Roger RASCHE and Velma Rasche, Plaintiffs-Appellants, v. VILLAGE OF BEECHER, an Illinois Municipal Corporation and Paul Lohmann, individually and as Agent for the Village of Beecher, Defendants-Appellees.
No. 02-3750.
United States Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit.
Argued May 30, 2003. Decided July 16, 2003.
336 F.3d 588
Finally, we reject Bonsu‘s remaining argument—that the district court erred in denying his motion to suppress his grand jury testimony on the basis of prosecutorial misconduct. In doing so we note how troubled we are that Bonsu‘s opening brief to this court failed to concede that the truthfulness of his grand jury testimony and the propriety of the prosecutor‘s conduct leading up to that testimony was the subject of a full hearing in the district court, and that the district court resolved this issue in the government‘s favor after that hearing. At the hearing, the district court heard testimony from Bonsu, Paul Flynn, his former public defender, and FBI Agent John Jimenez, the case agent in charge of the investigation. They presented conflicting accounts on three important questions: (1) whether the government used threatening and intimidating tactics in order to secure from Bonsu a version of the events that was favorable to its prosecution of the case; (2) whether Bonsu‘s lawyer or substitute counsel from the Federal Defender‘s office was present in the proffer sessions leading up to Bonsu‘s grand jury testimony and on the day that he actually testified before the grand jury; and (3) whether Bonsu himself chose to read the prepared statement to the grand jury rather than answering questions, and if he chose to read a statement, whether he was given an opportunity to review his prepared testimony before he had to appear before the grand jury. The district court resolved all three questions against Bonsu.
Moreover, as the government points out in its brief, there was really nothing to “suppress” at the trial itself. The government did not try to introduce the grand jury transcript at the trial before the petit jury. Whatever errors may have occurred before the grand jury became harmless once the petit jury convicted Bonsu. See United States v. Mechanik, 475 U.S. 66, 73, 106 S.Ct. 938, 89 L.Ed.2d 50 (1986). So, for a variety of reasons, we find no merit in this argument either.
III
For these reasons, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
William W. Kurnik (Argued), Knight, Hoppe, Kurnik & Knight, Des Plaines, IL, for Defendants-Appellees.
Before FLAUM, Chief Judge, EASTERBROOK and RIPPLE, Circuit Judges.
RIPPLE, Circuit Judge.
Roger and Velma Rasche (“the Rasches“) brought this action pursuant to
I
BACKGROUND
Roger Rasche owns and operates a vehicle towing business out of his home, located on Illinois Route 1 within the Village of Beecher, Illinois. He began his business in 1978 and has maintained a sign on his property since 1978. The business is licensed only in Mr. Rasche‘s name, but his wife, Velma Rasche, works full time for the business and does not receive a separate salary. Mr. Rasche therefore characterizes the business as a “family business” owned by himself and his wife. R.37, Ex.3 at 12-13.1
The Village of Beecher, Illinois, is a municipal corporation with a Board of Trustees. The Village President is Paul Lohmann, an individual defendant in this action. In 1997, the Village Board of Trustees enacted an ordinance authorizing the issuance of $4.5 million in bonds for the purchase of a golf course. Mr. Rasche was a principal organizer of a petition drive to require a referendum concerning the purchase of the course. Mr. Rasche spoke publicly concerning this effort, in addition to co-sponsoring a political advertisement in a newspaper and delivering fliers listing his home number. According to a Village resident, Pat Schroeder, one of the Trustees, Gary LaGesse, in his capacity as the chair of an unrelated association, the Beecher Recreation Association, stated at a meeting of that association in 1997 that he “would get even with anyone opposed to the Golf Course Referendum” and that he “would take out anybody who stood in [the] way of purchasing [the] golf course.” R.37, Ex.6 at 10, 40. The voters of the Village of Beecher defeated the purchase of the golf course at an election held on March 17, 1998.
In 1999, the Village of Beecher Board enacted an ordinance to issue $907,000 of bonds to pay for improvements to the Village waterworks. Mrs. Rasche was the leader and initiator of the petition drive to obtain a referendum on that proposal. The Rasches circulated the majority of the petitions on the waterworks bonds, and Mrs. Rasche filed the petitions with the Village of Beecher City Clerk. The waterworks bond ordinance was defeated by the Village of Beecher voters in an election held on March 21, 2000.
At least as early as 1997, the Village Board of Trustees was concerned about the appearance of Route 1. In July 1997, the Village Trustees decided to authorize enforcement of the Village‘s ordinance against temporary or portable signs. On August 11, 1997, at their meeting, the Trustees addressed whether the ordinance prohibited temporary or portable signs.2 The Board did not take immediate action, but held a public hearing on the temporary or portable sign issue. Affected property owners, including the Rasches, received notification by letter. At the meeting, which Mr. Rasche attended, the signs of the Rasches and seven other businesses were discussed.
At the time it was purchased in 1978, the Rasches’ sign was portable. However, Mr. Rasche had rotated the wheels up-
The zoning ordinance regarding signs had been enacted in 1974. Under the 1974 code, before a sign could be erected, the owner had to obtain a building permit and approval from the building inspector. Although the code did not prohibit explicitly temporary or portable signs, it impliedly defined a sign as requiring a foundation. A sign is defined as “a name, identification, description, illustration ... which is affixed ... upon a structure or land.” R.32, Ex.A at 3 (emphasis added). In 1992, the Village amended its zoning ordinance to prohibit “flashing signs,” to require that any wiring conform to the electrical code and to require that the sign be able to withstand wind pressure of not less than thirty pounds per square foot. Id. The code also stated that prior existing nonconforming signs could be used for any remaining depreciation in value, but not to exceed five years beyond the enactment of the ordinance.
In 1999, the Village appointed its first “Code Enforcement Officer,” Julie Riechers. Her duties included identifying any code violations and speaking with the owners about conforming to the requirements. Village Trustee Patrick Lane stated in his deposition that it was his understanding “that with respect to signs and compliance with the sign ordinances of the Village of Beecher that would have been solely Julie‘s [Riechers‘] responsibility as to what were proper signs and what were improper signs.” R.37, Ex.10 at 24-25. In the spring of 1999, Village President, Paul Lohmann, and the Village Administrator,3 Robert Barber, expressed to Riechers their concern about the appearance of Route 1.4
On August 9, Riechers visited several property owners, including Mr. Rasche. This time she reported that Mr. Rasche had “clean[ed] up the junk in the driveway. However, the sign was still there and he was issued a ticket for $25.00. He did unplug the extension cord and the sign is not lighted or flashing anymore.” R.32, Ex.N at 1. Riechers details in these reports approximately sixty actions she took in connection with code enforcement from June 1999 to May 2000.5
On approximately October 21, 1999, Mr. Rasche appeared before the Village adjudication system and ticket No. 4101 was dismissed.6 On November 23, 1999, the August 9, 1999, ticket for the sign was dismissed in the Illinois state circuit court.
On December 13, 1999, the Rasches received a ticket for having an inoperable vehicle on their property. On December 17, 1999, they received a notice from the Village of Beecher demanding that their sign be removed. On January 5, 2000, the Rasches received seven additional tickets for having inoperable vehicles in their front yard. The inoperable motor vehicle tickets were issued by Tim Mitchell, a Village police officer at the direction of Beecher Chief of Police Mark DiSanto. At the same time, another business, Jody‘s Transmission Service, also located on Route 1, was issued 29 citations for inoperable vehicles parked in its front yard.
Robert Barber, the Village Administrator, testified that, even though he “believed that under our Village Ordinance we had the authority to enter upon Rasche‘s property and remove a non-complying sign, [he] felt uncomfortable and recommended to the Trustees, in an Executive Session, that we file a Long Form Complaint in State Court and let the State Court Judge make the determination. The Trustees concurred with my recommendation. At the Executive Session, possible violations were discussed and direction was given to the Village Attorney, Mr. Knuth, to research the matter and draft a Long Form Complaint for filing in the Circuit Court.” R.32, Ex.A at ¶¶ 49-50. Trustee LaGesse testified that, at a Village board meeting, the Village Attorney received “the approval of the village board before he filed the lawsuit” against the Rasches. R.37, Ex.12 at 33. Village Administrator Barber testified that the reason for bringing the long form complaint was that “[w]ith the exception of Roger Rasche ... all of the business owners along Route 1 complied with Julie Riechers’ requests” and either removed their signs or brought them into compliance. R.32, Ex.A at ¶ 56.
On February 17, 2000, Mr. Rasche appeared before the Village adjudication system court on his remaining tickets (Nos. 4488 and 4304 through 4310); these citations were dismissed. In sum, the Village adjudicatory officer dismissed all citations issued to Mr. Rasche for the sign and inoperable vehicles. The Rasches contend that the officer dismissed the citations because they were not among the violations that could be prosecuted through the local adjudication system. Defendants maintain that the adjudicatory officer dismissed the tickets because the wrong statutory section was listed for the alleged violation and Mr. Rasche was trying to keep his inoperable vehicles away from the front yard. See Appellees’ Br. at 7-8.
In early 2000, the Village repealed the ordinance creating the local adjudication system. Village Administrator Barber explained that he had “received a letter from our retained hearing officer, John Murphey, resigning as hearing officer; and he also advised the Village that in enacting our Adjudicatory Ordinance, we neglected to include zoning violations within the purview of the ordinance, and he maintained that he had no jurisdiction over tickets covering ordinance violations.” R.32, Ex.A at ¶ 54. Consequently, “[w]ith the resignation of the hearing officer, and because we concluded that the use of the ordinance was not cost effective, the Trustees repealed our Adjudicatory Ordinance.” Id. at ¶ 55.
II
PROCEEDINGS IN THE DISTRICT COURT
The Rasches brought this
The district court granted summary judgment to Mr. Lohmann and to the Village.8 The district court noted initially
With respect to Mr. Lohmann, the court determined that, “[a]lthough the record establishes that Lohmann was aware of the Village‘s efforts to enforce the sign ordinance along Route 1, plaintiffs provide no evidence that he was aware of any Village official‘s retaliatory motive and no evidence that Lohmann either directed the conduct or consented to it.” Id. at 9.
As for the claims against the Village, the district court simply stated that: “Because the facts read in a light most favorable to the plaintiffs do not create a genuine issue of material fact that plaintiffs’ constitutional right to free expression was denied, it is unnecessary to address the question of municipal liability.” Id. at 9-10.9 Nevertheless, the district court went on to note in a footnote that:
Plaintiffs seem to argue that Riechers or DiSanto was a final policymaker that would make the Village liable, even though neither of these individuals is named as a defendant accused of depriving them of their rights. The only relevant question then is whether Lohmann was a final policymaker, and since he has prevailed on the motion, the Village likewise is not liable. Obviously, Riechers was not a final policymaker because all of the evidence indicates that she was an employee following her superiors’ directions. DiSanto, as police chief, did not enact the sign ordinance, and it is undisputed that the concern about enforcement derived from the Board. There is absolutely no evidence that DiSanto was a final policymaker, to say nothing of the lack of evidence that he had a motive to retaliate against plaintiffs based on their exercise of protected speech.
Id. at 10 n. 9.
III
DISCUSSION
A.
We first address whether the district court erred in granting summary judgment in favor of Mr. Lohmann. In examining this issue, we apply a well-established three-step analytical framework. We first ask whether the plaintiff‘s speech was constitutionally protected. See Vukadinovich v. Bd. of Sch. Trus. of N. Newton Sch. Corp., 278 F.3d 693, 699 (7th Cir. 2002).
The district court correctly determined that the evidence in this record does not support a determination either that Mr. Lohmann “caused or participated in a constitutional deprivation,” Vance, 97 F.3d at 991, or, under the three-step approach, that Mr. Lohmann‘s “actions [were] motivated by [the Rasches‘] constitutionally protected speech,”10 Vukadinovich, 278 F.3d at 699. The Rasches’ allegation that Mr. Lohmann directed Riechers to examine only the Rasches’ sign will not sustain their burden in this regard. As noted at some length earlier, see supra note 4, Riechers gave two versions of her meeting with Village officials. If Riechers’ initial deposition statement is true, Mr. Lohmann directed her to inspect not only the Rasches’ sign but also the signs for Risings and for the Shady Long Golf Course. In that case, Mr. Lohmann did not tell her to look exclusively at the Rasches’ sign. On the other hand, if Riechers’ immediate retraction is accurate, Mr. Lohmann did not direct her to any particular sign. See R.32, Ex.Riechers’ Dep. at 25-26. Neither version supports the view that Mr. Lohmann gave Riechers direction to focus exclusively on the Rasches’ sign. Accordingly, the district court did not err in granting summary judgment for Mr. Lohmann.
B.
We now turn to the issue of whether the district court erred in determining that summary judgment on behalf of the Village was warranted.
“[M]unicipalities cannot be held liable for
Under our case law, unconstitutional policies or customs can take three forms: (1) an express policy that, when enforced, causes a constitutional deprivation; (2) a widespread practice that, although not authorized by written law or express municipal policy, is so permanent and well settled as to constitute a “custom or usage” with the force of law; or (3) an allegation that the constitutional injury was caused by a person with final policymaking authority. Palmer, 327 F.3d at
The Rasches first submit that the Village is liable because the Board of Trustees directed the Village Attorney, or at least ratified the Village Attorney‘s decision, to file the state court suit against the Rasches. The Supreme Court has explained: “[P]roof that a municipality‘s legislative body or authorized decisionmaker has intentionally deprived a plaintiff of a federally protected right necessarily establishes that the municipality acted culpably.” Bd. of the County Comm‘rs of Bryan County v. Brown, 520 U.S. 397, 405, 117 S.Ct. 1382, 137 L.Ed.2d 626 (1997).11 Here, the Board of Trustees, the “municipality‘s legislative body,” authorized a suit against Mr. Rasche for an alleged violation of the sign ordinance. Id.
We therefore shall examine whether the Rasches’ speech concerning the golf course and waterworks bond proposals was, on this record, “a substantial or motivating factor” in the Village‘s decision to bring suit against Mr. Rasche. Vukadinovich, 278 F.3d at 699. Evaluating the record in the light most favorable to the Rasches, the only evidence that the Village‘s decision to file suit was motivated by his speech is the proximity of time between the suit and the speech, and the testimony concerning a comment made by LaGesse in 1997 in his capacity as a member of the Beecher Recreation Association that he “would take out anybody who stood in [the] way of purchasing [the] golf course.” R.37, Ex.6 at 10, 40.
The suit by the Village was brought soon after the waterworks referendum was put on the ballot. Although we have noted that a “telling temporal sequence” can be used to establish causation, see Sweeney v. West, 149 F.3d 550, 558 (7th Cir.1998) (internal quotation marks omitted), we have also recognized in the analogous Title VII context that timing, “standing alone, does not create a genuine issue as to causal connection.” Foster v. Arthur Andersen, LLP, 168 F.3d 1029, 1034 (7th Cir. 1999). A plaintiff must “show more than just temporal proximity.” Id.
We do not believe that the statement by LaGesse, a single legislator, made in a different capacity and three years before the legislative action now in question can be considered sufficiently probative to provide the additional support needed to sustain a jury verdict.12 The fact that LaGesse, three years prior to the Trustee‘s bringing suit against the Rasches, in his capacity in a recreational association, was upset about losing the golf course does not demonstrate that the entire board of Trustees was motivated to retaliate unconstitutionally by bringing suit against Mr. Rasche for his sign. The importance of LaGesse‘s statement is rendered even more feeble when we recollect the context in which the Village Board took action. It referred the sign matter to litigation only after numerous attempts to obtain compli-
The Rasches also submit that the Village is liable under the first form of unconstitutional policies identified in Palmer because “the express policy of the Village as enforced caused a constitutional deprivation.” Appellants’ Br. at 21. The Rasches identify the “express policies” or “official policy” as “the Adjudicatory Ordinance and the sign ordinance.” Appellants’ Br. at 13, 18. The Rasches make no argument that either the zoning ordinance or the adjudicatory ordinance is unconstitutional or represents unconstitutional policies; thus these ordinances do not fall within the first definition of unconstitutional “express” policies. The Rasches nevertheless argue that the ordinances, although not unconstitutional in themselves, have caused a constitutional violation.13 We cannot accept this argument.
In order for a
As to the third form of unconstitutional policies or customs, the Rasches argue that various individuals possessed final policymaking authority. At the outset, we simply cannot conclude that the evidence would support a determination that a final policymaker‘s decision resulted in retaliation against the Rasches. “[M]unicipal liability under
We have further elaborated on the term “final“:
Every public employee, including the policeman on the beat and the teacher in the public school, exercises authority ultimately delegated to him or her by their public employer‘s supreme governing organs. A police officer has authority to arrest, and that authority is “final” in the practical sense that he doesn‘t have to consult anyone before making an arrest; likewise a teacher does not have to consult anyone before flunking a student. That is a perfectly good use of the word “final” in ordinary conversation but it does not fit the cases; for if a police department or a school district were liable for employees’ actions that it authorized but did not direct, we would be back in the world of respondeat superior. To avoid this the cases limit municipal liability under
section 1983 to situations in which the official who commits the alleged violation of the plaintiff‘s rights has authority that is final in the special sense that there is no higher authority.
Under this formulation, Riechers certainly was not the person with final policymaking authority; she occupied a position quite analogous to a police officer making an arrest. Although Trustee Lane stated that Riechers was responsible for determining what signs were proper, it is clear that Riechers did not set the zoning policy, enact the zoning ordinance or even determine what area of town required her concentrated scrutiny. She simply had the authority to issue tickets and citations. She testified that she focused on Route 1 at the behest of the Board of Trustees. See R.32, Ex.Riechers’ Dep. at 19-20. She also reported her activities to the Board of Trustees. See R.32, Ex.M. The Board set the policy—including her area of focus, Route 1—for her enforcement of the zoning laws. Indeed, at page 15 of their brief, the Rasches admit as much in arguing that “the Village of Beecher retained the authority to measure [Riechers‘] conduct for conformance with their policies and approved [Riechers‘] decisions in only going after the Rasches.” Appellants’ Br. at 15. If the Village retained such authority, then Riechers’ authority cannot constitute final policymaking authority.
With respect to Mr. Lohmann, the Rasches have brought forth no authority to establish that, as a matter of state law, he has the authority to make final municipal policy with regard to zoning. Under Illinois law, it is the “corporate authorities” that have authority concerning zoning policy and enforcement.
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
AFFIRMED
Notes
Q: [D]id they mention the Rasche sign to you as one of the signs they wanted you to look at?
A: Yes. [end of page 25]
Q: Did they mention any other signs by name?
A: Risings, Shady Long Golf Course.
Q: Excuse me a second. Risings, Shady Long Golf Course?
A: Actually I think I‘m going to take that back. I assumed this all on my own. I‘m thinking about it. No one told me to deal with any particular thing. They just said go to Route 1, pick out things that you think are in violation.
Q: Of the Village—
A: Anything, right.
Q: Of anything?
The court also determined that Mrs. Rasche had standing despite the Village‘s argument that “she did not have any ownership interests in the business and none of the citations were issued against her.” Id. at 7 n. 7. The district court concluded that “[t]he facts indicate that Velma has an ownership interest because Rasche Towing may be a family business. Also, because Velma asserts that defendants retaliated against her First Amendment rights, she has standing to assert an injury sustained as a result” and she is not bringing claims “on behalf of third parties,” but “asserts her own claim, not that of her husband.” Id.
Here, the Rasches argue that the Village, by authorizing the suit in state court, ratified the Village Attorney‘s actions. The suit is therefore an act by the Trustees. There is no evidence that the Trustees “ratified” any other actions (such as Riechers’ or DiSanto‘s issuance of tickets).
