POSEY v. SWISSVALE BOROUGH et al
Filing
60
MEMORANDUM OPINION. Signed by Judge Mark R. Hornak on 8/1/14. (bdb)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA
HERMAN POSEY, JR.,
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)
Plaintiff,
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Civil Action No. 2:I2-cv-955
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v.
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SWISSV ALE BOROUGH, et aI,
Defendants.
Judge Mark R. Hornak
)
)
)
)
MEMORANDUM OPINION
Mark R. Hornak, United States District Judge
Pending before the Court is the Defendant's Motion [54] for the imposition of sanctions
against the Plaintiff personally pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 11, in the total
amount of $3,331.10, representing the legal fees and costs incurred in the Defendant John
Corrado moving for summary judgment, and in preparing the sanctions motion.
The Court has explained the facts in this case in some detail in its various Opinions found
at ECF Nos. 22, 27 and 58, so they will not be repeated here. The core of the sanctions motion is
that the Plaintiff s remaining claims centered on what was said, if anything, by Officer Corrado
to anyone at the Veteran's Administration ("V A") that was intended to and did interfere with the
Plaintiff s receipt of one (1 ) VA benefits check being delayed by about two weeks.
The sanctions motion was filed in procedural compliance with Rule 11, and that Rule and
its obligations are fully applicable to pro se litigants. Pal v, Jersey City lvfedical Center, No. 11
6911(SRC), 2014 WL 3573405 (D. N.J. July 21, 2014). As the Defendant points out in his
Motion for Sanctions, in this case, the Court covered that very topic meticulously with the
Plaintiff on the record and in open Court at the time that Plaintiffs counsel was permitted to
withdraw from the case based on that counsel's assessment that he could not in good faith
oppose the anticipated summary judgment motion of the Defendant.
Rule 11 requires any party, appearing via counsel or pro se, to proceed with federal civil
litigation only when there is a reasonable basis in fact and in law for doing so. It charges them
with making the necessary investigation into the law and facts supporting the position that they
are taking, and their signature on a submission to the Court is their representation that the papers
that they are filing are so supported. In assessing such a sanctions motion, the Court is to apply a
standard of objective reasonableness under the specific circumstances of the case, and that
determination falls within the sound discretion of the Court. Id. at *8.
The heart of the Defendant's motion for sanctions is that once the depositions of the two
involved VA representatives (Ms. Proctor and Ms. McAfee) had been taken, along with that of
Officer Corrado, it should have been plain to all involved, including the Plaintiff, that there was
no evidence that the VA representatives had anything to do with any delay in the payment of the
one VA benefits check at issue, that they could not have affected that payment given that such
matters are not handled at their VA facility, and that there was no evidence that Officer Corrado
attempted to affect that check. As to this point, which is the crux of the Plaintiffs federal First
Amendment claim and as the Court noted in its decision granting summary judgment, the record
is clear and without contravention -- the only thing supporting the Plaintiff s claim was his own
supposition and guesswork.
As to the Plaintiffs state law defamation claim based on the allegation that Officer
Corrado told the VA officials that the Plaintiff was "a criminal," the Defendant contends that
after discovery, it should have been known to the Plaintiff that the two VA representatives
denied that Officer Corrado ever called the Plaintiff a "criminal", and that Officer Corrado
denied doing so. That is true, but this issue is more complicated.
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Officer Corrado denied calling the Plaintiff "a criminal" in conversations with the VA
representatives, but admitted advising someone at the V A, perhaps the unidentified woman that
he says that he spoke with, that the Plaintiff was going to be charged with theft by deception
related to a missing VA-issued scooter. V A representative McAfee stated that she never had any
contact with Officer Corrado. VA representative Proctor did likewise, but her notes, relied on by
the Plaintiff in opposing summary judgment, did reflect that she had been told that the Plaintiff
would be so charged. Thus, there was an "issue of fact" as to any such contact by Officer
Corrado, and it appears to be genuine. Officer Corrado testified that he spoke with a female VA
representative, and advised someone at the VA, probably in relation to his efforts to serve a
subpoena, that the Plaintiff would be charged as alleged. Ms. Proctor stated that she had no
recollection of speaking with Officer Corrado, but her notes seem to reflect that she spoke with
someone from the Swissvale Police about the missing VA scooter and the impending charges.
Ms. McAfee denied speaking with anyone from the Swissvale Police, and had no notes to the
contrary.
For the reasons noted in the Court's summary judgment Opinion, to the extent there was
such a "genuine issue of fact," it simply was not "material" for summary judgment purposes. As
the Court held in granting summary judgment in favor of Officer Corrado, any communication
about charges to be filed against the Plaintiff were not defamatory as allegedly communicated to
Ms. Proctor, they were literally true, they were privileged and there was no record evidence from
which an abuse of the privilege could be shown. Therefore, even if that "genuine issue" of
whether Officer Corrado spoke with Ms. Proctor was resolved in Plaintiffs favor, it was not
"material" since it did not affect the disposition of the case.
That said, particularly when considering the Plaintiffs pro se status, the Court in its
discretion declines to impose a Rule 11 sanction here, although it is a close call. The Court
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comes to this conclusion because to a lay person, the distinction between some factual point
being controverted on the record, and that "dispute" being "material" is not nearly as self-evident
as it might be, or should be, to a lawyer. Thus, confronted with the facial disparity in the oral
testimony and the V A notation of some sort of contact with a Swissvale Police representative
who relayed something about the impending charges, it is not inherently out of bounds for a pro
se Plaintiff to have legitimately concluded that there may be something more to the case than
there is.
The Court does not reach this conclusion lightly. As noted in the Court's three (3)
Opinions in this case, from both a legal and factual standpoint, this civil action from day one had
been akin to a tempest in a teapot about misdelivered pizzas to missing/purloined scooters to
intrafamily bad blood in the various Posey households. Perhaps this case was filed on not a lot
more than a wish and prayer, and pursued by Mr. Posey himself based more on emotion than
reason. But, that is not the standard generally for the imposition of Rule 11 sanctions, and for the
reasons noted, does not in the Court's judgment require their imposition, at this point. \
An appropriate Order will issue.
Mark R. Hornak
United States District Judge
Dated: August {, 2014
cc:
All counsel of record
1 The Motion will be denied without prejudice, in that Mr. Posey has now filed another document in pursuit of his
case that facially appears to have little to do with any valid claim. If it turns out that Mr. Posey pursues this case
further contrary to the strictures of Rule 11, the Court will revisit both this Motion and any supplement to it.
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