WOODWARD & LOTHROP, et al., Appellants, v. Carnell HILLARY, Appellee. Carnell HILLARY, Appellant, v. WOODWARD & LOTHROP, et al., Appellees.
Nos. 89-994, 89-1082.
District of Columbia Court of Appeals.
Argued April 16, 1990. Decided Sept. 26, 1991.
599 A.2d 1142
Metcalfe C. King, Washington, D.C., for appellee/cross-appellant.
FARRELL, Associate Judge:
Woodward & Lothrop, which operates a downtown department store (among others), and Dwayne Wigfall and Earl Sellers, two security guards employed by the store, appeal from a jury verdict in favor of Carnell Hillary on Hillary‘s tort claims for false arrest, false imprisonment, assault and battery, and conversion, and his claim under
For the reasons discussed below, we find no error in the judgment on the jury verdict, and affirm it. We must, however, vacate the award of attorney‘s fees and remand for a statement of findings and conclusions sufficient to permit meaningful review of that award.
I. Facts and Proceedings Below
On the evening of May 9, 1986, Hillary entered the Woodward & Lothrop store at 11th and F Streets, N.W., to buy clothing. A cashier told him the store was closing. According to Hillary, as he turned to leave, Sellers, a security guard employed by the store, grabbed him, turned him around, and told him to accompany him. As they were walking, Sellers struck him in the right eye without provocation. In the ensuing scuffle Sellers called out for assistance and was joined in the attempt to subdue Hillary by his supervisor, Wigfall. They wrestled Hillary to the floor employing a headlock and landing several punches in the process, and handcuffed him. At some point Hillary was searched and, he asserted, two hundred dollars was taken from his pocket. He was taken in handcuffs across the street to the Woodward & Lothrop security office located in a separate building, where he was detained. Metropolitan Police Department Officers were called to transport him, but after two unidentified officers arrived he was released, and no criminal charges were brought against him. Hillary testified that the two hundred dollars taken from him during the search was never returned. According to medical experts who testified at trial, he suffered a fracture of the zygoma (the cheek bone), permanent drooping of his right eyelid, and permanent restriction in his field of vision as a result of the injuries.
On February 6, 1987, Hillary filed suit against Woodward & Lothrop in Superior Court alleging false arrest, false imprison-
The judge prepared and submitted to the jury a verdict form containing places for the jury to indicate whether it found for or against the plaintiff on each of the remaining counts. For the common law torts, the form included a space for an award of compensatory damages against all defendants jointly and severally, and a space for punitive damages against the individual defendants only. It also contained a space for a separate award of damages on the constitutional tort claim. The jury returned a verdict in favor of Hillary on all counts, awarding him $845 in compensatory damages against all defendants, $10,000 in punitive damages against Sellers and Wigfall on the common law tort claims,3 and $40,000 against all defendants on the constitutional tort claim. The judge denied the defendants’ motion for a new trial or for a remittitur, and an appeal was noted.
On May 16, 1989, Hillary applied for attorney‘s fees under
II. Section 1983 Issues
A. Color of State Law
Appellants contend that the trial judge erred in concluding, as a matter of law, that Sellers and Wigfall acted under color of state law in subduing, arresting and detaining Hillary. We find no error in the judge‘s resolution of this issue, as Sellers and Wigfall were exercising authority conferred on them by their commission as special police officers.4
To state a claim under § 1983, a plaintiff must allege the violation of a right secured by the Constitution or the laws of the United States, and must show that the alleged deprivation was committed by a person acting under color of state law.
United States v. McDougald, 350 A.2d 375 (D.C. 1976), on which appellants rely, is not to the contrary. There we held that the mere fact a commissioned special police officer does the allegedly unconstitutional act does not itself denote official action. Id. at 378. In particular, we refused to attribute to the state an alleged due process violation—viz., a special police officer‘s instruction to a witness not to discuss a criminal case with defense counsel outside the presence of the prosecutor—because the officer, in conveying the policy to the witness, “was not performing a public function authorized by his commission as a special policeman.” Id. In the present case, the required nexus with the state is furnished not by the fact of the commission alone—as in McDougald—but by the convergence of the authority bestowed by the commission and the officers’ actions.6 In Alston, citing McDougald, we recognized that special police officers are not “in all their actions” equated with regular police officers, 518 A.2d at 443 (emphasis added), but we held that a special police officer does act as a state agent or instrument when the challenge “involves the arrest of a suspect and actions related thereto—the broad [special police officer] power that distinguishes the [officer] from a private citizen.” Id.7
B. Separate Award of Damages for § 1983 Claim
Appellants further assert that the jury should have been asked to return a single verdict on compensatory damages, and that the court erred in submitting damages on the common law torts and the § 1983 claim to the jury separately. They argue that the elements of compensatory damages recoverable for the torts of false arrest, false imprisonment, assault and battery, and conversion are identical to those recoverable for the violations of constitutional rights that Hillary alleged, and that absent some element of injury not compensated by the common law tort damages, the return of two awards for essentially the same injury constitutes an excessive recovery.
Congress intended the § 1983 cause of action to supplement preexisting state remedies available to redress injuries when the acts causing those injuries also constitute a deprivation of constitutional or federal rights. Monroe v. Pape, 365 U.S. 167, 183 (1961), overruled in part by Monell v. Department of Social Servs., 436 U.S. 658 (1978). But while a plaintiff may seek damages for his injuries on a variety of legal theories, “a cardinal principle of law is that . . . a plain-
Hillary alleged that he was accosted in the store, illegally arrested, beaten, dragged across a public street in handcuffs, detained and wrongfully deprived of two hundred dollars in an unlawful search and seizure. These acts caused him monetary loss, physical injury, mental anguish, humiliation, and embarrassment. He sought compensation for the injuries by alleging violation of his constitutional rights to be free from unlawful arrest, search and seizure, and physical abuse, and by his common law tort claims for false arrest, false imprisonment, assault and battery and conversion. Thus, as appellants assert, Hillary alleged no injury in his § 1983 claim that could not fully be compensated by recovery on his common law claims. Stachura, 477 U.S. at 307 (§ 1983 damages can include compensation for monetary loss, personal humiliation, mental anguish and suffering). Because his § 1983 claim essentially was an alternative basis for the same recovery sought by way of the tort claims, submission of two verdict forms on damages created a substantial risk that the jury would allow him to recover twice for a single injury. See Clappier v. Flynn, 605 F.2d 519, 528-30 (10th Cir. 1979). Separate damage verdicts also could have suggested to the jury that there was a compensable component of a “constitutional” deprivation independent of the injury actually suffered, contrary to Stachura.9
Accordingly, we must determine whether either of these risks materialized—whether the jury‘s verdict reflects double recovery or likely was based on any other factor than the actual amount of injury suffered. If so, then it must be set aside.
In overruling the defendants’ objection to bifurcation of damages on the ground that the jury might award a double recovery, the trial judge told the parties:
[The jury] is going to be instructed very clearly on the question of damages that they are only to award damages that they believe will compensate [plaintiff] on what he is fairly entitled to in whatever category that they are asked to do it.
Although the judge then instructed the jury to return separate verdicts on damages, in his charge on the elements of damages he did not distinguish among Hillary‘s various claims but instead explained—as to all claims—that the jury
the extent and duration of any bodily injuries sustained; the effect [of] such injuries . . . on the overall physical and mental health and well-being of the Plaintiff; any physical pain and mental anguish the Plaintiff has suffered; any disfigurement or deformity and any humiliation or embarrassment associated with it; any inconvenience or discomfort that has been suffered by the Plaintiff . . . or [that he] will probably suffer in the future; any medical expenses that the Plaintiff has incurred and finally any damage or loss to the Plaintiff‘s personal property.
Just before the jury retired, the judge instructed:
Let me emphasize to you that the two damage considerations that you have to make, if you get to them, they are for the three common law claims together and then as to the Constitutional claim separately. You should in each of these two categories . . . award as I have instructed you before, only those damages as to those claims that you feel are appropriate and would reasonably compensate the Plaintiff.
These instructions do not ease entirely our misgivings about the submission of separate verdict forms on damages. In future cases of this kind, the trial judge should make explicit by instructions that the plaintiff may receive only those damages which, in the aggregate, fairly compensate for the injuries actually suffered. Nevertheless, the instructions given did tend to protect against a double recovery. Moreover, and of key significance to our holding, the verdict returned suggests strongly that the jury followed the court‘s admonition. On the common law claims, the jury awarded Hillary $845, an amount conforming exactly to his claim for pecuniary losses, which included $645 in medical bills and the $200 allegedly taken from him. On the § 1983 claim, considering the testimony which the jury credited in finding the defendants liable, the verdict of $40,000 was not plainly unreasonable as compensation for plaintiff‘s non-pecuniary losses as specified in the jury instruction quoted above. We hold, therefore, that the two verdicts rendered do not manifest an award of double damages.
III. Admissibility of Wigfall‘s Statement
Appellants contend that the judge committed reversible error in admitting defendant Wigfall‘s testimony that he had been discharged by Woodward & Lothrop for misappropriation. In fact, however, Wigfall‘s testimony that he had been fired for that reason occurred as an apparent surprise to everyone, in a manner it is necessary to describe.
At trial Hillary called Wigfall as an adverse witness. During direct examination, Hillary‘s counsel established that Wigfall had left Woodward & Lothrop‘s employment in November 1988 and asked why Wigfall had left, but defense counsel objected before the witness could respond. Previously, defendants had moved in limine to exclude any reference to the fact that Wigfall was no longer a security guard at Woodward & Lothrop, anticipating an attempt by Hillary to show that Woodward & Lothrop had removed him because he acted wrongly in treating Hillary. Defendants asserted, to the contrary, that Wigfall had been transferred to a different post “as a combination of declining performance and his request to be moved,” and that even if he had been replaced as security guard because of the present incident, the transfer was a subsequent remedial measure, proof of which is generally inadmissible.
Apparently the trial judge did not rule on the motion before Wigfall took the stand, and defendants repeated these arguments in objecting to the question by plaintiff‘s counsel cited above. The following exchange then took place at the bench:
MR. MORRISON [defendants’ counsel]: The fact that he‘s no longer a security guard is one of the points of our motion in limine; that that is not subject to the precaution taken by Woodward &
Lothrop. That is not admissible to show liability. MR. KING: [plaintiff‘s counsel]: I did not know why he was no longer at Woodward & Lothrop. If he would stipulate that Mr. Wigfall was terminated, we would take a stipulation.
MR. MORRISON: But it‘s not admissible.
THE COURT: What‘s the basis for it? Why do you need it in, Mr. King?
MR. KING: I‘m trying to find out why he no longer works for Woodward & Lothrop.
THE COURT: Yes, why?
MR. KING: I believe Mr. Wigfall was terminated as a result of this incident. I believe he was. Now, that may have been a corrective action by Woodward & Lothrop, but that‘s not my purpose for raising it. My purpose for raising it is to prove that in fact Carnell Hillary was improperly treated at Woodward & Lothrop that day.
MR. MORRISON: I don‘t think it‘s—
THE COURT: I will let you ask him.
Hillary‘s counsel repeated the question, and asked whether it was true that Wigfall had been terminated for declining performance as defendants had asserted in their motion in limine. When Wigfall replied yes, counsel asked the question approved by the trial court—whether Wigfall was terminated as a result of the incident with Hillary—to which Wigfall replied no. Counsel then asked Wigfall to specify the nature of the declining performance that led to his termination, and after another fruitless objection by defense counsel, Wigfall answered, “I misappropriated some funds from Woodies.”
We need not decide whether the judge ruled correctly in allowing Hillary to pursue questioning about a “subsequent remedial measure,” cf. C. MCCORMICK, MCCORMICK ON EVIDENCE § 275 (3d ed. 1984), because Wigfall‘s answer made clear that his firing had nothing to do with his conduct involving Hillary. Instead we must consider appellant‘s argument that the effect of the questioning was to allow Wigfall‘s testimony to be impeached—“in a case where credibility was essential“—by “evidence of a bad act unaccompanied by evidence of a criminal conviction.” Appellants argue that
In this case, it is unnatural to inquire whether Hillary had a factual predicate on which to ask whether Wigfall had been fired for misappropriation because that is not the answer Hillary—or apparently anyone else—expected. Nevertheless, Wigfall‘s own answer established a sufficient basis for the conclusion that he had engaged in misappropriation. Moreover, given the trial judge‘s express allowance of the questioning, we cannot find bad faith by Hillary‘s counsel in pursuing a line of inquiry designed (erroneously, as it turned out) to link Wigfall‘s firing to his actions in regard to Hillary. Thus, the primary issue
Appellants’ final argument is that the judge failed to balance the probative value of the impeachment against its potential for prejudice. See Roundtree, 581 A.2d at 323. The trial judge, however, was as surprised as anyone by Wigfall‘s answer. In their in limine motion appellants never explained to the judge that Wigfall had been fired for misappropriation, referring only to his “declining performance.” When the answer came out, they did not move to strike it as overly prejudicial. In these circumstances, the judge cannot be faulted for failing to conduct a balancing he was given no opportunity to perform.12 Nor are we persuaded by appellants’ suggestion that Hillary‘s counsel exploited the answer so as to invite the jury to draw a forbidden “propensity” inference—that because Wigfall had been discharged for misappropriation, he was likely to have stolen Hillary‘s money as plaintiff alleged. The only reference even colorably raising this possibility occurred during closing argument when counsel stated:
We are talking about credibility. Mr. Wigfall who was hired by Woodward & Lothrop to protect its property from deprivation was fired by Woodward and Lothrop. For what? He said it himself. He took some money from Woodies. But, that‘s the same man that arrested this man for simply walking in the store. And he was just doing his job.
Any suggestion in these statements that the jury could infer a general propensity for theft from Wigfall‘s confessed dishonesty is too attenuated to justify setting aside the jury‘s verdict.
IV. Attorney‘s Fees
Finally, both sides challenge the trial judge‘s order awarding attorney‘s fees to Hillary: appellants assert that the judge abused his discretion in failing to discount the fee requested to reflect excessive amounts of time claimed for certain tasks, while Hillary contends that the judge erred in failing to adjust the fee upward to reflect the risk of nonpayment and delay in payment of fees. We do not reach the merits of these issues. Because the judge set out no findings and conclusions, we are unable to determine whether he exercised his discretion in accordance with the legal standards governing fee awards under
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment on the verdict is affirmed and the order awarding attorney‘s fees is vacated and the case remanded for the entry of findings in accordance with the standards governing § 1988 fee awards.
So ordered.
REILLY, Senior Judge, dissenting:
In my opinion, two rulings of the trial court were not only erroneous, but so prejudicial to the defense, that I would set aside the verdicts for damages and order a new trial.
I.
The most serious error was the refusal of the court to overrule an objection to a question by plaintiff‘s counsel designed to draw the jury‘s attention to some misconduct by defendant Wigfall. This elicited the admission that he had been discharged by Woodward & Lothrop from his job as security officer for “misappropriation of funds.” This testimony—clearly inadmissible as evidence of an unrelated crime for which the witness had never been convicted—was allowed to remain in the record and was utilized repeatedly by plaintiff throughout the rest of the trial to smear the entire case put on by the defense. As plaintiff‘s own claim rested on testimony, not only uncorroborated but incredible on its face, it is difficult to believe that a jury would have returned a verdict in his favor had not this prejudicial evidence been admitted. In reaching a contrary conclusion, my colleagues have apparently overlooked this aspect of this case.
Just before Wigfall was called to the stand, plaintiff Hillary, as the first witness in the trial, had given the jury his account of what had happened to him when he entered the store one June evening at closing time. Describing himself as a regular customer at this downtown retail establishment, who had purchased some items of clothing there that very morning, plaintiff testified that in revisiting the store that evening, he had passed the doors and stepped only ten feet inside when he was told by a cashier that the store was closing.
According to his testimony, he “immediately started to turn around and go back out,” but was grabbed by Sellers, another security officer, who turned him around, refused his request to let him go out the door, and insisted that he come with him. Plaintiff stated he immediately complied, but as they were walking together to the security office, Sellers punched him in the eye, called for assistance to arrest plaintiff, who was then “assaulted and battered further and . . . immediately wrestled to the floor.” Identifying Wigfall as one of the men responding to Sellers’ call for help, plaintiff then recalled that when they could not contain him, they attempted to knock him unconscious by punching him and finally wrestled him to the floor, where they handcuffed him and removed two hundred dollars from his pockets.
In short, plaintiff portrayed himself as the victim of a totally unprovoked assault by an agent of a department store—conspicuous for its efforts to retain the good will of customers who still do their shopping in the fading downtown retail area. To avoid undue offense to late arriving customers (as well perhaps as to forestall potential shoplifters), it was the practice at Woodward & Lothrop‘s to assign a security officer after the closing bell is sounded to stand near the unlocked doors to warn tardy entrants that the store had closed and to see to it that they complied with requests to leave. It is scarcely conceivable that a customer immediately responding to such a request would be detained or physically attacked by any security officer in the absence of some personal animosity between them. There is not the slightest suggestion in this case that Sellers, the asserted assailant here, had ever seen plaintiff before. Hence, it is most unlikely that any reasonable jury would have believed Hillary‘s version of what had happened unless his testimony were allowed to stand uncontradicted.
Confronted with the prospect of this testimony, plaintiff‘s counsel adopted the strategy of discrediting the character of the defendants in the eyes of the jury, even before any testimony concerning the Hillary incident was presented by the defense. As part of this strategy, he called to the stand Wigfall, who was not a witness to the crucial events of the case—the issue of whether Hillary‘s arrest was triggered by his own misconduct in refusing to leave and assaulting the guard who insisted on his departure—and proceeded to interrogate him as to why he had been discharged from his employment. As Wigfall was Sellers’ superior officer, he obviously hoped by painting Wigfall as a villain and Sellers as an accomplice, to persuade the jury that plaintiff was an innocent victim of a larcenous plot.
Since Wigfall was an adverse party, plaintiff, under the applicable rule of the Superior Court,1 was indeed vested with considerable latitude in his examination of this witness, including the right to put leading and even hostile questions to him. But counsel‘s election to call Wigfall as his own witness, gave him no greater rights than he would have enjoyed on cross-examination had he waited for the defense to call him, for even a cross-examiner is precluded from questioning a witness on irrelevant issues or on matters beyond the scope of his direct testimony, to say nothing of interrogation on such subjects as the commission of other crimes or even misconduct unrelated to the evidence in the particular case.
Bearing in mind these limitations, it seems to me that there were several things wrong with the procedure adopted by the trial court after Wigfall had been sworn and had stated that he was no longer a Woodward & Lothrop employee:
(1) As a motion for an ad limine ruling was pending, the court, once reminded by counsel of this posture of the motion and engaging in a short bench colloquy, should have heard in camera all testimony concerning the termination of defendant Wigfall‘s employment as a guard before ruling on its admissibility. By permitting the jury to listen to the inquiry on an issue reserved solely for judicial determination, the court, even if it had ultimately ruled certain questions improper, allowed plaintiff‘s counsel to implant in the minds of the jurors the impression that either the corporate defendant or the individual defendants were trying to hide something.
(2) The court committed error by tacitly agreeing that plaintiff was entitled to ascertain whether Woodward & Lothrop had removed Wigfall from its guard force because it had concluded from its own investigation that his treatment of Hillary was improper. If that were indeed the purpose of the question, all that it would have proved was that the employer had taken corrective action as a precaution
(3) But even assuming, arguendo, the asserted ground for this line of questioning was to bring out relevant evidence, it soon became plain that there was no evidence that Wigfall‘s removal from his job had anything to do with the Hillary arrest. Wigfall testified that he was terminated on November 15, 1988, and when asked if such termination was the result of the Hillary incident, he answered “no.” Both court and counsel must have known that this answer was truthful. If Wigfall was still on the payroll for more than two years after the Hillary incident—and almost two years after the law suit commenced—his discharge could scarcely have been due to employer dissatisfaction with his conduct in a matter so remote in time.
Yet counsel persisted in asking the precise reason for the discharge of the witness. In my view, the court should have sustained the objection to this question, for it was obvious that counsel had no reason for propounding it except in the hope of bringing to the jury‘s attention some conduct discreditable to Wigfall. I respectfully disagree with the majority opinion‘s comment that Hillary‘s counsel was acting in good faith in “pursuing a line of inquiry to link Wigfall‘s firing to his actions in regard to Hillary.” At this point in the trial, any notion of such linkage had already been dispelled.
It may be true that despite his extensive pretrial investigation, counsel did not expect the exact answer Wigfall gave to his question. An employer may have all sorts of reasons for firing a long term employee. Some of them, like chronic absenteeism, rudeness to customers or fellow employees, or failure to follow instructions, do not reflect adversely on a person‘s reputation or character, and if Wigfall had answered that some relatively innocuous conduct of the sort had cost him his job, counsel would have drawn a blank. But if he could have shown the jury that in Wigfall‘s case, the reason for this discharge was falsifying records, drunkenness on duty, physical harassment of others, dishonesty, or some other kind of flagrant misbehavior, he would have struck pay dirt. And this is precisely what counsel accomplished by asking his question and what the trial court could have prevented had it confined counsel to voir dire examination of Wigfall outside the presence of the jury. Consequently, I do not share my colleagues’ view that Wigfall‘s answer “occurred as an apparent surprise to everyone,” or that appellants might have cured its potential for prejudice by moving to strike. As the court had just overruled his objection to the question, counsel might well have concluded that at this point in the trial, the court was unlikely to repent its ruling.
In rejecting appellant‘s argument that Wigfall‘s damaging answer—an admission of the crime of embezzlement—was inadmissible under
It has indeed been argued in the past that by mandating the admission of convictions for certain kinds of crimes, § 14-305(b)(1), supra, does not deprive Superior Court judges from exercising discretion, as federal judges do, to admit evidence of other crimes which bear on veracity even though there has been no conviction. In a leading case, however, which I had always supposed was binding upon us, our court rejected this argument, holding that crimes for which no sentence had as yet been imposed could not be offered in evidence as convictions, even if a jury had returned a guilty verdict. Langley v. United States, 515 A.2d 729 (D.C. 1986). In that opinion, our court deemed irrelevant federal holdings to the contrary, pointing out that the difference in wording between
Equally at odds with Langley is the majority‘s assumption that Sherer v. United States, 470 A.2d 732, 738 (D.C. 1983) supports the proposition that there is a well recognized exception to the rule that a witness may not be cross-examined on a prior bad act not resulting in a criminal conviction “where: (1) the examiner has a factual predicate for such question, and (2) the bad act ‘bears directly upon the veracity of the witness with respect to the issues involved at trial.‘” (Citations omitted.) In Sherer, the quoted rule was merely dictum, for its final holding was that it was not error for
the trial judge to exclude evidence that the government‘s key witness had perjured himself in previous cases when he had also testified against an accomplice who was being prosecuted. A similar attempt to explore a complaining witness’ history of lodging false accusations of sexual assault was also ruled out of order in Roundtree v. United States, 581 A.2d 315 (D.C. 1990), a case also cited in the majority opinion.
It appears from the text of the Sherer opinion, that the author merely adverted to a rule quoted, but also not applied, in United States v. Akers, 374 A.2d 874, 878 (D.C. 1977), which actually had its origin in a decision of the United States Court of Appeals for this circuit, Kitchen v. United States, 95 U.S.App.D.C. 277, 221 F.2d 832 (1955). As that opinion was handed down some fifteen years before Congress enacted § 14-305, it throws no light upon how that statute should be construed—the principal evidentiary issue in this case.2
In sustaining objections to proffered evidence of perjury in similar criminal prosecutions, the authors of the Sherer and Roundtree opinions, supra, pointed out the potential for prejudice if such evidence was introduced in the jury‘s presence. Yet, impeachment on the ground of previous perjury would certainly be much more “probative of truthfulness as untruthfulness” than an act of embezzlement. We are told nevertheless that Wigfall‘s admission bore directly upon his veracity with respect to the issues at trial, in particular, his defense that he had done no more than subdue an unruly customer who refused to leave the store. This observation ignores the fact that at the time this damaging answer was elicited, the witness had advanced no defense whatsoever concerning his own conduct in the Hillary encounter, as the only questions put to him were directed at subsequent actions by his employer.3 Thus, he
Wholly aside from any possible relevance of Wigfall‘s answer to the veracity of his testimony, however, plaintiff‘s counsel was not content to treat his answer as something impairing his credibility, but continually reminded the jury that Wigfall was guilty of thievery. On the very next day, (the trial lasted only three days) when Sellers testified that the tape of a camera in the security office would have exposed any failure on the part of security personnel to have returned Hillary‘s money to him, counsel sarcastically asked whether the person responsible for reviewing the tapes “was the same guy who turned in Mr. Wigfall?” A few minutes later when Wigfall was on the stand and counsel was about to cross-examine him on the money plaintiff asserted had not been returned to him, he prefaced his interrogation by “Now Woodward & Lothrop fired you did it not?”
testify on the issue of whether or not Hillary refused to leave. Even Hillary conceded that Wigfall was not at the scene when Sellers arrested him.
Although an objection to this question was sustained, its obvious purpose was to suggest to the jury that if Wigfall had misappropriated funds from his employer at some later time, he probably diverted to himself on this occasion most of the money found in plaintiff‘s pockets.
Finally, counsel drove home his point that Wigfall was such an evil character that his client‘s account of an unprovoked detention and a brutal beating was indeed credible by arguing to the jury, after a disparaging and misleading description of Sellers’ testimony:
Mr. Wigfall was his supervisor. We are talking about credibility. Mr. Wigfall who was hired by Woodward & Lothrop to protect its property from deprivation was fired from Woodward & Lothrop. For what? He said it himself. He took some money from Woodies. But that‘s the same man that arrested this man for simply walking into the store. And he was just doing his job.
(Emphasis added.)
Not only was this argument a prejudicial misuse of the Wigfall admission, but a blatant distortion of even his own client‘s account of the incident. According to Hillary, he had already been arrested by Sellers, although he was turning to leave the store, and did not resist arrest until Sellers suddenly punched him. Thus, the allegation that Wigfall was the man who arrested Hillary “for simply walking into the store” was a deliberate attempt to mislead the jury.5
It is also my opinion that if this had been a criminal case, we would have deemed the tactics of plaintiff‘s counsel as amounting to prosecutorial misconduct, serious enough to require setting aside a guilty verdict. Lewis v. United States, 541 A.2d 145 (D.C. 1988); Jones v. United States, 512 A.2d 253, 258 (D.C. 1986).
Granted that this was a civil action rather than a criminal prosecution, I see no reason for not applying these standards in a case where the defendants were accused of intentional criminal behavior—assault, battery, and larceny—warranting the imposition of punitive damages. We were recently reminded by the Supreme Court that tactics of a plaintiff‘s trial lawyer, which in the context of a criminal proceeding would have been prosecutorial misconduct, could be grounds for reversing a judgment for damages. Edmundson v. Leesville Concrete Co., — U.S. —, 111 S.Ct. 2077 (1991).
II.
As the majority opinion concedes, Hillary alleged no injury in his claim under
It is fundamental law that there can be only one recovery for a single injury. Therefore, a plaintiff cannot split his cause of action by seeking compensation for the same injury on two different legal grounds.
I cannot assume that simply because the jury granted a sum equivalent to Hillary‘s medical expenses and money loss on the common law tort claim, that the award under § 1983 was not composed of impermissible components. Unlike the majority, my misgivings over the decision to submit separate verdict forms on damages are not allayed by the result, where in the absence of guiding instructions, the jury arrived at a verdict which causes us to speculate on exactly what factors of compensation the seemingly exorbitant sum of $40,000 represented. On this issue alone a remand for a new trial is in order. See Stachura, supra, 477 U.S. at 312, citing Newport v. Fact Concerts, Inc., 453 U.S. 247, 256 n. 12 (1981).
Joel Atlas Skirble, with whom David Kayson was on the brief, for appellants.
Geoffrey S. Gavett, for appellees.
