Lead Opinion
Martin Abrams (“Abrams”) is an attorney in Illinois who alleges that his civil rights were violated when he was arrested by Illinois State Trooper Kent Walker (“Walker”) when Walker was conducting a traffic stop in the fall of 1998. The district court granted Walker’s motion for summary judgment, and Abrams appeals. We affirm.
I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
While many factual issues are disputed in this case, the record is clear on several basic points. On the evening of October 13, 1998, Abrams left the Boone County Courthouse with Trent Forte (“Forte”), his client. Abrams, having some concerns about potential police misconduct, told Forte that Abrams would follow him on the road back to Chicago. Shortly after entering the Northwest Tollway, Forte was stopped by Trooper Walker. Walker, in full uniform, exited his marked squad car and approached Forte’s car.
Noticing that Forte had been stopped, Abrams pulled his car onto the highway shoulder, backed up, parked in front of Forte, exited his car, and approached Walker. Abrams identified himself as Forte’s attorney and questioned Walker’s decision to pull Forte over. Turning his attention from Forte’s vehicle, Walker explained that he was going to issue tickets to Forte for following too closely, having an obstructed windshield, and not wearing a seatbelt. Walker then instructed Abrams to return to his vehicle and warned him that his failure to comply would result in Walker issuing tickets to Abrams.
Abrams admits that he refused to obey Walker’s order, even though he was aware it was being issued by a uniformed officer of the peace engaged in the performance of his duties, and even after that order was repeated. Walker then informed Abrams that he was being issued tickets, whereupon Abrams both announced and manifested his intent to flee in his vehicle. While trying to stop him from leaving, Walker found a knife in Abrams’ car, which he then put on the roof of Abrams’ car. Abrams subsequently retrieved the knife once Walker had returned to his squad car to call for backup. Though Abrams disputes Walker’s assertion that Walker warned Abrams not to touch the weapon, Abrams admits that he retrieved the weapon moments after Walker had removed it from his reach and informed him that he was going to be arrested for the unlawful use of a weapon. In all, Abrams’ actions had the effect of interrupting and delaying Walker’s traffic stop of Forte.
Abrams was then taken into custody. Though the parties dispute the extent of
II. PROCEDURAL POSTURE
On September 19, 2000, Abrams filed a federal complaint against Walker in his individual capacity under both federal and state law, alleging that Walker had engaged in malicious prosecution and that Walker had retaliated against him for exercising his First Amendment rights.
On February 23, 2001, Walker filed a motion for summary judgment. In his answer to Walker’s summary judgment motion, Abrams abandoned his Sixth Amendment claim. On April 9, 2001, the district court granted summary judgment in Walker’s favor. The district court granted Walker’s summary judgment motion on both counts, holding (1) that Walker had probable cause to arrest Abrams for obstructing a police officer and thus Abrams could not support a malicious prosecution claim; and (2) that Abrams never engaged in any protected First Amendment speech.
On April 18, 2001, Abrams filed a motion to reconsider or to alter or amend judgment, which the district court denied on May 23, 2001. Abrams timely filed a notice of appeal on June 6, 2001.
III. DISCUSSION
Appellant asks this Court to reverse the district court’s grant of summary judgment solely with respect to his First Amendment retaliation claim. Appellant objects to the district court’s determination of facts in rejecting the retaliation claim.
A. Basis for Summary Judgment
A summary judgment motion must be granted if there is “no genuine issue as to any material fact,” Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
B. Retaliatory Claim
It is well established that “[a]n act taken in retaliation for the exercise of a constitutionally protected right violates the Constitution.” DeWalt v. Carter,
Our Constitution permits citizens to criticize police officers, within reason, both verbally and nonverbally. See, e.g., Duran v. City of Douglas,
The dissent lists four “facts” that “seem” to have been “fairly disputed on the summary judgment record.” Post at 658. To make clear our conclusion that there were no “genuine issue[s] of material fact” with respect to these matters, we quote at length Abrams’ own statements made while under oath at trial:
Q: [W]as there any additional conversation between yourself and the trooper after he told you why he was ticketing your client and you told him who you were?
A: He said to me get in your car. I said well, I’d like to talk to my client. Q: Did he respond?
A: He said get in your car or you’re getting tickets.
Q: What if anything did you say or do at that time?
A: I said what for. He said tinted windows, parking on the' tollway, and backing up on the tollway.
Q: After he said that to you, what if anything did you do?
A: I laughed because I said that’s a factory Corvette. Those are not tinted windows.
Q: What happened then?
A: He said now you’re getting tickets. I said you know what. I’m going to get in my car and leave. And I went to my car.
Q: So you went to your ear to leave before he told you to go to your car, even?
A: No. He had told me from the very beginning get in your car or you’re going to get tickets.
Q: Okay.
A: Then when he said to me now you’re getting tickets, then I went and got in my car.
Q: What happened then?
A: Well, I told him I was going to leave so he came running up to my car and he reached into my car and he tried to grab my keys.
(Tr. at 120-21) (emphasis added). Upon cross-examination, Abrams again admitted that he attempted to flee the scene:
Q: Do you believe our traffic laws apply to you?
A: Sure.
Q: Yet when the officer told you that you were going to receive a traffic ticket, you took it upon yourself to get in the car and attempt to leave. True? A: No. I said I was going to leave. I never made — I tuas going to leave. I would have.
Q: ... Is the reason you were going to leave because you were terrified of this officer or because you felt he had no right to give you a ticket?
A: I felt he had no right to give me a ticket.
Q: At what point do you start getting scared of Trooper Walker?
A: When he says you’re under arrest for a UUW [unlawful use of a weapon] felony.
Q: And he said that when he found the knife in the back of your car?
A: He says you’re under arrest for UUW felony.
Q: You were so scared of him that at that point you proceeded to remove the knife that he had placed on the roof of your car and boldly take it back inside. Is that true?
A: I took the knife off the top of my car so it wouldn’t scratch my car and put it back in the car. Yes, I did.
(Tr. at 139) (emphasis added). After his exchange with Walker over the tickets and the knife, Abrams sat in his car while Walker returned to his car to call for backup. When asked to give an approximation of the time it took for Trooper Walker’s call for backup to be responded to, Abrams said “twenty minutes.” (Tr. at 124.)
These extended excerpts from Abrams’ state trial transcript show quite clearly, pace the dissent, that there was no “genuine issue” over whether Abrams (1) failed to comply with the repeated lawful order of Trooper Walker to return to his car (in the midst of a traffic stop on a busy interstate highway); (2) that Abrams attempted to flee
Appellant cites City of Houston v. Hill,
Even if Abrams’ conduct was constitutionally protected, he still failed to satisfy the second Mt Healthy requirement, for Abrams failed to demonstrate that his conduct was a “substantial factor” or “motivating factor” in the defendant’s challenged actions. See Thomsen,
Appellee Walker asks this Court to rule that the existence of probable cause is a complete defense to a First Amendment retaliation claim in the context of an arrest. See Curley v. Village of Suffern,
IY. CONCLUSION
The decision of the district court to grant the defendant’s motion for summary judgment was proper.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Abrams had also named another trooper who assisted Walker, The Tran, as a defendant, but voluntarily dismissed him and Tran is not a party to this appeal.
. The district court had jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1331 and § 1343(a)(3). However, contrary to Appellant's Brief, the district court did not have supplemental jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1367(a), as Abrams had dropped the state law claim in his amended complaint.
. "Fleeing” does not imply "rac[ing] off through the fields,” as the dissent states. Post at 659. The first two definitions given for the intransitive verb "flee” in Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary are "to run away, often from danger or evil,” and "to hurry toward a place of security.” It is clear from Abrams' own testimony that he attempted to leave the scene in his car once Trooper Walker informed him that Abrams would be issued tickets. The majority believes it is eminently fair to characterize as "fleeing” an attempt to leave the scene of a traffic stop in one's vehicle after a uniformed police officer communicates his intent to issue tickets.
. We are required, upon review of a summary judgment grant, to draw all "reasonable inferences” in favor of the non-moving party. Butera,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
If this appeal had come to us after a full trial had taken place, I would probably not be dissenting. But the procedural posture of a case on appeal has a critical bearing on the way in which this court must consider the facts. With respect, I cannot
Without repeating the facts that the majority has set forth, I wish to highlight those that seem to me fairly disputed on the summary judgment record. There are four alleged admissions from Abrams that are central to the majority’s analysis. It claims that Abrams admitted that (1) he repeatedly disobeyed Walker’s order to return to his car, (2) he attempted to flee the scene once Walker informed him that he would be ticketed, (3) he retrieved the knife that Walker had taken from his car once Walker returned to his squad car to call for backup, and (4) his actions had the effect of interrupting and delaying Walker’s traffic stop of Trent Forte (Abrams’s client). If there were indeed no material issues of fact about these points and Abrams had really made such admissions, then I would agree that the district court properly entered summary judgment for Walker. No malicious prosecution action could lie, because Walker would have had probable cause to arrest Abrams for obstructing a police officer, and no trier of fact or court could find that Abrams had engaged in speech protected by the First Amendment, which is the predicate for Abrams’s retaliation claim.
A closer look at these four admissions, however, shows that they are not what they appear to be. The first one — that Abrams allegedly repeatedly disobeyed Walker’s order to return to the car — is contested. According to Abrams’s version of the facts, when Walker ordered him to return to his car, Abrams simply asked why. Walker told him that Walker could give him tickets for having tinted windows and for backing up on the highway. Abrams laughed, and said that the windows were not tinted. Walker then responded (without any further requests about returning to the car) that Abrams was going to get ticketed. Abrams then indicated that he was going to comply with Walker’s request that he return to the car (and note that Walker did not testify that he had at that point also ordered Abrams to remain on the scene' — it was only later that he ran over and grabbed Abrams’s keys), and said, “You know what, I’m going to get in my car and leave.” Obviously, this is not Walker’s version of the events, but we cannot resolve disputed facts like who said what to whom, at what time, and who walked where, on summary judgment, when we are looking at the accounts of. two eyewitnesses or participants. Indeed, the majority explicitly agrees with the proposition that mere argument about the validity of an arrest is not enough to show probable cause, because it cites the Illinois case so holding, People v. Finley,
The second alleged admission relates to Abrams’s supposed attempt to flee the scene. The use of the word “flee” here is
This shows that the claim about the knife is also disputed. According to Walker, Abrams retrieved the knife without permission after Walker left the car. Abrams disputes the critical assertion here, which is whether Walker verbally or otherwise instructed him to leave the knife on the roof of the car. Either version of the events is possible; this is a quintessential example of something that cannot be resolved on summary judgment.
Finally, with respect to the fourth alleged admission, Abrams took the position in the district court and in his affidavit that he was cooperative, courteous, and did nothing to impede Walker’s traffic stop of Forte.
This leaves us with an arrest based solely on the words Abrams spoke to Walker, questioning the validity of the stop and inquiring what basis for an arrest existed. Walker had no right to retaliate against Abrams by arresting him just because Walker was offended by Abrams’s words. Finley and Crawford make this clear as a matter of Illinois law, and the First Amendment does not permit state actors to impose punishment because of the communicative content of words. See Houston v. Hill,
I would reverse the district court’s judgment in favor of Walker and remand this case for a trial on the merits, so that these factual disputes can be resolved properly. I therefore dissent.
