Catherine Touhy and Albert Parks, patrol officers of the Chicago police, were dispatched to investigate a landlord-tenant dispute in July 1986. The tenants asserted that their landlords, the Hebrons, who were trying to evict them for non-payment of rent, had cut off their water and were refusing to permit them to use or remove their washer-dryer in the basement. Parks went to the apartment on the second floor; no water came out of the tap. Parks and Touhy then knocked on the Hebrons’ first-floor door. Susie Hebron, 65 years old and toting a butcher knife, admitted the officers. After some discussion, Hebron put the knife down but otherwise was uncooperative. She denied that the tenants’ water had been cut off but would not visit their apartment with the officers to check. She admitted that she would not allow the tenants to enter the basement where their washer-dryer was located. Everything relating to the tenants was her husband’s responsibility, Hebron contended, but she conceded that she was a part owner of the building and refused to call her husband at work. Hebron also refused to call her lawyer. After the tenants signed formal complaints, the officers placed He-bron under arrest for depriving the tenants of utility services and their washer-dryer. She did not go quietly. First she sank her teeth into Touhy’s torso; after three blows from the heel of Touhy’s hand caused He-bron to release her grip, she bit into Touhy’s forearm; two more blows followed, and Touhy grabbed Hebron by the hair to prevent further bites. Hebron refused to walk and had to be dragged to a paddy wagon. She posted a $100 bond and was released. After the prosecutor dismissed the criminal charges against her, Hebron sued the officers under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for false arrest and the use of excessive force in effecting the arrest.
In April 1988 the district judge granted summary judgment to the defendants on He-bron’s claim that she had been arrested without probable cause. The tenants’ complaint plus the officers’ investigation, the judge concluded, supplied the necessary justification; Hebron’s denial did not detract from the existence of probable cause to arrest. Four and a half years later, a jury determined that the officers had not used excessive force when arresting Hebron. (The lengthy intermission is a mystery.) Hebron now contends that the probable-cause question should have been submitted to the jury and that procedural defects entitle her to another trial.
Before they arrested Hebron, the police received complaints from two persons (the tenants) who depicted themselves as victims of crimes. Such reports ordinarily establish probable cause.
Gramenos v. Jewel Cos.,
What is more, throughout this litigation Hebron has conceded that she denied the tenants access to their property. An affidavit filed in January 1988 states: “I did not let the [tenants] into the basement because I did not know their intentions after they knew they were being evicted but if they had wanted to move thier [sic] washer and dryer I would have gladly let them do so. I only wanted to protect my property which was also located in the basement.” In other words, Hebron admitted to the act the tenants alleged (denying them access to their machine) but denied that she had a criminal intent to keep their property permanently. Police have a hard time evaluating competing claims about motive; they are entitled to act on the basis of observable events and let courts resolve conflicts about mental states. Summary judgment in the officers’ favor was appropriate. Whether defendants would have had such an easy time if Hebron had invoked the warrant clause of the fourth amendment, see
Payton v. New York,
Only one of Hebron’s complaints about the conduct of the trial requires discussion. The judge instructed the jury that Hebron needed to establish that force grossly disproportionate to the cause, and inspired by malice, had produced severe injury. The instruction was drawn from language in
Gumz v. Morrissette,
Nonetheless, a court of appeals may not treat jury instructions in civil litigation as plain error.
Deppe v. Tripp,
At oral argument the reasons for the omission came into focus. The district judge told opposing counsel to confer. He wanted them to produce an agreed set of jury instructions. When they could not agree, he sent them off to parley repeatedly. During these discussions, the two lawyers debated the significance of Gumz, Lester, and principles of ret-roactivity. They never did achieve consensus, and the district judge then chose the defendants’ preferred instruction. Defendants’ lawyer told the court why, in his view, a Gumz instruction was appropriate; He-bron’s lawyer did not reply. He apparently believed (and, to judge from the oral argument, still believes) that having made the basis of his position clear to his adversary, he had done all the rule requires. Not so. When the litigants disagree, the judge decides; Rule 51 requires the lawyers to make their arguments in court, so that the judicial decision may be well informed and the instructions may conform to the law. Had the district judge been reminded of Graham and Beam Distilling, and the fact that immunity is a question for the judge rather than the jury, he would not have given an instruction based on Gumz, and the first jury could have decided the case fully informed about the applicable law. Having omitted an obligatory step that would have averted the error, Hebron is not entitled to another trial.
AFFIRMED.
ORDER
March 28, 1994.
Plaintiff-Appellant filed a petition for rehearing on March 18, 1994. This petition contends that plaintiff made a proper objection to the Gumz instruction and briefly stated reasons in open court. The case was briefed and argued on the contrary supposition: that although plaintiff offered a Lester instruction, she did not object to the Gumz instruction. The argument in the petition for rehearing comes too late and has been waived. All of the judges on the panel have *425 voted to deny rehearing, and the petition is therefore DENIED.
