His written waiver in the criminal case expressly provides otherwise. The undisputed facts here show that Lay bargained for the dismissal of the obstruction of justice charges, and the final disposition of the charges against Lay is not “indicative of innocence.”
Kent,
¶ 36. Lay next argues that the court erred in finding that Troidl acted consistently with 20 V.S.A. § 1923(b) in forwarding the IAU report to the State’s
¶ 37. The plain language of § 1923(b) does not support Lay’s interpretation. See
Tarrant v. Dep’t of Taxes,
¶ 38. Finally, we turn to Lay’s assertion that the court should have allowed him to engage in additional discovery before issuing its summary judgment decision. Lay maintains that in one of his interrogatories he sought to test the accuracy of the probable cause affidavit by obtaining all communications that described the offense stated in the affidavit. Lay asserts that the court should have given him a full opportunity to test the accuracy of the probable cause affidavit before issuing its summary judgment decision.
¶39. The trial court has discretion to limit discovery requests. See V.R.C.P. 26(b)(1). In this case, the trial court found at a September 2008 status conference that most of Lay’s discovery requests were overbroad and asked that they be revised. As to the particular request cited above, the court found it irrelevant. As the State explained, the district court’s decision on probable cause was based on Detective Roberts’s affidavit, and the district court’s probable cause decision spoke for itself. The court agreed with the State that the request should be denied, and Lay offers no compelling argument to show that the court abused its discretion in doing so.
¶40. Lay also asserts that the court should have required defendants to answer two other interrogatories before deciding as a matter of law that Lieutenant Troidl did not negligently refer the IAU report to the prosecutor. As discussed above, there is no legal basis for Lay’s negligent referral argument, and there can therefore be no error in the denial of Lay’s request. We have considered all of Lay’s arguments and find them all without merit.
Affirmed.
Notes
The Commissioner of the Department of Public Safety “superviséis] and directfs] the activities of the state police.” 20 V.S.A. § 1872.
Under 13 V.S.A. 8 3006, it is a crime for a public officer to “willfully neglect[] to perform the duties imposed upon him or her by law”; under 13 V.S.A. 8 3009, it is a crime to refuse or delay to execute criminal process.
Nor would it have been appropriate to do so in light of Vermont Rule of Professional Conduct 4.5, which states that “[a] laywer shall not present, participate in presenting, or threaten to present criminal charges in order to obtain an advantage in a civil matter.”
We are not here concerned with a claim of negligent misrepresentation, which is derived from common-law tort principles rather than from an expanded duty of representation by the attorney. See generally 1 R. Mallen & J. Smith, Legal Malpractice § 7:14 (2011 ed.) (discussing nature of negligent misrepresentation claim brought against attorneys). While Lay raises an argument concerning the dismissal of his negligent misrepresentation claim, he raised this argument for the first time in his reply brief. For that reason, we do not address it.
Robertson v. Mylan Labs., Inc.,
Lay claims that the requirement to show absence of probable cause should not apply to allegations that defendants retaliated because of his invocation of rights under the Vermont Constitution, rather than the United States Constitution. As the trial court found, however, Lay offered no argument why the test under the state constitution should differ from that under the federal constitution. In this Court, Lay argued that this aspect of
Hartman
should not be followed because it is “an unnecessary and illogical encrustation on the general rule [of]
Mt. Healthy City School District Board of Education v. Doyle,
Although the obstruction of justice charges were dismissed as part of an overall plea agreement, we do not believe this undermined the necessary finality for preclusive effect in this case. Some courts have refused to give preclusive effect to probable cause determinations where the defendant was subsequently released and therefore unable to appeal. See, e.g.,
Dukes v. Troy Hous. Auth.,
No. 1:08-CV-479,
In the majority of these cases, the underlying criminal action did not reach a guilty verdict such that the criminal defendant could have appealed in a noninterlocutory manner. See
Haupt,
Lay points to footnote two of the criminal court decision — stating that “[a] contrary conclusion would probably be reached if the allegations being investigated involved no potential criminal misconduct,” — as evidence that the suggested presence of marijuana did affect the decision. But this argument again mistakenly equates “allegations being investigated” with the results of the investigation. It is not the case that the allegations against Lay “involved no potential criminal misconduct” (emphasis added), and this was sufficient for the probable cause finding on the obstruction of justice charges.
We note that Lay was not charged with violating either statute suggested by Novotny; additionally, the IAU report detailing Lay’s behavior was submitted to the Windham County State’s Attorney pursuant to statute.
On appeal, Lay asserts that, as applied to criminal cases, the “favorable termination” element is outmoded and unfair. Lay fails to show that this argument
was preserved. In his complaint, Lay alleged that the prosecution was in fact terminated in his favor. We conclude that this argument was waived, and we therefore do not address it. See
Bull v. Pinkham Eng’g Assocs.,
